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Obama & the Supreme Court Quietly Legalize Torture

Obama and the Supremes Stand Up for Slavery
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Chris Floyd
chris-floyd.com
Fri, 18 Dec 2009 15:18 EST
While we were all out doing our Christmas shopping, the highest court in the land quietly put the kibosh on a few more of the remaining shards of human liberty.

It happened earlier this week, in a discreet ruling that attracted almost no notice and took little time. In fact, our most august defenders of the Constitution did not have to exert themselves in the slightest to eviscerate not merely 220 years of Constitutional jurisprudence but also centuries of agonizing effort to lift civilization a few inches out of the blood-soaked mire that is our common human legacy. They just had to write a single sentence.

Here's how the bad deal went down. After hearing passionate arguments from the Obama Administration, the Supreme Court acquiesced to the president's fervent request and, in a one-line ruling, let stand a lower court decision that declared torture an ordinary, expected consequence of military detention, while introducing a shocking new precedent for all future courts to follow: anyone who is arbitrarily declared a "suspected enemy combatant" by the president or his designated minions is no longer a "person." They will simply cease to exist as a legal entity. They will have no inherent rights, no human rights, no legal standing whatsoever -- save whatever modicum of process the government arbitrarily deigns to grant them from time to time, with its ever-shifting tribunals and show trials.

This extraordinary ruling occasioned none of those deep-delving "process stories" that glut the pages of the New York Times, where the minutiae of policy-making or political gaming is examined in highly-spun, microscopic detail doled out by self-interested insiders. Obviously, giving government the power to render whole classes of people "unpersons" was not an interesting subject for our media arbiters. It was news that wasn't fit to print. Likewise, the ruling provoked no thundering editorials in the Washington Post, no savvy analysis from the high commentariat -- and needless to say, no outrage whatsoever from all our fierce defenders of individual liberty on the Right.

But William Fisher noticed, and gave this report at Antiwar.com:

In the wake of the U.S. Supreme Court's refusal Monday to review a lower court's dismissal of a case brought by four British former Guantanamo prisoners against former defense secretary Donald Rumsfeld, the detainees' lawyers charged Tuesday that the country's highest court evidently believes that "torture and religious humiliation are permissible tools for a government to use."

...Channeling their predecessors in the George W. Bush administration, Obama Justice Department lawyers argued in this case that there is no constitutional right not to be tortured or otherwise abused in a U.S. prison abroad.

The Obama administration had asked the court not to hear the case. By agreeing, the court let stand an earlier opinion by the D.C. Circuit Court, which found that the Religious Freedom Restoration Act - a statute that applies by its terms to all "persons" - did not apply to detainees at Guantanamo, effectively ruling that the detainees are not persons at all for purposes of U.S. law.

The lower court also dismissed the detainees' claims under the Alien Tort Statute and the Geneva Conventions, finding defendants immune on the basis that "torture is a foreseeable consequence of the military's detention of suspected enemy combatants."

The Constitution is clear: no person can be held without due process; no person can be subjected to cruel and unusual punishment. And the U.S. law on torture of any kind is crystal clear: it is forbidden, categorically, even in time of "national emergency." And the instigation of torture is, under U.S. law, a capital crime. No person can be tortured, at any time, for any reason, and there are no immunities whatsoever for torture offered anywhere in the law.

And yet this is what Barack Obama -- who, we are told incessantly, is a super-brilliant Constitutional lawyer -- has been arguing in case after case since becoming president: Torturers are immune from prosecution; those who ordered torture are immune from prosecution. They can't even been sued for, in the specific case under review, subjecting uncharged, indefinitely detained captives to "beatings, sleep deprivation, forced nakedness, extreme hot and cold temperatures, death threats, interrogations at gunpoint, and threatened with unmuzzled dogs."

Again, let's be absolutely clear: Barack Obama has taken the freely chosen, public, formal stand -- in court -- that there is nothing wrong with any of these activities. Nothing to answer for, nothing meriting punishment or even civil penalties. What's more, in championing the lower court ruling, Barack Obama is now on record as believing -- insisting -- that torture is an ordinary, "foreseeable consequence" of military detention of all those who are arbitrarily declared "suspected enemy combatants."

And still further: Barack Obama has now declared, openly, of his own free will, that he does not consider these captives to be "persons." They are, literally, sub-humans. And what makes them sub-humans? The fact that someone in the U.S. government has declared them to be "suspected enemy combatants." (And note: even the mere suspicion of being an "enemy combatant" can strip you of your personhood.)

This is what President Barack Obama believes -- believes so strongly that he has put the full weight of the government behind a relentless series of court actions to preserve, protect and defend these arbitrary powers. (For a glimpse at just a sliver of such cases, see here and here.)

One co-counsel on the case, Shayana Kadidal of the Center for Constitutional Rights, zeroed in on the noxious quintessence of the position taken by the Court, and by our first African-American president: its chilling resemblance to the notorious Dred Scott ruling of 1857, which upheld the principle of slavery. As Fisher notes:

"Another set of claims are dismissed because Guantanamo detainees are not 'persons' within the scope of the Religious Freedom Restoration Act - an argument that was too close to Dred Scott v. Sanford for one of the judges on the court of appeals to swallow," he added.

The Dred Scott case was a decision by the United States Supreme Court in 1857. It ruled that people of African descent imported into the United States and held as slaves, or their descendants - whether or not they were slaves - were not protected by the Constitution and could never be citizens of the United States.

And now, once again, 144 years after the Civil War, we have established as the law of the land and the policy of the United States government that whole classes of people can be declared "non-persons" and have their liberty stripped away -- and their torturers and tormentors protected and coddled by authority -- at a moment's notice, with no charges, no defense, no redress, on nothing more than the suspicion that they might be an "enemy combatant," according to the arbitrary definition of the state.

Barack Obama has had the audacity to declare himself the heir and embodiment of the lifework of Martin Luther King. Can this declaration of a whole new principle of universal slavery really be what King was dreaming of? Is this the vision he saw on the other side of the mountain? Or is not the nightmarish inversion of the ideal of a better, more just, more humane world that so many have died for, in so many places, down through the centuries?
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Laura Comment by Laura on January 5, 2010 at 3:01am
Hi Henry,

I tried to check in to that. I couldn't really find any info to answer that question. I will keep looking though, when I have some more time.

Good Question!
Laura
Henry Allen Platsky Comment by Henry Allen Platsky on January 2, 2010 at 10:27am
Dear Laura,
do you know if this was a unanimous decision? Was there any dissent?
Henry ap
Laura Comment by Laura on December 24, 2009 at 8:41pm
"What about permanent detention under the Bush regime ... or the rendition of Canadian Muslims ... Are you being a tad nostalgic for WASP Republicanism?"

---I am not sure why you are so angry here. I have not discounted any of those things. I was simply sharing the latest shite that the US government is sneaking by the people. I am not nostalgic for anything. Nothing about the US history is worthy of the idealism that it's constitution implies


"Of course one could go back to how aboriginals such as Geronimo were rendered in a mosquito infested Florida, before the hi tech days of air-conditioning and reclaimed swamp land. "

----Yes... by all means. Post articles about this! The point here is to re-educate people. About current happenings as well as the altered historical facts. I am not especially fond of how the US was founded, either. And I am not thrilled about the repeat of this with Israel over the Palestinians.

"The American constitution from the start really only served the WASP confederate fathers ~ not Catholics, or colored emigrants, just like the so-called ancient Greek democratic model only served white males and not their women, slaves and servants or non-Athenian neighboring states. "

--- The American constitution and Bill of Rights, were they held to the letter, would indeed serve the rights of all. They just haven't so far, nor does it look like they will have the chance to.

"Do you really know what Ronald Reagan and Oliver North did in Central America or how the U.S. helped get rid of democracy in Iran back in 1953 "

----Yes... I do. And since you are being so sincere, perhaps you would care to post some more blogs and videos to help educate our members as well as the many people who visit this sight for information.

"~ fascism ought to be considered globally. All governments by their very nature tend toward the powerful seductive lure of fascism."

---I agree. And I would add, that absolute power does not necessarily corrupt. But power, indeed draws the currupt, power-hungry psychopaths who wish to impose their pathology and slavery on others. Again... not sure why you are so angry that I posted this article. Does every article have to incorporate every detail of the international conspiracy for a New World Order of Global Fascism? Or would it be OK with you for people to post the many pieces that make up the whole?

" I am certain that Obama, a darkie,..."

---What does that have to do with anything? Is that at all relevant to your comments? A darkie? WTF!?!?!

"... like Kennedy whose undoing was that he was a Catholic visiting an ultra protestant Texas, is between a rock and a hard place ..."

---Obama is just another puppet of the Oligarchy. Doing the bidding of his masters. He is in no hard place. He is simply furthering the cause of global fascism. And Kennedy being a Catholic had nothing to do with why he was assasinated.

"...and as for resigning up ... that's easy to say as an administrator. The alternative I have is leaving this group, period."

---Please try to keep your comments relevant to the subject of the blog. That is a request.

First of all.... I am not an administrator. I volunteer as the welcoming committee. And I care about what happens here. I stay involved and want to encourage other people to stay involved and spread as much objective information as possible. When it is not objective, I question it and hope that the conversation will lead to a greater percentage of objective, factual information.

My struggle to get NING to fix problems, was an individual effort for my own ability to sign into this sight. I do not know what it is that you are so angry about all of a sudden, and I don't especially appreciate your tone, which seems adversarial. If you do not want to be a part of this network. You have free will. You will do what you will do. And I won't try to convince you otherwise. It's none of my business. My inquiry to you was on your page.... not on a blog. I was simply trying to figure out if there was a greater problem that NING needs to address.

A little respect goes a long way.
Al Wl Comment by Al Wl on December 24, 2009 at 7:29pm
What about permanent detention under the Bush regime ... or the rendition of Canadian Muslims ... Are you being a tad nostalgic for WASP Republicanism? Of course one could go back to how aboriginals such as Geronimo were rendered in a mosquito infested Florida, before the hi tech days of air-conditioning and reclaimed swamp land. The American constitution from the start really only served the WASP confederate fathers ~ not Catholics, or colored emigrants, just like the so-called ancient Greek democratic model only served white males and not their women, slaves and servants or non-Athenian neighboring states. Do you really know what Ronald Reagan and Oliver North did in Central America or how the U.S. helped get rid of democracy in Iran back in 1953 ~ fascism ought to be considered globally. All governments by their very nature tend toward the powerful seductive lure of fascism. I am certain that Obama, a darkie, like Kennedy whose undoing was that he was a Catholic visiting an ultra protestant Texas, is between a rock and a hard place ... and as for resigning up ... that's easy to say as an administrator. The alternative I have is leaving this group, period.

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