Sunday, October 01, 2006
Steve and Sandra and the lighter side of torture
US Congress, with the help of 12 Democrats, has suspended the right of habeas corpus. Bush is now officially in the business of disappearing people without trial, and authorizing interrogation methods the UN considers illegal. In addition, immunity from prosecution is now retroactively granted to the perpetrators of all previous abuses.
In a story in the Toronto Star regarding Canada's ongoing complicity in the Arar case, there is this tragic little sidebar, with a quote from a State Department official regarding their decision to send Arar to Syria.
It reads in part :
"there were assurances that [Arar's] treatment would meet the standards of the Geneva Conventions," he told a briefing. "We had to have a reasonable expectation that he was not going to be tortured or maltreated. We were able to assure ourselves of that."
Not any more.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
About Me
Blog Archive
-
▼
2006
(286)
-
▼
October
(26)
- "God is my Spin Doctor"
- The Pumpkin Gospel
- Steve and Sandra and Acts of Spam
- Dog bites man
- Getting things done
- You so totally already have her
- Let's take just a moment to review shop safety
- Five things Peter MacKay has done for feminism
- Steve and Sandra and not Garth
- The traditional nine month anniversary gift : Zoloft
- The URL According to Garth
- Steve and Sandra and the faith-based thing
- My Pet Zombie
- No man is a peninsula
- Canadian Forces recruitment poster?
- Vote McCorp for a better world!
- Enter At Own Risk
- The Pray For Clean Air Act
- Giving thanks for love and guts
- Steve and Sandra - NAU you see it, NAU you don't
- Thank you, Stephen Harper
- The Federal Bureau of Integration
- Senate endorses leaky umbrella
- The Defense of Religions Act
- CSIS didn't want Arar returned to Canada
- Steve and Sandra and the lighter side of torture
-
▼
October
(26)
- 404 System Error
- A Creative Revolution
- Accidental Deliberations
- Another Voice
- April Reign
- Back of the Book
- Big City Lib
- Bilateralist
- Birth Pangs
- Blogging Change
- Bowen Island Journal
- Bread and Roses
- Broadsides
- CREEKSIDE - THE SPP POSTS
- Canadian Cynic
- Canadian Progressive Voices
- CathiefromCanada
- Challenging the Commonplace
- Council of Canadians
- Cracked Crystal Ball
- Crawl Across the Ocean
- DAMMIT JANET!
- Dawg's Blawg
- De Koboldorum Rebus
- Dymaxion World
- Harper Valley
- Impolitical
- In-Sights
- Just Another Willy Loman
- Laila Yuile
- Leftist Jab
- Let Freedom Rain
- Liberal Catnip
- Mirabile Dictu
- Montreal Simon
- Moved to Vancouver
- Murray Dobbin
- Northern Insights
- Of Gods & Other Monsters
- Open Parliament
- Orwell's Bastard
- POGGE
- Paying Attention
- Politics 'n Poetry
- Public Eye Online
- Pushed to the Left and Loving It
- Q at North of Center
- Red Tory
- Resettle THIS!
- Rose's Place
- Runesmith's Canadian Content
- Rusty Idols
- Stageleft
- Steve & Sandra Toons
- Terrible Depths
- The Black Ewe
- The Dominion
- The Galloping Beaver
- The Gazetteer
- The Regina Mom
- The Sixth Estate
- The Tyee
- The Woodshed
- TheLedgeTrials
- They Call Me "Mr. Sinister"
- Thinking Aboot
- Thwap's Schoolyard
- Trapped in a Whirlpool
- Unrepentant Old Hippie
- Youngfox Canada
- bastard.logic
- hairy fish nuts
4 comments:
Those Magna Carta guys were just living in a pre 911 mindset.
Its sad, isn't it, how afraid the Americans are these days. Reminds me of "This is the way the world ends, not with a bang but a whimper."
Earlier today, I was also reading the Rolling Stone article about the Khadl (?spelling) boy at Guantanamo -- awful, sick, painful.
congrats, i've nominated you for 'best series' blog.
http://cba.myblahg.com/
good luck!!!
I liked it better when Americans pledged their loyalty to their flag, instead of to Bush.
Post a Comment