Hope
November 10th, 2008
Hope
As the Bush administration comes to a close… Just consider – with no hyperbole – what our Government, our country, has done. We systematically tortured people in our custody using techniques approved at the highest levels, many of whom died as a result. We created secret prisons – “black site” gulags – beyond the reach of international monitoring groups. We abducted and imprisoned even U.S. citizens and legal residents without any trial, holding them incommunicado and without even the right to access lawyers for years, while we tortured them to the point of insanity. We disappeared innocent people off the streets, sent them to countries where we knew they’d be tortured, and then closed off our courts to them once it was clear they had done nothing wrong. We adopted the very policies and techniques long considered to be the very definition of “war crimes".
Our Government turned the NSA apparatus inward – something that was never supposed to happen – spying on our conversations in secret and without warrants or oversight, all in violation of the law, and then, once revealed, acted to immunize the private-sector lawbreakers. And that’s to say nothing about the hundreds of thousands of people we killed and the millions more we displaced with a war launched on false pretense. And on and on and on.
I did not vote for Obama nor did I vote for McCain because I strongly disagree with the policies of both. Be that as it may, I’ll tell you one thing that Obama gives me that McCain wouldn’t: hope.
I’m not talking about hope that Obama will suddenly fix all of our nations problems or hope that he will change our economy, education, and health care for the better. I’m talking about hope that he will undo some of the things mentioned above by Greenwald. Some of them are changes that Obama can begin to enact as soon as he takes office. Shut down the secret prisons. End spying on and detention of our own citizens. Create iron-clad policy against the usage of torture. Begin to restore a level of trust in the office of President of the United States of America.
It may be unlikely that President Obama will fulfill these hopes, but they stand a much better chance under Obama than they would under McCain.
UPDATE
This is a good sign (emphasis added):
President-elect Obama’s advisers are quietly crafting a proposal to ship dozens, if not hundreds, of imprisoned terrorism suspects to the United States to face criminal trials, a plan that would make good on his promise to close the Guantanamo Bay prison …
Laurence Tribe, a Harvard law professor and Obama legal adviser, said discussions about plans for Guantanamo had been “theoretical” before the election but would quickly become very focused because closing the prison is a top priority. Bringing the detainees to the United States will be controversial, he said, but could be accomplished.
“I think the answer is going to be, they can be as securely guarded on U.S. soil as anywhere else,” Tribe said. “We can’t put people in a dungeon forever without processing whether they deserve to be there.“
12 comments
After watching what they've done to our people (9/11 and the fellow who got his head sliced off with a KNIFE!!!, to name a couple) I hold little hope that being nice and trying to talk to these people will make things better.
I debated giving this opinion because now I know you will cut my head off with your words. (I do have feelings, you know) I'll just have to remember that communication via internet can so easily be misconstrued.
We should not treat people the way Khalid El-Masri and Maher Arar were treated.
You don't trust people, but you trust the government to detain (and maybe torture) the "bad guys" without having to prove that they actually are bad guys.
Is that what you are saying?
I don't believe the detainees were randomly picked up just so Geo. Bush and our military could look powerful to the rest of the world.
I believe they are on a mission from Allah, if you will, and don't consider the law of ANY land to be binding in their quest for jihad. It's all about their interpretation of the koran and their destiny to fulfill the will of Allah.
As you yourself have seen in the churches of Christ there is no reasoning with some people where their convictions are concerned.
My question to you is, if they should be found not guilty, what kind of reparation should we give them?
But I think the reason these leaders fall so far short in our estimation is because we've been led to think of them as president/ fixer-of-my-problems. Somewhere in my past I recall the president is to be the commander in chief and the job of he and the government is to keep us safe- to pursue life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness- from foreign aggression.
I think politicians being mostly lawyers, and no term limits for the House and Senate are the root of a lot of evil in this society.