Thursday, February 14, 2013

13-02-14 HOPE - you don't get indefinitely detained

We have regressed over the pats decade some 800 years back and lost the fruits of the struggles of generations, as we lost the protections, originally grounded in the Magna Carta - no deprivation of life, liberty, property with no due process of law.  As it looks now, we will not bequeath to our children the rights that were entrusted to us for safekeeping by previous generations. JZ


  CIVIL LIBERTIES  
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Michael Moore and Chris Hedges on the 'Corporate Coup d’État' and the Govt's Moves to Jail People without Charges or Trial

Scary moves by the Government in the name of 'fighting terrorism."
 
 
 

AMY GOODMAN: Last week, the ability of the U.S. government to jail people without charge or trial was back in court. A group of reporters, scholars and activists, including Noam Chomsky and Chris Hedges, are suing the Obama administration over the controversial provision in the NDAA, the National Defense Authorization Act, saying it could allow for the indefinite detention of journalists and others who interact with certain groups. Well, last Wednesday, the Justice Department asked an appeals court to reverse a judge’s earlier decision blocking indefinite detention, saying the ruling would hamper its ability to fight terrorism. The Obama administration has already won an emergency freeze of the ruling while the case is appealed.
Well, on the same day, Wednesday, an event, just after the court hearing, was held in New York featuring a panel of some of those who were in the courtroom to oppose the NDAA. Joining them was the Academy Award-winning filmmaker and activist Michael Moore and Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Chris Hedges. We end today’s show with their remarks. The case is known as  Hedges v. Obama. Michael Moore began by responding to a question about how he got involved.
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