Thursday, June 7, 2012

With recent disclosures that the Obama Administration personally operates a secret murder list that includes seventeen-year-old children in the Middle-East, it should be clear that America is moving into a new phase of transfer of power to the Executive branch, unheard of in this nation's history. A recent ruling by a judge that Obama doesn't have the right to indefinitely detain American citizens without a trial shouldn't really be cause for celebration, since Attorney General Eric Holder already argued at Yale Law school that President Obama has the right to assassinate Americans without a trial.When Congress followed up on this horrific declaration in a hearing on counter-terrorism with FBI Director Robert Mueller on whether these Executive Assassination powers applied to U.S. citizens domestically, Mueller replied that he'd "have to check." Obama takes and wants personal responsibility for all of his murders and loves it to be this way. This was also the case with Adolph Hitler, whom Germany invested all of their trust in. Of course, any leader whose acts are criminal demands "personal responsibility" for their acts so that the nation--as a collective, absolves themselves of responsibility for the actions carried out in their name. In a free nation such as the United States, where citizens are more free than most other nations of the world, the fact that virtually no public outcry among the vast majority of Americans over the executive's self-proclaimed right to assassinate them is deeply troubling. Perhaps those who are even informed about this proclamation figure that if they aren't doing anything wrong, then they have nothing to hide. However, in a Constitutional Republic, the burden of proof rests upon the government, through due process of law and evidence of the charges made against the accused, before the state revokes "life, liberty, or property." Surely, the evisceration of the Magna Carta of 1215 upon which the sixth amendment gauranteeing these rights is based, under the guise of protecting the population from "terrorism," will cause Americans to lose all three. The indoctrination of the public into the idea that wanton murder of this U.S. administration of both Americans and foreigners based upon a slight suspicion of wrong doing that the executive imagines--without the benefit of an investigation or examination by the prosecution in a court of law is preposterous.
With recent disclosures that the Obama Administration personally operates a secret murder list that includes seventeen-year-old children in the Middle-East, it should be clear that America is moving into a new phase of transfer of power to the Executive branch, unheard of in this nation's history. A recent ruling by a judge that Obama doesn't have the right to indefinitely detain Obama takes and wants personal responsibility for all of his murders and loves it to be this way. This was also the case with Adolph Hitler, whom Germany invested all of their trust in. Of course, any leader whose acts are criminal demands "personal responsibility" for their acts so that the nation--as a collective, absolves themselves of responsibility for the actions carried out in their name. In a free nation such as the United States, where citizens are more free than most other nations of the world, the fact that The indoctrination of the public into the idea that wanton murder The military industrial complex wages sheer war on the working/tax paying public as evidenced by the recent increase in expenditures on shipping costs to supply combat troops clearly reveals. The wars are not by any means ending any time soon, just getting more expensive while using up more of the world’s resources.

In November 2011, U.S. helicopters flying over the Pakistani border fired upon Pakistani soldiers, murdering 24 in a helicopter/jet attack on Pakistan's border positions. The unprovoked event has been left unexplained as Pakistan was at the time a close military ally of the U.S., but the retaliatory measures of the Pakistani government, which includes closing off key shipping routes to the U.S. military, has increased the cost of sending one 20-foot container of military supplies in the war by $10,000.


Now the U.S. must utilize the Northern Distribution Network.


I believe a lot of people in progressive circles are in denial. When the NYPD has their own submarines and are being called the seventh largest army in the world, things are getting pretty out-of-hand in my humble opinion. Also, it appears that the protest versus police balance has been set-off.
Whereas in the sixties, a lot of young people protesting were confronted by police in typical dress and therefore were able to have fun with them, now there are a lot of special operations style raids occurring against non-violent protesters. Tactics once reserved for AIM and BPP are now being used against non-violent squatters with precise efficiency.

http://tribune.com.pk/story/309163/only-29-of-non-military-us-supplies-go-through-pakistan-report/





The Pakistani army questioned why NATO undertook a sustained two-hour attack on well-known border positions, involving helicopters and fighter jets. A Western official said 25 Pakistani soldiers were dead as of Sunday night. The Pakistani army put the death toll at 24.
"No first fire came from Pakistan troops," said a senior Pakistani military official on Sunday. "But they did respond in self-defense after NATO gunship helicopters and jet fighters carried out unprovoked firing."
In retaliation, Pakistan indefinitely shut NATO supply lines through the country and said it was re-evaluating its military, intelligence and diplomatic links with the U.S. Authorities there gave the U.S. two weeks to pull out of a Pakistani air base that Washington has used in the past to launch drone strikes on Taliban militants, attacks that have become increasingly unpopular among Pakistani people.