There are several articles in here that bring to question what kind of
information, and how well informed much less informed about what, the MSM
keeps the people of the 'educated world'.

Graphics are included if you read it on the site but are removed after a
few days so the data allocation isn't exceeded on that group.

Scott

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/libertyunderground/message/4171

---------------------------- Original Message ----------------------------
Subject: [libertyunderground] Today's LUV News:  18 March, 2013
From:    "LUV" <jackdot...@cox.net>
Date:    Mon, 18 March, 2013 4:04 am
To:      libertyundergro...@yahoogroups.com
--------------------------------------------------------------------------

*THE STARVING ARE NOT BAILED OUT


*
**

*"The world's food security remains 'vulnerable,' new data suggests,
with some 870 million people experiencing sustained hunger and two
billion suffering from micronutrient deficiencies," begins a report this
morning from /IPS News/
<http://www.ipsnews.net/2013/03/food-policies-failing-the-worlds-hungry/>.
It goes on to explain the causes of hunger and proposed solutions.
*

*As we spend trillions of dollars on weapons and war on behalf of those
who finance our elections, a child dies of hunger-related causes every
five seconds.  While this happens, our government provides trillions of
dollars toward bailing out bankers who fund our elections.*

------------------------------------------------------------------------
*ANOTHER ILLEGAL WAR?


//*
**

*"Israel will use President Obama's visit on Wednesday to try to
persuade the US to carry out air strikes on Syria if there is evidence
that Syrian missiles are to be handed over to Hezbollah in Lebanon, or
at least to give full support to Israeli military action to prevent the
transfer," begins a piece at /The Guardian/
<http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013/mar/17/obama-visit-israel-syrian-missiles-transfer>
this morning.
*

*Although the US already supplies weapons to insurgents in Syria,
including terrorists, air strikes would constitute a clear act of war
and would be illegal under international law, since Syria has not
attacked us, nor has the UN given approval for a US attack on Syria.*

------------------------------------------------------------------------
*CLEARING THE FOG


*
**

*Guests this morning on /Clearing the FOG/ will discuss the Trans
Pacific Partnership
<http://us6.campaign-archive2.com/?u=eff40348098f866a6f564e5cd&id=aeae3250b2&e=a94bdaa8f0>,
the secret deal intended to undermine the world's environment and labor
for the profits of transnational corporations which fund our elections.
Watch it live at 11 a.m. EDT or the canned program after that.*

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**When hellfire missiles first began descending from the drone-filled
skies of Waziristan, I always got a laugh out of mainstream media
reports, which made it seem as though the drones may have belonged to
Swahilis for all they knew.  Early mainstream media reports would never
go so far as to say the US was responsible, but were careful to point
out that "militants" had been killed.  Of course, the mainstream media
had no reporters on the ground, so were merely acting as stenographers
for US government officials when they reported about dead "militants."
**

**What they did not point out, was that many of these "militants" were
women and children.  I read reports at the time, from third world
countries, who had reporters on the scene asking local police, who
provided the numbers for anyone who seriously wanted the truth.
**

**It is not rocket science, I can train the average person who is not
severely brain damaged to become a better news reporter than the average
mainstream media "journalist" in an hour or less, minus the flowery
academic words and bullshit required for the college journalism degree.
There is no attempt in mainstream media to report the truth when it is
in conflict with either corporate greed at any cost to the public
interest or the intent of the National Security State.  A mainstream
media "journalist" could lose their job for that.
**

**The coverage from mainstream media is so pathetically poor that most
of our fellow citizens don't know the president has authorized any of us
to be killed by our government without due process and is currently, in
our name, terrorizing Afghanis, Pakistanis, Yemenis, Central Africans,
and others in acts being investigated by the United Nations as potential
war crimes.  The justification for all of this is shamefully classified
as secret.  Our government is more out of control than ever, and it
would not be possible without massive mainstream media distortion of
reality  --Jack Balkwill**

*Killing Us Softly: Why the Administration's Response to Criticism on
Drones Carries Little Water
<http://www.truth-out.org/opinion/item/15156-killing-us-softly-why-the-administrations-response-to-criticism-on-drones-carries-little-water>
*

*By Shahid Buttar, People's Blog for the Constitution
*

*Senator Rand Paul (R-TX) forced a long overdue conversation in
Washington <http://www.constitutioncampaign.org/blog/?p=12387> about
checks and balances on executive power. Yet few observers recognize the
ultimate importance of his actions, or why the Senate's confirmation of
the new CIA director remained premature.*

*Prompted by Sen. Paul's filibuster last Wednesday, Attorney General
Holder wrote a letter
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/post-politics/files/2013/03/Senator-Rand-Paul-Letter.pdf>
the following day, acknowledging that our government lacks authority to
execute Americans within the US without trial.*

*His concession is welcome, but must be taken with a grain of salt. It
behooves observers to understand why, for several reasons, Holder's
statement may be less secure than we would ideally hope.*

**Accepting disclosure without investigation**

*Much of the controversy surrounding Brennan's nomination concerned mere
disclosure: whether the executive branch would let Congress read the
administration's legal analysis governing the targeted assassination
program. President Obama apparently heard the message, admitting in his
State of the Union address that more transparency is required
<http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/12/state-of-the-union-drones_n_2626160.html>.*

*The result proved underwhelming. One congressional committee received a
single legal memo among several, which did not even purport to delineate
the boundaries of the assassination program, but rather explored the use
of deadly authority against a single target among several hundred who
have been killed, including at least four US citizens.*

*Mere disclosure of some OLC memos to some Senators is insufficient.*

*Meaningful congressional oversight requires full access to all the
legal memos, as well as active investigation of the underlying facts. It
is not enough to simply read executive legal analyses paying lip service
to constitutional values routinely violated on the ground.*

*The congressional intelligence committees, after all, were founded
after robust investigations revealed widespread abuses by intelligence
agencies
<http://www.senate.gov/artandhistory/history/minute/Church_Committee_Created.htm>,
including the CIA, spanning decades and the terms of several presidents.
Factual investigation has revealed more recent abuses, as well.*

*Last year, the Senate Intelligence Committee concluded a thorough
investigation of torture
<http://thehill.com/homenews/senate/272885-senate-panel-approves-cia-torture-report>,
which produced a report recognizing torture as an international human
rights abuse that ultimately undermined US national security by
producing false intelligence, eroding pro American sentiment abroad, and
helping our enemies recruit foot soldiers.*

*Yet, reflecting its pattern of embracing secrecy while claiming
transparency, the Obama administration has refused to declassify the
report
<http://salsa.democracyinaction.org/o/498/p/dia/action/public/?action_KEY=12198>.
It is only because neither the press nor the public know the facts that
irresponsible Hollywood fiction
<http://www.constitutioncampaign.org/blog/?p=11393> proved so
problematic and controversial.*

*Forgotten in commentary on Brennan's confirmation were some troubling
details suggesting that, on both torture and drone strikes, transparency
remains inadequate.*

*First, Senators had to fight tooth & nail
<http://firstread.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/06/16872807-wyden-vows-to-pull-out-all-the-stops-to-get-actual-legal-analysis-on-drones?lite>
to secure even the most minimal disclosure from the White House. Second,
other congressional committees
<http://thinkprogress.org/security/2013/03/12/1701931/house-democrats-demand-answers-from-obama-on-drones/?mobile=nc>
also sought access to the OLC assassination memos, but were denied.*

*Finally, beyond disclosure of the OLC's legal memos are important
questions about how the standards in them are applied to real facts. The
Obama administration and CIA still refuse to answer congressional
questions beyond the memos
<http://www.wyden.senate.gov/download/letter-to-brennan>---such as, "How
much evidence does the President need to determine that a particular
American can be lawfully killed?" These questions are crucial, but
Brennan's confirmation could ensure that Congress receives few answers.*

**How the facts suggest elastic powers**

*Brennan spoke to the committee of the "great care
<http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2012/apr/30/rights-groups-hit-brennans-defense-of-legal-drone-/>"
taken to ensure that drone strikes kill only their intended targets.
What little we know about them suggests otherwise.*

*The OLC memo leaked to NBC's Michael Isikoff
<http://msnbcmedia.msn.com/i/msnbc/sections/news/020413_DOJ_White_Paper.pdf>
disclaims limiting principles. It cites several factors that officials
review when considering the assassination of Americans (eg, the
imminence of an attack, infeasibility of capturing a suspect, and
compliance with laws of war), but describes them "not...[as] minimum
requirements necessary to render an operation lawful," but rather as
mere considerations guiding one particular use of that authority.*

*In other words, these factors do not constrain targeting decisions,
which remain unfettered, as well as secret and---even after the
filibuster---completely unaccountable. Others have already explained
<http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2013/02/obamas-memo-on-killing-americans-twists-imminent-threat-like-bush/272862/>
how:*

    *the Obama Administration took a process that is supposed to
    constrain the president within the law's confines; nodded toward the
    notion that they can kill only if capture is infeasible and the
    threat of attack imminent; and then qualified those constraints so
    drastically that it would be more honest to acknowledge that neither
    imminence nor infeasible capture are really required.*

*The standard for imminence, for example, is so elastic that it permits
the presumption that "all military-age males in a strike zone [are]
militants
<http://www.salon.com/2012/05/29/militants_media_propaganda/singleton/>."*

*Similarly, while claiming to authorize strikes only on senior
operational leaders of Al-Qaeda and associated forces, other citizens
have been killed "incidentally" without any explanation or accountability.*

*This Sunday, the NY Times printed a story
<http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/10/world/middleeast/anwar-al-awlaki-a-us-citizen-in-americas-cross-hairs.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0>
examining the authorization of the drone strike on US citizen Anwar
al-Awlaki. Setting aside concerns that it reflected blatant propaganda
<http://www.emptywheel.net/2013/03/10/anwar-al-awlaki-is-the-new-aluminum-tube/>,
the article alludes to executive abuses for which no one has ever been
held accountable.*

*While presenting the leaked memo authorizing al-Awlaki's death as
limited to that particular target, the Times acknowledges that at least
two other US citizens---against whom drone strikes were supposedly not
authorized---were killed without trial. Yet no one has been held
accountable, the program has been only reinforced by Brennan's
confirmation, and the unaccountable use of targeted assassination
continues in secret.*

*The question ignored by proponents of drone strikes is the same
overlooked by those who defend torture: "How do we know our government
has the right person?" The overwhelming proportion of detainees released
from Guantanamo, or recurring revelations of surveillance
<http://www.aclu.org/maps/spying-first-amendment-activity-state-state>
targeting non-violent activists, reflect our government's poor track
record of assessing guilt.*

**Is Anwar al-Awlaki the new Jose Padilla?**

*Considering these issues across time exposes a further concern,
illustrated by the case of Jose Padilla.*

*A US citizen detained at O'Haire airport in 2002 and held in a military
prison until he lost his mind, Padilla was eventually tried in a
civilian court, where he was convicted of offenses bearing no relation
to the plot for which he was originally accused. His example, in the
context of a later debate on the power to detain Americans without
trial, demonstrates how powers initially introduced as exceptional can
grow entrenched and more pervasive.*

*The authority to detain Americans without trial is the subject of Obama
v Hedges <http://www.constitutioncampaign.org/blog/?p=11996>, an appeal
challenging the NDAA of 2012. Many misconstrue the breadth of the NDAA's
detention powers, including members of Congress who voted for them
<http://dailycaller.com/2011/12/22/dont-believe-the-rumors-about-the-2012-national-defense-authorization-act/>.*

*Apologists who downplay the impact of the NDAA's detention provisions
often cite section 1021(e)
<http://www.nytimes.com/2011/12/02/us/senate-declines-to-resolve-issue-of-american-qaeda-suspects-arrested-in-us.html>,
which states that "Nothing in this section shall be construed to affect
existing law or authorities relating to the detention
of...persons...captured or arrested in the United States." But they
forget Padilla
<http://my.firedoglake.com/shahidbuttar/2011/12/23/the-ndaa-another-assault-in-the-dead-of-night/>,
whom the government subjected to indefinite military detention even
before the NDAA became law.*

*For over a decade, a pattern has emerged of executive evasion of
judicial review <http://www.constitutioncampaign.org/blog/?p=11370> when
the military detains particular (seemingly exceptional) Americans. Ten
years after Padilla was first detained, the NDAA reflected congressional
ratification of that power applied to not particular Americans, but
potentially to anyone.*

*Padilla represents the once isolated case that serves as a baseline for
future abuses. Put simply, legal decisions take place not in a vacuum,
but reflect a vector. And with respect to drone strikes targeting
Americans, the trend points in a disturbing direction, which Brennan's
confirmation only confirms.*

**It's not paranoia if it's true**

*Reflecting their own confusion, many
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/post-politics/wp/2013/03/07/mccain-and-graham-attack-rand-pauls-filibuster/>
have suggested that Paul's concern about extrajudicial assassination
reflects paranoia. Unfortunately, it's only paranoid if unfounded.*

*Whatever Obama apologists may claim, our government has in fact
executed multiple US citizens without trial. And a potential drone
strike within the US hardly requires a flight of imagination: the
manhunt that mobilized across Southern California to find LAPD officer
Chris Dorner presents a scenario all too likely to recur.*

*Given Congress' dismal record, Paul's filibuster was a clarion call. It
emboldened members from both parties in both houses of Congress
<http://thinkprogress.org/security/2013/03/12/1701931/house-democrats-demand-answers-from-obama-on-drones/?mobile=nc>,
whose bipartisan concerns about checks & balances will resonate well
beyond the legal authority for drone strikes, which remain unacceptably
secret and effectively above the law.*

*This piece was reprinted by Truthout with permission or license.*
<http://www.truth-out.org/opinion/item/15156-killing-us-softly-why-the-administrations-response-to-criticism-on-drones-carries-little-water><http://www.truth-out.org/opinion/item/15156-killing-us-softly-why-the-administrations-response-to-criticism-on-drones-carries-little-water>

------------------------------------------------------------------------
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