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by rayiner
4708 days ago
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Jose Padilla was never held in Guantanamo. He was held in a military brig in South Carolina, longer than he should have because of litigation surrounding the authority of the Bush administration to hold him without charges. The Bush administration did charge him, likely because they lost Hamdi v. Rumsfeld which rejected their attempts to detain a different U.S. citizen. The only American citizen targeted in a drone strike was Al Awlaki. The others were killed because they happened to be traveling with Al Qaeda leaders in Pakistan or Yemen who were targeted. We can argue about the legality of targeting Al Awlaki, someone who was actively waging war against the U.S. and tried to evade capture for a decade, but it's ridiculous to bring up the other three. Hundreds of U.S. citizens were killed in the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The fact that U.S. citizens may be killed collaterally in a military strike with legitimate targets has never been construed to be a violation of due process. Snowden is a completely different situation. He's not waging war against the U.S. and leaking classified information is a criminal charge, not an act of war. |
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So he was held for three and a half years as an "enemy combatant" under order of the US president, G.W. Bush.
Is the US court system so broken that one person, one president, one dictator is now judge jury and executioner and gets away with such an atrocity?
What has become of the rule of law in the USA?
As a country, it's looking more and more like a dictatorship.
As a country that stood for democracy, freedom of speech and justice for all, what has become of that?
As a serious question, what exactly does the government of the USA stand for today?