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Old 03-11-2013, 10:01 PM   #1
CuteOldGuy
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Default Broad coalition fights against the NDAA, for HB558, and for the right to due process

States are taking action against the unconstitutional NDAA!

Article:

This week’s filibuster by Senator Rand Paul (R-KY) of the John Brennan nomination confirms just how unpredictable and fluid the politics of civil liberties are in Washington, DC these days: First we have a Republican senator leading the fight – joined by Democrats like Ron Wyden (D-OR) -- to learn just where due process lines are drawn these days. Second, we have a Democratic White House dragging its feet before grudgingly conceding there are any liberties.

Just two weeks ago, Annapolis witnessed a similar “odd bedfellows” moment, as Delegate Don Dwyer (R-Anne Arundel) and Sara Love (legislative director of the ACLU of Maryland) sat down together to urge the House Health and Government Operations Committee to consider the “Maryland Liberty Preservation Act of 2013” (HB558). The legislation would prohibit “an agency of the State, a county of the State, an employee of the State or a county acting in an official capacity, or a member of the Maryland National Guard or the Maryland Defense Force, on official State duty, to knowingly aid an agency of the United States in the detention of a person in accordance with” the troubling indefinite detention provisions of the National Defense Authorization Act, as passed in early 2012.

The NDAA provisions authorize (or purport to authorize) the U.S. military to arrest, indefinitely detain, and deny a trial or day in court to anyone—even US citizens—accused of a “belligerent act,” or any terror-related offense. Mere allegation of membership in or support of an alleged terrorist group could be the basis for indefinite detention.

This sets up modern-day versions of the “Count of Monte Cristo” – people indefinitely detained by the military without the hope of a fair hearing, for vague reasons that can amount to little more than associating with the wrong people or running afoul of the politics of the day. As Love pointed out in her testimony, the “breadth of the NDAA’s worldwide detention authority violates at least the 5th and 6th Amendments to the United States Constitution, as well as Article III of the Constitution. […] Furthermore, the provisions of the NDAA authorizing the indefinite military detention of civilians violate the laws of war by which the United States is bound and which it helped to establish, because it is not limited to people captured in the context of an actual armed conflict.”

Joining Delegate Dwyer and Ms. Love to add their voices in support of the bill were Marylanders representing a bipartisan—even transpartisan—coalition of political and ethnic backgrounds. Silver Spring resident Sue Udry, excutive director of the Defending Dissent Foundation, spoke to the concern that the NDAA raises for free speech and protest: “…the fact remains that it could easily be turned into a tool of political repression. And that, unfortunately, is not unprecedented in our country.”

Conservative Marylanders like Scott Strzelczyk pointed out that the rights at stake go back to the Magna Carta: “In nothing more than a stroke of the pen, a thousand years – a millennium – of due process rights are obliterated. You either believe in due process for all persons or you do not."

Mudusar Raza, president of the Maryland chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), warned that while the NDAA doesn’t extend a requirement to detain an American in military custody under its provisions, “the authority or option to do so remains, “ and that “To deny any person the right to due process in the name of national security makes our nation less free, but not more secure.”

I was at the hearing as well, testifying on behalf of the Montgomery County Civil Rights Coalition. The constitutional arguments—and common sense arguments—against the indefinite detention provisions of the NDAA seem so compelling to me that it’s hard to believe we need to convince an erstwhile Constitutional law professor or the U.S. judicial system of their validity.

But we do – and part of the way we need to do that is by withdrawing any support for enforcing and implementing its provisions, in a way similar to what many did over a hundred and fifty years ago in refusing to help enforce the immoral, unconstitutional Fugitive Slave Act.

And part of the way we need to do that is by working together with new allies on the left and on the right to pass bills like HB558 in Maryland and across the country.


There truly is HOPE!

http://indyreader.org/content/broad-...ht-due-process
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Old 03-11-2013, 10:36 PM   #2
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How have any Federal courts ruled?
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Old 03-11-2013, 11:46 PM   #3
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It appears that one Federal Judge agreed that the indefinite detention provision was indeed wrong due to being so vague as to allow almost anyone to be detained. However, Second Court of Appeals put a stay on that ruling and has just heard arguments about it. Interestingly enough, three US Senators spoke out in favor of indefinite detention -- Ayotte, Graham, and McCain. Haven't I seen somewhere on this board where the GOP is supposed to be the party supporting freedom? OK, in McCain's case it might just be a case of becoming increasingly senile.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/0...n_2632254.html
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Old 03-11-2013, 11:56 PM   #4
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The GOP does not support freedom. Most of them are owned by the banks and corporate interests, as are most of the Democrats. It's bullshit to think there is any real, substantive difference between the parties.

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Old 03-12-2013, 12:04 AM   #5
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True, politicians exist simply to support their own election/re-election. I believe I once upon a time pointed out the ONLY honest politician in the world, Mayor Stubs of Talkeetna, AK. Alright, it was a cat and the position was honorary, but no raising of taxes, no voter fraud and no corruption or anything like that. All the mayor wants is food and belly rubs. Maybe we need more politicians like that. Can't possibly be any worse than what we currently have in office.
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Old 03-12-2013, 12:52 AM   #6
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That's all anybody should be discussing when it comes to politics how our government is a total joke.
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Old 03-12-2013, 12:58 AM   #7
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A total joke with guns and a kill list that is getting longer every day.

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Old 03-12-2013, 01:22 AM   #8
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The NDAA is a prime example of open ended legislation which can be interpreted for the sake of convienience. If a person has been deemed a Terrorist, then they are a Terrorist. The NDAA was drawn up to thwart the threat of Terrorism which is over emphasized. The particulars in this legislation define Terrorism /Terrorist to such an extent that almost anyone can be considered a Terrorist. If we had a Congress with a set of balls this piece of crap along with other nonsense proposed by this administration would be shot down instamatically.
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Old 03-18-2013, 03:52 AM   #9
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And no replies not even a kiss my ass your kind of mind set is the second biggest problem we have in this world.
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