Daily Kos

Website: http://home.earthlink.net/~fsrhine
Email: fsrhine[at]gmail[dot]com

I'm a 47-year-old lawyer and chess master. I live with my wife, our 17-year-old daughter, one dog, and two cats, in Park Ridge, Illinois (next to Chicago), about a block from where Hillary grew up.

Bush, Congressional Rethuglicans aim to destroy judicial review

Fri Sep 22, 2006 at 03:34:57 PM PDT

The Supreme Court's landmark 1803 decision in Marbury v. Madison established the power of judicial review: the Supreme Court's ability to strike down laws that it finds violate the Constitution. Marbury is generally considered the most important Supreme Court decision in history. Chief Justice Marshall wrote for a unanimous Court in Marbury that, "It is emphatically the province and duty of the judicial department to say what the law is."  In the intervening two centuries, the Supreme Court has come to be universally accepted as the final arbiter of the meaning of the Constitution. Until now. The pro-torture "compromise" recently approved by the Bush administration and those "courageous" Congressional Republicans (McCain, Warner, Graham) is nothing less than an attempt to destroy judicial review and give Bush, not the courts, the ultimate authority to interpret the Constitution. There's more after the fold:

Re-Improved Colbert transcript (now with complete text of Colbert-Thomas video!)

Sun Apr 30, 2006 at 11:04:01 AM PDT

UPDATE: Dan Froomkin, in his May 1, 2006 "White House Briefing" column in the Washington Post, writes, "Daily Kos blogger Frederick seems to have the most extensive transcript of Colbert’s talk." A nice recognition to receive from an outstanding journalist.

I've taken the existing transcripts I've seen of Stephen Colbert's brilliant monologue at the White House Correspondents Dinner, and the actual footage (complete video available at Democratic Underground and Google Video; more links to it here and here), and edited the transcripts (correcting spelling and punctuation, adding mistakenly omitted words, etc.) to produce the following improved transcript. I have now also transcribed all of Colbert's Press Secretary "audition video." Continue below the fold with me.

Why Does the State Department Hate America?

Tue Mar 28, 2006 at 10:13:52 AM PDT

As we know from the Bush administration, Fox News, and the Right blogosphere, the liberal media is failing to report all the great news coming out of Iraq. I figured I'd have to travel there myself to experience firsthand the democratic wonderfulness that is Iraq. I headed over to the United States State Department website to find out what I needed to know for my trip. Imagine my shock when I found out that the State Department was just as negative about Iraq as the liberal media!

Atrios discontinues his blog!

Wed Jun 29, 2005 at 08:49:40 PM PDT

Shocking news! Atrios, evidently fearing the possibility of new FEC regulations that could impinge upon his freedom to support and solicit donations to political candidates, has discontinued his famous "Eschaton" blog. It's not as bad as it sounds, though:  he has redesignated it an "Online Magazine of News, Commentary, and Editorial."

http://tinyurl.com/7jbuh

There's more below the fold:

ACLU Sues Rumsfeld for War Crimes

Tue Mar 01, 2005 at 04:06:41 PM PDT

The ACLU and Human Rights First have sued Rumsfeld on behalf of eight men who say that they were tortured by military forces under Rumsfeld's command. The lawsuit was filed this morning in federal district court in Chicago.

The distinguished legal scholar (I don't know if he/she wants his/her name used) who sent me this happy news noted:

In Nuremberg and later in proceedings of the International Criminal Courts for Yugoslavia and Rwanda, a doctrine of per se ministerial liability for systematic abuses of detainees in wartime was crafted. Applying the legal standards of those cases to the current war, Donald Rumsfeld would clearly go to prison, or perhaps face the death penalty.

British soldiers urinate on, torture, and kill Iraqis

Sun May 02, 2004 at 06:52:39 PM PDT

Unbelievable. The British newpaper the Mirror has a story, including photographs, detailing British soldiers urinating on Iraqi prisoners, beating them for hours at a time, and probably killing them in some instances (e.g. throwing a prisoner off a truck, reportedly throwing prisoners off a bridge, etc.). Go read it yourself. It's too disgusting for me to excerpt.

One of Billmon's readers has made an amazing discovery on the Internet: the diary of Joe Ryan, one of the American interrogators at Abu Ghraib prison.

Poll: Is Dubya among the 10 million best qualified?

Thu Nov 27, 2003 at 05:24:48 PM PDT

The United States has a population of about 280 million people.  Do you think Dubya is more qualified than most of those people to be President of the United States?
Poll

Do you think George W. Bush is among the 10 million Americans most qualified to be President of the United States?

8%4 votes
92%46 votes

| 50 votes | Vote | Results

Melanie has a blog!

Sun Nov 16, 2003 at 02:55:04 PM PDT

For those of you who liked the stuff posted by Melanie, formerly a guest host here, she has just started her own blog called Just a Bump in the Beltway.

Another Iraq war whopper

Sun Nov 02, 2003 at 06:11:56 PM PDT

On April 23, 2003, Andew Natsios, the administrator of the United States Agency for International Development, unequivocally told Ted Koppel on Nightline that the United States was going to spend no more than $1.7 billion max to rebuild Iraq.  An excerpt:

TED KOPPEL
(Off Camera) . . . I want to be sure that I understood you correctly. You're saying the, the top cost for the US taxpayer will be $1.7 billion. No more than that?

ANDREW NATSIOS
For the reconstruction. And then there's 700 million in the supplemental budget for humanitarian relief, which we don't competitively bid 'cause it's charities that get that money.

TED KOPPEL
(Off Camera) I understand. But as far as reconstruction goes, the American taxpayer will not be hit for more than $1.7 billion no matter how long the process takes?

ANDREW NATSIOS
That is our plan and that is our intention. And these figures, outlandish figures I've seen, I have to say, there's a little bit of hoopla involved in this.

Calpundit (from whom I stole this story) reports that for some strange reason this transcript apparently is no longer on the USAID's website. Surprise, surprise.  He got it from the Google cache.  Thank heaven for Google.

Calling the Dog

Sun Nov 02, 2003 at 05:26:56 PM PDT

Buster!
Come on, you Formidable Pharaoh of Fur,
King of Canines,
Baron of Beasts,
Prince of Pets,
Potentate of Pooches,
Monarch of Mongrels,
Maharajah of Mutts,
Sultan of Slobber,
Duke of Drool,
Wizard of Woof,
Avatar of Alliteration!
Busterella!
Dog of the Galaxy!

Kos Baby Weight Poll

Sun Nov 02, 2003 at 03:24:39 PM PDT

How much will Kos and Elisa's baby weigh?
Poll

How much will Kos and Elisa's baby weigh?

0%0 votes
3%1 votes
13%4 votes
37%11 votes
27%8 votes
13%4 votes
0%0 votes
0%0 votes
0%0 votes
3%1 votes

| 29 votes | Vote | Results

Kos Baby Gender Poll

Sun Nov 02, 2003 at 03:17:13 PM PDT

What will the sex of Kos and Elisa's new baby be?
Poll

Will Kos and Elisa's baby be a . . .?

36%7 votes
63%12 votes

| 19 votes | Vote | Results

Does our War Against Iraq Violate International Law?

Fri Oct 31, 2003 at 08:21:26 PM PDT

I was looking at the judgment in the Nuremberg Trials the other day.  There is a strong argument that our war against Iraq violates international law as enunciated in that judgment.  "The judgment of the International Military Tribunal was handed down on September 30-October 1, 1946. Among notable features of the decision was the conclusion, in accordance with the London Agreement, that to plan or instigate an aggressive war is a crime under the principles of international law."

Was the war on Iraq an "aggressive war"?  Oddly, it seems that there has been difficulty reaching consensus on the exact definition of that term, as shown by this article by one of the Nuremberg prosecutors.

Presumably a war would be "non-aggressive" if it were waged in response to the other country's attack on one's country (e.g., Pearl Harbor) or one's ally (e.g., Iraq's 1991 invasion of Kuwait).  But Iraq did not attack the United States:  as President Bush recently belatedly admitted, Iraq had nothing to do with the September 11, 2001 attacks against the United States.  Iraq had seized Kuwait long before, but we successfully fought a war in 1991 to restore Kuwait's sovereignty, so that can hardly justify waging war against Iraq again in 2003.

What about weapons of mass destruction?  Even assuming that the United States reasonably believed that Iraq had WMD's, that cannot suffice to make our war against Iraq "non-aggressive."  Many countries, emphatically including the United States, have WMD's.

Perhaps our war against Iraq could properly be deemed non-aggressive if we reasonably believed that Iraq posed an imminent threat to us, for example if we had a strong basis for believing that it possessed large quantities of WMD's and intended to use them against us in the near future.  (Ironically, conservatives are denying that the administration claimed that Iraq posed an imminent threat. Josh Marshall has a contest
to disprove that contention (scroll down to Oct. 30 2:18 p.m. entry).  But if there was no imminent threat, that would only prove beyond a doubt that this was an aggressive war.)

But it appears that the administration's claims that Iraq had WMD's were massively over-hyped.  Moreover, even if we had a basis for thinking that Iraq had some WMD's (this was commonly believed, even by opponents of the war), there was no apparent reason for thinking that Iraq had an imminent intent to use them against the United States.  Our 1991 war against Iraq had surely engendered ill will by it against the United States, yet we had no evidence that Iraq had been involved in any actual or planned attacks in the intervening 12 years.  Iraq's willingness to allow U.N. weapons inspectors in, and the fact that the inspectors found no WMD's, also strongly undercut any claim that our subsequent war against Iraq was non-aggressive.

The inescapable conclusion appears to be that our war against Iraq was an aggressive war that violated international law. Sadly, the United States has come a long way, in the wrong direction, since Supreme Court Justice Robert Jackson's August 12, 1945 statement that "our position is that no grievances or policies will justify resort to aggressive war.  It is utterly renounced and condemned as an instrument of policy."

Employee relations, Republican style

Sat Oct 25, 2003 at 10:28:45 AM PDT

1.  Three citrus contractors were sentenced to prison terms Wednesday for enslaving undocumented farm workers, threatening them with violence and holding them hostage over alleged debts.

The three men were convicted in June of involuntary servitude, harboring undocumented workers, interfering with interstate commerce by extortion and using a firearm.

Brothers Ramiro and Juan Ramos employed more than 700 farm laborers, many of them undocumented immigrants from Mexico.

They each were sentenced to 12 years and three months in prison and must forfeit real estate and personal property worth $3 million. Their cousin, Jose Ramos, was sentenced to 10 years, three months in prison.

Defense attorney Joaquin Perez said the Ramoses were scapegoats for a larger industry-wide problem.

. . .

[Coalition for Immokalee Workers staff] member Julia Perkins said it was the fifth case that resulted in convictions on similar slavery charges in as many years. She accused the [Florida] state agriculture industry of looking the other way as contractors employ illegal aliens who have few rights. http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2002/11/21/national/main530239.shtml

2. In a sweeping crackdown on undocumented workers, federal agents arrested more than 300 people at Wal-Mart stores in 21 states Thursday and raided the retail giant's world headquarters in Arkansas.

. . .

The cleaning crews did not receive health insurance and were paid below the minimum wage, sometimes as little as $2 a day, a federal official said. http://www.usatoday.com/money/industries/retail/2003-10-23-walmart-arrests_x.htm


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