Glenn Greenwald's Blog, page 97

January 18, 2012

Chris Dodd's paid SOPA crusading

The Connecticut Mirror, August 30, 2010 – "Dodd Foreswears a Lobbying Career":

WASHINGTON — Sen. Chris Dodd says he still doesn't know what he'll do come January 2011, when, for the first time in 36 years, he will no longer be a member of Congress. But he has ruled out one option.

"No lobbying, no lobbying," Dodd said in a recent interview. That Dodd would forgo a trip through Washington's "revolving door," using his policy and political expertise–and a thick Rolodex–to launch a new career in...

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Published on January 18, 2012 02:30

January 16, 2012

Who are the victims of civil liberties assaults and Endless War?

(updated below)

In The Washington Post yesterday, Law Professor Jonathan Turley has an Op-Ed in which he identifies ten major, ongoing assaults on core civil liberties in the U.S. Many of these abuses were accelerated during the Bush administration in the wake of 9/11, but all have been vigorously continued and/or expanded by President Obama.  Turley points out that these powers have long been deemed (by the U.S.) as the hallmark of tyranny, and argues that their seizure by the U.S...

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Published on January 16, 2012 04:29

January 13, 2012

Arthur Brisbane and selective stenography

The New York Times' Public Editor Arthur Brisbane unwittingly sparked an intense and likely enduring controversy yesterday when he pondered — as though it were some agonizing, complex dilemma — whether news reporters "should challenge 'facts' that are asserted by newsmakers they write about." That's basically the equivalent of pondering in a medical journal whether doctors should treat diseases, or asking in a law review article whether lawyers should defend the legal interests of their...

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Published on January 13, 2012 01:58

January 12, 2012

Iran and the Terrorism game

(updated below)

In the few venues which yesterday denounced as "Terrorism" the ongoing assassinations of Iranian scientists, there was intense backlash against the invocation of that term. That always happens whenever "Terrorism" is applied to acts likely undertaken by Israel, the U.S. or its allies — rather than its traditional use: violence by Muslims against the U.S. and its allies — because accusing Israel and/or the U.S. of Terrorism remains one of the greatest political taboos (even...

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Published on January 12, 2012 03:18

January 11, 2012

More murder of Iranian scientists: still terrorism?

(updated below – Update II)

Several days ago I referenced a controversy that arose in 2007 when the law professor and right-wing blogger Glenn "Instapundit" Reynolds criticized President Bush for not doing enough to stop Iran's nuclear program and then advocated that the U.S. respond by murdering that nation's religious leaders and nuclear scientists. "We should be responding quietly, killing radical mullahs and Iranian atomic scientists . . . ," he argued. The backlash against Reynolds'...

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Published on January 11, 2012 00:57

January 10, 2012

The new WH Chief of Staff and Citigroup

When President Obama last January announced the departure of Rahm Emanuel as White House Chief of Staff, many liberals were furious that his replacement was the Midwest Chairman of JP Morgan and Boeing Director William Daley, who was also an opponent of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and a critic of Obama's health care bill as too leftist. As but one example, Rachel Maddow harshly condemned the choice, noting Daley was a hedge fund manager and "business lobbyist" and "is known for p...

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Published on January 10, 2012 01:58

January 8, 2012

The evil of indefinite detention and those wanting to de-prioritize it

(updated below – Update II)

This Wednesday will mark the ten-year anniversary of the opening of the Guantanamo prison camp. In The New York Times, one of the camp's former prisoners, Lakhdar Boumediene, has an incredibly powerful Op-Ed recounting the gross injustice of his due-process-free detention, which lasted seven years. It was clear from the start that the accusations against this Bosnian citizen — who at the time of the 9/11 attack was the Red Crescent Society's director of...

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Published on January 08, 2012 03:18

January 6, 2012

Michael Hastings on war journalists

Rolling Stone's Michael Hastings — whose 2010 article on Gen. Stanley McChrystal ended the Afghanistan War commander's career by accurately reporting numerous controversial statements made in a series of interviews — embodies the pure journalistic ethos. Some of the most celebrated establishment military reporters in America attacked Hastings for that article on the ground that it violated a sacred trust between Generals and war reporters (The New York Times' John Burns), and even baselessly ...

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Published on January 06, 2012 07:07

January 5, 2012

Democratic Party priorities

(updated below)

Much of the reaction to the article I wrote last Saturday regarding progressives, the Obama presidency and Ron Paul (as well as reaction to this essay by Matt Stoller and even this tweet from Katrina vanden Heuvel) relied on exactly the sort of blatant distortions that I began that article by anticipating and renouncing: that I was endorsing Paul as the best presidential candidate, that I was urging progressives to sacrifice reproductive rights in order to vote for him over...

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Published on January 05, 2012 02:50

January 3, 2012

Matt Taibbi on the 2012 election

Writing — or, more accurately, typing — is difficult for me today as a result of a disagreement two of my dogs had with each other earlier this morning, one they shamefully attempted to resolve through the use of their teeth (rather than through diplomacy, as they've been taught). When, being the natural peacemaker that I am, I attempted to separate them, one of the combatants mistook my hand for the face of the dog at whom she was angry, and sunk her quite large teeth into that hand...

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Published on January 03, 2012 10:47

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