--- In [email protected], "raunchydog" <raunchy...@...> wrote:
<snip>
> Anyway, they're missing out on the fun of engaging in the
> world of facts and having a voice that is free to say to 
> Obama, "Stop the war. End torture and extraordinary
> rendition. Domestic spying threatens our democracy.
> Indefinite detention obviates Habeas Corpus. Invoking
> state secrets privilege to cover Bush's crimes is wrong.
> Reviving the military commissions act, WTF?" 
> 
> These are issues at the core of why Obots and liberals
> hated Bush. There's no figuring Obot reality avoidance,
> except that Obots LOVE Obama. Love is blind, indeed.

>From Glenn Greenwald at Salon.com yesterday:

The American Prospect's Adam Serwer becomes the latest to
comprehensively chronicle what is no longer in dispute 
among reasonable people:  "the Obama administration's 
failure to reverse the trajectory of U.S. national-
security policy and of its ultimate decision to embrace 
the core framework of the Bush administration's 'war on 
terror'."  As Serwer puts it:  "Obama hasn't departed 
from the Bush administration tactics on national 
security, he's just changed tone."  Relatedly, The 
Washington Post publishes a letter from the ACLU's 
Anthony Romero who -- responding to The Post's 
unsurprising editorial support for Obama's assassination 
programs -- explains why such policies are plainly 
"unlawful."

Isn't it amazing that it even needs to be debated whether 
the President has the right to order the death sentence 
for American citizens far away from any battlefield with 
no trials given or even charges posed?  Even more amazing 
is that it's actually not debated -- not because it's 
widely understood that the President has no such power, 
but because, between the authoritarian GOP and the Obama-
loyal Democratic Party, there is bipartisan consensus 
for any lawless and Constitution-destroying actions Obama 
embraces.  That outcome -- bipartisan consensus for what 
were once deemed the province of radical, right-wing 
Bush/Cheney policies -- is, as much as anything, a key 
impact of the Obama presidency.  As Serwer writes, 
Obama's signature is "embracing Bush-era policies with 
minor substantive changes and a dramatic change in tone.  
This is Bush with a smile."

http://www.salon.com/all_salon/?page=7#postid-updateA5


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