Every Friday some people, politicians, corporations and government bureaucracies, slip out news they don’t want people to pay attention to. The assumption is that most people aren’t paying attention on Friday. That’s true for most, but not me.

Here’s what I have so far.

AG Holder didn’t reveal all legal papers to Senate

WASHINGTON — Justice Department officials say that when senators were considering Eric Holder’s nomination to be attorney general last year, he didn’t given them all the legal briefs he had signed from his time in private practice. Read more

Bloomberg’s Fling Mulls Senate Run

New York politics is about to get messier. The state’s Republican Party has reportedly tapped Diana Taylor, the former state banking superintendent and longtime girlfriend of Mayor Bloomberg, to run against Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand. Read more

Texas ed board adopts social studies standards

AUSTIN, Texas — The Texas State Board of Education agreed to new social studies standards on Friday after the far-right faction wielded its power to shape the lessons that will be taught to millions of students on American history, the U.S. free enterprise system, religion and other topics. Read more

Attorney General Eric Holder

The only question remaining now is whether former Vice President Dick Cheney personally participated in waterboarding people. When it comes to torture, hell yes, Cheney was totally on board.

On Sunday, Cheney unequivocally stated the Bush administration tortured prisoners. On ABC’s “This Week” Cheney said, “I was a big supporter of waterboarding.”

I guess one could argue that waterboarding isn’t torture, or illegal. But if you remember Vietnam, you might recall the story about the US soldier who was court-martialled for waterboarding a North Vietnamese prisoner. The Washington Post ran a photo of the torture.

That was back when the US had a news media willing and able to challenge the government. Now we just have media without the news.

“Water boarding was designated as illegal by US generals in Vietnam 40 years ago,” ABC News reported in 2005 in their story “History of an Interrogation Technique: Water Boarding.”

Sen. John McCain(R-Ariz), who was tortured as a POW in Vietnam, said the water-board technique is a “very exquisite torture” that should be outlawed, according to the ABC News report.

Waterboarding has been outlawed. We signed the Geneva Convention that prohibits torture. And here’s what the US Justice Department’s Criminal Manual says about torture.

Section 2340A of Title 18, United States Code, prohibits torture committed by public officials under color of law against persons within the public official’s custody or control. Torture is defined to include acts specifically intended to inflict severe physical or mental pain or suffering. (It does not include such pain or suffering incidental to lawful sanctions.) The statute applies only to acts of torture committed outside the United States. There is Federal extraterritorial jurisdiction over such acts whenever the perpetrator is a national of the United States or the alleged offender is found within the United States, irrespective of the nationality of the victim or the alleged offender.

So where’s the Justice Department investigation Attorney General Eric Holder was yammering about last year?

The story is that Holder is waiting on the Office of Professional Responsibility to complete its report on the Bush torture program. Well, it’s been a year now, and it looks a lot more like a cover-up than an investigation.

The sad truth is that this is NOT a nation of laws but rather men, and this case proves that. These men can break any law they want and get away with it.

Maybe an international war crimes tribunal is a more appropriate venue anyway?

Here are links to stories last year about the pending Bush torture investigation.
Criminal investigation into CIA treatment of detainees expected LA Times
Top prosecutor orders probe into interrogations; Obama shifts onus CNN
Holder Probe Would Be Big Break From Bush Torture Policy Washington Independent
Justice Dept. Report Advises Pursuing C.I.A. Abuse Cases New York Times

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