So, do you remember Obama’s first act as President? He shut down Gitmo. It seems to still be there, however. (See interview, below.)
I do remember he is a Nobel Peace Prize Laureate. I once said that there is no such thing as irony, but if there was, his having a hit list of who to assassinate next is a good approximation of what Irony is.
Whoever can prove what Gitmo is still doing there, other than continuing torture, wins a free entry in the Publisher’s Clearing House Sweepstakes. Could be worth millions, but won’t be. Still, you have a better chance of winning that than living to see Gitmo closed.
Another prize could be a free cruise to the Pope’s home town in Argentina on Carnival Cruises. If you like, you could also buy at a discount the new Notre Dame basketball uniforms.
Sorry, no openings as a commentator on the Jodi Arias murder trial as it is carried on several stations and also a cable network. Watching it, however, has replaced the death penalty in several states.
I am giving myself an award for being mellow. Today, at the store, some little old lady grabbed my arm and said "They finally got Whole Wheat Bread!" Last century I might have stuck my fingers up her nose and ripped it off her face. Today I just said "I am so happy for you". How's that??!!
On one single day, last week (I haven’t looked since) these were the stats for the ABSURD TIMES:
EntryPageviews
China
117
United States
80
Germany
54
Russia
53
France
18
Sweden
17
Ukraine
13
Israel
11
Turkey
10
Poland
8
Any idea why 117 Chinamen decided to visit? The last time something that weird happened as when about 200 Mauritanians decided to visit.
I can't get this text any larger, sorry:
Over 100 Guantánamo Prisoners on Hunger Strike, Citing Threat of Return to "Darkest Days Under Bush"
More than 100 detainees held in the U.S. military prison at Guantánamo Bay are reportedly entering their fifth week of a hunger strike sparked by deteriorating conditions. News of the hunger strike first emerged last week, but it appears the action involves far more prisoners than previously thought. In a letter to his attorney, one detainee wrote: "We are in danger. One of the soldiers fired on one of the brothers a month ago. Before that, they send the emergency forces with M-16 weapons into one of the brothers’ cell blocks. ... Now they want to return us to the darkest days under [George W.] Bush. They said this to us. Please do something." We’re joined by Pardiss Kebriaei, senior staff attorney with the Center for Constitutional Rights and counsel for one of the hunger strikers. [includes rush transcript]
TRANSCRIPT
This is a rush transcript. Copy may not be in its final form.
NERMEEN SHAIKH: More than a hundred detainees held in the U.S. military prison at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, are reportedly entering their fifth week of a hunger strike against deteriorating conditions. News of the unrest comes as U.S. military officials have confirmed a guard fired rubber bullets at detainees in January for the first time in the prison’s history. The incident took place on a soccer field for cooperative captives when, authorities say, a detainee sought the attention of a guard in a watchtower who controlled a gate leading to a pathway back to the prison. The detainee allegedly tried to scale the fence.
Meanwhile, more information about the ongoing hunger strike has begun to trickle out in letters from detainees. Some say Arabic interpreters have searched their Qur’ans in ways that constitute desecration according to their religious beliefs. Others report guards have been taking away detainee possessions.
AMY GOODMAN: Yemini detainee Bashir al-Marwalah wrote in a letter to his lawyer, quote, "We are in danger. One of the soldiers fired on one of the brothers a month ago. Before that, they send the emergency forces with M-16 weapons into one of the brothers’ cell blocks. ... Now they want to return us to the darkest days under Bush. They said this to us. Please do something," he wrote. Lawyers for the detainees say some prisoners who have refused to eat for weeks in protest are now "coughing up blood" and "losing consciousness."
For more, we’re joined by Pardiss Kebriaei, senior staff attorney with the Center for Constitutional Rights. She spoke last Thursday with her client Ghaleb Al-Bihani, who is one of the hunger strikers. Welcome to Democracy Now!
PARDISS KEBRIAEI: Thank you.
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