to challenge their detention in the camp and that they "have constitutional rights"i'll get a story shortly.
6/12/2008 10:42:02 AM
THAT'S UNAMERICAN
6/12/2008 10:51:54 AM
6/12/2008 10:57:32 AM
This is the stupidest thing I've ever heard of. You don't try enemy military soldiers as if they were citizens of the U.S.
6/12/2008 11:24:46 AM
and who's to say they're enemy soldiers?
6/12/2008 11:26:10 AM
they aren't classified as enemy soldiers unfortunately... otherwise we would have to do stuff like not torture them and stuff.
6/12/2008 11:27:18 AM
^ Not to mention most of them were turned in for reward money, not picked up on the battlefield.
6/12/2008 12:08:35 PM
MAGNA CARTAWHAT WHAT
6/12/2008 1:53:02 PM
pandora's box is officially opened.
6/12/2008 1:53:40 PM
WHY DOES THE SUPREME COURT HATE OUR FREEDOM?!?
6/12/2008 1:57:27 PM
Universal application of basic human rights = Pandora's Box?
6/12/2008 1:57:59 PM
You know the dissenting opinion is tenuous when they have to say that we're fighting a war against Islamic Jihadists and 'rulings like this don't help' with no mention to the constitution or any other laws.
6/12/2008 1:59:28 PM
nobody should be held in prison without just cause. the decision, however, surprises me because surely this situation is an extreme and unique one to history. we are opening ourselves to a further and unprecedented bloodletting of taxpayer money with this. right or wrong, these people should have no civil recourse within our court systems. they should, however, be released if innocent and every measure should be taken to be sure that only guilty parties are held.
6/12/2008 2:01:12 PM
Unique to history?How so?
6/12/2008 2:05:31 PM
^^ You're saying that every measure should be taken to be sure that only guilty parties are held, but that the parties being held should have no legal recourse to oppose their detention. This is a logically inconsistent stance.And this situation is a "unique one to history?" Really? REALLY?]
6/12/2008 2:05:59 PM
I don't know if I could call it unique to history, but it's not all that similar to Pearl Harbor.Pearl Harbor was a military attack organized, sanctioned, and carried out by the nation of Japan.
6/12/2008 2:10:14 PM
6/12/2008 2:38:16 PM
Nope, we should call them enemy combatants so they don't fall under the geneva conventions and incarcerate them for 5+ years without hope of trial.
6/12/2008 3:12:39 PM
6/12/2008 3:18:19 PM
^^^i figured this ruling would irritate some people on tww. i don't understand how you can say they should have no legal recourse within our court system when WE are the ones detaining them. if the situation were reversed and americans were being detained in another country i feel as though we'd want our citizens to have legal options within that countrys court system. and perhaps we would be able to solve it in "some international court" if the U.S. EVER chose to follow any international protocol (such as geneva).and do we not use taxpayer money to "prosecute ourselves" all the time??
6/12/2008 3:23:38 PM
Look, I understand your points and I hate the idea of any person detained without cause. Our government needs to show cause or release the prisoner. Period. However, those prisoners are not US citizens and therefore do not deserve civil recourse within our court system. That is my opinion. If their country takes their case on their behalf and brings it to the court system based on international standards, so be it, but as individuals and perceived combatants, their rights do not exist here as far as I am concerned. Obviously, the Supreme Court disagrees with me, but that is my opinion.
6/12/2008 4:00:51 PM
6/12/2008 4:03:57 PM
so all trials of non-citizens should only be held to the standard of political viability?
6/12/2008 4:17:05 PM
6/12/2008 4:28:56 PM
non-citizens within our country legally is a completely different stories. enemy combatents and illegals have no rights to our courts IMO.
6/12/2008 5:01:35 PM
so what do we do with them, then? let them rot in prison until they die without ever having been proven guilty or innocent all the while torturing them for information?
6/12/2008 5:06:08 PM
That's a laughable position. You're saying that, by being alleged to have committed a crime, people who are not US citizens lose any right to a fair trial. What need for a trial would they have were they not already accused of a crime? (I say "accused of a crime" here in the loosest sense of the word, since most of the people in Gitmo have not and will never be actually charged with a crime.)
6/12/2008 5:06:48 PM
So it's okay to spend money to feed, clothes, and house them, but it's not okay to spend money to see if we can let them go or execute them, so that we no longer have to feed, clothes, and house them?And as someone else just pointed out, if someone is here illegally, what do we do? Now, we process them in OUR court system, and deport or detain them (if they're a criminal) as necessary. There is TONS of precedence for handling illegal non-citizens in our court system. It's a completely idiotic position to say because they're not legal citizens or here legally, or whatever it is you're saying that we can't handle them in our courts. Our laws are designed to handle this situation, there's no reason we can't handle them. It's not like giving them a trial instantly will set them free. Our court system has loopholes, but it can't be that bad.
6/12/2008 5:27:44 PM
Have we even convicted anybody on terrorism charges?
6/12/2008 6:14:17 PM
Only citizens of the USA should be tried in a citizen's courtroom. They should be tried in a military court.
6/12/2008 6:46:37 PM
So a Japanese tourist on vacation in America who gets picked up for drunk and disorderly should go to a military court?
6/12/2008 6:53:05 PM
I actually approve of the scotus decision. I do not like the idea of teh gov't being able to imprison someone throwing away the lock and key, simply by attaching the "terror suspect" label. If these guys really are guilty then it should not be a big deal about proving their guilt. "We arrested Samir Al-cameljockey after we intercepted a conversation talking to other terrorist leaders about blowing up xyz building; we then searched his house and found the explosives; blah blah blah".We like to pat ourselves on the back claiming to be the vanguard of spreading freedom and democracy; yet is willing to deny the basic rights of trial to criminal "suspects".
6/12/2008 6:54:12 PM
DaBird is an NCSU alum majored in PolySci, yet he still can't formulate a basic coherent political argument that has any basis in reality.how sad.
6/12/2008 6:56:18 PM
You don't try people arrested in other countries, whom are accused of terrorism against us, in the civilian courts.^ You might want to read it again. I saw his point just from reading the last thing he posted.
6/12/2008 7:03:19 PM
Freed Guantanamo inmates take up arms
6/12/2008 7:07:50 PM
^ what's your point.Do i need to throw up statistics x out of y inmates released from city jails are re-incarcerated within z months.n% of inmates arrested on drug charges caught again dealing after released.So using your logic we just need to keep all convicted inmates in jail since they will likely go back out to assault/rob/deal drugs/etc again.As far as waterboarding I never had much problem with "enhanced" interrogation techniques aka torture; given their was a legitimate reason/threat to which the individual likely possessed useful information. My problem was the political doublespeak of the the Bush admin trying to pretend that waterboarding was torture. Serbia was not committing genocide in the 90's; they were undertaking "ethnic cleansing" of certain groups of people [Edited on June 12, 2008 at 7:16 PM. Reason : ll]
6/12/2008 7:12:57 PM
we just need to listen to the prisoners...understand their feelings...be nice to them...they will change!
6/12/2008 7:14:24 PM
Because this is worth giving up centuries of tradition and the things our country is founded on?Even if it's a military tribunal, these people deserve a trial or some sort of recourse. Leaving aside that this is one of our basic national principles, you don't think there's a chance we're angering anyone by locking them or their relatives up for months or years on end and interrogating the hell out of them?
6/12/2008 7:18:17 PM
you literally cant do anything without angering some people...our national security is more important than being well liked by 6 billion peoplebesides if these pussies didnt have their little loophole of not claiming a country and not wearing a military uniform (while they carry out violent attacks) their rights would be a lot more clearly defined]
6/12/2008 7:19:15 PM
^^ My point is quite clear. Try to grasp the actual numbers here:
6/12/2008 7:19:53 PM
^ well fucking shoot the mother fucker on the battlefield and you will not have to worry about it.For all I know Muhammed Soliman was osama's cook. If he's a terrorist then it shouldn't be hard proving his association to justify his continued incarceration. Otherwise it just makes us look like hypocrits to go around indefinitely imprisoning random people from other countries by listing them as "suspected terrorists"[Edited on June 12, 2008 at 7:30 PM. Reason : ll]
6/12/2008 7:26:10 PM
^ DEY TUK UR TERRORIST RIGHTS!!!1
6/12/2008 7:29:26 PM
^ DRILL SGT. BILL ANAL RAPED ME IN BOOT CAMP AND NOW I AM A MINDLESS JARHEAD INDOCTRINATED WITH MILITARY DOCTRINE AND HAVE LIMITED PERCEPTION OF REALITY BEYOND LETS GO BLOW SHIT UP AND CALL PEOPLE IDIOTS WHO DONT AGREE WITH USWhy do you hate freedom hooksaw? You still have failed to make a credible argument as to why it is a big deal that if they are guilty then it shouldn't be hard to prove it in court to justify their continued imprisonment. [Edited on June 12, 2008 at 7:34 PM. Reason : l]
6/12/2008 7:32:45 PM
can't we just be nice to them? won't our kindness offset their mentality that they must kill us for their mythical god and false promises of virgins in heaven? can't being nice to them become more important than their lifelong commitment to jihad?
6/12/2008 7:35:39 PM
^ i hope that is not directed to me. Ensuring that everyone locked up there is being incarcerated for a legitimate reason and actually linked to terrorist activity is a lot different then stating i want us to shower the prisioners of gitmo with hugs and flowers in order to turn them from their violent ways. If they are linked to 9/11, other plot on US soil, or is an accessory to the many terrorists attacks going on in Iraq/Afghanistan; for all i care they could be executed via firing squad tomorrow.
6/12/2008 7:39:11 PM
^^ LOL. Exactly.[Edited on June 12, 2008 at 7:39 PM. Reason : .]
6/12/2008 7:39:40 PM
its directed at everyone basicallymy point is, EVERY SINGLE PRISON / JAIL / PENAL SYSTEM IN THE WORLD has some people locked up there that are innocent...THAT IS NOT ANYTHING UNIQUE TO GITMO...so if someone's argument is about people being wrongfully locked up, that is nothing new and something that inevitably occurs everywherepeople quickly lose sight though that many of these people would be happy to murder your children...and i'm not exaggerating here
6/12/2008 7:40:44 PM
6/12/2008 8:59:58 PM
Well technically its not in this country.
6/12/2008 9:10:25 PM
^^^ first you say
6/12/2008 9:12:08 PM