Americans
already detained under NDAA?
The
plaintiffs that are suing US President Barack Obama over his
insistence on keeping the National Defense Authorization Act on the
books said Thursday that they fear Americans are already being held
indefinitely and without trial under the NDAA
28
September, 2012
US
President Barack Obama refrained from even once commenting on his
efforts to keep his power to indefinitely detain Americans without
charge when he appeared on
Reddit.com recently and urged users to “Ask Me Anything.” His
opponents in the matter aren’t shying away from speaking up online,
though.
The
plaintiffs in the case to ban the White House
from imprisoning Americans
indefinitely without trial or due justice took to Reddit on
Thursday to answer questions involving the National Defense
Authorization Act of Fiscal Year 2012, or the NDAA, and blamed
corrupt media and a broken governmental establishment for letting the
Obama administration maintain its to book Americans in military
prisons without charge.
On
December 31, 2011, President Obama authorized the NDAA, and with it
he approved a controversial provision that permits the government to
indefinitely detain US citizens without trial for mere allegations of
ties to suspected terrorists. Journalists and activists filed
a lawsuit against
the president earlier this year over the provision, Section 1021,
which US Federal Judge Katherine Forrest in turn agreed
was unconstitutional.
Last month Judge Forrest decided that an earlier,
temporary injunction on the clause should be made permanent, but the
Obama Justice Department pleaded for
an emergency stay only hours later. A lone federal appeals judge has
since heard that plea and has momentarily blocked Judge
Forrest’s injunction. Now pending the results of an appeals panel’s
formal investigation, the NDAA’s indefinite detention provision
remains on the books.
On
Thursday, the plaintiffs in the case — journalist Chris Hedges,
activist Tangerine Bolan, Pentagon Papers leaker Dan Ellsberg, their
attorneys and others — told users of Reddit to ask them anything.
“The
Obama DOJ has vigorously opposed these efforts, and immediately
appealed her ruling and requested an emergency stay on the
injunction – claiming the US would incur ‘irreparable harm’
if the president lost the power to use Section 1021 – and
detain anyone, anywhere until the end of hostilities on a whim. This
case will probably make its way to the Supreme Court,” the
plaintiffs acknowledged in their introduction.
From
there, President Obama’s opponents in federal court combed through
hundreds of posts to answer questions regarding the NDAA over the
course of several hours. And although the plaintiffs have not exactly
been silent with the status of their fight since suing the White
House earlier this year, the insight they offered on Reddit provided
a fresh update on the case against the NDAA amid some of the
government’s most unusual legal maneuvers yet.
Offering
his take on the case, Hedges said that he even believes the NDAA’s
indefinite detention clause is already being used to imprison
Americans, “because
they filed an emergency appeal.”
“If
the Obama administration simply appealed it, as we expected, it would
have raised this red flag,” Hedges
added.“But
since they were so aggressive it means that once Judge Forrest
declared the law invalid, if they were using it, as we expect, they
could be held in contempt of court. This was quite disturbing, for it
means, I suspect, that US citizens, probably dual nationals, are
being held in military detention facilities almost certainly overseas
and maybe at home.”
“The
signing statement is the most ridiculous part to this for me. He
writes this statement saying he's not happy about the power existing,
but then his administration fights so hard to keep that specific
power in place,” Reddit
user devilrobotjesus responded.
“If
Obama didn't want it to happen, he would not have signed it,
especially after stating that he would veto it,” co-counsel
Carl Mayer explained. Mayer has represented the plaintiffs in the
case of Hedges
v. Obama and
said that he plans on continuing his pursuit to take indefinite
detention off the books.
“We
will do whatever it takes,” Mayers
added. “We
are prepared for a Supreme Court battle.”
Activist
and journalist Tangerine Bolan is also insistent on prevailing over
the Obama administration, but says “The
biggest obstruction to our winning this case . . . is our broken
systems.” Bolan
blames a lack of media coverage, insufficient public awareness “and
the government behaving very badly, even in court, on the
record,” for
the difficulties the plaintiffs have had to endure, adding that the
Obama administration’s constant missteps have been noticed by no
one except “seven
plaintiffs, four attorneys, one federal judge and the activists who
have been following this case.”
“Amazing,” she
added.
Journalist
Chris Hedges extrapolated on Bolan’s opinion, singling out “a
corporate-owned system of information” for
not informing Americans that they can be imprisoned without trial at
this very moment.
“MSNBC,
which is a propaganda arm of the Democratic establishment, just as
Fox is a propaganda arm of the Republican establishment, is not going
to raise this as Obama is as guilty as Romney. If we had a healthy
press this would have gotten more coverage, although the print media,
and in particular my old paper the NY Times, finally did good
coverage,” Hedges
wrote.
Daniel
Ellsberg, the former Defense Department employee who achieved
notoriety a generation earlier by leaking what became known as the
Pentagon Papers, agreed that the system is severely in fault in this
instance.
“Virtually
every public institution has failed us gravely. Not only the
executive, but the courts, congress, most of the media and most of
the churches,” Ellsberg
wrote on Reddit. “Radical
reform is needed, even to the point of non-violent revolution. “
Elsewhere,
the panel touched on why they believe the Obama administration is so
adamantly fighting to keep the NDAA legal.
“It
is quite possible that the NDAA is . . . a way to get Julian Assange
and WikiLeaks,” Bolan
claimed. “While
the USG has tried to paint us as irrational, delusional and
ridiculous, you see the slippery slope here.”
On
his part, Hedges said that emails hacked by Anonymous and released by
Wikileaks show that the US government has attempted to "tie
a legitimate dissident group to terrorism and strip them of their
right of dissent,” to
which Bolan follows up with an explanation that supports the ramped
up attempts from the White House to persecute whistleblowers and
leakers under President Obama
“Yes,
of course, if [Assange] is an enemy of the state, then yes, [The New
York Times] could be considered to have communicated with the enemy.
And perhaps the NDAA is a way to finally nail him,” Bolan
said.
A
three-judge appeals panel is expected to soon weigh in on the stay
placed on Judge Forrest’s injunction, in the meantime keeping
Section 1021 and the rest of the NDAA applicable to every American.
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