The core misconceptions in the 'war on terror'

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Apr 25, 2002
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The core misconceptions in the 'war on terror'
By John Feffer

In September 2002, Maher Arar was passing through JFK airport in New York. He was expecting a simple transit. A Syrian-born Canadian citizen and wireless technology consultant, Arar was traveling home to Ottawa after a vacation with his family in Tunis. The stopover in New York was the best deal he could get with his frequent flyer miles. He had no inkling of what would happen next. He didn't know that he would spend the next 10 months being tortured in a secret jail.

At the airport immigration line, officials pulled Arar aside. They fingerprinted and photographed him. They didn't let him make any phone calls. They didn't let him contact a lawyer. Interrogated about his connections to another Syrian-born Canadian, a bewildered Arar did his best to answer the questions. The authorities were not satisfied. They transferred him to New York's Metropolitan Detention Center where he spent more than a week.

Then, based on evidence that they would not share with him, US immigration officials informed Arar that he would be deported to Syria. He objected that he was a Canadian citizen, that the United States couldn't just send him to another country, particularly not Syria, where they might well torture him. Heedless, officials loaded him onto a private plane and flew him to Jordan, where he was beaten before being driven across the border into Syria.

In Syria, Arar was imprisoned in a cell that was just large enough for him to stand. He was repeatedly tortured and forced to sign a false confession. Only as a result of outside pressure - by his wife, by human-rights organizations, by the Canadian consulate - was he finally released and returned home. Two years later, a Canadian commission of inquiry cleared Arar of all charges of terrorism. Yet the United States still bars him from visiting the country. An innocent man caught up in the machinery of fear created by the "global war on terror", Arar will bear the scars of his experience for the rest of his life. [1]

Arar's story illustrates the key problems with the George W Bush administration's approach to terrorism and how it has defied legal standards at all levels. In the United States, the administration suspended key civil liberties. It imprisoned over 5,000 foreign nationals, subjected 80,000 Arab and Muslim immigrants to fingerprinting and registration, sent 30,000 "national security letters "every year to US businesses demanding information about their customers, and justified the large-scale, warrantless wiretapping of citizens. [2] It denied the right of habeas corpus to both American and non-American detainees and plans to continue to restrict the legal rights of terrorism suspects by trying them in military tribunals rather than civilian courts.


Read the whole article here:
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/IG13Ak03.html
 
May 4, 2002
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www.myspace.com
#2
THA WAR ON TERROR WOW!

that's fucked all back man like i been sayin for months this war on terror bullshit aint nothing but a war on liberty and freedom,
and a fuckin conga line headed straight to fascism.

So Much god dam nazi germany all over again.
But hitler's smilin, winkin, and mispernouncing shit.
 

Hemp

Sicc OG
Sep 5, 2005
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#3
you know bush is really spelled "Busch" (german). You know that george H W Busch's dad supplied a good percentage of the nazi war machine.
 
Feb 8, 2006
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#4
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n0u8SOxbhCk
I thought this song and lyrics with video are pretty right on about war on terror

its
Crying Shame
by
Jack Johnson

"Crying Shame"

It's such a tired game
Will it ever stop
How will this all play out
Out of sight, out of mind

By now we should know
How to communicate instead of coming to blows
We're on a roll
And there ain't no stopping us now
We're burning under control
Isn't it strange how
We're all burning under the same sun
By now we say it's a war for peace
It's the same old game
But do we really want to play?
We could close our eyes it's still there
We could say it's us against them
We can try but nobody wins
Gravity has got a hold on us all
We try to put it out
But it's a growing flame
Using fear as fuel
Burning down our name
And it wont take too long
Cause words are burning same
And who we gunna blame now?

And oh, it's such a crying crying crying shame
It's such a crying crying crying shame
It's such a crying crying crying shame, shame, shame

By now
It's beginning to show
A number of people are numbers who aint coming home
I can close my eyes it's still there
Close my mind be alone
I can close my heart and not care
But gravity has got a hold on us all
It's a terrific price to pay
But in the true sense of the word
Are we using what we've learned?
In the true sense of the word
Are we losing what we were?
It's such a tired game
Will it ever stop?
Is not for me to say
And is it in our blood?
Or is it just our fate?
And how will this all play out
Out of sight, out of mind
And who we gunna blame?
On and on
It's such a crying crying crying shame
It's such a crying crying crying shame shame shame

video with song
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n0u8SOxbhCk
 

V

Sicc OG
Apr 25, 2002
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#5
  • V

    V

Bush could give a fuck about stories like that...and thats just sad...
 

PGBD

Sicc OG
Nov 10, 2004
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#9
Where are the 'core misconceptions'. Everything this person mentioned has been documented and publicly aired. So there aren't any misconceptions unless you don't know how to make sense of information that's provided to you.

Anyway, in war there is collateral damage and in the war on muslims there is collateral profiling. Oh well, get accustomed to it muslims (if you aren't already). That's the price you have to pay for members of your religion and ethnicity acting like over zealous nuts.

And get this in your head's hippys, there is a large number of people in this world, specifically Muslims, that would like to kill as many American as possible. So it is only logical that we as Americans do everything we can to prevent this from coming about even when it means being overly suspicious of our own citizens and taking away their rights until they're proven innocent.
 
Aug 8, 2003
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#11
PGBD said:
Anyway, in war there is collateral damage and in the war on muslims there is collateral profiling. Oh well, get accustomed to it muslims (if you aren't already).
so should that mean they should get used to being stopped at an airport, denied habeas corpus and sent to syria to be tortured?
PGBD said:
That's the price you have to pay for members of your religion and ethnicity acting like over zealous nuts.
wow.. what ethnicity and religion might u be? hispanic right? your really going to fork over to a racist govt, the only thing protecting you from being treated the same way?

PGBD said:
And get this in your head's hippys, there is a large number of people in this world, specifically Muslims, that would like to kill as many American as possible.
as in 'large' numbers,your talking how much? and can you show me a source?
PGBD said:
So it is only logical that we as Americans do everything we can to prevent this from coming about even when it means being overly suspicious of our own citizens and taking away their rights until they're proven innocent.
guilty until proven innocent? since when could someone in a supposedly 'democratically elected government' decree that the they no longer needed 'probable cause' (as per the constitution)?

dictatorship anyone?