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#278148 - 08/10/08 02:41 AM
Re: Salim Ahmed Hamdan
[Re: lizbeth]
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TM Chairman of the Board
Registered: 09/22/00
Loc: Arkansas, USA
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Yeah, but what does "Yemeni chauffeur = terrorist?" have to do with that? Why did you ask that question? What that question not important to what you were trying to say? If that's the case, then whey do you get so bent out of shape if somebody doesn't bend over backwards to answer your questions? I'm still confused. Is the fact that Hamden was from Yemen have any importance in this? If not, why was that bit of information included? What about "chauffeur." I assumed you were asking is maybe his national heritage and current occupation had anything to do with being a terrorist? Was I wrong? I asked for a clarification and you came back with the ramble about him being found guilty of aiding and abetting a terrorist and I guess you're acting as the defense attorney (why am I surprised by that?) and suggesting he wasn't "aiding and abetting" or that "aiding and abetting" a crime isn't a crime in itself? But then why didn't you ask "Does a Yemeni Chauffeur = Aiding and Abetting?" Why, you more you think about this the stranger it gets. All I know is I sure don't want to hear any more nonsense about how nobody answers you questions because when we try to answer we discover you didn't really want your question answered. You just wanted to complain about it not being answered. That seems hardly rational. . o O (Go back to sleep, Lawmage. False alarm.) 
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#278149 - 08/10/08 03:08 AM
Re: Salim Ahmed Hamdan
[Re: Ray]
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veteran member
Registered: 11/29/06
Loc: PNW
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Yeah, but what does "Yemeni chauffeur = terrorist?" have to do with that? Why did you ask that question? With what, Ray? I honestly don't know what you're talking about. Why did you ask that question? What that question not important to what you were trying to say? If that's the case, then whey do you get so bent out of shape if somebody doesn't bend over backwards to answer your questions? I'm still confused. So am I--by your response. Are you so tired by the differences in our time zones, Ray, that you only submit a posting in order to submit a posting?
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#278304 - 08/12/08 01:13 AM
Re: Salim Ahmed Hamdan
[Re: Lawmage]
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veteran member
Registered: 11/29/06
Loc: PNW
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I know the MCA set up "a process to try detainees for what amounts to war crimes" etc. But it was enacted only after much political and legal wrangling, including an earlier decision by the Supreme Court that rejected what Mr. Bush wanted--to deny the detainees the right to habeous corpus. This is the first time since the Nuremberg trials wherein a military commission had been used. (I only know about the Nurembuerg trials, btw, through the Spencer Tracy movie "Judgement at Nuremberg." And, as I recall, Tracy played a retired civilian judge sent to hear the cases of some German judges who were accused of crimes against humanity.) Whatever, legalists are apparently still fighting the enactment of the MCA. With all that in mind, I have a hard time seeing just how the trial and conviction of Salim Ahmed Hamdan would serve as an indictment of the Military Commissions Act. To answer your question, Law, about how Hamdan's trial would serve as an indictment of the MCA, I offer this, taken from gaurdian.co.uk: The Hamdan trial is of huge legal and symbolic significance, as it has become the conduit through which the ongoing tussle between the US judiciary and the Bush administration over Guantánamo has been played out.
Only one case emerging from Guantánamo has so far reached a conclusion - that of the Australian David Hicks which stopped short of trial after he pleaded guilty to providing material support for terrorism.
It was through Hamdan's case that the US supreme court, in June 2006, ruled the military tribunals illegal because they violated the terms of the Geneva Conventions on the treatment of prisoners of war. The Bush administration riposted with the Military Commissions Act of 2006 that forced the trials to go ahead.
Human rights lawyers continue to protest about the legal system set up under the act which they say is a gross distortion of domestic US norms. But, remember, I also said it could be used as a defense of the MCA. Hamdan got a light sentence. What sort of sentences will the few 'heavy duty' detainees receive?
Edited by lizbeth (08/12/08 01:15 AM) Edit Reason: deleted an extraneous word
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