Search This Blog

Translate

Blog Archive

Middleboro Review 2

NEW CONTENT MOVED TO MIDDLEBORO REVIEW 2

Toyota

Since the Dilly, Dally, Delay & Stall Law Firms are adding their billable hours, the Toyota U.S.A. and Route 44 Toyota posts have been separated here:

Route 44 Toyota Sold Me A Lemon



Sunday, April 9, 2017

RSN: Ronnie Dugger | Trump's Illegal Act of War Against Syria




It's Live on the HomePage Now: 
Reader Supported News

Sure, I'll make a donation!

Ronnie Dugger | Trump's Illegal Act of War Against Syria 
The guided-missile destroyer Porter launching a Tomahawk missile in the Mediterranean Sea. (photo: MC3 Ford Williams/U.S. Navy/AP) 
Ronnie Dugger, Reader Supported News 
Dugger writes: "Let's be clear. Thursday, in our names, President Trump committed an act of war firing 59 Tomahawk missiles into Syria without authority from Congress and therefore without authority from us, the American people." 
READ MORE

et’s be clear.
Thursday, in our names, President Trump committed an act of war firing 59 Tomahawk missiles into Syria without authority from Congress and therefore without authority from us, the American people.
Under the Constitution only Congress can declare war. Trump did not ask Congress for war or for authority to use our military forces against Syria.
By no stretch of sophistry does George W. Bush’s 2001 authorization from Congress to use our military force against Al Qaeda and associated terrorists have any defensible connection 16 years later to Trump’s bombing Syria during its civil war, which so far has killed 400,000 people.
Trump called his bombing “retaliation,” but in the atrocity he gave as his reason, Syrians, not Americans, were gassed, 85 dying, more than 500 sickened. As Senator Rand Paul, R-Ky., said Friday, “the United States was not attacked.” Because of that and since there is no declaration of war or statutory authority for Trump’s act of war, he has also violated the War Powers Resolution of 1973.
Trump ordered what he did as a military dictator, which he is not. His commanding generals, whose own rules of war require them to refuse to obey an illegal order, obeyed his illegal order illegally. If their crime of aggression now metastasizes into a multinational war, even World War III, all of that will be on all of us as an American war of aggression prohibited under international law since the end of World War II at Nuremberg.
With Congress, as scheduled, recessing the day after these bombings for two weeks, at the least members of Congress ought to demand publicly from their home areas that Trump and his generals confer with and obey Congress before committing any further acts of war on Syria. Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont said Friday that Trump “must come to Congress to authorize any further use of force against the Assad regime.” Nancy Pelosi, the minority leader of the House, asked Speaker Paul Ryan to call members back into session to “debate any decision to place our men and women in uniform in harm’s way.”
Of course now Trump must stand ready to protect or withdraw our thousand or so troops in Syria if they come under attack after his bombing, and in the same meanwhile, Mr. President, if you do not call a special session on this, then until you consult with and hear from Congress, in respect for the people of the United States, stand back.
War criminal Assad’s hideous, brutal war crime, again exploding the weapon of mass murder, sarin poison gas, upon his own people, should be prosecuted by both the International Criminal Court and, at our country’s initiative, the United Nations. Let Russia use their UN veto to protect Assad’s mass murders if they dare.
Did Trump’s act of war while warning Syria’s war ally Russia in advance constitute what he dramatized Thursday night, or was his fear of being impeached over collusion with Russia a major or controlling motivation? There is much more that should be asked and said, because Trump’s high crime Thursday ordering an act of war is impeachable, as are:
  • his nakedly selfish refusal to place his assets in a blind trust as required by the Constitution;

  • his presidential libels from the White House uttered against President Obama and other citizens;

  • his violation of his constitutional duty to see that the laws are faithfully executed by his executive orders directing his subordinates to undercut or disregard a large number of our laws in force;

  • his calling out on national and world TV while a candidate that he welcomed it if Russia had hacked Hillary Clinton’s missing emails, and urging them to make them public if they had them, along with whatever else he and/or his agents may have been doing to help Russia suborn, in his favor, the U.S. election he was in —

  • and alas, whatever other high crimes and misdemeanors he may commit if and as his elephantine ego and what we might understand to be his mental moral illness continue to cause him to put himself first, ahead of the country he is the president of.
At this moment, though, fellow citizens, I believe we need to stop, think carefully about Trump, our lethal and obedient military, our nuclear weapons, our country, the world, and confer with our own emotions and values, and then we should refuse, refuse, to once again “rally around the president” and be manipulated into waging another aggression just a dozen years since we let George W. Bush lie us into invading Iraq and a still raging bloody war that we and the whole world so bitterly regret.


Ronnie Dugger, author of presidential biographies of Lyndon Johnson and Ronald Reagan, books about Hiroshima and universities, and articles in The New York Times, The Nation, The Washington Post, Harper’s, The Atlantic, and many other periodicals, received the George Polk career award in journalism in 2012. Living now in Austin, he is writing a book about nuclear ethics and nuclear war. ronniedugger@gmail.com
Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.
US Navy Strike Group to Move Towards Korean Peninsula, Official Says 
Edward Helmore, Guardian UK 
Excerpt: "The US navy has deployed a strike group towards the western Pacific Ocean to provide a presence near the Korean peninsula, a US official said on Saturday." 
READ MORE
Jeff Sessions Wants to Bring Back the War on Drugs 
Sari Horwitz, The Washington Post 
Horwitz writes: "When the Obama administration launched a sweeping policy to reduce harsh prison sentences for nonviolent drug offenders, rave reviews came from across the political spectrum. Civil rights groups and the Koch brothers praised Obama for his efforts, saying he was making the criminal justice system more humane." 
READ MORE
Alabama Supreme Court Allows Impeachment of Governor to Proceed 
Ian Simpson, Reuters 
Simpson writes: "The Alabama Supreme Court ruled on Saturday that impeachment proceedings against Governor Robert Bentley can start next week, halting a court order that had blocked hearings stemming from his relationship with a former aide." 
READ MORE



Blasts at Coptic Christian Churches in Egypt Kill Dozens on Palm Sunday 
Joe Sterling, Faith Karimi and Mohammed Tawfeeq, CNN 
Excerpt: "Bombs targeted two Coptic churches in Egypt as the Christian faithful observed Palm Sunday, one of the most important days on the religion's calendar." 
READ MORE
Venezuelans Return to Streets, Roused by Ban on Opposition Leader 
Alexandra Ulmer and Girish Gupta, Reuters 
Excerpt: "Protesters clashed with security forces during protests in Venezuela on Saturday after a ban on a top opposition leader from office breathed life into a fractured movement and fueled the first sustained anti-government demonstrations since 2014." 
READ MORE
17 States Raise Hell Over Clean Power Plan 
Climate Nexus, EcoWatch 
Excerpt: "The group of 17 states which backed the Clean Power Plan filed a legal challenge Wednesday urging the DC Circuit Court of Appeals to ignore the Trump administration's request to stay legal proceedings in the Clean Power Plan suit." 
READ MORE

Contribute to RSN
Become a Fan of RSN on Facebook and Twitter









No comments: