The Scum at the Top
Commentary on the Rats in Washington
Torture Bill States Non-Allegiance To
Bush Is Terrorism
By Paul Joseph Watson & Alex Jones
Information Liberation
© 2006
Legislation tolls the bell for the day
America died, birth of the dictatorship
Buried amongst the untold affronts to
the Bill of Rights, the Constitution
and the very spirit of America, the
torture bill contains a definition of
"wrongfully aiding the enemy" which
labels all American citizens who breach
their "allegiance" to President Bush and
the actions of his government as terrorists
subject to possible arrest, torture and
conviction in front of a military tribunal.
After five hours of searching through
the 80-plus page bill, Alex Jones, who
won the 2004 Project Censored award for
his analysis of Patriot Act 2, uncovered
numerous other provisions and definitions
that make the bill appear as almost a
mirror image of Hitler's 1933 Enabling Act.
In section 950j. the bill criminalizes
any challenge to the legislation's legality
by the Supreme Court or any United States
court. Alberto Gonzales has already
threatened federal judges to shut up
and not question Bush's authority on
the torture of detainees.
"No court, justice, or judge shall have
jurisdiction to hear or consider any
claim or cause of action whatsoever,
including any action pending on or filed
after the date of the enactment of the
Military Commissions Act of 2006,
relating to the prosecution, trial,
or judgment of a military commission
under this chapter, including challenges
to the lawfulness of procedures of military
commissions under this chapter."
The Bush administration is preemptively
overriding any challenge to the legislation
by the Supreme Court.
The definition of torture that the
legislation cites is US code title 18
section 2340. This is a broad definition
of torture and completely lacks the
specific clarity of the Geneva Conventions.
This definition allows the use of torture
that is, "incidental to lawful sanctions."
In alliance with the bill's blanket
authority for President Bush to define
the Geneva Conventions as he sees fit,
this legislates the use of torture.
The media has spun the bill as if it
outlaws torture - it only outlaws torture
for "enemy combatants," and in fact outlaws
the retaliation of any military against
the United States as "murder." Those
deemed "enemy combatants" are not even
allowed to fight back yet the government
affords itself every power including the
go-ahead to torture.
Further actions that result in the
classification of an individual as a
terrorist include the following.
- Destruction of any property, which is
deemed punishable by any means of the
military tribunal's choosing.
- Any violent activity whatsoever if it
takes place near a designated protected
building, such as a charity building.
- A change of the definition of "pillaging"
which turns all illegal occupation of
property and all theft into terrorism.
This makes squatters and petty thieves
enemy combatants.
In light of Greg Palast's recent hounding
by Homeland Security, after they accused
him of potentially giving terrorists key
information about U.S. "critical infrastructure"
when filming Exxon’s Baton Rouge refinery
(clear photos of which were publicly available
on Google Maps), sub-section 27 of section
950v. should send chills down the spine of
all investigative journalists and even
news-gatherers.
"Any person subject to this chapter who with
intent or reason to believe that it is to be
used to the injury of the United States or
to the advantage of a foreign power, collects
or attempts to collect information by
clandestine means or while acting under
false pretenses, for the purpose of conveying
such information to an enemy of the United
States, or one of the co-belligerents of the
enemy, shall be punished by death or such
other punishment as a military commission
under this chapter may direct."
Subsection 4(b) (26) of section 950v. of HR
6166 - Crimes triable by military commissions -
includes the following definition.
"Any person subject to this chapter who, in
breach of an allegiance or duty to the United
States, knowingly and intentionally aids an
enemy of the United States, or one of the
co-belligerents of the enemy, shall be
punished as a military commission under
this chapter may direct."
For an individual to hold an allegiance or
duty to the United States they need to be a
citizen of the United States. Why would a
foreign terrorist have any allegiance to the
United States to breach in the first place?
This is another telltale facet that proves the
bill applies to U.S. citizens and includes them
under the "enemy combatant" designation. We
previously cited the comments of Yale law
Professor Bruce Ackerman, who wrote in the
L.A. Times, "The compromise legislation....
authorizes the president to seize American
citizens as enemy combatants, even if they
have never left the United States. And once
thrown into military prison, they cannot
expect a trial by their peers or any other
of the normal protections of the Bill of Rights."
The New York Times stated that the legislation
introduced, "A dangerously broad definition of
“illegal enemy combatant” in the bill could
subject legal residents of the United States,
as well as foreign citizens living in their
own countries, to summary arrest and indefinite
detention with no hope of appeal. The president
could give the power to apply this label to
anyone he wanted."
Calling the bill "our generation’s version of
the Alien and Sedition Acts," the Times goes
on to highlight the rubber stamping of torture.
"Coerced evidence would be permissible if
a judge considered it reliable — already a
contradiction in terms — and relevant.
Coercion is defined in a way that exempts
anything done before the passage of the 2005
Detainee Treatment Act, and anything else Mr.
Bush chooses."
Since with this bill, in the aggregate, Bush
has declared himself to be above the Constitution
and the laws of the United States, the allegiance
of American citizens is no longer to the flag
or the freedoms for which it stands, but to
Bush himself, the self-appointed dictator,
and any diversion from that allegiance will
mandate arrest, torture and conviction in a
military tribunal under the terms of this bill.
Similar to the UK's Glorification of Terrorism
law, which top lawyers have slammed as vague,
open to interpretation and a potential weapon
for the government to kidnap supposed subversives,
the nebulous context of "wrongfully aiding the
enemy," could easily be defined to include
publicly absolving an accused terrorist of
involvement in a terrorist attack.
That renders the entire 9/11 truth movement
an aid to terrorist suspects and subject to
military tribunal and torture. In addition,
Bush's recently cited National Strategy for
Combating Terrorism, which is available on
the White House website, labels conspiracy
theorists as terrorist recruiters.
This should leave us with no doubt as to which
parties are the target of the government's
torture and intimidation campaign.
Could protesting a war approved by the
government and their bootlickers in Congress
and the Senate be considered breaching an
allegiance to the United States? Could
campaigning against the bombing of a target
country be considered wrongfully aiding the
enemy?
When the USA PATRIOT act was rushed through
at the height of an anthrax scare without any
members of Congress even having time to read
it, we were assured that it was to fight
terrorists and would not be used against the
American people.
Since then a plethora of cases whereby the USA
PATRIOT act was used against U.S. citizens
emerged, including the internment without
trial for over three years of Jose Padilla,
an American citizen who was finally released
after no evidence of terrorism was uncovered.
The so-called "compromise" before the bill
was passed and the media acclaim of John
McCain as some kind of human rights champion
is one of the biggest con jobs ever inflicted
upon the American people.
Shortly after the bill was finalized it
was spun by Bush security advisor Stephen
Hadley as "good news and a good day for the
American people." McCain said that it
safeguarded "the integrity and letter and
spirit of the Geneva Conventions."
In truth the legislation does the exact
opposite, giving Bush carte blanche to
"interpret the meaning and application of
the Geneva Conventions."
In addition, under the bill, "No person
may invoke the Geneva Conventions or any
protocols thereto in any habeas corpus or
other civil action or proceeding to which
the United States, or a current or former
officer, employee, member of the Armed
Forces, or other agent of the United States
is a party as a source of rights in any
court of the United States or its States
or territories."
The bill also allows hearsay evidence
(obtained via phony confessions after
torture) to be considered by the military
tribunal and bars the suspect from even
having knowledge of the charges against
him - making a case for defense impossible.
This is guaranteed to produce 100% conviction
rates as you would expect in the dictatorships
of Uzbekistan or Zimbabwe and other torture
protagonists who are in many cases allied
with the Bush administration and provide phony
confessions obtained from torture that allow
the U.S. government to scare its people with
the threat of imaginary Al-Qaeda terror cells
waiting to kill them.
Following the Supreme Court's ruling to
previously strike down Bush's shadow penal
system, Alberto Gonzales is already out
threatening federal judges to shut up and
get behind the dictator or face the consequences.
Gonzales has the sheer gall to attack judges
for even considering to "overturn long-standing
traditions or policies without proper support
in text or precedent," which is exactly what
Gonzales, Bush and the rest of the White
House criminals are doing themselves by
de facto abolishing the Bill of Rights!
This is a dark day for the United States,
the day America died and the bastard birth
of a literal dictatorship.
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E-mail: dwagner2@isd.net
©2007 DJW
Last Modified:
January 15, 2007