HUMAN RIGHTS Trump Is Restoring the Darkest Elements of Bush’s War on Terror

The following article by Karen Greenberg was posted on the AlterNet website October 15, 2017:

The Trump administration just classified its first American prisoner from the battlefields of Syria an “enemy combatant.”

Credit: Ivo Antonie de Rooij / Shutterstock.com

Eight years ago, when I wrote a book on the first days of Guantanamo, The Least Worst Place: Guantánamo’s First 100 Days, I assumed that Gitmo would prove a grim anomaly in our history.  Today, it seems as if that “detention facility” will have a far longer life than I ever imagined and that it, and everything it represents, will become a true, if grim, legacy of twenty-first-century America.

It appears that we just can’t escape the perpetual pendulum of the never-ending war on terror as it invariably swings away from the rule of law and the protections of the Constitution.  Last month, worries that had initially surfaced during the presidential campaign of 2016 over Donald Trump’s statements about restoring torture and expanding Guantanamo’s population took on a new urgency.  In mid-September, the administration acknowledgedthat it had captured an American in Syria.  Though no facts about the detained individual have been revealed, including his name or any allegations against him, the Pentagon did confirm that he has been classified as an “enemy combatant,” a vague and legally imprecise category. It was, however, one of the first building blocks that officials of George W. Bush’s administration used to establish the notoriously lawless policies of that era, including Guantanamo, the CIA’s “black sites,” and of course “enhanced interrogation techniques.“  Continue reading “HUMAN RIGHTS Trump Is Restoring the Darkest Elements of Bush’s War on Terror”

Trump to meet Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte, accused of extrajudicial killings, during Asian visit

The following article by Anne Gearan was posted on the Washington Post website October 16, 2017:

President Trump will meet with Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte during a marathon trip to Asia next month, the White House announced Monday.

“The President’s travel will underscore his commitment to long-standing United States alliances and partnerships, and reaffirm United States leadership in promoting a free and open Indo-Pacific region,” White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said in a statement. Continue reading “Trump to meet Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte, accused of extrajudicial killings, during Asian visit”

s Inside the ‘adult day-care center’: How aides try to control and coerce Trump

The following article by Ashley Parker and Greg Jaffe was posted on the Washington Post website October 16, 2017:

In his first month as President Trump’s chief of staff, John F. Kelly has brought discipline to the White House, sometimes to the frustration of Trump. (Video: Bastien Inzaurralde/Photo: Bill O’Leary/The Washington Post)

During the campaign, when President Trump’s advisers wanted him to stop talking about an issue — such as when he attacked a Gold Star military family — they sometimes presented him with polls demonstrating how the controversy was harming his candidacy. Continue reading “s Inside the ‘adult day-care center’: How aides try to control and coerce Trump”

Kasich: US is ‘weakening’ post-WW2 alliances

The following article by Julia Manchester was posted on the Hill website October 15, 2017:

Ohio Gov. John Kasich (R) warned on Sunday that the U.S. is walking away from international alliances and guidelines that were put in place after World War II as a means of preventing authoritarianism.

“One of the things I am concerned about is the drift that we are in right now in terms of America and the world,” Kasich told NBC’s Chuck Todd on “Meet the Press.”

“There is an issue here where we’re weakening the things that we put in place after World War II to keep the world safe and reflect our values. We can’t afford to walk away, Chuck. Because if we walk away, this thing collapses. And who wins? The authoritarians. The Russians and the Chinese. Not good for our country, and not good for freedom,” he said.

“There is a battle now. The Russians and the Chinese want authoritarian-type government, okay? And we’re walking away from our allies on trade agreements, this Iran thing, we’ll see how that turns out,” he continued. Continue reading “Kasich: US is ‘weakening’ post-WW2 alliances”

Trump’s Obamacare attack heralds new health-care battles on Capitol Hill

The following article by Mike DeBonis and Ed O’Keefe was posted on the Washington Post website October 13, 2017:

President Trump’s health-care actions could have ripple effects throughout the Affordable Care Act’s marketplaces. (Video: Jenny Starrs/Photo: Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post)

President Trump’s decision Thursday to cut off crucial health-care subsidies has once again revived the long-running debate over the Affordable Care Act, increasing the potential for a government shutdown in December and making the issue central in next year’s midterm elections.

The move to end insurer subsidies could propel premiums an average of 20 percent higher next year for those who purchase insurance on the individual market, according to a nonpartisan congressional analysis. Continue reading “Trump’s Obamacare attack heralds new health-care battles on Capitol Hill”

Trump decertifying the nuclear deal isn’t putting pressure on Iran. It’s isolating the US.

The following article by Eric Lutz was posted on the mic.com website October 13, 2017:

Credit: Joshua Roberts/Reuters.

President Donald Trump on Friday decertified the Iran nuclear deal, calling on Congress to address the “many serious flaws” of the landmark agreement or else he will end it.

“We cannot and will not make this certification,” Trump said from the White House Friday. “We will not continue down a path whose predictable conclusion is more violence, more terror and the very real threat of Iran’s nuclear breakout.”

It was a sternly worded announcement, delivered by Trump through gritted teeth, that characterized the Obama-era deal as a “political and economic lifeline” for Iran — which he claimed, contrary to what his own secretary of state said a day earlier, was not fulfilling the terms of the accord. Continue reading “Trump decertifying the nuclear deal isn’t putting pressure on Iran. It’s isolating the US.”

Iran nuclear deal: Global powers stand by pact despite Trump threat

The following article was posted on the BBC website October 14, 2017:

Global powers, including key US allies, have said they will stand by the Iran nuclear deal which US President Donald Trump has threatened to tear apart.

Mr Trump said on Friday that he would stop signing off on the agreement.

The UK, France and Germany responded that the pact was “in our shared national security interest”. The EU said it was “not up to any single country to terminate” a “working” deal.

Iran’s President Hassan Rouhani said the US was “more isolated than ever”. Continue reading “Iran nuclear deal: Global powers stand by pact despite Trump threat”

DoJ argues Trump doesn’t have to preserve presidential records

The link below will take you to a portion of the October 12, 2017, Rachel Maddow show where she talks about an important news item that has pretty much gone unreported:  The Trump Administration’s Department of Justice has stated that the administration doesn’t believe it needs to abide by the Presidential Records Act and preserve all documents, emails, etc.

View the video here:  http://www.msnbc.com/rachel-maddow/watch/doj-argues-trump-doesn-t-have-to-preserve-presidential-records-1072310851931

Rick Perry Defends Private Travel Costs at House Energy Hearing

The following article by Elvina Nawaguna was posted on the RollCall.com website October 13, 2017:

Some sites are too remote to be accessed by commercial airlines, secretary says

Energy Secretary Rick Perry testifies during a hearing before the House Energy and Commerce’s Energy Subcommittee on Thursday. (Bill Clark/Roll Call)

Energy Secretary Rick Perry told lawmakers Thursday that his use of private aircraft for work travel is sometimes justified because his department’s national laboratories and some sites he has to visit are too remote to be accessed by commercial airlines.

Perry and four other administration officials are under scrutiny for exorbitant private travel at taxpayer expense.

Both Democrats and Republicans on the House Energy and Commerce’s Energy Subcommittee, where Perry was testifying Thursday about the department’s priorities, demanded that he address the allegations surrounding his travel expenses. Continue reading “Rick Perry Defends Private Travel Costs at House Energy Hearing”

Trump administration’s zeal to peel back regulations is leading us to another era of robber barons

The following article by Jermi Suri was posted on the Conversation website October 11, 2017:

Credit: Library of Congress

The Trump administration has a clear economic objective: deregulate. Loosening regulations on industries, the White House believes, will lead to faster growth and more jobs. This is the stated reason for pulling the U.S. from the international climate accord, and the economic justification for seeking to rescind the EPA Clean Power Plan that limits carbon emissions from plants.

But an examination of history shows that government regulations are not always harmful to industry; they often help business. Indeed, government regulation is as central to the growth of the American economy as markets and dollars. Continue reading “Trump administration’s zeal to peel back regulations is leading us to another era of robber barons”