huge huge up, while proclaiming a "nation of laws" that supposedly claims everybody has the "right" of presumed innocence until proven guilty.
President Obama’s pronouncement about Manning, “He broke the law,” amounts to unlawful command influence – something prohibited in military trials because it is devastating to the military justice system. Manning will be judged by a jury of military officers in a military court where everyone involved follows the orders of the commander-in-chief. How are these officers going to rule against their commander-in-chief, especially after Manning has been tortured in solitary confinement for almost a year?
Unlawful Command Influence occurs when senior personnel, wittingly or unwittingly, have acted to influence court members, witnesses, or others participating in military justice cases. Such unlawful influence not only jeopardizes the validity of the judicial process, it undermines the morale of military members, their respect for the chain of command, and public confidence in the military.” Further, even: “The ‘appearance of unlawful command influence is as devastating to the military justice system as the actual manipulation of any given trial.’” The commander-in-chief announcing guilt before trial is an unprecedented case of unlawful command influence.
huge huge up, while proclaiming a "nation of laws" that supposedly claims everybody has the "right" of presumed innocence until proven guilty.
Glenn Greenwald: What Obama's Reckless Treatment of Bradley Manning Reveals About Our "Nation of Laws"
Obama invoked America's status as a "nation of laws" to justify Manning's punishment; this is a President who has embraced much of the lawlessness of the Bush administration.
http://www.alternet.org/world/150722...3B?page=entire
Probably won't amount to anything.
Again.
This is a nation of laws, alright. The rich ones write them, and the poor ones get the brunt of them.
This is probably coming from the people who don't listen to a word he says anyway.
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