| Monday, February 27, 2012.  Chaos and violence continue, a song-and-dance  is performed before a bewildered House Subcommitee, Nouri and Moqtada al-Sadr  are at odds again, Michael Ratner talks about the Bradley Manning arraignment  last week, US Senator Patty Murray wants answers about whether or not the  Defenseand more.     This afternoon the House Veterans Subcommittee on Health held a hearing  that covered the issue of bridges between the VA and Community Organizations.   Near the end of the hearing, Subcomittee Chair Ann Marie Buerkle declared, "I  must say I'm a bit chagrinned and, more than that, concerned.  I think we have a  real big disconnect here in knowing what's avaialbe and what's out there."   More than anything, that summed up the hearing.  Listening to panel two  offer testimony was highly distressing.  Chaplain John Morris, Reverend E. Terri  LaVelle and Chaplain Michael McCoy Sr. were the primary witnesses on that panel  and you really had to wonder about not just where the money goes but also who's  watching it?     US House Rep Michael Michaud had a very basic question for Rev LaVelle and  she explained that she'd have to speak to someone else about that, she was  primarily focused on what went on in DC (she's with the VA Director Center for  Faith-based and Neighborhood Partnerships) but she would speak to the filed  about this.   The obvious question would be: Why didn't you before you showed up for this  hearing?   The obvious question wasn't asked.  Instead, she noted she'd only spoken to  the district once in her time in her current position.  Michaud asked her how  long she'd been on the board and she responded "two and a half years."  That  should have been a red flag.   There were many red flags throughout the hearing.   Michaud wanted to know if veterans were being charged by faith-based  organizations for services?  He never got a clear answer on that.  LaVelle, for  example, was happy to talk at length in response to what should have been a  "yes" or a "no" question.  Going on and on, at a fast clip, about how you're  "more than willing to say that so many days a week, so many hours, we'll use our  current transportation" might have seemed like a response to her but I'm not  sure many others would feel the same.   Her comments also raised serious issues about qualifications.  For example,  I think many of us (I know I feel this way, you don't have to) feel that if a  veteran seeks out a faith-based organization, he or she will be speaking about  issues to do with religion and spirituality.  And that doesn't bother me (I'm  not happy that it's funded with tax payer dollars because I believe it chips  away at the wall that's supposed to exist between church and state).  But when  you're selling your program to Congress on something other than that, we may  have a problem.   So, for example, when LaValle wants the Subcomittee to know that they  employ Phds and licensensed clinical social workers, it does matter to me if  these people are trained in assisting veterans.  LaVelle's people she brags  about, these people with so much education and training, have never been trained  in helping veterans.  But, she insists, they will learn on the job.     Will learn.  Haven't yet.  What do they do all day?  We're not talking  about fresh recruits, we're not talking about a new program that just received  start-up funding.   Sitting through that hearing was a non-stop exercise in frustration and,  after awhile, it really appeared that most members of the Subcommittee just gave  up.  (Two appeared to walk out in frustration. And those two were Republicans  and Republicans who support the idea of faith-based programs being funded by the  government.)   US House Rep Silvestre Reyes is a very laid back and calm person.  He  doesn't lose his cool in hearings and generally has a smile and some comforting  exchange at the start to set the witnesses at ease.  Though he did not lose his  good manners, even he seemed puzzled by what was taking place before the  Subcomittee.   He noted what so many noted which was, why aren't veterans hearing anything  about these programs?  (I will add, why aren't veterans hearing anything about  these programs that US taxpayers are forking over a small fortune for?)  This  was picking up directly on US House Rep Michael Michaud's questioning but also  on just about every Subcommittee member's line of questioning.   And the song and dance was always, 'We try. We're contacting  someone.'   Reyes noted that in his area (El Paso), Joan Ricard would be the best one  to contact.  She's the Director of the El Paso VA Health Care System.  He  wondered, "Why can't your programs be part of the services?"  No real  answer.   They're putting on events.  They're spending money.  But it doesn't seem  like veterans are going to these events and that seems to be because they aren't  getting the word out on these events.     In addition, rural veterans are being completey disregarded by these  programs.  They aren't doing any in, for example, West Texas.  As Reyes pointed  out, except for El Paso pretty much all of West Texas is rural. The witnesses  rushed to tell him that his veterans could go to Waco, Texas where they're  putting on programs and he explained to them that Albuquerque was closer to El  Paso than Waco (El Paso to Waco, he said, was 386 miles -- still a huge journey,  especially for a disabled veteran and especially for a veteran in need of  services; while El Paso to Waco is over 670 miles). Chaplain McCoy wanted to  insist, "We are cooperating with the Office of Rural Health and we are  cooperating with the Office of Mental Health and others."  The programs they  represented to the Subcomittee did not appear to be serving rural veterans,  regardless of whom they were "cooperating with."    In Texas, Reyes was told, the closest chaplain to his city of El Paso is  Waco. (Again, that's over 670 miles  -- at 60 mph the whole way, someone's going  to have drive over 11 hours for an event that's for 'rural' veterans.  That's  ridiculous.)    Reyes was also very concerned about this issue where the events aren't  known, where even the faith-based organizations providing some kind of services  weren't known of by the veterans.   He noted that his office holds a veterans clearing house meeting every  month.  He attends when he's in his district but, even when he's not there, the  meeting takes place.  And it's where information can be passed on.  He noted  Joan Ricard attends every month's meeting.  But he's never once seen anyone from  these groups or heard any information about their programs, He again stressed  that the faith-based programs were not getting the information out, "We've never  heard the information about your programs.  So is there a reason you can't  designate the VA Directors in our respective areas to provide information?"      LaVelle insisted that if someone could tell her the faith-based liason to  Congress, they could get information to them about services in their district.      Really?   You're taking taxpayer money to provide a service for veterans.  Your  events are poorly attended.  The reason for that is you're not getting the word  out on them.  And your answer to that is to wait until you're at a Congressional  hearing and treat a Subcommittee as if you just dialed 411?     Winding down the hearing, Subcommittee Chair Ann Marie Buerkle said, "In  closing here today, I think that Chaplain [John] Morris said it best, that we  really do need a community effort to make sure that our veterans have what they  need."   Tomorrow should be a big hearing -- joint-hearing by the Senate and House  Veterans Affairs Committee. That's a problem for one reason, I'm not really able  to go into to today's hearing.  It's one of those that I would prefer to have a  night's sleep between covering just because I'm so upset by it.  But with  tomorrow's hearing, it won't be possible to pick up this Subcommittee tomorrow.   So we've done the above, a thumb nail, and that may end be it for the  Subcommittee hearing.  I think it was an important one, I think we've provided a  bit more than overview but that's all we can do today.   Short of my issuing a  non-stop string of curse words, that's all we can cover.  What the Subcommittee  learned was that the faith-based organizations being represented by the  witnesses happily take money from the taxpayer to provide services but they hire  people who are unqualified to provide the services and then they somehow  repeatedly forget to get the word out on the services which explains the low  turnout.  On top of all of that -- and the lack of oversight of the way the  taxpayers' money is being spent -- rural veterans aren't benefitting from the  present system.  A specific issue family courts have raised to House members is  where are the clergy to provide family counseling to veterans whose families  and/or marriages are struggling?  And the answer, like every other 'answer' to a  direct question in this hearing, was a long string of words that wandered around  but never arrived at a point.     Let's stay on veterans issue and Congress for a bit more.  Senator Patty  Murray is the Chair of the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee.  Her office issued  the following today:   FOR PLANNING PURPOSES Monday, Februay 27, 2012 CONTACT: Murray Press Office (202) 224-2834   TOMORROW: Murray to Push Deense Secretary Panetta on Pentagon  Oversight in PTSD Diagnoses   Murray will also question Panetta on proposed FY 2013 cuts and  their impact on DOD   (Washington, D.C.) -- Tomorrow, Senator Patty Murray (D-WA), senior  member of the Senate Budget Committee, will attend a hearing on President  Obama's Fiscal Year 2013 Budget Request for the Department of Defense.  The  Committee will hear testimony from Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta and  Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Martin Dempsey.  Sen. Murray will  question Secretary Panetta about the Pentagon's handling of Post-Traumatic  Stress Disorder (PTSD) diagnoses, specifically as it relates to the recent  controversy surrounding the Madigan Army Medical Center in Washington  state.   WHO:   Senator Patty Murray (D-WA)             U.S. Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta             Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Martin  Dempsey      WHAT: Examination of President's FY 2013 Budget Request for Dept.  of Defense             Focus on PTSD Diagnoses Oversight, FY 2013  Cuts   WHERE: Dirksen Senate Office Building -- Room 608   When: Tomorrow -- Tuesday, February 28, 2012            9:30 AM EST/ 6:30 AM PST     ###   Megan Roh Deputy Press Secretary Office of U.S. Senator Patty Murray 202-224-2834     So what's going on?  The press release refers to Madigan Healthcare  System.  As we've noted before, the US Army Medical Command has investigated  complaints from soldiers who say that their PTSD diagnoses have been reversed  and that there have been comments that these were administrative decisons made  to save money.  If you're late to the story, you can check out Hal Bernton's piece for the Seattle  Times . That is tomorrow.  As the press release noted, if you can't be  present but are interested, you can stream it online. For those who are saying,  "I'm on dial up" or "My platform's too out of date for streaming" or something  similar -- CSPAN Radio will broadcast the hearing live (and most who can't  stream video due to being dial up or an older platform, can stream audio with  few problems).  I was under the impression (apparently wrong) that CSPAN (1,2,3)  broadcast all the Senate hearings.  If so, that's not going to happen tomorrow  unless CSPAN2 is carrying the hearing.  (CSPAN1 and CSPAN3 are both going to be  covering the House and not the joint-hearing of the House and Senate Veterans  Affairs Committee.)        If you call the VA's suicide hotline, you have a right to believe  your call is confidential. Christian Daventport  (Washington Post) reported yesterday on  Gulf War veteran Sean Duvall's troubles caused by seeking help. He called the  hotline and now he's facing criminal charges and, if convicted of them, could  spend as many as 40 years in jail. Sean Duvall called because he wanted to take  his own life. The homeless man had a gun he'd made himself. He called for help  and got that to a degree immediately (or that's how the story is being told).  What happened after that is that he found himself charged for the homemade gun.  That's what he could face up to 40 years in prison for.      Today, Christian Davenport provides an update  noting  that "in a hearing Monday, the prosecution changed course and recommended that  Duvall be admitted to counseling overseen by a new Veterans Treatment Court.  If  the counseling is completed, the charges, which carried a 40-year prison  sentence, would be dropped." The US Attorney for the Western Distric of  Virginia, Timothy Heaphy, stated the change stemmed from them re-examing the  case.     Turning to Iraq where Aswat al-Iraq reports  that in the last  months over 34 women in the city of Karbala attempted to take their own lives  via "pills or medicine and some of them use rodenticides."  (If you're not sure  but thinking, "That 'rodenticide' looks like rodent posion," you are correct.)   Women trying to take their own lives in Iraq since the start of the Iraq War  usually do so out of some 'honor' issue.  For example, they may have something  recently take place that would be deemed an "honour" issue.  They may fear it  coming out or it may already be out and a close relative may be threatening to  kill the woman if she does not take her own life.  In 2007, for example, women  and girls were showing up in Sulaimaniyah emergency room with burns caused by  cooking fuel and blame the burns on an accident while cooking.  Now it appears  that women are once again attempting to take their own lives and the Iraqi  system (thus far) hasn't demonstrated that it can address these sort of issues.      I've also seen quite a few women who've burned themselves.  They're  of a type: young, married and very poor.  Their families, fearing disgrace,  always deny that the women have tried to commit suicide.  But as we press them,  the story gradually changes. Burns, which often cover most of their bobides, are  one of the toughest aspects of my E.R. work -- along with blast victims.  I  never really get over these things. But what angers me most is that, if they survive, these women  almost never get any counseling or psychiatric help -- though they are often  abused, deeply angry and severely damaged even before they come to the emergency  room. These women are especially at risk in a health care system in which  overworked doctors like me focus only on saving lives; healing their invisible  wounds is another story.  Even though Iraqis have been living in a violent,  unstable environment for years, there is still no culture of mental health care  here.  It has little to no support from the state or haalth authorities, and  people who do seek psychiatric help are stigmatized by their families and  society: these two truths reinforce each other.  Even blast victims, if they  recover, don't get counseling.   That's distressing for women (and there's much more in her piece, please  read it), but grasp that the Iraqi population is a young population.  It's a  country of widows and orphans.  And the median age is 19.7 years old.  In a  country where that's the median age, there are a lot of people struggling  already.     Last week, Parliament voted to spend over 50 million dollar buying 350  vehicles -- armored vehicles -- for themselves. There was an immediate uproar  among many Iraqis over this move. The uproar has not yet died down (and may  not). Aswat al-Iraq notes  that the head of the  Iraqiya bloc in Parliament, MP Salman al-Jumaili, declared today that the money  insted should be used to compensate Iraqis who are the victims of terrorism.  Kitabat reports  that cleric Moqtada  al Sadr (who controls approximately 40 seats in the Parliament and whose bloc is  part of the ruling National Alliance) decried the move and has branded it a  "disgrace." He states the money should instead be going to the Iraqi poor who  are without water, food, I home, security and safety. He stated anyone who rides  in them is betraying the Iraqi people. Al Rafidyan has  al-Sadr calling it  a stain and those riding in them are traitors to the Iraqi people, to Iraq and  disobeying Allah. Over the weekend, the big news from the Sadr camp was  Moqtada al-Sadr likening Nouri to a dictator (and glory hog). Pakistan's The News noted  that Moqtada al-Sadr  issued a statement last night which declared of Nouri al-Maliki, "The dictator  of the government is trying to make all the accomplishments as though they were  his accomplishments, and if he cannot he will try to hinder these  accomplishments and erase them." The paper notes that his bloc is a member of  the National Alliance, as is Nouri's, and that this may "indicate a new round of  political conflict" for Iraq. Now Aswat al-Iraq reports  that two  State of Law stooges are insisting that relations are just fine, thank you very  much, between Nouri and Moqtada and they doubt Moqtada even said what he's  quoted as saying. They're like two children seeing Mommy and Daddy fight.  Meanwhile Al Mada reports  that Ibrahim  al-Jaafari is attempting to heal the rift between Dawa (Dawa is Nouri's  political party; State of Law is his political slate) and the Sadrists. The  former prime minister (al-Jaafari) is attempting to smooth over the differences  which erupted after Moqtada declared Iraq had a new dictatorship. Some feel the  statements are part of a negotiation strategy on the part of the al-Sadr bloc  regarding the upcoming Amnesty Law which could allow many members of Moqtada's  militia that were arrested nearly three years ago to be released. Nouri  really can't afford to have many more rifts these days. He already has the  Kurdish Alliance, Iraqiya and the Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq calling for  him to return to the Erbil Agreement which ended Political Stalemate I. Nouri  started Political Stalemate II (the current crisis) when he discarded the Erbil  Agreement. He's also demanded the Deputy Prime Minister Saleh al-Mutlaq be  stripped of his post and that Vice President Tareq al-Hashemi be arrested on  terrorism -- al-Mutlaq and al-Hashemi are both members of Iraqiya which came in  first in the March 2010 elections (his State of Law came in second). Dar Addustour notes  Nouri's again  huffing that the Baghdad judiciary must be listened to (Nouri controls the  Baghdad judiciary, they are not independent). In another report, they  note  that Nouri's insisting (via surrogates) that Iraqiya leader Ayad  Allawi is trying to inflame tensions between Nouri and Saudi Arabia by declaring  that Nouri is targeting Tareq al-Hashemi because he is a Sunni. The government  of Saudi Arabia is well aware that Tareq al-Hashemi and Saleh al-Mutlaq are  Sunnis. They're also well aware of the fact that Nouri is Shi'ite. They don't  trust Nouri because they see him as too close with the Tehran government (which  is also Shi'ite). Ayad Allawi tends to stress the Iraqiya issue and not the  Sunni aspect. (Allawi is Shi'ite.) And, as leader of Iraqiya, it would make  sense for him to stress the Iraqiya aspect first and foremost.Al  Mada also notes  Nouri's remarks and these come when various  parties in Parliament thought they would be addressing the al-Hashemi issue and  members of the prep committee for the national conference to resolve the  political crisis thought the three presidencies (President Jalal Talabani, Nouri  and Speaker of Parliament Osama al-Nujaifi) would be resolving it.  Saturday Aswat al-Iraq reported   that MP Ahmed al-Massari, who serves on the prep committee, is declaring that  al-Mutlaq's case will be decided by the "the three presidencies" (that's  Talabani, Nouri and Osama al-Nujaifi). There's no unified opinion on  al-Hashemi's case, the MP stated, but he noted "that the two working papers of  Iraqiya and National Allaince blocs were unified, containing most of Arbil  agreement items." Al Mada reported  that the  issue of al-Mutlaq will be resolved by Parliament. Nouri's paranoid.  We've noted his intense paranoia since 2006. US State Dept cables note it  beginning in 2008. There's really no denying it. Iraq's set to finally host the  Arab Summit. It was postponed twice in 2011. (And may get postponed this year  due to Iraqi violence.) Right now it looks like a go. But Nouri's paranoia  swells and travels. So instead of encouraging the Arab Summit and talking it up,  Alsumaria TV reports   Nouri declared today that Iraq is stillt argeted and that all sorts of external  actors are trying to destroy it. Al Mada notes the paranoid whispers  that Qatar is plotting to take over the Arab Summit, to steal it from  Baghdad. Today's violence included a Falluja bombing which left 1 Sahwa leader injured . Sahwa, also known as  "Awakenings" and "Sons of Iraq" are resistance fighters who stopped fighting  when put on the US payroll.  Nouri was supposed to integrate them into the  security forces and other government jobs but has not. Many fled from Baghdad starting in 2006 due to the violence, at least  300,000 according to the UN Secretary-General's Special Envoy Martin Kobler.  Aswat al-Iraq notes  that he  declared in a Green Zone press conference yesterday that 1.3 million Iraqis  remain internally displaced. The Boston Globe  notes  UN diplomat Claire Bourgeois states that the Baghdad government  has not done enough to assist the homeless in Iraq. The United Nations News Center  quotes  Kobler stating:  
 Our  collective responsibility is to ensure that the displaced are adequately cared  for as long as they live in displacement, while measures are being taken to plan  for their sustainable return, resettlement and local integration, the three key  pillars of a durable solutions strategy. No durable solution can be achieved  without the express consent of those on whose behalf it [the strategy] is being  implemented.
 By ensuring that those who fled the cruelty of violence that  befell this country in the past years can safely return to their homes -- or,  where return is not possible, that they are given a free choice of resettling or  integrating in a place of their choosing -- we help restore their rights. We  recognize them as citizens of this country, who are entitled to a life in  dignity, like all other Iraqis.
Dignity is what the Iraqi youth called for on Saturday.  Al  Mada reported  Iraqis turned out in Baghdad's Tahrir Square  today demanding reform on the anniversary of the wave of youth protests that  began last year on February 25th. (If your new to last year's protests, click here for a CNN iReport  with links to various  videos.) Banners carried had slogans on them such as "OIL FOR THE PEOPLE, NOT  THE THIEVES" and "MALIKI'S GOVERNMENT HAS FAILED." Siham al-Zubaidi explained  her view and that of her peers who were protesting: Nouri al-Maliki has had a  year since Iraqi youths began making their demands and he has changed nothing,  he has met none of the demands on safety, electricity or job creation. An  unidentified male protester states that crowd is smaller now because a number of  people have sold their peers and conscience out for government money. He also  noted that Nouri's security forces were present not to protect the peaceful  demonstrators but to protect the Green Zone. Al Mada notes that Najaf also saw  Iraqis protesting today. Dar Addustour added  that the  demonstrators called for Nouri's government to resign and that banners denounced  the decision of the Parliament to spend at least $50 million on the purchase of  350 armored vehicles for members of Parliament. Dar Addustour offers some  idiotic statements by an idiot named Mohammed Chihod whom they wrongly identify  with the National Alliance. Yes, Chihod is with the National Alliance.  But he's State of Law. And when he blathers on with lies to defend Nouri, it's  the State of Law that needs to be disclosed to readers. So Liar Mohammed says  that the protesters are wrong in their call for a resignation, that there can be  no resignations because these leaders were elected by the people. Calling for  Nouri and his cabinet to resign is perfectly acceptable and not one of them was  elected to a Cabinet post or prime minister by the people. The people voted for  members of Parliament. (And their will was ignored.) And even though they voted  for MPs, they still have the right to call for their resignation. The one who's  "wrong" isn't the Iraqi people, it's liars like Mohammed Chihod who apparently  are also illiterate since he can't read and comprehend his country's  Constitution. He's such a sweetheart for Nouri, you'd almost think the two men  were engaged and planning a wedding.Aswat al-Iraq noted , "Laith M.  Redha, member of a youth group told Aswat al-Iraq that another group of  demonstrators will hold their activities in Culture Street of Mutanabi. He added  that the demonstrators will commemorate this occasion and demand the reforms  which were promised by the government a year ago, eradicating corruption,  availability of services and electricity."Turning to the United States where the Academy Awards were just handed  out last night so apparently it's now time to work ourselves into yet another  tizzy over awards.  Jarreau Joseph Weber (Death And Taxes)  reports  that there are 231 people nominated for this year's Nobel Peace  Prize.  It's not a prize we take seriously but one of the nominees is Bradley  Manning.  Weber notes that Bradley "was arrested in May 2010 after allegedly  leaking more than 250,000 U.S. diplomatic cables, 400,000 U.S. Army reports  about Iraq and another 90,000 about Afghanistan -- the biggest leak of  classified documents in U.S. history.  Manning was in solitary confienment for  nine months before formal charges were brought against him last week. "      Michael Ratner: I went down to Fort Meade on Wednesday -- on  Thursday for Bradley Manning's arraignment and, of course, getting into  Fort  Meade, it gives me the willies just going near the place because basically it's  one of a thousand bases the US has all over the world -- a thousand bases that  the US has all over the world. And I went to Bradley Manning's arraignment. You  have to go through -- your car gets inspected, you have to have license,  insurance, and you go into this really antiseptic courtroom where there were  only 20 of us in the entire courtroom.  There were ten press and ten spectators  including some resister people, Bradley Manning Defense Committee.  And Manning  walked in wearing his dress uniform, very moving scene to see Bradley Manning,  the alleged leaker,  of the collateral helicopter -- Collateral Murder  videotape, of the diplomatic cables and of hundreds of thousands of pieces of  information from the Iraq and Afghanistan wars.   Heidi Boghosian: How did he look, Michael?   Michael Ratner: He didn't look that bad. I mean, he looked quiet  and everything.  He only said a few words which was "Your honor."  Arraignment  is when you're supposed to plead guilty or not guilty.  They deferred the plea  till another time, they talked about motions.  But, you know, I'll give you --  and then we'll go back to some hard pitching -- and I can talk more about this.  But I'm sitting in that courtroom and it's a very antiseptic courtroom. It's  like hospital room.  It has a Celotex ceiling. It has sort of newish carpet,  but, you know, sort of the thin, industrial carpet, some wooden benches.  And  we're sitting there and there's three of the guys with brass all over them at  the prosecution table and then there's Manning's formerly military counsel but  now he's a civilian so he doesn't wear a uniform and a couple of people next to  him and there's Bradley Manning sitting there.  And, you know, you sit in that  courtroom and you say, "Here's the person who revealed probably more about US  War Crimes -- if it's true what they allege -- than any single person in US  history."  And what I thought was present in that courtroom, was not the brass,  was not the spectators, but what was really present and what was looking on was  really the Reuters journalists who were murdered from the US helicopter, were  the children who were killed, were the thousands of civilians watching who'd  been killed in Iraq and Afghanistan, those are the real people in that courtroom  watching that trial. And the people who should be on trial are not Bradley  Manning, are the United States government who authorized an utterly illegal war  including every member of Congress who voted for it -- that's who should be  there.  Bradley Manning is a whistle blower and the real witnesses to that are  the spirits of the dead who the US has murdered all over the world.       Lynne  Stewart is political prisoner. She's an attorney, the people's attorney,  willing to take the cases that weren't pretty or didn't have a big pay off.   Because of the 'crime' of issuing a press release, she was put on trial -- a  show trial in Manhattan which attempted to link Lynne and 9-11 -- under the Bush  administration.  Under the Barack administration, things got even worse.  The  judge sentences her to about two years.  Not good enough decides the Barack  administration, who made the judge 'review' the sentence.  Lynne was then  slammed with a ten year sentence.  She's a breast cancer survivor and a grandma,  she's over 70-years-old.  She's been moved to a Texas prison (on a military  base) far, far from her husband and partner Ralph Poynter.  Tomorrow people  gather at Tom Paine Park in NYC  to show their support at sundown. Wednesday,  supporters will be taking part at Occupy The Courts at 500 Pearl Street begining  at nine in the morning.  Heidi Boghosian and Michael S. Smith addressed the  targeting of Lynne on today's live broadcast.       Heidi Boghosian:  Lynne, if you don't know, was made to be a poster  child for the government's so-called War On Terror.  They gave her a harsh  sentence merely for issuing a press release for one of her clients who was held  in maximum security.   Michael S. Smith:  Well, they didn't even -- when she did it,  nothing happened to her.   Heidi Boghosian: Exactly.   Michael S. Smith: Because nothing ever happened to anybody because  of that.   Heidi Boghosian: [Then Attorney General] Janet Reno gave her a slap  on the wrist but it wasn't until --   Michael S. Smith: The Clinton administration let it slide.  When  Bush --   Heidi Boghosian: Right, when Bush came in.   Michael S. Smith: They thought, "Well we're going to make an  example out of her."  And they turned around and they prosecuted her on some  b.s. charges for something she had done years before.  And they wanted to make  sure that they scared attorneys so they wouldn't represent people accused by the  United States of terrorism.     And that's why the government went after Lynne.  To intimidate  others. They're trying to turn her into the modern day equivalent of a severed  head impaled upon a pike, to warn other attorneys not to take the difficult  cases and challenge the government.  The locking up of Lynne is an attack on  democracy and an attack on our judicial system and all that we're supposed to  stand for in the United States.  Lynne needs to be set free. (And if Barack  Obama had the character to do that, not only would I vote for him, I'd donate  the maximum amount to his campaign and then donate more to his superpac.  But he  has no character and can't even feel for a woman who gave to her community, who  gave to the law and who now sits behind bars for something as insane as issuing  a press release.)         |