Page 12 of 16 FirstFirst ... 28910111213141516 LastLast
Results 221 to 240 of 313

Thread: The Imperial Presidency

  1. #221
    Expatriate American Patriot's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Location
    A Banana Republic, Central America
    Posts
    48,612
    Thanks
    82
    Thanked 28 Times in 28 Posts

    Default Re: The Imperial Presidency

    http://phoebe53.wordpress.com/2014/0...hty-sovereign/

    There's a video of this at the link above.

    Jul 29 2014
    Obama: We must surrender our rights to an almighty sovereign

    This Obama speech was given at the Bilderberg Group conference in Brussels, Belgium, on May 23, 2014. We shouldn’t be surprised but I was stunned when I heard him actually utter the words.
    Libertatem Prius!


    To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 15 or greater. You currently have 0 posts.




  2. #222
    Expatriate American Patriot's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Location
    A Banana Republic, Central America
    Posts
    48,612
    Thanks
    82
    Thanked 28 Times in 28 Posts

    Default Re: The Imperial Presidency

    'Stop Hatin' All the Time' : Obama Slams GOP Lawsuit Vote

    Obama Calls GOP Lawsuit a Bad Political Stunt

    NBC News










    President Barack Obama on Wednesday continued to slam Republicans for moving to sue him over his use of executive actions, calling the move a “political stunt” and urging Congress to “stop hatin' all the time.”
    “They have announced that they are going to sue me for taking executive actions to help people,” he said during an event in Kansas City. “They’re mad because I’m doing my job.”
    Calling the vote a waste of valuable taxpayer dollars, Obama said Republicans are also taking time away from important legislation they should be addressing.
    “Stop being mad all the time,” he said of Republicans, chuckling. “Stop just hatin’ all the time. Let’s get some work done.”
    The House is expected to approve a resolution later Wednesday to authorize a lawsuit against the president for what Republicans call his overstepping of executive authority. Democrats call that a slippery step towards an impeachment fight – being sure to note their concern about impeachment in fundraising appeals that have brought in millions for the party.
    It’s not the first time that Obama has challenged Republicans on the lawsuit. In July, when House Speaker John Boehner was threatening the move, Obama told a Washington crowd that “middle-class families can’t wait for Republicans in Congress to do stuff.”
    “So sue me,” he added.
    Libertatem Prius!


    To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 15 or greater. You currently have 0 posts.




  3. #223
    Expatriate American Patriot's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Location
    A Banana Republic, Central America
    Posts
    48,612
    Thanks
    82
    Thanked 28 Times in 28 Posts

    Default Re: The Imperial Presidency

    Obama grabs squeeing woman at dinner; These captions will have you giggling madly [photo]

    Posted at 2:36 pm on July 30, 2014 by Twitchy Staff | View Comments

    • Share on Facebook


    "'Oh My God!' one woman cried out when she saw him." verbate from WH Pool report on Obama's visit to Kansas City.

    (@toddstarnes) July 30, 2014
    As Twitchy reported, President Obama dined with selected letter writers Tuesday at Arthur Bryant’s Barbecue in Kansas City, Mo.
    Then this happened.
    Woman’s over-the-top reaction to President Obama caught by White House Photog:
    https://t.co/2lNOlHlMk5
    Will Rabbe (@WillRabbe) July 30, 2014
    At Arthur Bryants: "He's so handsome, oh my God!" a woman exclaimed. "I'm paying for her food," Pres Obama said. http://t.co/B1f1EtYrvm
    (@petesouza) July 30, 2014
    Squee!
    @CuffyMeh She seems nice. Is she single?—
    EducatédHillbilly (@RobProvince) July 30, 2014
    Truth to Power! RT @NBCNews: This woman found Obama so 'handsome' in person she couldn't contain herself nbcnews.to/1u0jxxW
    Lachlan Markay (@lachlan) July 30, 2014
    Heh.
    Reach for the hurl bag? Yes. But as a cure, use some laughter. It is the best medicine and all.
    .@petesouza Bill Clinton's thinking "Damn, I miss being President." http://t.co/cwhqbNB5x8
    BT (@back_ttys) July 30, 2014
    "If you like your doctor, you can keep your doctor. Just kidding." http://t.co/QPONJUJfiz
    Cuffé (@CuffyMeh) July 30, 2014
    Worst. Edvard Munch. Ever. http://t.co/LslzADlJrF
    Cuffé (@CuffyMeh) July 30, 2014
    I'll have what she's having! Oh. On second thought. RT @CuffyMeh: Worst. Edvard Munch. Ever. http://t.co/xnJWUw6qdW
    Jeff Forret (@7OverTheWall) July 30, 2014
    And win:
    "I JUST IMPEACHED MY BLADDER!" https://t.co/Bc5SkBFDjv
    Cuffé (@CuffyMeh) July 30, 2014
    Snicker.
    @CuffyMeh Would be great to see this side by side with photo of Angela Merkel grimacing when Pres Bush put his hands on her shoulders—
    James (@JamesJo) July 30, 2014
    Make it happen, Internet.
    Libertatem Prius!


    To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 15 or greater. You currently have 0 posts.




  4. #224
    Expatriate American Patriot's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Location
    A Banana Republic, Central America
    Posts
    48,612
    Thanks
    82
    Thanked 28 Times in 28 Posts

    Default Re: The Imperial Presidency

    #AceNewsGroup 12:46 on July 30, 2014 Reply | Follow

    President Obama: ‘ GOP Back-Off From Suing Him and Do Their Jobs ‘

    #AceBreakingNews – UNITED STATES (Washington) – July 30 – President Obama asked Republicans to stop “hating” and “being mad all the time” during a Wednesday speech in Kansas City focused on the economy.



    The president accused GOP lawmakers of needlessly suing him instead of doing their jobs.



    He said they should be more focused on the economy.



    “They have not been that helpful,” Obama told a crowd in a local theatre.



    “They have not been as constructive as I would have hoped and these actions come with a cost.”



    By Amie Parnes @ The Hill

    #ANS2014
    Libertatem Prius!


    To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 15 or greater. You currently have 0 posts.




  5. #225
    Postman vector7's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2007
    Location
    Where it's quiet, peaceful and everyone owns guns
    Posts
    21,663
    Thanks
    30
    Thanked 73 Times in 68 Posts

    Default Re: The Imperial Presidency

    Quote Originally Posted by American Patriot View Post
    Obama grabs squeeing woman at dinner; These captions will have you giggling madly [photo]





    To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 15 or greater. You currently have 0 posts.


    Nikita Khrushchev: "We will bury you"
    "Your grandchildren will live under communism."
    “You Americans are so gullible.
    No, you won’t accept
    To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 15 or greater. You currently have 0 posts.
    outright, but we’ll keep feeding you small doses of
    To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 15 or greater. You currently have 0 posts.
    until you’ll finally wake up and find you already have communism.

    To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 15 or greater. You currently have 0 posts.
    ."
    We’ll so weaken your
    To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 15 or greater. You currently have 0 posts.
    until you’ll
    To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 15 or greater. You currently have 0 posts.
    like overripe fruit into our hands."



  6. #226
    Expatriate American Patriot's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Location
    A Banana Republic, Central America
    Posts
    48,612
    Thanks
    82
    Thanked 28 Times in 28 Posts

    Default Re: The Imperial Presidency

    /barf
    Libertatem Prius!


    To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 15 or greater. You currently have 0 posts.




  7. #227
    Expatriate American Patriot's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Location
    A Banana Republic, Central America
    Posts
    48,612
    Thanks
    82
    Thanked 28 Times in 28 Posts

    Default Re: The Imperial Presidency

    Hahahahahahahahahahaha


    Channeling McCarthy: Lib Wants Corporations To Sign Obama “Loyalty Oaths”


    (8 comments)
    By Robert Gehl
    August 5, 2014

    A prominent liberal wants corporations to sign “loyalty oaths” to President Obama’s economic agenda.


    It sounds like something out of Mussolini’s Italy, but Jonathan Alter thinks companies that move workers or headquarters out of the U.S. are unpatriotic and should be publicly shamed. To stop what he sees as a horrible trend, he wants corporations to sign loyalty oaths. Amazingly, he even compares it to McCarthy-era loyalty oaths.


    Remembering those dark days, Democrats don’t like oaths, or even pledges, which have proven enormously effective. Grover Norquist’s ability to get nearly every Republican in Congress to sign a no-new-taxes pledge is one of the most successful political gambits of recent decades—and a big reason for today’s gridlock.
    Because oaths and pledges are a little creepy, this effort needs something else—something that comes out of the legal and business worlds: a contract. More specifically, a [non-disclosure agreement].


    He cites corporations like Walgreens, Chiquita (the banana company) and Mylan as examples of un-American companies.


    This kind of fascist insanity can’t possibly be seriously considered, can it?


    Outsourcing is a political hot-button among liberals. But – as is common with the left – it’s short-sighted and stupid. Raging against corporations that send workers and headquarters overseas and even punishing them for doing so, means other countries can do the same thing.


    More than five million Americans are employed by foreign companies. Couldn’t Japan force Honda, Toyota and Nissan to close their American factories? Would the UK force British Petroleum out of the U.S.? Those countries aren’t railing against their version of outsourcing.


    I’d wager that more jobs are gained by other counties outsourcing here than the other way around.
    Libertatem Prius!


    To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 15 or greater. You currently have 0 posts.




  8. #228
    Expatriate American Patriot's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Location
    A Banana Republic, Central America
    Posts
    48,612
    Thanks
    82
    Thanked 28 Times in 28 Posts

    Default Re: The Imperial Presidency

    ByStephanie CondonCBS NewsAugust 12, 2014, 10:51 AM
    Obama tries to motivate Democrats with Supreme Court warning


    President Obama makes a statement on the situation in Iraq at Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts, on August 11, 2014. NICHOLAS KAMM/AFP/Getty Images
    Attempting to mobilize donors at a Democratic fundraiser Monday night, President Obama suggested that some Supreme Court justices may soon step down.
    "What's preventing us from getting things done right now is you've got a faction within the Republican Party that thinks solely in terms of their own ideological purposes and solely in terms of how do they hang on to power. And that's a problem," Mr. Obama said at the Tisbury, Mass., home of Roger H. Brown, president of the Berklee College of Music.
    "And that's why I need a Democratic Senate. Not to mention the fact that we're going to have Supreme Court appointments."


    Four of the nine Supreme Court justices are over 70 years old, but none has suggested they have plans to retire soon. Liberal Ruth Bader Ginsburg, the oldest justice on the court at 81, recently made clear she in fact plans to stay on the court for as long as possible. She suggested that even under the Senate's current Democratic control, Mr. Obama wouldn't be able to successfully nominate a liberal to the court.
    "So tell me who the president could have nominated this spring that you would rather see on the court than me?" Ginsburg said last month in an interview with Reuters.
    Ginsburg did acknowledge to Reuters that in an unusual move, Mr. Obama invited her to a private lunch at the White House last year. However, she said, "I don't think he was fishing" for hints about her potential retirement.
    The justice also told Reuters that she hasn't "slowed down," even after surviving two bouts with cancer in 1999 and 2009.
    Ginsburg similarly told the Associated Press last month, "Right now, I don't see any sign that I'm less able to do the job."
    Senate Democrats last year changed the Senate rules so that lower court appointments may be approved by a majority vote; however, under the rules Democrats set, Supreme Court appointments could still be subject to filibusters.
    Libertatem Prius!


    To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 15 or greater. You currently have 0 posts.




  9. #229
    Expatriate American Patriot's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Location
    A Banana Republic, Central America
    Posts
    48,612
    Thanks
    82
    Thanked 28 Times in 28 Posts

    Default Re: The Imperial Presidency

    The man is all show, no go....


    Obama's break from vacation: How unusual is that?

    Other presidents – especially George W. Bush – have left vacation to attend to business at the White House or elsewhere. But Obama's two-day diversion to Washington for 'meetings' is unusual.


    By Linda Feldmann, Staff writer

    • Pablo Martinez Monsivais/AP
      View Caption




    Washington — Why did President Obama leave his vacation in Martha’s Vineyard and come back to the White House for two days?
    The official reason is “meetings.” Mr. Obama and Vice President Joe Biden had their regular daily briefing Monday morning, then met with the National Security Council to discuss Iraq. Then Obama and Mr. Biden had a private lunch. In the afternoon, Obama met with Attorney General Eric Holder to receive an update on the situation in Ferguson, Mo. No word yet on what Tuesday holds. The president is scheduled to make a statement from the briefing room at 4 p.m. Eastern time.
    Speculation has been intense over what else might be going on – an announcement on immigration policy, perhaps? That’s not supposed to come until the end of summer. Maybe some personnel changes? Certainly that could wait until Obama’s two-week vacation is over.
    Recommended: Could you pass a US citizenship test? Find out.
    In part, the diversion from vacation may be intended to show that the president is active and engaged amid various world crises, from Iraq to Ukraine to Ferguson. But, it must be noted, the two-day hiatus was on the books before Obama decided to launch airstrikes in Iraq and before rioting in Ferguson erupted over a policeman’s killing of an unarmed black teenager.

    “[I] don’t recall a president interrupting vacation just for some WH meetings – but there have been prior interruptions,” writes Mark Knoller, a CBS Radio White House reporter and collector of presidential data, in an e-mail.
    Most of them involve President George W. Bush, who spent a lot of time at his ranch in Crawford, Texas, almost treating it at times as a second White House. Mr. Knoller cites these examples:

    • President Bush left his ranch for the White House on March 20, 2005, to sign legislation aimed at keeping alive Terry Schiavo, the young woman with severe brain damage who became a national cause célèbre. Then, he returned to Crawford.


    • Bush would also interrupt ranch visits for scheduled events in other locations – sometimes a day trip, sometimes more, then return to the ranch.




    • In August 2007, Bush interrupted a ranch stay to attend a Summit of the Americas in Canada. He then returned to Crawford by way of Minnesota and Kansas for other events.



    For any president, getting away from Washington is complicated. It involves a lot of advance planning by the Secret Service and other support staff, and must be in a location that can accommodate staff – including protective services – and the media.
    “So for the president to take a break like this one, it’s serious,” says Stephen Hess, a presidential scholar at the Brookings Institution and a veteran of two White Houses.
    Then, there’s the break in mental relaxation. Imagine, even for us average folks, departing the beach house one has rented for two weeks, leaving the family behind, and going back to the office for a couple of days. Ugh.
    “I’ve always felt, at least the two times I was on a president’s staff, that a vacation is sacrosanct,” says Mr. Hess, whoworked in the Eisenhower and Nixon White Houses.
    “It’s very important to the president. It is very important to all of his staff, particularly those who don’t go with him. It’s either a great time for them to go on vacation, or to clean up all the work they haven’t had time to do when he was looking over their shoulders.”
    Obama’s brief return to the White House also puts the lie to the notion that presidents can do everything they need to do from their vacation homes. Indeed, he has staff with him on the Vineyard, and those who aren’t there are available on speed dial.
    Nevertheless, the work of a vacationing president is “done with a skeleton staff, and the hour or two he puts aside for office business is only part of it,” says Hess. “It’s penciled in as vacation, not as serious work from someplace other than the White House.”
    Someday, the public will know the full story of Obama’s “vacation from vacation.” But until then, the mystery lingers.
    Libertatem Prius!


    To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 15 or greater. You currently have 0 posts.




  10. #230
    Expatriate American Patriot's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Location
    A Banana Republic, Central America
    Posts
    48,612
    Thanks
    82
    Thanked 28 Times in 28 Posts

    Default Re: The Imperial Presidency

    Cornel West slams ‘counterfeit’ Obama’s presidency

    August 26, 2014 by kristalklear

    Cornel West, activist and professor at Union Theological Seminary, ripped Barack Obama’s “Wall Street presidency,” calling him another neoliberal “counterfeit” after posing as a progressive in his initial campaign for the White House in 2008.
    “We ended up with a Wall Street presidency, a drone presidency, a national security presidency,” West told Salon.com’s Thomas Frank.
    “The torturers go free. The Wall Street executives go free. The war crimes in the Middle East, especially now in Gaza, the war criminals go free. And yet, you know, he acted as if he was both a progressive and as if he was concerned about the issues of serious injustice and inequality and it turned out that he’s just another neoliberal centrist with a smile and with a nice rhetorical flair.”
    Public intellectual West lamented Obama’s failure – or refusal – to attempt a revival of democratic principles at a time of “an empire in decline.”
    “Our culture is in increasing decay. Our school systems are in deep trouble. Our political system is dysfunctional. Our leaders are more and more bought off with legalized bribery and normalized corruption in Congress and too much of our civil life. You would think that we needed somebody—a Lincoln-like figure who could revive some democratic spirit and democratic possibility.”
    West said at a time of deep need for solutions, for a change of culture in the gilded halls of Washington, Obama was another “opportunist.”
    “It’s like you’re looking for John Coltrane and you get Kenny G in brown skin.”
    Looking back, West said he believes Obama’s “motus operandi” has always consisted of seeking to placate the powers-that-be and to occupy the “middle ground,” even though he acted the part of a transcendent figure during his campaign 2008, the year that saw the beginning of the Great Recession.
    “And so what did he do? Every time you’re headed toward middle ground what do you do? You go straight to the establishment and reassure them that you’re not too radical, and try to convince them that you are very much one of them so you end up with a John Brennan, architect of torture [as CIA Director]. Torturers go free but they’re real patriots so we can let them go free. The rule of law doesn’t mean anything.”
    West also chided US Attorney General Eric Holder for his cozy relationship with Wall Street.
    “Eric Holder won’t touch the Wall Street executives; they’re his friends. He might charge them some money. They want to celebrate. This money is just a tax write-off for these people. There’s no accountability. No answerability. No responsibility that these people have to take at all.”
    Acting as if there are no divisions in the US, that there is one “American family,” as Obama has said, is part of the President’s “temperament,” West said.
    “You don’t try to act as if we have no divisions and we’re just an American family, with the poor getting treated in disgraceful ways and the rich walking off sipping tea, with no accountability at all, and your foreign policy is running amok with Israelis committing war crimes against precious Palestinians and you won’t say a mumbling word about the Palestinian children. What is history going to say about you? Counterfeit! That’s what they’ll say, counterfeit. Not the real thing.”
    Obama and Holder, both black men, were “completely silent,” West said, following the police killing of unarmed African-American teenager Michael Brown in Ferguson. The incident was emblematic of “arbitrary police power” that is often trained on communities of color, he added.
    West said Holder will likely step down by the end of the year, as he is “concerned about his legacy as if he’s somehow been swinging for black folk ever since he’s been in there. That’s a lie. He’s been silent, too. He’s been relatively silent. He’s made a couple of gestures in regards to the New Jim Crow and the prison-industrial complex, but that’s just lately, on his way out. He was there for six years and didn’t do nothing.”
    The post-Obama era will be “an America in post-traumatic depression,” West said, and the likely successor in the White House, “neo-liberal opportunist par excellence” Hillary Clinton, will be “much worse.”
    “Hillary Clinton is an extension of Obama’s Wall Street presidency, drone presidency, national surveillance, national security presidency. She’d be more hawkish than he is, and yet she’s got that strange smile that somehow titillates liberals and neo-liberals and scares Republicans. But at that point it’s even too hard to contemplate.”
    http://rt.com/usa/182688-cornel-west-obama-counterfeit/
    Libertatem Prius!


    To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 15 or greater. You currently have 0 posts.




  11. #231
    Expatriate American Patriot's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Location
    A Banana Republic, Central America
    Posts
    48,612
    Thanks
    82
    Thanked 28 Times in 28 Posts

    Default Re: The Imperial Presidency

    Interesting. Even the Left is denigrating the dumbass bozo with oversized ears and over zealous ego...

    From Daily Beast....

    Politics

    09.08.14
    Does Obama Remember He's President?

    More and more, Obama seems like a passive observer of events who dismisses criticism as superficial. Not a good combination.
    “But part of this job is also the theater of it. A part of it is, you know, how are you, how, how are you, well, it's not something that—that always comes naturally to me.” —President Barack Obama on Meet The Press, Sunday
    Some presidents might have garnered a bit of sympathy and understanding with claims that the “theater” of the office doesn’t come naturally to them. Gerald Ford, Jimmy Carter, Lyndon Johnson, maybe even Richard Nixon, who was so much the anti-natural he hired PR professionals to run his White House. But Barack Obama?
    This is the Obama who as a candidate spoke before 200,000 at Berlin’s Brandenburg Gate? Der Spiegel headlined that speech with: “People of the World, Look at Me.” The same candidate who gave his acceptance speech outdoors in Denver surrounded by columns, mocked for their resemblance to ancient Greek temples, which is, ironically enough, where the Greeks performed the new art form of dramatic theater they were creating.
    Why is this pretense necessary? Obama wrote two autobiographies by the age of 40 and is well aware of the role that his mastery of political theater has played in his rapid ascension to the White House. As Valerie Jarrett said of Senate candidate Obama’s speech at the 2004 Democratic Convention: “It changed his life.”
    The “I’m not good at theater” is a calculated, if awkward, attempt to dismiss criticism as superficial and worthy of, well, theater critics, not serious thinkers. It’s fundamentally condescending, but like a lot of ill-considered defenses, it only reinforces the heart of the criticism. The charge is being disconnected and out of touch, and to dismiss it with a retort that even supporters will find inadequate seems….disconnected and out of touch.
    Democratic supporters of the president are worried about both the perception and reality of the president’s leadership. “Too passive,” says Senator Diane Feinstein. In the Meet The Press interview he again disputed that he was talking specifically about ISIS when he now famously said in a January 2014 New Yorker interview, “I think the analogy we use around here sometimes, and I think is accurate, is if a JV team puts on Lakers uniforms, that doesn’t make them Kobe Bryant.” As Washington Post fact-checker Glenn Kessler points out, that denial simply isn’t credible as “the context of Remnick’s question makes it clear that he was asking about ISIS.”
    It is rarely a good thing when the country seems more worried than the president. Or when the country is worried about the president’s level of concern. But when confronted with vexing issues that defy easy solutions, more and more, the president seems to check out rather than dig in.
    The “passive” comments of Senator Feinstein reflect not just a specific response to ISIS but a larger worldview. Increasingly the president seems to view the world as this dangerous place where things just keep happening but where the United States and our allies have little impact.
    When we go away, the world has a way of demanding our attention. The task for a president—never easy—is to shape events to America’s advantage rather than allowing events to shape us.

    In one of the more revealing moments in the MTP interview, the president summed up the situation with ISIS and Syria: “You know, the reason we're in this situation is because Assad brutalized his people and specifically brutalized the Sunni population that is the majority in Syria.”
    Well, no. First there’s the fact that previously, the president had assured the world that Bashar al-Assad would soon no longer be in power. In his 2012 State of the Union address, he declared: ”A year ago, Qaddafi was one of the world’s longest-serving dictators—a murderer with American blood on his hands. Today, he is gone. And in Syria, I have no doubt that the Assad regime will soon discover that the forces of change cannot be reversed, and that human dignity cannot be denied.”
    Qaddafi would likely not have fallen without external forces aided by the United States (the example cited as a success of “leading from behind”), and Assad’s ability to remain in power has largely been contingent on the United States and others not taking a more active role. If the president believes ISIS has been spawned by Assad brutalizing his people, that would surely be one more reason we should have intervened earlier. Maybe staying out of Syria was the right decision, maybe it was the wrong decision, but let’s don’t pretend that it wasn’t a decision—a decision made by our commander in chief.
    But does ISIS exist as a consequence of Assad’s failures, or is it the latest continuation of a militant Islamic fundamentalism? As Shiraz Maher of the International Centre for the study of Radicalisation wrote in The New Statesman, “This is precisely what Bin Laden always envisioned. His main thesis on the failure of the Islamist project was that western interference in the Middle East prevented the rise of Islamic governments. Weaken the west’s sphere of influence, he argued, and a caliphate would emerge.”
    This is the antithesis of President Obama’s view. As outlined in his June 2009 Cairo speech, the president clearly believes that Western influence in the Muslim world is a contributing factor to radicalism, not a mitigating force. “Tension has been fed by colonialism that denied rights and opportunities to many Muslims,” the president declared in Cairo, “and a Cold War in which Muslim-majority countries were too often treated as proxies without regard to their own aspirations.”
    That’s certainly true in a historical sense, but the president seems unwilling to acknowledge other realities as well: that withdrawal of Western influence is rarely followed by the triumph of “the common principles—principles of justice and progress; tolerance and the dignity of all human beings”—that he described in Cairo. It’s as if he assumes that the life experience he describes—“I have known Islam on three continents”—will lead others to a like conclusion.
    Our American tendency to see the world as populated by like-minded souls is never productive. It surely was a contributing factor in some of our greatest foreign policy miscalculations, from Vietnam to Iraq.
    Americans are tired of war and would like much of the world to simply go away. But when we go away, the world has a way of demanding our attention. The task for a president—never easy—is to shape events to America’s advantage rather than allowing events to shape us. ISIS—like Vladimir Putin—seems to know what it wants and how to get it. The question is, do we?
    When the president says we don’t have a strategy to fight ISIS, it’s not theater but reality. When Russia invades another country and our response is predicated on denying it’s an invasion, that’s reality, not theater.
    President Obama has 864 days left in office, just a couple hundred less than JFK served. The president came to office with great energy and ambition. Chuck Todd asked him if he was “exhausted.” It’s time to prove he’s not.
    Libertatem Prius!


    To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 15 or greater. You currently have 0 posts.




  12. #232
    Expatriate American Patriot's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Location
    A Banana Republic, Central America
    Posts
    48,612
    Thanks
    82
    Thanked 28 Times in 28 Posts

    Default Re: The Imperial Presidency




    /snicker
    Libertatem Prius!


    To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 15 or greater. You currently have 0 posts.




  13. #233
    Expatriate American Patriot's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Location
    A Banana Republic, Central America
    Posts
    48,612
    Thanks
    82
    Thanked 28 Times in 28 Posts

    Default Re: The Imperial Presidency

    Obama: I Do Not Need Congressional Approval To Go To War With ISIS

    1, September 10, 2014 by jonathanturley

    President Obama is again asserting his right to act unilaterally and without congressional approval in going to war. In what has become a mantra for this Administration, Obama reportedly told members of Congress that he does not need congressional approval to unleash a comprehensive military campaign against the Islamic State. The President informed a few members at a dinner — a striking image of how low congressional authority has become in our tripartite system of government.

    We have been discussing the growing concerns over President Barack Obama’s series of unilateral actions in ordering agencies not to enforce law, effectively rewriting laws, and moving hundreds of millions of dollars from appropriated purposes to areas of his choosing. One of the greatest concerns has been his unchecked authority asserted in the national security area. I previously represented members of Congress in challenging Obama’s intervention in the Libyan civil war without a declaration from Congress. In the case, President Obama insisted that he alone determines what is a war and therefore when he needs a declaration. Since the court would not recognize standing to challenge the war, it left Obama free to engage in war operations in any country of his choosing. As with his approach in Libya, Syria and other combat operations (and most recently on whether he will resume the war in Iraq), Obama is again asserting his extreme view of executive power.
    As in the past, Democrats are not just silent but actually applauding the circumvention of Congress — a precedent that will likely come back to haunt them if the next president is a Republican.
    I have repeatedly testified (here and here and here and here) and wrote a column on President Obama’s increasing circumvention of Congress in negating or suspending U.S. laws. However, war is a particularly egregious form of this unilateralism since the Framers worked hard to limit such powers under Article I and Article II.
    Not only is the United States about to enter a new military campaign based solely on the President’s authority but he is promising to fight to the Islamic State “wherever their strategic targets are.” That may suggest additional violation of international law if the United States acts unilaterally with regard to the borders of foreign nations. Michèle Flournoy, a former undersecretary of defense for policy, seems to anticipate and support such actions. She is quoted as saying “This is not an organization that respects international boundaries. You cannot leave them with a safe haven.” For some countries, that view may seem quite threatening since the United States has been repeatedly accused of bombing and conducting operations in other countries without approval.
    Once again, we are left with the questions of any limiting principle to this new uber-presidency. A president can now unleash a military campaign without congressional approval that could involve multiple nations. Yet, Congress seems content, again, to watch in a purely pedestrian role as if this invitation to a “dinner” is a sufficient substitute for congressional authorization. While it is not a check or balance, the president did pick up the check.
    Source: Washington Post
    Libertatem Prius!


    To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 15 or greater. You currently have 0 posts.




  14. #234
    Expatriate American Patriot's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Location
    A Banana Republic, Central America
    Posts
    48,612
    Thanks
    82
    Thanked 28 Times in 28 Posts

    Default Re: The Imperial Presidency

    The CIA Has Legal Justification to Kill American Citizens

    Monday a federal court released the outline of the legal justification for the 2011 killing of Anwar al-Awlaki which was previously declared a secret government memo. Al-Awlaki, killed in a drone strike in Yemen, was a U.S. Citizen and had been accused of being an al-Qaeda operative.
    It was David Barron from the First Circuit Court of Appeals who gave President Obama the legal justification, without a trial, to kill this American citizen.
    Because of his suspected dealing and ties to al-Quada, al-Aulaki was targeted and killed by our administration. Barron and another lawyer, Marty Lederman, were the authors of the first two memos on how the administration could rationalize this act.
    first white paper (Memo’s)
    The Central Intelligence Agency’s first memo consisted of only seven pages and was deficient. “As that length suggests, the memo, which could have resulted in a human’s death at any moment, was woefully incomplete as a legal analysis,” stated The Atlantic.
    The judicial logic in the memo was lacking to say the least. Both Barron and Lederman agreed and they became uncomfortable with the content of their first memo.
    The next memo the Barron and Lederman drew up was much longer and went into much more description of how al-Aulaki was not only guilty but that he needed to die.

    The 22-page memo entitled “Legality of a Lethal Operation by the Central Intelligence Agency against a U.S. Citizen” provides the reasoning behind fatal operations by the agency.
    Because of a very lengthy lawsuit against the Justice Department, the document was released under the order of the U.S, Court of Appeals and the memo was given to Vice News. The Obama administration had fought for years to keep the memo secret from the public, not to mention several other aspects of the targeted-killing agenda.
    “We do not believe that al-Aulaki’s U.S. citizenship imposes constitutional limitations that would preclude the contemplated lethal action,” by the CIA or United States military, the memo stated, and made it possible for a drone strike knowing it would cause powerful political and legal debate.
    Ex Parte Quirin, the 1942 Supreme Court decision, states that “by universal agreement and practice, the law of war draws a distinction…between those who are lawful and unlawful combatants. [A]n enemy combatant who without uniform comes secretly through the lines for the purpose of waging war by destruction of life or property” is an illustration of a confrontational individual who is an “offender against the law of war subject to trial and punishment by a military tribunal.”
    It was the New York Times and the American Civil Liberties Union who filed the Freedom of Information Act lawsuits to obtain the release of the document in July 2012.
    “The release of this memo represents an overdue but nonetheless crucial step towards transparency,” stated Jameel Jaffer. Jaffer is the deputy legal director of the American Civil Liberties Union.
    Jaffer stated, “The release of this memo will allow the public to better understand the scope and implications of the authority the government is claiming.”
    Legal analysis, Conor Friedersdorf wrote, “Barron and Lederman signed off on an American’s death before delving into intelligence reports and doing other due diligence they completed for the later memo, which would be more than four times as long as their earlier effort.”
    “High-Level government officials have concluded, on the basis of al-Aulaki’s activities in Yemen, that al-Aulaki is a leader of al-Qaeda [in the Arabian Peninsula] whose activities in Yemen pose a ‘continued and imminent threat’ of violence to the United States persons and interests…The contemplated DoD operation, therefore, would be carried out against someone who is in the core of individuals against whom Congress has authorized the use of necessary and appropriate force,” stated Barron and Lederman in the second memo.
    However, reports state that sections of importance in the Justice Department’s legal analysis were omitted and revised before being released to the public. The accusation states that the sections explaining why the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel “determined that killing Awlaki in a drone strike would not violate the Fourth Amendment, which guarantees due process to U.S. citizens accused of crimes,” reports The Washington Post.
    Kevin Jon Heller, an international law expert and professor of criminal law at the School of Oriental and African Studies at the University of London, said that the government is worried about the status of the CIA.

    “There’s absolutely no question that if any of these CIA agents involved in al-Awlaki’s killing ever went on vacation in Yemen or ever went on vacation in a state that has universal jurisdiction over war crimes, they could be arrested and prosecuted for murder. They certainly have committed murder under the laws of other states. Whether they have committed murder under American domestic law is another question.”
    There are three statutes that could forbid the CIA from lethal force against U.S. citizens who are abroad, the War Crimes Act, the foreign murder statute, and conspiracy to murder a citizen outside the U.S. There are also two provisions in the constitution that apply here, the Fourth Amendment that prohibits unreasonable seizures or searches, and the Fifth Amendment that guarantees due process.
    There are two doctrines, however, the 2001 Authorization to use Military Force (AUMF) and the not so well-known doctrine called the “public authority justification” that were used to prove Barron and Lederman’s point. They used these doctrines to explain that the CIA’s actions were well within the legal realm and that no law prohibited the killing of a U.S. citizen by the CIA.
    Barron and Lederman stated that “Awlaki’s relationship with al-Qaeda brings him within the scope” of the use of military force, according to the document. CIA and Pentagon were cited as references by the memo and stated that Awlaki “has operational and leadership roles [with al-Qaeda] and continues to plot attacks intended to kill Americans.”
    According to The Washington Post, “The administration has acknowledged killing three other U.S. citizens in Yemen, including Awlaki’s teenage son in a separate strike a month after his father was killed. But only the elder Awlaki was targeted intentionally, according to U.S. officials who have said the others were killed incidentally in strikes against other targets.”
    As long a U.S. citizen possess “an imminent threat of violent attack against the United States” and to capture them alive is not an option, Eric Holder is in agreement that killing them is acceptable as a last resort.

    Heller told Vice News, “They clearly realize they needed to come up with their independent justification of why [the CIA] has public authority to kill. Unfortunately, the memo doesn’t really tell us anything because of the way it’s been redacted. If the Question is, Where does the CIA get their authority to use lethal force abroad?, given that’s the necessary condition for them to avoid this foreign murder statute, this memo doesn’t tell us anything. It could be there. But if it is, it’s behind a redaction.”
    When another memo was written by the Justice Department on November 8, 2011, explaining the “lawfulness” of assassinating a U.S. citizen, it took seven months for the Justice Department to share the memo with the Judiciary Committee and Senate Intelligence Committee, among other departments.
    “Obama nominated the author of the targeted killing memo, David Barron, to serve as a judge on the First Circuit Court of Appeals,” reports, Vice News. His nomination was held up by lawmakers over the White House’s refusal to share a copy of his memo with them. The administration relented, and in late May he was confirmed by the Senate in a near party-line vote of 53-45.”

    Republican Rand Paul of Kentucky refused to support the nomination of Barron’s, however.

    Paul, on the senate floor, stated, “I rise today to oppose the nomination of anyone who would argue that the president has the power to kill an American citizen not involved in combat and without a trial. I rise to say that there is no legal precedent for killing citizens not involved in combat and that any nominee who rubber stamps and grants such power to a president is not worthy of being one step away from the Supreme Court.”
    A member of the Senate Intelligence Committee, Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) stated a hope that “the memo would generate new pressure for the executive branch to answer other pressing questions.” Wyden wanted to know if a president can order the killing of an American citizen “anywhere in the world” and also what it means “to say that capturing an American must be unfeasible.”
    Paul is not alone in his concerns and many commend his public stand against the nomination.
    Americans are donning a new age in American citizenship and they, too, want to know the answers to Wyden’s questions and more.
    Libertatem Prius!


    To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 15 or greater. You currently have 0 posts.




  15. #235
    Expatriate American Patriot's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Location
    A Banana Republic, Central America
    Posts
    48,612
    Thanks
    82
    Thanked 28 Times in 28 Posts

    Default Re: The Imperial Presidency

    OBAMA SET TO IGNORE CONGRESS, ANNOUNCE SYRIA STRIKES TONIGHT

    Posted on by Tom Fernandez

    Assad government to consider any military action an act of war

    by PAUL JOSEPH WATSON | SEPTEMBER 10, 2014


    President Barack Obama is set to ignore Congress once again by launching military strikes inside Syria without consulting lawmakers, a move that threatens to enflame the entire region given that the Assad government has repeatedly insisted it will consider any military activity inside Syrian territory as an act of war.


    “President Obama is prepared to use U.S. military airstrikes in Syria as part of an expanded campaign to defeat the Islamic State and does not believe he needs formal congressional approval to take that action, according to people who have spoken with the president in recent days,”reports the Washington Post.


    Obama is set to deliver a prime time speech tonight during which he will make the case for U.S. air strikes inside Syria in the name of targeting ISIS militants.


    In citing ISIS, which was armed and funded by the United States’ biggest allies in the region, as a justification for a military campaign inside Syria, Obama is set to accomplish what the administration failed to achieve last year after the chemical weapons attack in Ghouta was blamed on the Assad government, despite a subsequent MIT report which concluded the incident was more likely the work of US-backed rebels.


    Despite many calling for Washington to renew its support for so-called “moderate” rebels in Syria in the name of combating ISIS, it recently emerged that murdered journalist Steven Sotloff was sold to ISIS by FSA militants. In addition, arms given to FSA rebels that originated from the U.S. and Saudi Arabia were later seized by ISIS fighters.


    Bassel Idriss, commander of an FSA-run rebel brigade, also recently admitted that US-backed “moderate” rebels are still collaborating with ISIS.


    During a recent appearance on Fox News, General Thomas McInerney also revealed how the United States inadvertently bolstered ISIS as a result of the terrorist group obtaining weapons from the U.S. consulate in Benghazi. A more direct method of support involved the U.S. training militants at a secret base in Jordan who later went on to become ISIS fighters in Syria.


    Obama’s decision to launch air strikes inside Syrian territory without congressional approval echoes his 2011 assault on Libya, which again was a move to support radical jihadists that ended up with the African country turning into a failed state.


    At the time, Obama brazenly undermined the power of Congress by insisting his authority came from the United Nations Security Council prior to the attack on Libya and that Congressional approval was not necessary. “I don’t even have to get to the Constitutional question,” scoffed the President.


    According to Congressman Walter Jones, this was an act that constituted “an impeachable high crime and misdemeanor under article II, section 4 of the Constitution.”


    Obama’s move to strike inside Syria in the name of fighting ISIS militants which his administration helped boost as a result of its disastrous policy to arm so-called “moderate” rebels threatens to spark a regional war given that the Assad government has repeatedly insisted that any military action within Syrian territory will be considered an act of war.


    The global resistance to a U.S. attack on Syria, which successfully derailed last year’s seemingly inevitable assault, has largely evaporated in light of the western media’s ceaseless promotion of ISIS as a catastrophic threat.


    As an MSNBC poll showed last night, anti-war fervor amongst liberals has all but disintegrated, with just 12% calling on Obama to get permission from Congress before launching an attack on ISIS inside Syria.
    Libertatem Prius!


    To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 15 or greater. You currently have 0 posts.




  16. #236
    Expatriate American Patriot's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Location
    A Banana Republic, Central America
    Posts
    48,612
    Thanks
    82
    Thanked 28 Times in 28 Posts

    Default Re: The Imperial Presidency

    Patriotism? I think not.

    Obama’s latte salute is offensive because . . . death
    bookwormroom.com ^ | 9-24-2014 | Bookworm
    Posted on 9/25/2014, 5:27:41 AM by servo1969



    Ah, yes. The infamous “latte salute.” If you haven’t heard about it yet, Obama walked off a helicopter insouciantly clutching an environmentally-deadly Styrofoam latte cup in his right hand. When the two Marines waiting at the base of steps offered him a smart salute, Obama, who seemed to avoid looking at them, vaguely pawed his forehead with the hand holding that cup and then walked on. Here, see it for yourself:



    People in the military and conservatives were outraged. Liberals have been outraged at the outrage. Here are a few of the comments I’ve culled from liberals on my “real me” Facebook page:
    Obama isn’t military so he shouldn’t be expected to salute.
    Reagan started the saluting trend, and there’s no reason to continue it.
    Obama has the weight of the world on his shoulders, so it’s ridiculous to expect him to salute.
    If you’re going to demand saluting, why not require all presidents to be ex-military. [Bookworm: Not a bad idea, but the liberal who wrote that was obviously being sarcastic.]
    We all do things like waving a “hi” while holding a coffee cup. He’s a good guy and sincere.
    For military people, the honor of directly serving the president outweighs all other things.
    Weak leaders like Reagan (who sold arms to terrorists) disguise their weakness by saluting.
    Bush did worse, because he hugged a dog when saluting. [Bookworm: What I see, given my bias, is that Bush found himself holding a dog, and struggled to construct the best salute possible under the circumstances.]



    You get the idea. Progressives simply cannot understand why Obama’s failure to perform this silly, formulaic act should excite so much disgust amongst the president’s critics. Certainly, the Left is correct that, just as they viewed every eyebrow twitch on George Bush’s face as a sign of evil or stupidity, conservatives are watching Obama like a hawk for proof that he is indeed a far-Left ideologue, who is hostile to America’s core values and interests. In what is still a kind-of-free political system, this partisanship is natural.


    Conservatives, however, are on to something deeper than mere politics or tradition when they look with disgust at Obama’s almost studied disrespect for the Marines. As I mentioned above, you need to look at his body language. It’s not just the limp, cup-in-hand salute he offers; it’s the way he rushes past the Marines, refusing to make any eye contact.


    Obama, unlike Eisenhower (whom Leftists note was a general who did not salute the troops), is a wartime president. More than that, he is presiding over the longest war in American history and one, moreover, that appears to be heating up significantly on his watch, with an indefinite, probably far off, end-point.


    It doesn’t matter that Obama is trying to distinguish himself from George Bush by promising that his latest war won’t be “boots on the ground” fight. We know that this promise is as untrue as all of Obama’s other promises. After all, Bush also tried a no-boots-on-the-ground strategy, which rejoiced under the name “Shock & Awe.” That strategy failed dismally until the boots-on-the-ground Surge turned the tide.






    The reality is that you can bomb battleships and military bases, but you cannot bomb disparate individuals who can instantly melt into the surrounding landscape and population. The only way to deal with that is hand-to-hand combat. That’s what the Israel did to win back Jerusalem in 1967 and to destroy Hamas’s tunnels in 2014; and it’s what the US did to destroy the Iraqi Islamic fanatics in places such as Fallujah.




    Gunnery Sergeant Ryan P. Shane shot while trying to rescue fatally wounded Marine at Fallujah



    The problem with boots-on-the-ground fighting is that people die. They die in especially large numbers during the first days of fighting, when the Commander-in-Chief is trying to convince the public in a republican democracy that a ground fight really is a good idea. Sure, these fights produce incredible tales of heroism that are still told around military campfires by modern-day bards, but at the end of the day, a culture that still values most life (more or less, depending on whether the life has already been born or isn’t yet aging its way to death) is left staring at a long list of names carved into a wall.


    Marine 1st Sergeant Bradley Kasal in Fallujah.



    Moreover, because our Constitution (possibly with an eye to our first president) designates any sitting president as Commander-in-Chief, the American way is for the president to command that all these young men be sent to potential death. This power over life and death is especially large if you’re a Commander-in-Chief who insists on ignoring the clear language in Article I, Section 8 of the Constitution that “Congress shall have the Power . . . to declare War” and, instead, contends that he doesn’t need no stinkin’ Congress. He’s the Obama and has the imperial power to declare war.


    Not only has Obama given himself the sole power to send these men into battle, he’s doing so at a time when he’s shrinking our military to a size and readiness more consistent with an America right before World War I than with an America fighting a sadistic, hydra-headed enemy all over the world in a battle that has lasted for more than a decade and that promises at least another several years to come. It doesn’t take a genius to figure out that more war with less military probably means more military deaths.


    So what about that salute? From a lower rank to a higher rank, a salute is obviously a sign of deference. When returned by that higher rank to the lower rank, it’s a sign of respect. The higher ranking officer is recognizing the individual serviceman’s humanity, his training, and his willingness to go into battle. Never is this mutual respect more important than with a Commander-in-Chief who is in the actual process of making life-and-death decisions about these troops.


    Given this relationship between America’s Commander-in-Chief and his troops, it’s stunning that Obama’s whole body language says “I don’t see you. You’re not there. You’re not worthy.” Perhaps that’s understandable. It’s so much easier to send the invisible, unworthy ones into battle than to do so with real human beings. After all, as Stalin tellingly remarked to Churchill when the two met at Tehran, “When one man dies it is a tragedy, when thousands die it’s statistics.”


    In other words, when conservatives see a Leftist Commander-in-Chief — one who is uncomfortable with the military and who seeks to cut it down to size, even as he plans to send more troops into battle — rush past saluting Marines, avoiding eye contact, and making a bare pretense of a salute, they see a Commander-in-Chief who is saying “Eh, they’re just statistics. Why bother?”



    TOPICS: Chit/Chat; Military/Veterans; Politics; Society
    KEYWORDS: cup; obama; salute; scandals

    1 posted on 9/25/2014, 5:27:42 AM by servo1969
    [ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies]

    To: servo1969


    If you want to debate "progressives" regarding Obama, the only tactic that works is to point out his hypocrisy. Hypocrisy is the greatest moral offense in the adolescent mind (e.g. Catcher in the Rye).

    He must have been horribly insecure as a leader in 2011:





    ...or perhaps he doesn't respect customs and social graces not because of ideological courage or psychological fortitude, but because he is an a****le?






    2 posted on 9/25/2014, 5:38:05 AM by oblomov
    Libertatem Prius!


    To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 15 or greater. You currently have 0 posts.




  17. #237
    Creepy Ass Cracka & Site Owner Ryan Ruck's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Location
    Cincinnati, OH
    Posts
    25,061
    Thanks
    52
    Thanked 78 Times in 76 Posts

    Default Re: The Imperial Presidency

    And people wonder how someone like Hitler can take power...


    https://twitter.com/passantino/statu...82662154788864



  18. #238
    Literary Wanderer
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Location
    Colorado
    Posts
    1,590
    Thanks
    5
    Thanked 6 Times in 6 Posts

    Default Re: The Imperial Presidency

    The ignorance, nay the idiocy is at monumental levels. How can these Hollywood morons, after watching president destroy country and commit treason over and over again, still follow him around like lost puppies? They aren't even human beings.

  19. #239
    Creepy Ass Cracka & Site Owner Ryan Ruck's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Location
    Cincinnati, OH
    Posts
    25,061
    Thanks
    52
    Thanked 78 Times in 76 Posts

    Default Re: The Imperial Presidency


  20. #240
    Senior Member Avvakum's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2012
    Posts
    830
    Thanks
    4
    Thanked 0 Times in 0 Posts

    Default Re: The Imperial Presidency

    Quote Originally Posted by Ryan Ruck View Post
    Things haven't affected them.... Yet. As Anatoly Golitsyn said in 'the Perestroika Deception'; (the Communists)" ..... Shall have their bloody feasts".
    "God's an old hand at miracles, he brings us from nonexistence to life. And surely he will resurrect all human flesh on the last day in the twinkling of an eye. But who can comprehend this? For God is this: he creates the new and renews the old. Glory be to him in all things!" Archpriest Avvakum

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •