How Evil Is the American Empire?: A Review of The Mauritanian (movie)

Reprinted from the Future of Freedom Foundation with permission.

If ever one were to doubt or question that the United States has become a national-security state, all he or she would need to do is see the movie The Mauritanian  to dispel such doubts. Titled after the name of the obscure Arab country in Africa from which the protagonist is from, it is an inspiring true story of Mohamedou Ould Slahi’s fight for freedom after being detained and imprisoned without charge by the U.S. government for years at Guantanamo Bay in the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks.

Alone and afraid, Slahi finds allies in defense attorney Nancy Hollander (played by Jodie Foster) and her associate Teri Duncan. Together they battle the U.S. government in a fight for justice that tests their commitment to the law and their client at every turn. Their controversial advocacy, along with evidence uncovered by a formidable military prosecutor, who at first was unwilling to accept the possibility that our government was lying about Slahi, uncovers shocking truths of relentless torture and forced confessions.

The movie is available on Netflix and various streaming services and is based on Slahi’s memoir Guantanamo Diaries. I cannot recommend it more highly. It is the kind of story out there in the mainstream media which reinforces the libertarian world view simply by virtue of telling it, and is the type of thing that libertarians should seek out and make known in our efforts to grow the movement and demand change, like closing the notorious Guantanamo Bay prison once and for all.

Lance Lamberton is a Georgia-based taxpayer-activist who founded the Cobb Taxpayers Association, which advocates for taxpayers on issues related to transportation, among others. In an earlier life, he served as the deputy director of the White House Office of Policy information under President Ronald Reagan.

Ukrainian Dissident Reports on Repression of the Ukrainian Peace Movement

From The Grayzone:

Ukrainian journalist and exiled antiwar dissident Ruslan Kostaba has been jailed and brutally attacked for his years of opposition to his government’s war in the Donbas, and his calls for peace with Russia. From exile, he speaks to The Grayzone’s Max Blumenthal about the growing movement in Ukraine against escalating the war, and the price his countrymen face for attempting to escape the war.

Act Now To Save Ukrainian Peace Activist From Prosecution

We’ve just learned that the office of the prosecutor and the “security service” of Ukraine have published press releases claiming to have put a stop to the activities of the “vicious Russian propagandist Yurii Sheliazhenko.”

This is, of course, very strange because Yurii, a Board Member of World BEYOND War, has — like World BEYOND War — denounced and opposed Russian warmaking from Day 1.

Yurii Sheliazhenko has been formally charged by the Ukrainian government with the crime of justifying Russian aggression. The evidence is this statement which explicitly condemns Russian aggression.

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Ukraine Hits Crimea (With US Targeting and British Missiles)

From today’s Ron Paul Liberty Report:

Yesterday, Ukraine hit targets in Crimea, damaging or destroying one kilo-class Russian sub and one landing ship. The missiles used were StormShadows from the UK and the targeting was from the US Pentagon. How soon until Russia strikes back at increasingly direct NATO/US involvement in the war? Also today: too little too late – the Pentagon suddenly develops an interest in where the money to Ukraine is going. Finally – Agent Orange 2.0? US to “defoliate” Asian jungles to prepare for war with China.

Reprinted from The Ron Paul Institute for Peace & Prosperity.

My First August 6th in Hiroshima

Reprinted with permission from Greg Mitchell’s newsletter Oppenheimer: From Hiroshima to Hollywood.

From a few years back, but little has changed, except nearly all of the bomb survivors, the “hibakusha,” have now passed away (but their children and other descendants continue to bear witness). All photos: my own, taken on that August day.

On the evening of August 5 we were told we ought to retire early and get up before five the next morning if we wanted to truly appreciate the occasion, before the TV cameras and the politicians horned in.  August 6 is not like any other day in Hiroshima.  It is not like any other day anywhere. What other city even has such a day to commemorate? More died in the siege of Leningrad, but the carnage occurred over many months. More died in the Holocaust, but the victims were separated by the miles between the death camps.

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Dan Sanchez: My Seizure, Diagnosis, and Initial Treatment

(Editor’s Note: Please consider supporting Dan’s struggle here.)

In this post, I’d like to tell the story of my cancer journey thus far and provide an update about my condition and treatment plans to my family, friends, readers, and supporters.

As I mentioned in yesterday’s post:

The first sign of my cancer was a periodic visual phenomenon I’ve had every few days for several weeks: a spot in my visual field distorts in a pulsing manner.

The first few times it happened, it cleared up by itself after a couple minutes. But when it happened again on the morning of July 31, it lasted much longer. The distorted spot also got much bigger, to the point where I couldn’t read anything on my computer screen.

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