Sunday, August 4, 2013

Japan MP under fire for praising Nazis

Japan's finance minister has publicly retracted comments he made this week that appeared to call on Japan's conservative government to emulate Adolf Hitler's takeover of pre-war Germany, a gaffe that underscored the potential for disputes over Japan's own wartime history to derail its popular prime minister, Shinzo Abe.

Taro Aso, also a former prime minister, insisted that his comments on Monday, in which he seemed to say that Japan should learn how the Nazi party quietly rewrote Germany's constitution, were taken out of context.

Faced with growing criticism within Japan and abroad, he countered that he had never meant to praise the Nazis. He said he had hoped to prompt debate in Japan over whether to change its pacifist constitution to allow a full-fledged military, as many conservatives now seek.

Still, the uproar over the comments by Mr Aso seemed to confirm the fears of some Japanese and other Asians that members of Mr Abe's government want to revise views of World War II to present Imperial Japan, an Axis ally of Nazi Germany, in a more positive light.

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Friday, July 26, 2013

The Surveillance State Is Not John Roberts' Fault

The secret court that determines the boundaries (such as they are) for NSA surveillance has gotten progressively less secret over the past few months, thanks to Edward Snowden. New data about the historic composition of the court seems to suggest that more of its judges now have prosecutorial backgrounds and were Republican appointees. Put your partisanship down. Existing data and leaked rulings suggest the difference this made was at best subtle.

RELATED: Government Update: We're Still Collecting All Your Phone Data

That new data appeared in a front-page article in The New York Times on Friday. It addresses the role played by Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts in making appointments to the court, which is formally known as the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (or FISA) Court. The name stems from the law that gives it its authority, the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, signed into law in 1978. The court came into being the next year, with appointees determined by then-Chief Justice Warren Burger.

RELATED: The Easy Way for the Government to Get Around Secrecy Rules Is to Change Them

While Roberts' role in appointing judges to sit on the FISA Court has been documented before ??most notably by the Washington Post earlier this month ? it had not previously been possible to compare Roberts' appointees with his predecessors. The Times got a full list of appointees over time, most of whom come from district appeals courts. The paper's Charlie Savage summarizes:

Though the two previous chief justices, Warren E. Burger and William H. Rehnquist, were conservatives like Chief Justice Roberts, their assignments to the surveillance court were more ideologically diverse, according to an analysis by The New York Times of a list of every judge who has served on the court since it was established in 1978.

According to the analysis, 66 percent of their selections were Republican appointees, and 39 percent once worked for the executive branch.

Our own version of The Times' graph of those appointees is below. Each Chief Justice who has appointed FISA Court judges is below. The timing is important, so it's worth breaking out:

RELATED: How the Snowden Leaks Are Leveling the Oversight Playing Field

  • Warren Burger: began appointing judges in 1979
  • William Rehnquist: began in 1986
  • John Roberts: began in 2005

As is hopefully obvious, the distinction between Roberts and his predecessors is subtle. He has appointed a higher percentage of judges who have experience in the executive branch (mostly as prosecutors) and who were themselves appointed to the bench by other Republicans. This, Savage argues, is important.

While the positions taken by individual judges on the court are classified, academic studies have shown that judges appointed by Republicans since Reagan have been more likely than their colleagues to rule in favor of the government in non-FISA cases over people claiming civil liberties violations. Even more important, according to some critics of the court, is the court?s increasing proportion of judges who have a background in the executive branch.

The "academic study" linked is to a 2004 report that broadly suggests George W. Bush appointees to all benches were more conservative than the norm. The FISA Court is not mentioned.

RELATED: A Former Judge on the Secret Privacy Court Says He Quit Over Surveillance

But the data itself suggests that concerns about an increasingly conservative set of appointees ??which, again, is subtle! ? are overblown. Using data compiled by the Electronic Privacy Information Center, using reports from the FISA Court to Congress on its decision-making, here's how the FISA Court has ruled on government-proposed warrants under each Chief Justice.

RELATED: The Members of Congress Who Want to Reform NSA Surveillance

It's hard to tell, but the percentage of warrant applications rejected during the years Roberts was appointing judges actually increased. Barely, mind you, and Roberts' FISA Courts have been presented with far, far more applications than previous courts.

You may be thinking: Well, if a bench has a majority of conservative judges, it can overrule the non-conservative minority. Except that isn't how the FISA Court works. As Reuters reported earlier this year, each warrant is considered by one judge at a time. Given the propensity with which the warrants are approved, it's obvious that the judge's background as a prosecutor or political predilection makes no difference whatsoever in the decisions he or she makes.

Where the point is more valuable is in considering the opinions the bench has released. Savage makes this point:

[I]ncreasingly in recent years, the court has produced lengthy rulings interpreting the meaning of surveillance laws and constitutional rights based on procedures devised not for complex legal analysis but for up-or-down approvals of secret wiretap applications. The rulings are classified and based on theories submitted by the Justice Department without the participation of any lawyers offering contrary arguments or appealing a ruling if the government wins.

Among those opinions ??which are then used in consideration of those warrant applications ??were decisions that apparently loosened the definition of "relevant" used to determine when information was important for a criminal case. This is by no means insignificant ??but it's also not clear which judges were on the FISA Court when the decision was made. The Wall Street Journal's original report puts the timeframe as "starting in the mid-2000s" ??when the FISA Court would have been mostly Rehnquist appointees. (Each judge serves a seven-year term, so even after Roberts was named Chief Justice, many of Rehnquist's appointments were still in place.)

What's more, the FISA Court released an opinion that was a strong rebuke of the NSA's activity after 2008. In a letter to Senator Ron Wyden of Oregon last year, the office of the Director of National Intelligence admitted that the FISA Court had ruled that the NSA's intelligence-gathering operations had, at some point, violated the Fourth Amendment. That ruling, which is still classified, has become a focal point for civil liberties groups as one of the few indicators that the NSA overstepped its authority. And it came well after John Roberts started appointing his slightly-more-conservative judges.

Learning more about the composition of the FISA Court is an important development from the Snowden leaks ??just as is learning about the surveillance that court authorizes. But critique of Roberts' appointees as somehow exceptional does not appear to be warranted. The FISA Court has always been deferential to the government. That's the real problem.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/surveillance-state-not-john-roberts-fault-143900828.html

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Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Egypt: Masked Assailants Fire Shots At Church in Port Said

Masked assailants fired shots at Mary Mina Church in Port Said then escaped during the early hours of Tuesday.

No injuries were reported after the attack, the state news agency MENA said.

Police and army forces were deployed to the church and investigations are ongoing.

This is the fourth attack witnessed by the city in the past 24 hours.

Source: http://allafrica.com/stories/201307091451.html

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Orson Scott Card, Ender's Game Author, Under Fire for Gay Marriage Views

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/07/orson-scott-card-author-of-enders-game-under-fire-for-gay-marria/

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Pope Francis prays for victims, families of Canada train derailment

(Vatican Radio) Authorities in the severely damaged Quebec town of Lac-Megantic said some residents could start returning home on Tuesday, after a runaway train derailed and exploded early Saturday, killing up to 50 people. Dozens are still unaccounted for. In a message to the People of Lac-M?gantic, signed by Vatican Secretary of State Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, Pope Francis offers his sympathy and prayers for the victims, their families and rescue workers.

Below we publish his message to the People of Lac-M?gantic :

"Upon learning of the tragic train derailment at Lac-M?gantic, with its many victims of whom a large number is still unaccounted for, His Holiness Pope Francis unites himself through prayer in the anguish of the grieving families, and he entrusts the victims to the mercy of God, asking Him to welcome them into His light. He expresses his deep sympathy to the injured persons and their families, to the emergency workers, and to all the people around them, asking the Lord to support and comfort them in their hardship. As a token of consolation, the Holy Father sends a special apostolic blessing to all persons touched by this tragedy. "

Source: http://www.radiovaticana.va/EN1/articolo.asp?c=709043

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Members of Basehor VFW Post No. 11499 wave to parade-goers near the end of the parade route.

Members of Basehor VFW Post No. 11499 wave to parade-goers near the end of the parade route.

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[NFL: Giants Daily Blitz Blog] - Twitter: Reaction to Cruz signing extension

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