Obama to Let Congress See Drone Memo

[Content Note: Drones; war; violence.]

A modicum of transparency:

The White House on Wednesday directed the Justice Department to release to the two Congressional Intelligence Committees classified documents discussing the legal justification for killing, by drone strikes and other means, American citizens abroad who are considered terrorists.

The White House announcement appears to refer to a long, detailed 2010 memo from the Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel justifying the killing of Anwar al-Awlaki, an American-born cleric who had joined Al Qaeda in Yemen. He was killed in a C.I.A. drone strike in September 2011. Members of Congress have long demanded access to the legal memorandum.

The decision to release the legal memo to the Intelligence Committees came under pressure, two days after a bipartisan group of 11 senators joined a growing chorus asking for more information about the legal justification for targeted killings, especially of Americans.

..."Today, as part of the president's ongoing commitment to consult with Congress on national security matters, the president directed the Department of Justice to provide the Congressional Intelligence Committees access to classified Office of Legal Counsel advice related to the subject of the Department of Justice white paper," said an administration official who requested anonymity to discuss the handling of classified material.

The official said members of the Intelligence Committees would now get "access" to the documents.

Christopher Anders, senior legislative counsel for the American Civil Liberties Union, called the president's move "a small step in the right direction." But he noted that the legal memo or memos were not being shared with the Armed Services Committees, which have jurisdiction over Pentagon strikes, or the Judiciary Committees, which oversee the Justice Department. It was not clear whether the release involved more than one memo.

The public should be permitted to see at least a redacted version of the relevant material, Mr. Anders said. "Everyone has a right to know when the government believes it can kill Americans and others," he said.
Yes. The argument against disclosing guidelines for drone strikes (and/or other types of defense strategies in the war on terror) has always been that publicly disclosing our strategies is a national security concern because it puts the country at risk if "the terrorists" are aware of our defense strategies. I'm not at all convinced that's true, but, even if it were, our representative government acting in secrecy without oversight or accountability puts the country at risk in other ways.

Our system of government and our culture of democracy is dependent on transparency, on oversight, on accountability. These are not small things. How we value and prioritize them fundamentally defines what type of nation we are.

In the linked New York Times article, anonymous administration officials describe President Obama's decision to grant Congressional access to these classified documents as "extraordinary." That's true. But it's nothing to celebrate. It shouldn't be extraordinary in the first place.

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Question of the Day

What's the last movie you saw? In the theater, at home, a movie you've never seen before, or one you've seen a million times...just the last movie you watched from start to finish.

I rented Celeste and Jesse Forever yesterday, because Rashida Jones.

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Tweet of the Day


Wait—is he JUST KIDDING? Or will his tweets really have his initials? If he sends a gag tweet, will it say "j/k! -JK"? WE NEED TO KNOW WHEN THE NEW SECRETARY OF STATE IS BEING WHIMSICAL! I'm just saying: "We totes invaded Poland. -JK" could get confusing.

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Quote of the Day

"Over the past few decades, employees fortunate enough to have employer-based retirement benefits have been shifted from defined benefit plans to defined contribution plans. We are now seeing the results of that grand experiment, and they are frightening. Recent and near-retirees, the first major cohort of the 401(k) era, do not have nearly enough in retirement savings to even come close to maintaining their current lifestyles. Frankly, that's an optimistic way of putting it. Let me be alarmist for a moment, because the fact is the numbers are truly alarming. We should be worried that large numbers of people nearing retirement will be unable to keep their homes or continue to pay their rent."—Duncan Black, aka Atrios, in a must-read column in USA Today.

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Two-Minute Nostalgia Sublime



The Smiths, "Death of a Disco Dancer"

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New Girl Open Thread

image of Jess and Nick wrestling over a roll of masking tape
"It's a terrible table!"

[Spoilers are making sturdy tables out of newspaper and masking tape herein.]

Oh girl! There is a lot to talk about after the episode following THE EPISODE! Jess and Nick are dealing with THE THING in totally expected ways: Jess wants to talk it out, and Nick wants to literally moonwalk away from mature discussion. So much LOL at Nick's evasive moonwalking!

Meanwhile, Jess is unhappy that Sam wants to fist-bump her first thing in the morning. In real life, this could be solved by Jess saying, "Hey, you know, it kinda annoys me when you want to fist-bump me good morning!" to which Sam would probably respond, "Oh, okay. I won't do that anymore," but this is a sitcom where we need to feel okay about Jess and Sam's relationship being DEFINITELY DOOMED, so it's the fist-bump heard 'round the world.

Actually, this was the fist-bump heard 'round the world—or "terrorist fist-jab," if you work for Fox News—but you get my drift. THAT FIST-BUMP WAS IMPORTANT.

And of course it all comes back around to the fist-bump when, at the end of the episode, Jess mentions the fist-bump to Nick right before bed, only to have Nick immediately offer her his fist goodnight. "Too soon?" LOL! OH NICK MILLER DON'T EVER CHANGE.

Also: Other stuff!

Nick Turtleface bullet point "I literally haven't said a word for like over an hour."

Nick Turtleface bullet point "Yeah, I saw through space and time for a minute, but that's not the point!"

Nick Turtleface bullet point "You look like the fortune teller in Big."

Nick Turtleface bullet point "Can you drive in that dress?"

Nick Turtleface bullet point "I'm a squirrel. You're my nut. Winter's coming, and I'mma store you in my cheek, girl."

Nick Turtleface bullet point "Blammo! THAT happened!"

Nick Turtleface bullet point "So this is rock bottom."

Nick Turtleface bullet point "This is a weird date. I always thought we'd go bowling before we went to an Indian marriage convention."

Nick Turtleface bullet point "You were like a dog and my mouth was like a bowl full of dog milk!"

Nick Turtleface bullet point "I will Calcutta bitch!"

Nick Turtleface bullet point "He's in such terrible shape! You could have killed him!"

Nick Turtleface bullet point "Is there another doctor in the house?"

Nick Turtleface bullet point "Get your crap together, India! Schmidt—OUT."

[Content Note: Sexual violence.] On a serious note, this episode underlined a very fundamental problem with doing "ironic" humor, especially around rape culture. The character of the convention organizer, an Indian woman who aggressively comes onto and sexual harasses Winston, was certainly intended to be a send-up of the demure, sexually passive, exoticized virgin to which female Indian characters are reduced in Western media. But it was eminently possible to mock that trope without crossing the line into drawing her as a predator. This episode may well have been written before the highly publicized recent rape case in India, but that's the problem with "ironic" rape culture humor. It evokes awful truths about the way the world really works, and who the real predators and victims tend to be, for anyone who cares to pay attention to the world. I desperately hope the team over there will reconsider the efficacy of that sort of commentary. I know they can be smarter than that, and I hope they will.

Discuss!

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Wednesday Blogaround

This blogaround brought to you by whiskers.

Recommended Reading:

Rick: The HAES® Files: Punching Holes in the Matrix [Content Note: Fat bias.]

Jorge: Justice Sonia Sotomayor and All the Hugs on Her Book Tour

Trudy: Like Father, Like Daughter (A Tale of Introverts…)

Ari: Problems Ahead In a Post-DOMA World: The Fate of Binational Couples

Echidne: On Higher Education as a Bad Investment

Steve: RIP Barney

Alex: Game of the Day: The Little Girl Nobody Liked by Deirdra Kiai

Chloe: Daily Feminist Cheat Sheet

Susana: Welcome to the Marvel Universe, Chris Pratt: You're Star-Lord Now

Angry Asian Man: Amy Poehler and the Helpful Best Buy Employee

Late Night: Downton Sixbey: Episode 3

Leave your links and recommendations in comments...

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Hillary Clinton Says Goodbye

I'm sorry this has been delayed by my absence, but I figured I'd share it now, in case anyone missed it and so we have a chance to talk about it...

Four years ago, Hillary Clinton arrived at the State Department to cheers and applause. To this day, I cannot watch that video without getting choked up. It was such a momentous occasion, and not just because it was Hillary Clinton, and not just because it was so meaningful that she had been offered and had accepted a prominent role in the Obama administration, but because it was a marked end to the Bush administration's state policies, which treated diplomacy like a dirty word.

I remember, among all the feelings I had that day, a sense of overwhelming relief. I knew Clinton's tenure would not be perfect, and that she was always going to be more hawkish than I will ever be, but we went from a foreign policy of belligerent aggression and black-and-white thinking to a foreign policy shaped by nuance and good faith, and it mattered.

Last Friday, Hillary Clinton left the State Department, and she went out the same way she came in: To the sound of cheers and applause.


[Full transcript here.]
I know that the world we are trying to help bring into being in the 21st century will have many difficult days, but I am more optimistic today than I was when I stood here four years ago, because I have seen, day after day, the many contributions that our diplomats and development experts are making to help ensure that this century provides the kind of peace, progress, and prosperity that not just the United States, but the entire world, especially young people, so richly deserve. I am very proud to have been Secretary of State.

I will miss you.
Thank you for your service, Secretary Clinton.

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Daily Dose of Cute

All five furry residents of Shakes Manor have been keeping me good company while I'm laid up. Sophie wants desperately to knead my back, and she doesn't understand why it's not helpful. "But this is the hurty spot!" And, as per usual, Watch Dog and Not-Watch Dog are fulfilling their respective roles with aplomb:

image of Zelda lying on the floor beside me, looking up at me
"Are you okay? What can I do? Are you okay? Can I get you anything? Are you okay?"

image of Dudley lying on the loveseat with his tongue hanging out
"She's fine. Be quiet. I'm trying to sleep."

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Downton Abbey Open Thread

image of Carson (Jim Carter) looking Very Concerned
"I may not have the breeding and fortune of a lord, but I have TWICE the sanctimony!"

[Spoilers are telling secrets downstairs herein.]

Oh the goings-on at Downton this week! Lady Valium CAN'T EVEN LOOK at Lord Whoops, because he refused to listen to Doctor Mustache about Sybil's eclampsia. Luckily, Lord Whoops, giant man-child, has a Mommy to intervene on his stupid behalf. Which, in this case, means bullying Doctor Mustache into stretching the truth about how Sybil would have almost definitely died anyway, even if they'd taken his advice. Which sends Lady Valium into Lord Whoops' arms, and now they can grieve together.

And Lord Whoops never being held accountable for anything pans out pretty well for everyone else, as he pitches a fit about Tom wanting to name his motherless daugher Sybil and raise her Catholic; throws a tantrum about Matthew's correct assessment of his garbage estate-management skills; and storms over to Isobel's ladies' luncheon to demand his womenfolk return to Downton immediately lest they be tainted by prostitute soup.

What a neat guy!

At least Lady Mary lets him have a little whatfor when she tells him he's mad that the world isn't going his way anymore. OOH SNAP!

Carson's condescending judgmentalism picks up right where the Lord's leaves off, and he gives a full-strength dose of haughtiness to Mrs. Hughes about the staff having anything to do with Ethyl after Mrs. Patmore lent Ethyl her copy of Betty Crocker's Gruel for Dummies. It's time to ring Doctor Mustache on the telephone machine, because Mrs. Hughes and Mrs. Patmore have sprained their eyeballs rolling them at Carson. "Come quickly, sir! Their eyes be stuck!"

Lady Edith still hasn't taken the job at the newspaper. And that's all the news for Lady Edith, because tragedy is happening to other people this week. Lady Mary and Matthew have a sweet moment where they promise to never take for granted their love for each other. ("Just wait until you realize your husband's a total dipshit!"—Lady Valium. Great advice, I think we can all agree.) And Sybil is still dead because Jessica Brown Findlay wanted out of her contract.

Downstairs, Daisy gets an offer she thinks she might want to refuse from her sorta father-in-law. TAKE IT, DAISY! GO LIVE ON THE FARM! Sure, cooking food for rich people who barely acknowledge your existence and fox-trotting with Alfred so he can try to get off with Rosy Cheeks is nothing but fun NOW, but is it still going to be fun when you're fully 100 years old? THINK ABOUT IT.

And the conniving O'Brien tells Thomas to keep inappropriately touching Jimmy, who she assures him DEFINITELY LIKES BEING HIT ON even though Jimmy told her he hates it. "What a great subplot!"—All of us, as we are forced to watch the only openly gay character on the show turn ever more certainly into a gross stereotype of The Predatory Gay.

Meanwhile, at Grey Gaol, something something gaolmumble and shiv, and now Mean Lady decides to tell the truth and Bates will go free! Huzzah! I would be a lot more invested in this intrigue if I'd only understood a word of anything said in the sound production deadzone that is the Gray Gaol cobblestone wall set.

I can only hope that once Conniving Cellmate gets released, he heads to Downtown to murder Bates and kills Lord Whoops by accident. THE END!

Discuss.

[Please proceed to talk about all things Downton Abbey, but only through the fifth episode of Season 3. Please don't share things from later in the season, even with a spoiler warning, because I've got to mod the thread, which requires reading everything. So be kind, if you're elsewhere in the world where the whole season has already aired.]

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Reproductive Rights Updates: Arkansas, Utah, Tennessee, and Missouri

In Arkansas, Jason Rapert (R-Idiculous) had proposed "heartbeat" legislation that would ban abortions if cardiac activity is detected. That legislation was tabled Tuesday. Rapert, however, is undeterred (of course he is!).

Republican Sen. Jason Rapert of Conway told reporters Tuesday he's amending his "heartbeat" bill to address concerns raised by lawmakers. The legislation originally called for banning abortions if a fetal heartbeat is detected, a move that would prohibit them as early as six weeks into a pregnancy.

Opponents have said the only way to detect a heartbeat that early is by vaginal probe. Rapert said limiting the test to an abdominal ultrasound would ban abortions as early as 10 to 12 weeks into a pregnancy.
Again, Rapert, you are missing the fact that a heartbeat does not a viable fetus make.

***

In Utah, a Republican senator has decided to rework her legislation that would have banned "gender-based abortions" and has opted for an entirely new tactic:
On Tuesday [Sen. Margaret Dayton] released a new bill in place of her gender selection bill that would require Utah's Department of Health to prepare an annual report for the Legislature that includes the number of abortions performed in the state and at what stage of the pregnancy the abortions took place.

"I had requests from several legislators that we get all the data and keep it in state and then we will address other issues," Dayton explained.

Dayton said the data is collected on a federal level but there are concerns that the reports will not produce the numbers Utah is seeking. She went on to explain that this bill will allow the state to gather the numbers to help policymakers when creating abortion legislation.
It's SB60 and, in looking at it, it doesn't seem to require any patient identifying information. Interesting to note though that the section the changes modify is called this: "This bill modifies Title 76, Chapter 7, Offenses Against the Family."

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In The News

Your regular In The News correspondent, Deeky W. Gashlycrumb, MD., is off while he moves into his new evil lair apartment.

[Content Note: Enslavement; homophobia; sexual violence.]

Everything We Know So Far About Drone Strikes, care of Cora Currier at ProPublica.

The Irish government acknowledged its role "in the enslavement of thousands of women and girls in the notorious Magdalene Laundry system," in which "women and girls were stripped of their names and dumped in Irish Catholic church-run laundries where nuns treated them as slaves, simply because they were unmarried mothers, orphans or regarded as somehow morally wayward," but has not apologized because that's just silly talk.

The Boy Scouts have decided to delay a vote on allowing openly gay members, because "the organization needs time for a more deliberate review of its membership policy." Sure. No one wants to be hasty about deciding not to be an asshole!

India has enacted stronger sentences for crimes of sexual violence, but still fails to criminalize spousal rape.

Republican Chuck Hagel's appointment to Secretary of Defense is pretty much a done deal.

Illinois lawmakers are trying to legalize same-sex marriage by Valentine's Day. Neat!

The United States Postal Service announces it will stop delivering most mail on Saturdays to save money.

NASA's Deep Impact spacecraft has spied the "comet of the century."

Eric Cantor wants his party to "focus our attention really on what lies beyond the fiscal debates" and to create "conditions for health, happiness and prosperity." Welp, good luck with all that! Considering your policies are: Lower taxes and make life miserable for marginalized people!

Breaking Bad's return will be Hank-centric. HAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAANK!

And Hillary Clinton has a website! CUE THE SPECULATION!

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Drones Come Under Scrutiny

[Content Note: Drones; war; violence.]

In September of last year, the Stanford International Human Rights & Conflict Resolution Clinic, a group comprised of human rights advocates from Stanford and New York Universities, released a report entitled "Living Under Drones: Death, Injury and Trauma to Civilians from US Drone Practices in Pakistan," which detailed the many negative effects of the use of drones—the unmanned, remotely controlled combat air vehicles from which missiles are deployed in so-called "precision" attacks, which have become a central feature of the United States' "war on terror."

The report made clear that the targeted attacks were neither as precise as the Obama administration (and the Bush administration before them) claimed, nor was it accurate that the routine use of drone strikes was making the US safer, as the drone program and its extensive (though unacknowledged) civilian casualties had become the a key recruiting tool of anti-American militants. They hate us for our freedom indeed.

When the report was released, it got little notice. But, as the New York Times reports, "the clandestine war will receive a rare moment of public scrutiny on Thursday, when its chief architect, John O. Brennan, the White House counterterrorism adviser, faces a Senate confirmation hearing as President Obama's nominee for CIA director."

From his basement office in the White House, Mr. Brennan has served as the principal coordinator of a "kill list" of Qaeda operatives marked for death, overseeing drone strikes by the military and the C.I.A., and advising Mr. Obama on which strikes he should approve.

"He's probably had more power and influence than anyone in a comparable position in the last 20 years," said Daniel Benjamin, who recently stepped down as the State Department's top counterterrorism official and now teaches at Dartmouth. "He's had enormous sway over the intelligence community. He's had a profound impact on how the military does counterterrorism."

Mr. Brennan, a former C.I.A. station chief in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, has taken a particular interest in Yemen, sounding early alarms within the administration about the threat developing there, working closely with neighboring Saudi Arabia to gain approval for a secret C.I.A. drone base there that is used for American strikes, and making the impoverished desert nation a test case for American counterterrorism strategy.
The article further notes that Brennan "has often been a restraining voice," which is terrifying given the scope of the drone program.

The questions Brennan will presumably face will come days after "the leak of a white paper from the Department of Justice (DOJ) that outlines the legal basis for killing Americans overseas who are believed to be a threat. In the memo, Justice outlines a three-part test to determine whether a 'lethal operation' can be carried out against an American who is a senior operational leader of a terrorist group."

White House spokesperson Jay Carney defended the position yesterday, arguing that the guidelines for targeting Americans in drone strikes are "fully consistent” with the US Constitution.

That is a debatable contention.

And, back in the US, the ACLU is raising flags about the potential use of drones to spy on US citizens and residents, "after the Federal Aviation Administration began establishing safety standards for civilian drones."
Lawmakers in at least 11 states are looking at plans to restrict the use of drones over their skies amid concerns the unmanned aerial vehicles could be exploited to spy on Americans.

The American Civil Liberties Union says state legislators are proposing various restrictions on local authorities' use of the technology.

Concerns mounted after the Federal Aviation Administration began establishing safety standards for civilian drones, which are becoming increasingly affordable and small in size.

Some police agencies have said the drones could be used for surveillance of suspects, search and rescue operations, and gathering details on damage caused by natural disasters.

..."The use of drones across the country has become a great threat to our personal privacy," said ACLU of Montana policy director Niki Zupanic. "The door is wide open for intrusions into our personal private space."
Being spied on is bad enough. But drones are being deployed to indiscriminately kill people in our names on the other side of the world. Indiscrimination may not be the intent, but it is nonetheless the result. We need to draw a line under drones.

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Update

Hi, everyone. Thanks for all the well wishes!

I'm slowly but surely returning to my usual normal of Functional Garbage Back. I'm going to start getting back to work today, but it will probably be a slow day. Thanks for your patience.

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Hosted by a Cinnamon Teal duck.

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Blog Note

Looks like I'm going to need at least another day or so. I've really done something new and terrible to my garbage back this time!

The only thing for it is just to lay here and not do anything, which as we all know is the hardest thing to do. Because BOREDOM.

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Hosted by a Blue-Billed Duck.

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Blog Note

Hi, everyone. I tore something badly in my back Saturday, and I was hoping I'd be better by this morning, but it's only gotten progressively worse. I now hope I'll be in better shape by tomorrow; right now, I can't even sit upright to work. I'll keep you posted, and my sincerest apologies for the disruption in service.

(Although I am always appreciative of well-wishing, there is no need at all to feel obliged; I just wanted to post something informational for the Shakers who tend to worry when I deviate from my routine.)

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Hosted by a Wood Duck.

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