2006
Announcing Project Bridge the Gap- Crashing the Gate, December 18, 2006
Envagelical Christianity Preaching Environmentalism
George Lakoff: Building on the Progressive Victory. December 13, 2006
"Blue Planet Award" to be given to Chelsea Green author Diane Wilson
Queens Ledger Reports on, "Green Brooklyn Conference" November 16, 2006
Seattlepi.com Election Commentary
War Crimes Filed Against Donald Rumsfeld, November 9
Hunger Strike Against Texas Coal, November 3
Hunger Strike, November 2, 2006
God's Green Earth, October 29, 2006
Lakoff: Staying the Course Right Over a Cliff, October 27, 2006
Bioneers Conferences 2006
NY Times: Bioneers Conference, October 24, 2006
Folks, it's time to pray, October 18, 2006
The Vegetable-Industrial Complex, October 15, 2006
Lakoff: A Call for Progressive Unity, October 12, 2006
Markos Moulitsas Profile, October 4, 2006
NY Times on Artisan Cheese, October 4, 2006
Confessions of an Apple Snob, October 1, 2006
Keep the Great Writ Alive, September 26, 2006
Peter Laufer Testifies on Capitol Hill, September 26, 2006
CGP adds Kids' Imprint, September 25, 2006
Faith and Environmentalism, September 20, 2006
Michael Ratner on Democracy Now, September 19, 2006
Wilson Plans for Peace Day, September 19, 2006
The Gospel of Green, September 19, 2006
King Filthy Rat Bastard Speaks, September 13, 2006
Community Renewable Energy, September 11, 2006
Lakoff: Drop War Metaphor, September 11, 2006
Slow Food Nation, September 9, 2006
Rummy Scores, September 2, 2006
Katrina One Year Later, August 28, 2006
Laufer: Wouldn't Catch me Dead in Iraq, August 27, 2006
Laufer: And Now They Send More, August 23, 2006
First Responder, August 17, 2006
Laufer: Not Shooting Our Heros, August 17, 2006
GI Resistance Grows, August 17, 2006
Gene-Altered Crops Denounced, August 16, 2006
Zero-Waste Publishing, August 14, 2006
A Spirit Renewed, August 13, 2006
Laufer: Soldiers No One's Counting, August 11, 2006
Where the Bombs Fell, August 11, 2006
Chelsea Green Crashes 'Crashing', August 10, 2006
Fasters Meet Iraqi Parliament, August 10, 2006
Beirut, August 10, 2006
Iraq Is Dying, August 9, 2006
Laufer: U.S. Army Theme Park, August 9, 2006
The Road to Beirut, August 7, 2006
Glasnost for the U.S., August 7, 2006
Diane Wilson Meets Iraqi Parliament, August 6, 2006
Thousands Refuse to Fight, August 5, 2006
Laufer: Let the Soldiers Testify, August 4, 2006
A Letter from Diane Wilson, August 2, 2006
Hunger Strikers to Break Fast, August 1, 2006
Fasters to Meet with Iraqi Parliament, August 1, 2006
Laufer: What If They Say No?, July 31, 2006
Publishing for the Green Lifestyle, July 31, 2004
Sleeth: God Vital to Saving Earth, July 29, 2006
Diane Wilson Arrested, July 29, 2006
Laufer: O'Reilly and Me, July 28, 2006
Laufer: The Citizen Draft, July 26, 2006
Laufer: Deseter Pushes the Envelope, July 24, 2006
Laufer: Damage Behind the Damage, July 24, 2006
Minimum Wage War, July 24, 2006
Fasting in Protest, July 20, 2006
Ratner Fights Bush & Co., July 19, 2005
Laufer: Assume Mic Is On, July 18, 2006
IRS: Some Churches too Political, July 18, 2006
George Lakoff's Freedom Frame, July 18, 2006
Going Green, July 17, 2006
Christians and Climate Change, July 16, 2006
Food Not Lawns, July 13, 2006
Soil Vs. Oil, July 12, 2006
Michael Ratner on Guantanamo Ruling, July 12, 2006
Wilson: Day 9, July 12, 2006
Geneva Rights Apply, July 11, 2006
Wilson on Hunger Strike, July 7, 2006
An American in Berlin, July 6, 2006
Wilson: Day 2, July 5, 2006
An Inconvenient Truth About Iraq, July 5, 2006
Fasting for Peace, July 3, 2006
The Politics of Language, July 1, 2006
High Court Blocks Guantanamo Tribulans, June 29, 2006
Bush's Baghdad Is No Budapest, June 28, 2006
Bring the Troops Home Fast, June 27, 2006
Bush Is Not Incompetent, June 26, 2006
White House Plans to Gut Protections, June 25, 2006
A Call for Impeachment, June 25, 2006
International Conference on Peak Oil, June 23, 2006
The Poverty Draft, June 23, 2006
Rot Runs Deep, June 22, 2006
Lt. Watada Refuses Orders, June 22, 2006
More Soldiers Resist Deployment, June 21, 2006
Ratner named to elite list, June 19, 2006
US Hid Guantanamo Suicides, June 18, 2006
Lt. Ehren Watada, June 18, 2006
A Father Speaks Out, June 17, 2006
LA Farms Plowed Under, June 16, 2006
YearlyKos Convention, June 14, 2006
Trust: Core Principle of Progressives, June 13, 2004
Silencing Gutenberg? June 11, 2006
Framing Vs. Spin, June 9, 2006
YearlyKos Keynote, June 9, 2006
Spilling the Beans, June 5, 2006
Mass Natural, June 4, 2006
The Moon of Making Fat, June 1, 2006
Hunger Strike for Peace, May 26, 2006
Framing Immigration, May 22, 2006
CGP Authors Wow DC Crowd, May 19, 2006
South Africa and China, May 16, 2006
Energy Crash, May 10, 2006
Kos: Hillary too much of Clinton Dem, May 7, 2006
The New Milk Moon, May 1, 2006
Shortchanging Wounded Veterans, April 27 2006
No Bar Code, April 26, 2006
Community Supported Agriculture, April 13, 2006
Fasting for Bhopal Victims, April 12, 2006
Crash Campaign, April 6, 2006
Lawsuit Filed Against Formosa Plastics, March 31, 2006
Chelsea Green's National Impact, March 15, 2006
Good Fats in Grass-Fed Beef, March 7, 2006
Impeaching Bush, March 6, 2006
Indie Publishers, March 6, 2006
The Soldiers Speak, February, 28, 2006
What Is Wrong with Progressives, January 28, 2006
Chelsea Green Banks Left, January 23, 2006
The New Red, White and Blue, January 6, 2006
Gaia Matters: review of Animate Earth, Dec. 2006
Special Offers

Keep the Great Writ Alive, September 26, 2006

Keep the Great Writ alive

For eight centuries, habeas corpus has shielded people from detention without trial. The Senate "compromise" denies this right -- and threatens the rule of law.

Salon.com
By Michael Ratner, with Sara Miles
September 26, 2006

For nearly five years, I've been fighting attempts by the Bush administration to sweep away the cornerstone of our justice system: habeas corpus, which protects people from being summarily detained without trial. Considered the hallmark of Western liberty, habeas corpus has its origins in the Magna Carta of 1215. The "Great Writ" ended kings' power to kidnap people at will, lock them in dungeons and never bring them to court. Habeas corpus forever marked the line between authority under law and authority that thinks it is the law.

As president of the Center for Constitutional Rights, I've challenged the Bush administration for acting as a law unto itself and blatantly disregarding the Great Writ in its prison camp at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba. Twice, the Supreme Court has insisted that the administration respect habeas corpus; repeatedly, the White House has ignored the court's rulings, going to Congress to get approval for previously unthinkable kinds of detention.

Now, within the next few days, it is conceivable that Congress will abolish the writ of habeas corpus for any non-citizen who is detained outside the country. Stripping away the political nitpicking, linguistic compromises, calculated deal-making and cynical maneuvering of last week's "compromise" in Congress, two questions remain at the center of legislation about the rights of prisoners in Guantánamo.

The first, about torture and the Geneva Conventions, is straightforward: Are we human beings?

The second, about habeas corpus, is, do we believe in the rule of law?

I've spent my life defending victims of torture, and I firmly believe that to be human means recognizing that torture, whether committed by Nazis, Stalinists, Islamic fundamentalists or Americans, is never justified. Inexcusably, the compromise forged by the Bush administration and Republican senators now blurs the line on Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions, which prohibits "violence to life and person, in particular murder of all kinds, mutilation, cruel treatment and torture" and "outrages upon personal dignity, in particular, humiliating and degrading treatment." It's morally corrupt to attempt to parse exactly what kinds of cruelty, which degree of mutilation, and what depth of degradation are OK: This cannot be an area where "compromise" is acceptable.

But it's also crucial to understand that this legislation places our very belief in the rule of law at risk. The contempt for the law shown by recent developments disturbs me enormously, and shows how far our national values have been hijacked by the extreme right and its partisan agenda.

My office represents and coordinates writs of habeas corpus on behalf of all 460 detainees held at Guantánamo. Almost none of these detainees have been charged with a crime. Many, according to the administration's own claims, have never actively taken hostile action against the United States, but were turned over to the Americans by war lords or bounty hunters. Others are confused, elderly, or simply arrested in error. As Col. Bill Cline, deputy camp commander at Guantánamo, acknowledged, "Some of the prisoners are victims of circumstance, caught up in the wrong place at the wrong time."

But without habeas corpus hearings, there is no way for detainees to know the charges against them, or to refute any evidence that might be wrong. Like our client Maher Arar -- a Canadian sent by the United States to Syria, where he was tortured in a secret prison until the Canadians finally demanded his release -- they are unable to prove their innocence because they have no way to test their detention. And without accountability to a court, as we have seen over and over, abuse of prisoners quickly becomes rampant.

We have been trying to get the Guantánamo prisoners a habeas corpus hearing in federal court for nearly five years. We had a major victory in June 2004 (Rasul v. Bush) when the Supreme Court ruled that courts are open to aliens held outside the United States, and that they have the right to file writs of habeas corpus to test their detentions. Evoking the central importance of habeas corpus to our system of law, the court wrote: "Executive imprisonment has been considered oppressive and lawless since John, at Runnymede, pledged that no free man should be imprisoned, dispossessed, outlawed, or exiled save by the judgment of his peers or by the law of the land."

Within days of our victory something remarkable occurred. Hundreds of lawyers from big firms and small firms, Democrats and Republicans, Christians, Jews and Muslims, all stepped forward to represent Guantánamo detainees. They did this at great expense and personal sacrifice, traveling to meet their clients at Guantánamo -- and, in the process, discovering what we now know about the torture and abuse there, and putting an end to much of it. These lawyers undertook these cases on principle, believing, as did the Supreme Court, that no person should be imprisoned solely at the behest of the executive, and that all human beings are entitled to the protections of law.

And yet, as of today, not one of our clients has been given the required habeas corpus hearing that would determine whether he was properly detained. The administration stonewalled, stalled and flatly refused to obey the court, fighting hard to retain the privilege of kings.

In 2005, the Bush administration went to Congress and got legislation passed that it hoped would abolish habeas corpus for our clients. It did not work. Once again the Supreme Court stepped in and in June 2006 (Hamdan v. Rumsfeld) ruled that the legislation, called the Detainee Treatment Act, did not apply to our clients.

Refusing to accept the court's verdict, the administration went back to Congress yet again: This week, Republicans in Congress appear ready to pass new bills abolishing habeas corpus. The current legislation does not just apply to those held at Guantánamo but to aliens detained anywhere outside the United States; it is retroactive, so any pending habeas petitions will be knocked out of court.

We believe that this legislation is as unconstitutional as the previous attempts by the administration to abolish habeas corpus, and that, as with previous attempts, it will eventually be overturned by the Supreme Court. But it should not be passed at all: It is unconscionable that illegally detained individuals need to languish in prison for years more without charges or hearings while awaiting judicial remedy.

The remedy is at hand. It is one that has been with us since 1215: the Great Writ. As citizens, we must keep it alive.