hdthehn
Friends’
Search Members
Type in a member you wish to find
Most Active Members
Most Recent Groups
In the News
Let's Meet Our Good Pal:
hdthehn
Telling the 'approved' story March 7, 2006 01:12 AM / The Rant . By DOUG THOMPSON On an unspecified day last week an employee of a federal agency that cannot be revealed delivered a document that cannot be identified to a company that cannot be named seeking information that cannot be discussed. The aforementioned federal agent left the unidentified document with an employee of the unnamed company. That employee then called the owner, who must remain anonymous, to inform him that the document that could not be identified sought information that could not be discussed. The owner who must remain anonymous instructed the employee to deliver the unidentified document to a lawyer whose name is protected by attorney-client privilege. The lawyer whose name is protected by attorney-client privilege examined the unidentified document and then reviewed the information that could not be discussed with the owner who must remain anonymous. With the approval of the owner who must remain anonymous, the lawyer whose name is protected by attorney-client privilege contacted a U.S. attorney who demanded that his identity be concealed. The U.S. attorney who demanded that his identity be concealed then claimed the owner who must remain anonymous violated a law that could not be disclosed and faced arrest for charges that could not be specified because he had referred to the document that cannot be identified in an article for a certain, but unnamed, web site. The lawyer whose name is protected by attorney-client privilege argued that his client could not be charged under the undisclosed law because he had been acting as a journalist at the time of the alleged publication and not as the owner of the company that cannot be named. He had, in fact, learned of the existence of the document that cannot be identified from a third-party, who was not named, and was not aware of its exact contents because he had not seen or read the document and, therefore, was not aware of the exact contents that cannot be discussed. The U.S. attorney who demanded his identity be concealed consulted with others who names are classified and concluded that the owner who must remain anonymous walked a fine line between legal and illegal and would not face arrest for violating a law that could not be disclosed on charges that could not be specified. So walking this fine line of justice allowed the owner who must remain anonymous to avoid confinement at an institution at an unknown location for an unspecified length of time. In exchange for his freedom, the owner who must remain anonymous agreed to write a "clarification" of what happened, following the guidelines for publication laid down by the Bush administration. Which is what you just read.
RSSSubmitted Articles (7)
-
McCain Debates Himself on Supporting Bush »
Posted by: 1 year, 6 months ago in News
It's just so hard resisting the temptation to screw around with John McCain. Here he is debating himself on his support for George W ...
(read more)Read (135) | Share | Discuss (3) | Read Full Story at jedreport.com
-
McCain Showcases His Foreign Policy Expertise »
Posted by: 1 year, 6 months ago in News
By telling a crowd that he's super qualified to be President due to his extensive foreign policy experience dealing with Vladimir Putinââ;¬Â ...
(read more)Read (99) | Share | Discuss (6) | Read Full Story at crooksandliars.com
-
The real John McCain. »
Posted by: 1 year, 7 months ago in News
Brave New Films has put together a new video, The Real McCain 2, attempting to give an accurate portrayal of McCain and highlighting his inconsistencies ...
(read more)Read (141) | Share | Discuss (13) | Read Full Story at thinkprogress.org
-
Scalia: Does Torture Violate 'Cruel And Unusual Punishment' Provision? 'No.'Ã;» »
Posted by: 1 year, 8 months ago in News
STAHL: If someone's in custody, as in Abu Ghraib, and they are brutalized, by a law enforcement person ââ;¬" if you listen to ...
(read more)Read (148) | Share | Discuss (13) | Read Full Story at thinkprogress.org
-
Addington, Gonzales Witnessed Gitmo Interrogations In 2002; Approved Of 'Whatever Needs To Be Done' »
Posted by: 1 year, 8 months ago in News
Haynes, Feith, Yoo, Bybee, Gonzalez and ââ;¬" at the apex ââ;¬" Addington, should never travel outside the US, except perhaps to Saudi Arabia ...
(read more)Read (47) | Share | Discuss (0) | Read Full Story at thinkprogress.org
-
GAO: U.S. lacks terror plan for Pakistan »
Posted by: 1 year, 8 months ago in News
Terrorists are still operating freely in Pakistan along the country's Afghanistan border, despite the U.S. giving Pakistan more than $10.5 billion in ...
(read more)Read (59) | Share | Discuss (5) | Read Full Story at usatoday.com
-
Iraq: Six Months At A Time »
Posted by: 1 year, 9 months ago in Business & Finance
How do you get to 100 years in Iraq? Six months at a time. Watch this video
(read more)Read (153) | Share | Discuss (5) | Read Full Story at youtube.com