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Excusing Torture at 'Justice'

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Excusing Torture at 'Justice'

By
Ray McGovern

On Sunday, I attended an informal talk given in a parish hall by the Justice Department’s Thomas Perez, Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights. His topic: “The way his work for justice is defined by his faith.”


During the Q&A after his talk, I had a chance to pose some questions:

Question:  Thanks Tom, for making yourself available to us. You raise the issue of torture, and intimated that there is consensus among Catholics that torture is wrong. Polling conducted two years ago indicates that this is far from the case.

[According to the Catholic News Agency, a survey by the Pew Center Forum on Religion & Public Life found that Catholics are more likely than the general U.S. population to favor the use of torture against suspected terrorists. More than half the Catholics surveyed said that torture could be often or sometimes justified, while another 27 percent said the practice could rarely be justified. Only 20 percent said it could never be justified.]

You are head of the Civil Rights Division at Justice. I am sure you would agree that a person’s right not to be tortured is a civil right.

Your immediate boss, Attorney General Eric Holder has stated in testimony to Congress that waterboarding is torture. President Obama has said the same thing.

Now the President…that is former President George W. Bush…has written a book in which he brags about authorizing waterboarding and says he would do it again. Former Vice President Dick Cheney earlier endorsed waterboarding.

Like you, Tom, I went to a Jesuit high school, and I know what a syllogism is. If waterboarding is torture, and those who authorized it now admit that and brag about it, is not your boss Eric Holder bound by his oath of office to prosecute those who admit to having authorized torture?

I refer here not only to those tortured at Guantanamo, at the huge prison complex at Bagram, Afghanistan, and at “black sites” around the world where my former colleagues at CIA were given carte blanche to ply their trade. 

I refer also to American citizens like José Padilla born, like me, in New York City, who was deprived of his civil rights and subjected to the cruelest forms of debilitating torture right here in the U.S.A.

Again, you are head of the Civil Rights Division at Justice. You have talked a good bit about conscience. Your boss, the Attorney General, appears unwilling to see to it that the law be faithfully executed. Has your faith or your conscience led you to raise this subject with Eric Holder?

Perez:  It’s a matter of prosecutorial discretion. We have discussed these matters, and I am not about to reveal information on those discussions.

Question: Your talk is billed as a discussion of how your faith defines your work for justice. I am not asking you to reveal information about the discussions you have been part of at the Justice Department; I am asking you how you come at the issue of torture from a faith perspective.

Perez:  You are very clever; but I am not going to let myself be drawn into this discussion. Next questioner.

Perez had begun by expressing appreciation for the education he had received from the Jesuits at Canisius High School in Buffalo — a sentiment I share from my four years at Fordham Prep in the Bronx.

As far as moral theology and justice are concerned, though, it appears that Perez was exposed to the same dictum at Canisius as I was at Fordham. Moral theology? Ethics? Simple. The whole deal is to: Do Good, and Avoid Evil.

It was not until the mid-80s, when I completed a Certificate in Theological Studies with the more up-to-date Jesuits at Georgetown, that I learned that the Do-Good-and-Avoid-Evil proposition was only half correct. Jesus of Nazareth called us to do good, certainly. But not to avoid evil; rather to confront it.

This shows through clearly in the first chapter of the first gospel written (Mark 1:16-28). After recruiting his fisherman freshman to enroll in Discipleship 101, Jesus brings them into the synagogue at Capernaum and provides a vivid illustration of what we are called to do in the face of evil — confront it. 

His message: No confronting of evil, no true discipleship.

Making It at Harvard Law

Distinguished Catholic jurists who preceded Perez at Harvard Law School — for example, “where-does-the-Constitution-say-executions-have-to-be-painless” Antonin Scalia, and former Attorney General Alberto Gonzales — have amply demonstrated the validity of Lord Acton’s dictum about how power corrupts.

Perez’s response suggests to me that some of this may have rubbed off on him as well.

I am grateful for the insights gained during my years of theology at Georgetown (coincidentally, the same years Perez spent at Harvard Law). The one theme wending its way through all the courses was this: what Yahweh of the Hebrew and Jesus of the Christian scriptures care about, above all else, is that we do Justice — that disciples are called unambiguously, to Do Good and CONFRONT (not merely Avoid) Evil.

I was not surprised that Perez found my question unwelcome. I was surprised that he answered it so dismissively. 

His reaction left the impression that, during whatever deliberations on executive accountability for torture he has been party to, he has held his nose in silence — like his seniors of malleable conscience at Justice and the White House, who choose to duck, rather then confront human rights abuses involving U.S. officials.

Worse still, his taking refuge in “prosecutorial discretion” is legally flat-out wrong.

Does he not know that the United Nations Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment adopted by the UN General Assembly on Dec. 10, 1984 (now signed by some 150 nations — including the U.S., which also ratified it on Oct. 21, 1994) has been and remains the supreme law of the land? The Convention makes no allowance for “prosecutorial discretion.”

If evidence of a violation arises, the signatories are obliged to promptly investigate any allegation of torture and, if appropriate, prosecute. The Convention’s description of torture certainly includes waterboarding. And, as already mentioned, Attorney General Holder and President Obama have conceded the point.

(For that matter, even if waterboarding — best defined as “contrived drowning with intentional resuscitation” — were somehow not to be deemed torture, it would certainly constitute the “cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment” for which the Convention Against Torture also requires investigation as a matter of law.)

The Convention defines torture as:

“Any act by which severe pain or suffering, whether physical or mental, is intentionally inflicted on a person for such purposes as obtaining from him or a third person, information or a confession, …”

The Convention also declares torture an extraditable offense, and endorses the concept of universal jurisdiction to try cases of torture where an alleged torturer cannot be extradited.

Jesus and Empire



This may sound somewhat harsh, but it struck me that if Perez was not open to addressing “the way his work for justice is defined by his faith,” he ought not to have appeared under that rubric.

Comparisons can be invidious.  And the one that follows is probably a bit unfair. But the exchange with Perez reminded me of another person of Christian faith, former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, to whom CBS’ Leslie Stahl posed a difficult question on May 12, 1996.

Referring to the effect of the sanctions against Iraq, Stahl noted: “We have heard that half a million children have died. I mean, that is more children than died in Horoshima. And, you know, is the price worth it?”

Albright:  “The price, we think the price is worth it.”

In an address eight years later at the Yale Divinity School, Albright elaborated on her Realpolitik approach to matters of state. She asked what would have happened if after 9/11 the President had said, “Resist not evil.  Whosoever shall smite thee on the right cheek, turn to him the other also.”

Albright’s exegesis: “I suspect most of us would think it a preposterous prescription in a time of national crisis.”

She went on to speak of the dilemma that “we each face in trying to reconcile religious beliefs with professional duties,” and came down squarely on the side of “professional duties.” 

Not stopping there, Albright went on to misquote Scripture in claiming that the President, in vowing to rid the world of evil, echoed the words of Jesus, “You are either with us or against us.”

In a gratuitous allusion to her empire-centric approach, the former secretary of state went on to endorse Vice President Dick Cheney’s “sincere” religious beliefs. She singled out as a “good thing, his controversy-provoking Christmas card the year before (2003), which bore the inscription: “If a sparrow cannot fall to the ground without His notice, is it probable that an empire can rise without His aid?”

Stanley Hauerwas, a Yale alumnus now professor of theological ethics at Duke Divinity School, was moved to comment on Albright’s speech in a Yale Divinity School publication. 

He noted that much of what she said was designed to “underwrite the assumption that we cannot follow Jesus and pursue the limited justice possible in foreign affairs.”

But wait. Was not "His" message a direct challenge to empire – in his day the Roman Empire and religious and civil collaborators in the Roman occupation? Isn't that why the religious and civil authorities put their heads together and ended up torturing and executing him?

Had Jesus allowed himself to be co-opted by the empire and its Quislings, had he chosen to divorce his nonviolent but challenging vision of justice from the politics of the day, he could have died peacefully in his bed – as did the leaders of the institutional church in Nazi Germany.

And we can too. All that is required is a mind-trick to convince ourselves that Jesus did not really mean to say what he said, that he did not really mean to do what he did in exposing the evils of empire.

And help is at hand. It is easy to find a pastor preaching a domesticated Jesus – an ahistorical Jesus far more interested in ``piety'' than justice. I still find myself wondering how the Cheneys' pastor reacted to their Christmas card.

Sinning for Us

Often it takes a compassionate but truth-telling outsider to throw light on our country, its leaders, its policies. Bishop Peter Storey of South Africa, who walked the walk in his courageous, outspoken resistance to the apartheid regime (and was chaplain to Nelson Mandela), provides this prophetic word:

"I have often suggested to American Christians that the only way to understand their mission is to ask what it might have meant to witness faithfully to Jesus in the heart of the Roman Empire.

“Certainly, when I preach in the United States I feel, as I imagine the Apostle Paul did when he first passed through the gates of Rome – admiration for its people, awe at its manifest virtues, and resentment of its careless power.

"America's preachers have a task more difficult, perhaps, than those faced by us under South Africa's apartheid, or by Christians under Communism. We had obvious evils to engage; you have to unwrap your culture from years of red, white, and blue myth.

“You have to expose and confront the great disconnect between the kindness, compassion, and caring of most American people and the ruthless way American power is experienced, directly and indirectly, by the poor of the earth. You have to help good people see how they have let their institutions do their sinning for them.

“This is not easy among people who really believe that their country does nothing but good. But it is necessary, not only for their future, but for us all.

“All around the world there are those who believe in the basic goodness of the American people, who agonize with you in your pain, but also long to see your human goodness translated into a different, more compassionate way of relating with the rest of this bleeding planet."

Finally, let me add something I have learned thanks to the candid comments of my atheist friends.

“Hey, Ray,” one wrote, “Please, not so heavy on this Judeo-Christian heritage you keep citing. I don’t buy any of it, but wake up: on torture it is not at all necessary to be a person ‘of faith.’

“It is abundantly clear to this atheist, and to most of us, that it is simply impermissible for human beings to torture one another. Humans do not do that to other humans. Period.”

I see the truth in that. At the same time, it does seem to me that we who claim to follow a courageous dissident activist who was tortured to death may have extra incentive to do all we can to prevent others from being subjected to “Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment.”

Ray McGovern is an ecumenical Catholic working with Tell the Word, a publishing arm of the Church of the Saviour in inner-city Washington. He spent almost 30 years as a CIA analyst and Army infantry/intelligence officer and is co-founder of Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity (VIPS).

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Sunni Leader Breaks Dialogue With the Vatican Over Pope's Comments

  • Sunni Leader Breaks Dialogue With the Vatican Over Pope's Comments

As someone who teaches theology in a Jesuit university, I always wondered how my Catholic colleagues felt when the Pope made a statement with which they disagreed. Today, I have some sense of what it’s like. Not because of anything said by the Holy Father, but because of comments made by the Shaikh al-Azhar. I understand of course that the comparison is not exact. There is, for example, no magisterium in Islam. But Al-Azhar, founded in Cairo in 970, is second only to Al-Qarawiyyin in Morocco (founded over a hundred years earlier) as the oldest university in the Muslim world. And the leader, or shaikh (literally, “old man”) of Al-Azhar carries tremendous authority and respect in the Sunni Muslim world. On January 20, the current Shaikh al-Azhar, Ahmed El-Tayyib, announced that Al-Azhar was “suspending” dialogue with the Vatican due to comments made by Pope Benedict XVI about the persecution of Christians in the Middle East.

Shaikh El-Tayyib is a good and decent man. I met him in 2009 at a conference on dialogue that he organized at Al-Azhar. At the time, he was the Rector, and the following year, after the death of Shaikh Tantawi, he was appointed as the Shaikh al-Azhar. The 2009 conference was called “Al-Azhar and the West: Bridges of Dialogue,” and it was a great success. At the conference, I met Archbishop Michael Fitzgerald, the Apostolic Nuncio in Egypt, who has done much work on interfaith dialogue between Catholics and Muslims.

I do hope that Al-Azhar resumes its dialogue with the Vatican, precisely because difficult times are when dialogue is most needed. As William Blake wrote, “It is an easy thing to rejoice in the tents of prosperity”. It is much more difficult to stay together when things are tough. And the sad truth is that Christians are being persecuted in the Middle East and other parts of the Muslim world. The proper response to that persecution was what Egyptian Muslims did during Christmas, serving as shields for Coptic Christians, standing beside them in their churches. Yes, Muslims are being persecuted around the world. But this gives us no moral high ground. We must do what we can to protect minority communities.

The Qur’an is clear in commanding Muslims to always act out of justice, and not out of hate: “Oh you who believe! Be upright for God as witnesses to justice, and let not hatred of a people incite you to not act equitably; act equitably, that is nearer to piety, and observe your duty to God. Surely God is aware of what you do” (5:8). Muslims are therefore called to treat people on the basis of how they behave, not because they identify themselves as Muslims, monotheists, or polytheists. Another Qur’anic verse is even more explicit about the righteousness of faithful Jews and Christians and the reward of such righteousness: “Some of the People of the Book are a wholesome nation. They recite God’s signs in the watches of the night, prostrating themselves, having faith in God and the last day, bidding to honour and forbidding dishonour, and vying with one another in good deeds. They are among the wholesome. Whatever good they do, they will not be denied its reward” (3:113–115). The Qur’an, therefore, envisions a peaceful coexistence that comes from a common revelation and a common God. If they do come into conflict, then they should remember the common God that they worship. “Argue not with the People of the Book” we are told, “unless it be in a better way, except with such of them as do wrong; and say: ‘We believe in that which has been revealed to us and revealed to you; our God and your God is One, and to God do we surrender’” (29:46).

Read more at www.religiondispatches.org
 

Union is in a state of emergency

Amplify’d from www.examiner.com

Union is in a state of emergency

Okay, so in response to President Obama's State of the Union address last night, I do have to say it was a great speech. Full of promise and positivity. Full of applause from the "date night" atmosphere dog and pony show that was put on by Democrats and Republicans as they sat, staggered together, as a show of "civility" towards one another. 

President Obama touched on the subjects of job creation, corporate tax reform, government reform, reducing the national deficit, utilizing technology to modernize rural America, creating infrastructure projects, the importance of education and teachers and competing in a global economy through science and innovation, investment (aka, spending), terrorism (yep, terrorists still hate us), unity in Congress, gays in the military and the withdrawal of troops from Iraq and Afghanistan.

Yeah, it was a lot to update us on in just over an hour. But, for some reason it seemed that we had heard this speech before. Oh, yes, it was last years State of the Union. Same message with a little added subject matter. 

Politicians are great. They say great things. They dress great. They're the first to vocalize their achievements and pat themselves on the back. They're always telling us how they're working hard for Americans. We're gonna cut spending, reduce taxes, create jobs, invest in education... blah, blah, blah. They're a broken CD that keeps looping and looping and...

So what exactly is the state of the Union? Its in a rather tumultuous pickle. We're in a black hole of debt that offers no escape. $14 trillion give or take a few billion. The U.S. Government is broke. Has been for a long time. States are now broke. California, Illinois, Michigan, New York to name a few. Cities are broke. Los Angeles, Chicago, New York city, Detroit and many others. They're cutting and slashing services, education and pensions.

Individual people are broke. From their depreciating homes, to their leased cars, to credit cards, medical bills and student loans to not even bringing in an income because of a joblessness. So, in short, everybody and everything is broke. The only exception would be those tribes still yet discovered living in the remote Amazon jungle. But, I fear they'll be found by modern methods like GPS and sucked into the black hole, too.

Who the heck do we owe all this money to? President Obama broached the subjects of deficit reduction, spending cuts and investments. Isn't investment and spending the same thing? At least in government terms?

Let's talk about the deficit. In order to reduce the deficit you need to stop borrowing and printing and printing and borrowing more money. Borrowing forty cents for every dollar we (they) spend is suicide. And who do we (they) borrow all this money from? The Federal Reserve of course.

A non-federal institution with no reserves. A legalized banking cartel looking out for their interests while charging us interest to print our own money. But, not once did we hear about reforming the Fed or even doing away with the banker barons of the fake and inflated financial economy on Wall Street. Why can't we print our own money? What is the Treasury Department's real responsibility these days? To print T-bills and bonds in exchange for debt?

What about spending cuts? What do you cut without adding to the unemployment numbers? How do you protect the borders and battle terrorists with military reduction? How do you care for the elderly while slashing Medicare? What about Social Security? President Obama touted education last night. But how do you get educated without spending and investing and loaning money? While the federal government has grown in scope and size and billions upon billions of money has been wasted, where do you even start?

Trillions or dollars have been spent on Iraq and Afghanistan in the name of protecting us from terrorists. We (they) recently constructed a multi-billion dollar embassy in Iraq at taxpayers expense. Its bigger than the Vatican. They have swimming pools, grocery stores, shopping malls, movie theaters, housing and offices. But, for what?

The city of Detroit could have used those billions for new housing and grocery stores. The city could have used that money to build state of the art schools for education. Fix the roads. Provide infrastructure and architecture to lure small and big businesses downtown. But, instead we'll invest in an embassy on foreign soil. Is that what Obama meant about investment?

The dot com bubble burst ten years ago. The housing bubbled popped three years ago and it seems headed for a double pop with artificially inflated prices, toxic assets and bad loans dished out by the big banks. Housing prices here in the Metro Detroit area dropped more than 8% in 2010 and it hasn't even bottomed out yet. 

They say that student loan debt has now eclipsed credit card debt for the first time in history and is the next bubble to explode. How's that for incentive to get an education? Borrow money to invest in your future. If there aren't any jobs waiting for the recently graduated then what kind of investment is an education if you can't pay it back? That also comes with interest mind you? 

Some states, including Michigan, have started to research the possibility of creating their own public banking facilities. These banks would use the resources from their citizens to invest within their own state. For economic growth, for agricultural purposes and real investment into education. They're trying to emulate the success of North Dakota's 92 year old state owned and publicly run bank. In 2009, North Dakota saw the largest budget surplus in the U.S.

Unlike private banks, public banks do not gamble on high risk financial investments. They don't dish out high paying salaries and bonuses. The profits of the bank are returned to the shareholders -- the people of the state. Michigan and the Metro Detroit area should look into concepts and ideas that can copy a similar system.

Because as we keep borrowing and spending we'll continue to rack up astronomical debt levels that will never be paid back. And even though Congress extended Bush era tax cuts, we are experiencing the most dangerous tax, the tax we don't even think about that exists. The tax that you really never here about. It's called inflation. When the prices of goods go up and the dollar continues its steady decline, inflation is the tax we pay. The purchasing power of your hard earned dollars is slowly disappearing.

Maybe Michigan and the Metro Detroit should print their own money. After all, Michigan is a sovereign State (country) within the Union. 

Read more at www.examiner.com
 

Italy: Magistrates ask to quiz conservative politician in prostitution probe

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Italy: Magistrates ask to quiz conservative politician in prostitution probe

Rome, 26 Jan. (AKI) - Italian prosecutors on Wednesday summoned a regional councillor for prime minister Silvio Berlusconi's conservative ruling party for questioning on allegations that Berlusconi used an underage Moroccan prostitute.
Prosecutors in Milan, want to question Lombardy regional councillor Nicole Minetti on 1 February over allegations that she procured prostitutes for erotic parties and sex with Berlusconi at his home in Arcore near Milan and elsewhere.




Prosecutors supported their request, submitted to the Italian parliament, with several hundred pages of documentation, including text and other messages, financial payments from Berlusconi's financial administrator Giuseppe Spinelli, and wiretap transcripts.




Minetti's lawyer said it had not yet been decided if Minetti would be questioned by prosecutors next Tuesday.




Berlusconi fielded Minetti as a candidate for his People of Freedom party in Italy's March 2010 region elections. She met the former showgirl and newly qualified dental hygienist when treated him for two broken teeth and facial injuries after he was attacked at a political rally.




She also appeared a dancer on a TV show aired by one of the billionaire media tycoon's channels, called Colorado Cafe, and on another programme called Scorie, which is an Italian version of Candid Camera.




Minetti is one of the women named in the media as 74-year-old Berlusconi's possible girlfriend after he claimed in a recent video message that he had been in a "steady relationship" for the past 18 months since he split from his second wife.




Minetti is among several Berlusconi associates who are suspected of of procuring prostitutes for Berlusconi, including teenage Moroccan nightclub dancer Karima El Mahroug, nicknamed Ruby, who was allegedly17 when she spent at least eight nights at Berlusconi's villa in Arcore last year.




She and Berlusconi deny they have ever had sex and she has claimed he "never laid a finger" on her.




A panel of the Italian parliament is currently considering a request sent on 14 January by Milan prosecutors spearheading the prostitution probe for permission to search Spinelli's offices in Milan. The prosecutors supplied a 389 page dossier of evidence gathered on the case.




Berlusconi refused to be questioned by the prosecutors last week over the allegations he had sex with a juvenile prostitute and abused his powers of office by pressuring police to release El Mahroug from custody last May over an unrelated theft charge.




He claims the allegations against him are "absurd" and part of a plot against him by subsersive leftwing prosecutors who should be "punished".




He has said it would be "mad" for him to bow to opposition demands that he resign, but has also received criticism from the Catholic Church and the Vatican over the prostitution allegations.




On Wednesday he said the furore would blow over and he vowed he would remain premier. He told journalists the new dossier againt Minetti was "scandalous".




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Search for Christian unity is 'moral imperative,' pope says

Amplify’d from www.catholicnews.com
Search for Christian unity is 'moral imperative,' pope says
Pope Benedict XVI greets Christian leaders as he leaves an ecumenical evening prayer service that marked the close of the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity at the Basilica of St. Paul Outside the Walls in Rome Jan. 25. (CNS/Paul Haring)

By Cindy Wooden

Catholic News Service



ROME (CNS) -- Giving in to the temptation of thinking the Christian churches will never be fully united is a sign of weak faith, Pope Benedict XVI said.



"One must resist the temptation of resignation and pessimism, which is a lack of trust in the power of the Holy Spirit," the pope said Jan. 25 at an ecumenical evening prayer service marking the close of the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity.



The pope presided over the service at Rome's Basilica of St. Paul Outside the Walls with a German Lutheran delegation, an international group of Oriental Orthodox bishops and theologians and Orthodox, Anglican and Protestant leaders from Rome.



Special prayers were read by Orthodox Metropolitan Gennadios of Italy and Malta and by the Rev. David Richardson, the Anglican archbishop of Canterbury's representative to the Vatican and director of the Anglican Center in Rome.



In his homily, the pope said the search for Christian unity is "a moral imperative, a response to a precise call of the Lord."



The theme of the 2011 week of prayer, "One in the apostles' teaching, fellowship, breaking of bread and prayer," described the unity experienced within the early Christian community, the pope said.



The early Christian community in Jerusalem "was not closed in on itself, but from its birth it was catholic, universal, capable of embracing people of different languages and cultures," the pope said.



"It was a community not founded on a pact among its members, or on the simple sharing of a project or ideal, but on profound communion with God," he said.



Pope Benedict repeated what he had said Jan. 19 during his weekly general audience at the Vatican: The theme's four ingredients are the four pillars of Christian faith and are "the fundamental dimensions of unity of the visible body of the church."



To be fully united, he said, Christians must hold firm to the faith taught by the apostles, they must gather together, they must share the Eucharist, and they must pray constantly.



Because unity must be based on faith believed and lived in common, he said at the prayer service, Christian unity cannot be reduced to a recognition and acceptance of differences and an agreement to coexist peacefully.



"That for which we yearn is the unity for which Christ himself prayed and which, by its nature, is manifested in a communion of faith, sacraments and ministry," Pope Benedict said.



END
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Italy: Bishop Cites ‘Moral Unease’ Over Public Figures

Amplify’d from www.nytimes.com

Italy: Bishop Cites ‘Moral Unease’ Over Public Figures

By RACHEL DONADIO











The head of the Italian bishops conference said Monday that Italians felt a “moral unease” toward their public figures, an indirect reference to a sex scandal in which magistrates accuse Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi of compensating “a significant number” of women for sex. “Whoever accepts a public position must understand the sobriety, personal discipline, sense of measure and honor that come with it,” Cardinal Angelo Bagnasco said. His remarks were a sign of the rising pressure on Mr. Berlusconi. The Vatican secretary of state said last week that the Vatican was watching the scandal “with concern,” and the head of the leading industrialists’ organization said Sunday that she would support Finance Minister Giulio Tremonti as a possible replacement for Mr. Berlusconi. Mr. Berlusconi denies all wrongdoing and has vowed to fight on.




In his televised speech, Cardinal Bagnasco also warned that Italy was facing an “anthropological disaster”: A culture in which success is based on “artificiality,” “easy gain,” “ostentation” and “commercial objectification.”






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Unmasking the Vatican's bank

Amplify’d from www.globalpost.com

Unmasking the Vatican's bank

The mysterious Istituto per le Opere di Religione responds to anti-money-laundering laws.
By Alessandro Speciale — Special to GlobalPost
Crime
Editor's note: This article is part of "Underworld: a global crime blotter," a semi-regular series covering crime and punishment around the world.


ROME, Italy — When Pope Benedict XVI makes lofty statements about the role ethics plays in the economy, he speaks from experience.


Within the Vatican is the only branch of the Istituto per le Opere di Religione (IOR), otherwise known as the Vatican bank. Its ATM uses Latin.


Only Vatican employees and religious institutions are allowed to open accounts in the bank — which you’d think would make it the most moral bank in the world.


So why is its chief, economist Ettore Gotti Tedeschi, under investigation for money laundering?


Italy's Central Bank flagged a 23 million euro transfer from an IOR account in an Italian bank, the Credito Artigiano, to two other accounts as lacking some information now compulsory under EU-mandated anti-money laundering laws. So prosecutors seized the money, froze the IOR account, and opened an investigation.


This embarrassing “misunderstanding” — as the Vatican called it in a note published in its newspaper, l'Osservatore Romano — managed to turn the spotlight again on an institution that has been involved in many murky affairs.


“The IOR is not a bank in the normal definition of the term,” wrote Vatican spokesman Federico Lombardi in a recent letter to the Financial Times. In fact, it doesn't lend money or act as a consultant to businesses.


“It is more a fund deposit and transfer institution than a bank,” said Carlo Marroni, a Vatican expert with Il Sole 24 Ore, Italy's financial daily. IOR doesn't invest in the stock market, he thinks, “though they operate on the currency or bond market, or buy gold.” To trade in world markets it must go through other banks, such as the Credito Artigiano.


It is hard to pin down the value of IOR’s holdings. “It doesn't publish a budget or an annual report,” Marroni said. “It is usually held that it has 5 billion euros in deposits, but I don't know how exact this figure is.”


Another often reported figure is that accounts turn a 13 percent yearly interest — tax-free, like the Vatican itself.


But, “I think it's much less than that,” said Marroni. A leaked document from 1987 published in a recent book that made headlines here, “Vaticano Spa” — Spa being the acronym for publicly traded companies in Italian — showed that an IOR account yielded a 9 percent net interest.


IOR's biggest asset, anyway, is its secrecy — all its accounts are identified only by number. This secrecy has been used for unholy goals.


Some of them have been documented in full. The author of “Vaticano Spa,” Gianluigi Nuzzi, gained access to the archive left by the late Monsignor Renato Dardozzi, a key player at IOR from 1974 to the late 1990s. He used it to investigate the bank's involvement in money-laundering for Italian politicians and even mafia bosses. In a letter published by Nuzzi, the previous president of the Vatican Bank, Angelo Caloia, confessed worriedly to cardinal Angelo Sodano, John Paul II's “prime minister,” that IOR had served to “clean” bribes and that it held ciphered accounts for Catholic politicians, such as seven-time prime minister Giulio Andreotti.


When Banco Ambrosiano head Roberto Calvi, know as “God's Banker,” died under Blackfriars Bridge in London in 1982, the Vatican Bank was then the main shareholder of the Banco.


The American head of IOR at the time, Illinois-born cardinal Paul Casimir Marcinkus, a former body guard to Pope Paul VI, resorted to Vatican immunity to avoid prosecution by Italian judges. He died in 2006 and has often been blamed for the scandals that plagued the bank in the 1980s.


“After that, things started to change, starting under Caloia (Marcinkus' successor from 1990)," said Giancarlo Galli, a journalist who wrote a key book on Catholic finance. “Slowly, later than elsewhere, but people in the Vatican began to understand that 'opacity' is no longer a value in the financial world, replaced by 'transparency.'”


Such efforts redoubled with the arrival last year as president of Gotti Tedeschi, an outspoken economist who had worked as Italian representative from Spain's Banco Santander. After news of the money-laudering investigation came out last fall, Tedeschi voluntarily spoke with prosecutors. Italy's Corriere della Sera also reported that 13 IOR accounts not belonging to Vatican employees had been closed.


Until now, IOR's secrecy has been assured by the loyalty and frugality of its employees, mostly priests, and by the fact that the Vatican, a sovereign State, operates as a financial black hole, exempt from all international disclosure and transparency obligations.


This is going to change: The Vatican is working with the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development to be accepted on a 'white list' of financially accountable countries.


“This could take quite a long time, though,” Marroni said.


A papal decree published on Dec. 30 gave the Vatican for the first time its own money-laundering law. It also created a financial oversight authority with broad powers to investigate any suspicious money transfer.


Also last year, for the first time, the Vatican attached an official figure to IOR, saying in the yearly statement on the Holy See's budget that the bank had donated 50 million euros “for the religious activities of the Holy Father.”


“This is welcome,” Marroni said, “though this shows that IOR turns a profit. And one cannot help but wonder where it comes from.”


More Underworld stories:

Read more at www.globalpost.com
 

The Tangled Web Tightens for the Vatican

Amplify’d from www.patheos.com

The Tangled Web Tightens for the Vatican

Marci A. HamiltonBy Marci A. Hamilton

Headlines around the world this week have reported that Irish broadcaster RTE obtained a 1997 letter from the Vatican that instructed Irish bishops not to report child sex abuse by priests to the police. According to the letter, "the situation of ‘mandatory reporting' gives rise to serious reservations of both a moral and a canonical nature."

Survivors are calling this the "smoking gun" that proves the Vatican's complicity in the abuse cover-up. They are right, but that is not the whole story with this letter.

Absolutely no one should be surprised by this direct expression of what everyone should have known already: the Vatican has orchestrated a conspiracy of secrecy about child abuse for decades, if not centuries.

Once the practice of covering up the identities of priest child sex abusers was established beyond a doubt in Boston, then incrementally, the entire United States, and then Europe, and Mexico, and South America, could anyone actually believe the cover-ups were a colossal coincidence? When you have a top-down hierarchical institution with an ever-repeating pattern of abuse/cover-up/move around/abuse/cover-up/move around, the resulting secrecy is no accident.

Jeffrey Lena, who represents the Vatican in the United States clergy sex abuse cases, disputed the notion that the letter required bishops to disregard civil reporting requirements. In fact, there were no such requirements in Ireland at the time, so his defense is thin at best.

The public is being seriously misled on the Vatican's position on reporting then and now. The Vatican's official position is that it urged cooperation with authorities then and that it requires reporting now, so it's all good. Right?

Definitely not. The Vatican's policy, as Lena indicates, which was reconfirmed in the last year as part of the Vatican's "new" measures to protect victims, is to require reporting only if civil law requires it. No voluntary reporting to the police.

But their position is much darker than it appears on the surface. Not only has the Vatican only required reporting if the civil law mandates it, its lobbyists have lobbied hard to make sure that state laws do not require clergy to report. Similarly, their lawyers have argued ad infinitum in courts that they should not be required to report, raising silly First Amendment arguments and every technicality they can.

Let me say that again. The Catholic Conferences and the lawyers for the dioceses routinely argue that clergy should be exempt from reporting, generally and in specific cases.

They will tell you that the reason they lobby against reporting is to protect the sanctity of the confessional. But it is out of character for them to limit their arguments in the legislatures or the courts to a bona fide confessional. Everything is a "confession" for them, including discussions about child sex abuse between priests and their superiors way outside the confessional box. So the sum total of their "reporting policy" is to avoid reporting in as many instances as they possibly can. All the while, they are paying lip service to reporting. This letter is a smoking rocket launcher.

The rest of the letter deserves attention as well. If perhaps you are an incurable optimist who has been giving the benefit of the doubt to the Church, I think you would be interested in this paragraph farther down the letter:

Since the policies on sexual abuse in the English speaking world exhibit many of the same characteristics and procedures, the Congregation is involved in a global study of them. At the appropriate time, with the collaboration of the interested Episcopal Conferences and in dialogue with them, the Congregation will not be remiss in establishing some concrete directives with regard to these policies.

This is the most stunning part of the letter to me. First, they started working on "concrete directives" in 1997? I have nothing but questions about this. I wonder what directives they have considered over the last fourteen years—certainly not mandatory reporting to the authorities. Nor have they shut down their "treatment centers" to which they send their priest perpetrators, or been willing to release records of claims against priests without civil litigation.

Given the resources they waste on trying to halt legal reform for child sex abuse victims, I'm wondering if one of the concrete directives was to ensure that all victims of child sex abuse be treated just as their victims have been—manacled by the law and ignored by the culture. Nothing like a level playing field to make everyone feel better.

Second, clergy abuse has hardly been cabined to the English-speaking world. It has been rampant in South America and Mexico as well as Africa. And they have known it. Just look at the remarkable, tragic story of the many victims of Marcel Maciel, who was befriended by John Paul II and only recently rebuked by the Vatican.

Does this paragraph mean that they were only taking the English-speaking abuse seriously? That actually makes some sense, because the English-speaking countries have the best legal systems for victims to be able to sue. They are called "common law" legal systems. In contrast, in civil law countries, victims have a much harder time getting to court. The bishops do not take these issues terribly seriously unless they are threatened with imminent legal proceedings. They are particularly averse to having to be deposed themselves, which is why every diocesan bankruptcy has been declared just before a bishop was going to be required to be deposed or testify on abuse. The recent Milwaukee Diocese bankruptcy filing is no different.

Third, what does "at the appropriate time" mean? Were a publicly traded corporation accused of child trafficking, it would not be speaking in terms of "appropriate time" but rather "emergency," "speedy resolution," and it would be firing its leadership for letting it go down such a dark and ultimately unprofitable path. But the Vatican assumed a right to take whatever time it needed, proving once again this institution's callous and shallow response to heinous crimes within its confines. It was, once again, all about the Vatican, and not about the victims.

I don't know how many times one institution can re-victimize its victims, but here you have another example. Fourteen years is a long time to consider what to do in the face of entrenched evil. Of course, for the victims, the abuse itself is a life sentence.

This institution has become the epitome of the famous and memorable line by Walter Scott, in his poem "Marmion": "Oh, what a tangled web we weave when first we practice to deceive." The point is that one lie leads to another and another until one is so entangled that escaping the original falsehood becomes virtually impossible. This letter is the latest proof that the leadership of the Catholic Church is inextricably tangled in a web of its own making, and the rest of us have to be the ones to ensure the safety of our children.

Marci A. Hamilton is the Paul R. Verkuil Chair in Public Law, Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law, Yeshiva University and author of Justice Denied: What America Must Do to Protect Its Children (Cambridge, 2008) and God vs. the Gavel: Religion and the Rule of Law (Cambridge, 2005, 2007).

Hamilton's column, "God vs. Gavel," is published every Wednesday. Subscribe via email or RSS.

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Utah cop punches 58 y/o woman in the face repeatedly

Amplify’d from www.infowars.com

MOX News

You Tube

January 24, 2011

Supposedly this woman took too long to pull over, and police were afraid she’s try to drive away once she stopped, so they unleashed the taser and simultaneously deployed the ‘fist to the face.’

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5hcfJ-ePtS4
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Ventura Strikes Back with Lawsuit Against TSA

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The Inside Story from Alex Jones About the Former Governor’s Humiliating Pat-Down Experiences that Included ‘Touching, Gripping & Rubbing of the Genitals’ at the Hands of TSA

Aaron Dykes & Alex Jones

Infowars.com

January 25, 2011

infowars



Former Governor Jesse Ventura has filed a lawsuit against the TSA and the Department of Homeland Security in an effort to take on invasive airport pat-downs. [READ LAWSUIT]

Former Governor Jesse Ventura has taken steps to sue the TSA and the Department of Homeland Security, naming their chiefs John Pistole and ‘Big Sis’ Janet Napolitano in a lawsuit that will take on invasive airport pat-downs [READ LAWSUIT]. Ventura first told Alex Jones of his intent to sue the TSA privately back in November while traveling for the making of TruTV’s “Conspiracy Theory,” expressing grave concern about what he viewed as his country’s transformation into East Germany.

As far back as September, Ventura confided in Jones that his career was under threat and that he was considering abandoning travel altogether because of the fact that he was being harassed by TSA agents every single time he went through an airport security checkpoint.

Jones recalls Ventura’s outrage at the TSA’s harassing old people in wheelchairs with the invasive new pat-down procedures. The former governor himself is routinely sent to secondary screening due to a hip replacement in 2008, and Jones witnessed him undergo repeated humiliating searches during pat-downs at the hands of TSA. Worse, at airports across the country, even those presenting medical cards describing special needs or equipment from a doctor are routinely ignored as TSA agents demand that medical patients remove urostomy bags, prosthetic breasts or that TSA be allowed to grope a pacemaker patients’ breasts.

“That’s why I want to leave the United States,” Ventura had told Jones at the time. “This is why I go down to Mexico– this is wrong.” Ventura indicated that he was most concerned about the destruction of the 4th Amendment and passing of the America he once knew. During one TSA pat-down procedure on Ventura that Jones witnessed at Atlanta International Airport, Ventura loudly proclaimed his disgust that the United States had turned into East Germany and that the America he loved and served in the military was dead, while TSA agents conducting the pat down merely smiled. They knew who Ventura was and that he was a public figure, but still subjected the former Governor to an 8 minute-plus invasive body search.

Ventura filed his lawsuit Monday, January 24, 2011 in Minnesota and news reports have named David Olsen as his lawyer. The former governor has indicated that his suit will include violations of the Americans with Disabilities Act and the 4th Amendment, arguing that he and others with disabilities have been discriminated against and unduly singled out by TSA despite presenting no threat and warranting no reason for lawful search. Further, Ventura has argued that his ability to travel freely has been infringed, hampering his ability to work.

In November 2010, Ventura vowed on the Alex Jones Show that he would never again fly on commercial aircraft so long as current TSA policies remain in place. “It probably means an end to my career,” Ventura lamented on Jones’ program. As The Drudge Report exposed months ago, Ventura has been groped during TSA pat-downs and is uncomfortable with the invasion of privacy, as well as the abuse of government power.

Now, KSTP in Minnesota is reporting that:

“Ventura accuses the agencies of violating his ‘basic rights to privacy and dignity, and his right to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures’.”

“Ventura.. alleges the pat-down included ‘warrantless, non-suspicion-based offensive touching, gripping and rubbing of the genital and other sensitive areas of his body,’ which, the lawsuit contends, met ‘the definition for an unlawful sexual assault’.”

In November, Jesse Ventura confirmed to Alex Jones that he would be suing the TSA in the new year and would explain more once the suit was filed. Ventura is in the Baha area of Mexico but Alex Jones was told yesterday by his management that Ventura would be giving Jones a written statement and should be appearing on the Alex Jones Show in the near future.

Homeland Security, in the ever-echoing siren song of “public safety,” is attempting to bar our right of free passage across the country. Those who refuse to cooperate with body scanners or pat-downs are told they will be arrested, detained or fined. Just as in Nazi Germany, we’re increasingly gearing towards internal passports, where we must satisfy on the spot inspection or be refused the ability to travel. Tourism is down by billions of dollars; angry travel and vacation industry representatives tried to get TSA to back down, citing some 41 million potential fliers who ‘avoided’ travel due to anxiety over airport security. But airports are only the leading phase. TSA, VIPR squads and mobile x-ray scanners are rolling out onto the streets of America at train and bus stations. Sports stadiums and shopping malls will be next. Homeland Security is unveiling 9,000 tele-screens at locations across America, including Wal-Mart, to encourage people to spy on their neighbors.

If anyone can stop the police state, it is the people of the United States. The bigger picture is looking more and more like 1984. It is vital that we resist these police state measures and make our voices heard. We commend former Gov. Jesse Ventura for standing up to TSA and using his prominent name to fight back against clear bullying and intimidation by a government agency trying to expand its mandate for power. Others have fought the TSA, including a man in Seattle who recently won his suit over the right to use a camera. Moreover, the TSA had to settle with an Amarillo, Texas woman after their agents shockingly exposed her breasts and then laughed about it.

The Alex Jones Show – November 19, 2010:

JESSE VENTURA ABUSED BY TSA WILL NO LONGER FLY.
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Police: Man under arrest urinated in officer's cruiser

Amplify’d from www.inyork.com

Police: Man under arrest urinated in officer's cruiser

Daily Record/Sunday News
York, PA -
A Baltimore man arrested by state police early Sunday morning urinated in the back of one of their cruisers, according to charging documents.


William Russell Kuit, 19, was a passenger in a black 2002 Volkswagen Jetta that police said they stopped in the southbound lanes on Interstate 83 in Springettsbury Township just before 2:30 a.m. Kuit was arrested after police smelled alcohol on him and he refused to take a preliminary breath test and a field sobriety test.


He also gave police an incorrect birth date, according to charging documents, and when they asked him for his Social Security number, he said, "I don't know it. You can figure it out."


Kuit was placed in the back of a cruiser and taken to Central Booking. As the trooper was waiting to be allowed in into the York County Judicial Center, he heard "the sound of fluid hitting the floor board directly behind the front passenger seat where the defendant was located," according to court documents.


The trooper turned around and found that Kuit had slid his handcuffs over his legs so that they were now in front of him, police said. Kuit was charged with indecent exposure; criminal mischief; disorderly conduct; and purchase, consumption, possession or transportation of liquor or malt or brewed beverages by a minor.

Read more at www.inyork.com
 

York man wanted on sex assault charges

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York man wanted on sex assault charges

Daily Record/Sunday News
York, PA -

Authorities are looking for a 40-year-old York man wanted on sexual assault charges, according to the York County Sheriff's Office.


Caesar Lassiter, also known as Akeem Hawkins or Alvin Davis, had a last known address in York.


He faces charges of statutory sexual assault, indecent assault and domestic relations.


Anyone with information on his whereabouts may call York County Crime Stoppers at 755-TIPS or 1-800-722-0991.

Read more at www.inyork.com