Against Da Law (Part 2)
July 16, 2017 1:08 am Leave your thoughts The law is indeed trickier than a snake, and can slip under obstacles and slither away into the undergrowth. It leaves in its wake tattered truth and battered justice
The law is indeed trickier than a snake, and can slip under obstacles and slither away into the undergrowth. It leaves in its wake tattered truth and battered justice
Perhaps, at last, justice may have a chance, one which might set a precedent and also deter any politician or leader from embarking on the "supreme international crime", ever again. Here's fervently hoping.
What do you do if you're the victim of injustice against major
institutions, walled up behind teams of legal eagles whose expertise
focuses first and foremost on closing ranks and damage limitations?
Western media and Democratic Party politicians have made a major campaign accusing Russia of "meddling" in the U.S. election. The following are major problems with the "anti-Russia" theme, starting with the lack of clear evidence.
The atrocity goes on. Two million human beings suffer inhuman treatment. And the world? Alas. the world is busy. It has no eyes for Gaza. Better not to think about that awful place
Japan has found a way to write off nearly half its national debt without creating inflation. We could do that too.
When I first heard that, on April 4, Bashar al-Assad had bombed Khan Sheikhoun with nerve gas my inner voice whispered: wait. Something wrong. Something smells fishy. First of all, it was too quick. Just a few hours after the event, everybody knew it was Bashar who did it.
The hope is that we wake up to something within our grasp at last.
For all their obvious flaws, one of the good things about early Trump supporters in the US was their opposition to war.
A poem by Dick Jones