Opinion

Bradley Manning's trial is no more than a 'judicial lynching'

FORT MEADE, Md.—The military trial of Bradley Manning is a judicial lynching. The government has effectively muzzled the defense team. The Army private first class is not permitted to argue that he had a moral and legal obligation under international law to make public the war crimes he uncovered. The documents that detail the crimes, torture and killing that Manning revealed, because they are classified, have been barred from discussion in court, effectively removing the fundamental issue of war crimes from the trial. Manning is forbidden by the court to challenge the government’s unverified assertion that he harmed national security. Lead defense attorney David E. Coombs said during pretrial proceedings that the judge’s refusal to permit information on the lack of actual damage from the leaks would “eliminate a viable defense, and cut defense off at the knees.” And this is what has happened.

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NSA surveillance makes the U.S. sound a lot like China

Both governments think they are doing what is best for the state and people. But, as I know, such abuse of power can ruin lives

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Bacterial apocalypse – the bugs are getting cleverer, and we are doing little to stop them

The time is now to develop new antibiotics, but serious barriers stand in our way

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Should we all eat less meat?

MPs have reported that if Britons ate less meat, it would ease inflation and help the developing world. Jay Rayner and Charles Sercombe debate the issue

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What telephone metadata can tell the authorities about you

When does mass data collection get personal? When it comes to the contents of our communications – what we say on the phone, or in emails – most people agree that's private information, and so does US law and the constitution. But when it comes to who we speak to, and where we were when we did it, matters get far hazier.

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The Republican Party loss among young voters goes way beyond 'rebranding'

The College Republicans National Committee report focuses on the GOP's image problem. It's way more fundamental than that

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Supreme Court's DNA ruling is yet another blow to civil liberties

A divided US supreme court ruled this week to uphold a Maryland law that allows the police to collect without warrant DNA material from persons who are arrested. The 5-4 decision was greeted with dismay by civil liberties advocates who see it as a body-blow to privacy and a further erosion of the US constitution's fourth amendment, which is supposed to protect individuals from excessive government intrusion. The truth is, in an era of mass surveillance, we have little privacy left to lose – and the courts have shown little willingness to resist law enforcement claims that access to our personal and physical data is necessary for them to do their job.

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Rupert Murdoch is now an old man on a lonely throne

In his 80s, with no clear successor, the media mogul and his spun-off newpaper operation are in a precarious position

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Five reasons Democrats will miss Michele Bachmann

Michele Bachmann's departure from the US congress is great news for my little corner of the world. Her retirement is another step in the right (or, technically, left) direction for Minnesota's progressives, who are on something of a roll lately with the defeat of a voter ID law and the passage of marriage equality legislation. (We did lose gay rights advocate and Vikings football punter Chris Kluwe, and spring seems to have been cancelled – but other than that, it's been a great year.)

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Gloria Steinem's 'A Bunny's Tale' – 50 years later

Steinem's groundbreaking article exposing the 1960s world of Playboy Bunny clubs is as fresh and relevant as ever

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Why should Apple have access to consumers if it refuses to pay its fair share of taxes?

Countries are competing to provide the biggest tax breaks, the cheapest labour and the easiest regulation to attract the likes of Google, Apple and Amazon, to the disadvantage of their own citizens. But there is another way

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On Memorial Day, it's time to make sure our veterans suffering from burn pit diseases get the care they need

This Memorial Day weekend, amid barbeques and picnics, many Americans will make time to remember the troops that have died in the twelve years of war in Afghanistan and Iraq. But the number, 6,521, tells only part of the price our troops have paid. The longest wars in U.S. history have actually claimed far fewer American lives than our other extended foreign wars in the past century (WWI: 116,516; WWII: 405,399; Korea: 36,574; and Vietnam: 58,220). It's in the living that we see the full catastrophic toll of our recent wars on our service men and women. Over 900,000 of the 1.6 million veterans of these wars are patients in the VA system, and over 800,000 have applied for disability benefits. The dead are at peace, we hope, but the living casualties still suffer the wounds of war.

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