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Bob Herbert

Stories From the Inside

Bob Herbert | New York Times | February 7, 2005

"The Bush administration has turned Guantánamo into a place that is devoid of due process and the rule of law. It's a place where human beings can be imprisoned for life without being charged or tried, without ever seeing a lawyer, and without having their cases reviewed by a court. Congress and the courts should be uprooting this evil practice, but freedom and justice in the United States are on a post-9/11 downhill slide." [more]

Bombs and Blood

Bob Herbert | New York Times | March 13, 2003

"We should outlaw the term collateral damage. Above all else, the damage done by the weapons of war is to the flesh, muscle, bone and psyches of real people, some of them children. If we're willing to inflict such terrible damage, we should acknowledge it and not hide behind euphemisms." [more]

Secrecy Is Our Enemy

Bob Herbert | New York Times | September 2, 2002

"Judge Keith wrote an opinion, handed down last Monday by a three-judge panel in Cincinnati, that clarified and reaffirmed some crucially important democratic principles that have been in danger of being discarded since the terrorist attacks last Sept. 11. The opinion was a reflection of true patriotism, a 21st-century echo of a pair of comments made by John Adams nearly two centuries ago. 'Liberty,' said Adams, 'cannot be preserved without a general knowledge among the people.' " [more]

Isn't Democracy Worth It?

Bob Herbert | New York Times | June 17, 2002

"Mr. Padilla, an American citizen, has been sucked into a procedural black hole in which he no longer has any legal rights. If left unchecked, this contempt for the law and due process could pose more of a threat to our way of life than Al Qaeda." [more]

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