Title: Obama's Legacy: Military Fags Can Now "Get it On" Source:
[None] URL Source:[None] Published:Sep 20, 2011 Author:somebody Post Date:2011-09-20 09:54:14 by no gnu taxes Keywords:None Views:238 Comments:9
Larry Sinclair can now fuck CinC Obama up the butt in the White House, and Michelle can go down on Hillary without any rear of reprisal.
Like if we could only fix this, then the rest of the Military would be Okie Dokie....
What's the First thing the US does after an Invasion:
News for baghdad embassy expanding news # 750 Million-Dollar US Embassy In Iraq Will Expand Further Citizens for Legitimate Government - 7 hours ago 750 Million-Dollar US Embassy In Iraq Will Expand Further 16 Sep 2011 US ... to fall back to the gargantuan embassy in Baghdad -- a heavily fortified, ... 2 related articles
Second:
In the U.S., prisons are so wildly overcrowded that courts are ordering them to release inmates en masse because conditions are so inhumane as to be unconstitutional (today, the FBI documented that a drug arrest occurs in the U.S. once every 19 seconds, but as everyone knows, only insane extremists and frivolous potheads advocate an end to that war). In the U.S., budgetary constraints are so severe that entire grades are being eliminated, the use of street lights restricted, and the most basic services abolished for the nation's neediest. But the U.S. proposes to spend up to $100 million on a sprawling new prison in Afghanistan.
8D
Planet Hell where your Rulers are Psychos and the gods aren't very nice...8D
Ten years after the September 11 attacks, few Americans realize that the United States is still imprisoning more than 2800 men outside the United States without charge or trial. Sprawling U.S. military prisons have become part of the post-9/11 landscape, and the concept of "indefinite detention" -- previously foreign to our system of government -- has meant that such prisons, and their captives, could remain a legacy of the 9/11 attacks and the "war on terror" for the indefinite future. . . . .
The secrecy surrounding the U.S. prison in Afghanistan makes it impossible for the public to judge whether those imprisoned there deserve to be there.