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You are here: Home / 2007 / Archives for November 2007

Archives for November 2007

Paey Interview

by John Cole|  November 22, 200711:59 am| 44 Comments

This post is in: The War on Your Neighbor, aka the War on Drugs, Outrage

And if the previous story did not piss you off enough, this surely will. Read Radley Balko’s interview with Richar Paey, who was convicted of drug trafficking for his own legally prescribed pain treatment, given a 25 year mandatory minimum sentence, and then promptly hooked up to a morphine pump in prison to give him FAR MORE painkillers than he was convicted of “trafficking.” A sample:

reason: You mention getting transferred to Butler Lake, the maximum-security prison across the state, several hours further away from your family. That transfer happened shortly after your interview with John Tierney of the New York Times. Do you think the transfer was retaliation—punishment for talking to a journalist?

Paey: That’s what I was told. That’s what a friendly prison nurse told my wife after the interview. And just after the interview, one of the prison officers who was on good terms with me told me that the guard who sat in on my interview with Tierney had gone to his captain about writing me a disciplinary report—which is the first step toward sending someone to solitary. He said I had said thing in the interview that I shouldn’t have said, and that they were going to act on it. There are designated “transfer days” when they move inmates between facilities. About two weeks later, on a day not scheduled to be a transfer day, the sergeant came up to me at around midnight and told me to pack my things. I was being shipped out to Lake Butler. They had no explanation. I couldn’t decline the move. It wasn’t medical in nature.

The move was tough. The sun was up by the time they moved me. It was of those insufferable July days. The van they transfer you in has no air conditioning, and only the driver’s window opens, and only about an inch. So I’m dying in the back of the van, strapped down in my wheelchair in this suffocating heat, where you can’t move, and there’s no air circulating. I ended up falling over, and they had to drive back and do it all over. They ended up taking me an ambulance a few days later.

reason: You say you were put in solitary confinement at Lake Butler. Was that for your health—to keep you from other inmates? Or was that punishment, too?

Paey: Laughs. When I got up to Lake Butler, they didn’t know why I was there. They had no paperwork on my transfer. This is going to sound absurd. Even now I find it difficult to believe. But when my wife Linda began calling the Department of Corrections about my transfer, they told her that a particular doctor had ordered my transfer. Linda called this doctor, got her on the phone. The doctor looked at my transfer order and said, “I didn’t sign that. I don’t know who signed that. Somebody used my signature stamp to sign that. I had no part in this transfer.”

Now, what’s going on, here? I’m being moved out of my permanent camp, which is close to my home and family, I’m being moved to the Siberia of the Florida corrections system, and they put me in solitary confinement once I got there. And nobody knows who authorized it? And the doctor the paperwork says ordered it says she never ordered it? So where do you go from there? What do you do?

This is the toxic combination of a lack of accountability, an authoritarian mindset, a disregard for human suffering (while getting ourselves worked into knots about embryos), an unwavering faith that our justice system is “good” (think about this the next time people are talking about the death penalty), a lack of transparency, a general erosion of your civil liberties, and the hysteria of the drug wars. Add in the profound political cowardice of politicians in both parties who always want to look “tough on crime,” and this is what you get- Turkish prisons in middle America.

And I mean no disrespect to Turkish prisons.

This country is so majorly screwed up right now, it is hard to figure out where everything went so wrong. I would start assigning blame at the drug war and with the big money to be made building prisons. Things are so out of control right now I am honestly shocked there is not rioting on a daily basis. maybe things have just been screwed up for so long that people are used to it by now.

Paey InterviewPost + Comments (44)

Morning In America

by John Cole|  November 22, 20079:28 am| 130 Comments

This post is in: Outrage

Via Digby, your Jack-Booted thugs:

Sign the ticket, or they taser you. And then giggle about it.

Classy.

Morning In AmericaPost + Comments (130)

Happy Thanksgiving: Open Thread

by Michael D.|  November 22, 20078:10 am| 34 Comments

This post is in: Previous Site Maintenance

Wishing you all the best. Enjoy your tofurkey, turduckens, and hams!

Most importantly, enjoy the game! (GO, ahmmmmm, whoever’s playing!)

***Update: This is how I am cooking my turkey this year. I’ve never put anything but salt and pepper on a turkey, and certainly nothing under the skin, so we’ll see!

Happy Thanksgiving: Open ThreadPost + Comments (34)

GOP Attitudes Towards Gays Changing

by Michael D.|  November 21, 20076:44 pm| 127 Comments

This post is in: Politics, Popular Culture

Not fast enough, in my own opinion, but there seems to be real change occurring in the GOP. Thirty-five Republicans voted in favor of adding gays, lesbians, and bisexuals to current hate crimes legislation. Just a short time ago, nearly none of them would have touched that issue, and I think Log Cabon Republican president Patrick Sammon has it right:

“You have folks who are looking ahead to 2008 and they see the landscape is going to be very difficult and they need to reach out to moderate voters,” he said. “This is one issue to do that on.”

Clyde Wilcox, a Georgetown University government professor, agreed.

“This helps them at election time,” he said. “It’s a minimal kind of support, but it’s still an issue that resonates in American culture.”

What caused that change in American culture, I would submit, is not using blanket statements to condemn every Republican for the faults of the decided majority. It was gay people of all stripes who took a more tactful approach, whether it was coming out to more conservative friends, or by joining groups like Log Cabin Republicans. As much as you might think “gay Republican” is an oximoron (or simply moronic), you can’t deny that there’s been a significant political change in the attitudes of Republicans towards them.

GOP Attitudes Towards Gays ChangingPost + Comments (127)

Georgia Sex Offender Law Ruled Unconstitutional

by Michael D.|  November 21, 20073:19 pm| 71 Comments

This post is in: Politics

I know there are many out there who don’t give a crap about what happens to sex offenders. It’s debatable whether or not a sex offender can be rehabilitated. What’s not debatable is how difficult it is to even start the process when you are so tightly restricted that simply finding a place to live is near impossible. So I think this is terrific news.

The Supreme Court of Georgia has ruled as unconstitutional the Georgia law that prohibits registered sex offenders from living within 1,000 feet of child care facilities, schools, churches or other areas where children congregate.

Anthony Mann, a convicted child molester, sued the state Department of Corrections in Clayton County Superior Court, challenging the constitutionality of Section 42-1-15 of the Official Code of Georgia, which restricts where sex offenders can live and work.

When Mann and his wife purchased their current home in Hampton, GA, there were no prohibited facilities nearby, and he was in compliance with Georgia’s Sex Offenders Statute. Similarly, when Mann entered into a business agreement as half owner and operator of a barbecue restaurant in Lovejoy, GA, there were no facilities nearby where children would possibly congregate.

Subsequently, two different day care centers were built within 1,000 feet of his home and his business. His probation officer demanded that Mann physically remove himself from his business and his home or face arrest and revocation of his probation.

The Court ruled for Mann on the grounds that, given the strict nature of the law, Mann could be forced to uproot himself and his family at the whim of anyone who brought a child into his neighborhood.

I won’t rehash it all here, but if you want my opinion on sex offender registries, you can read them here and here. Here’s a guy on the list because he urinated in public 21 years ago.

I wasn’t sure what to file this under. Politics seems right because the only reason we have these registries in the first place is to make us feel good and to make politicians appear tough on crime.

Georgia Sex Offender Law Ruled UnconstitutionalPost + Comments (71)

So That’s It?

by Tim F|  November 21, 20072:48 pm| 31 Comments

This post is in: War, General Stupidity

This is kind of depressing.

Abu Nawall, a captured al-Qaeda in Iraq leader, said he didn’t join the Sunni insurgent group here to kill Americans or to form a Muslim caliphate. He signed up for the cash.

“I was out of work and needed the money,” said Abu Nawall, the nom de guerre of an unemployed metal worker who was paid as much as $1,300 a month as an insurgent. He spoke in a phone interview from an Iraqi military base where he is being detained. “How else could I support my family?”

Jeebus. $1300 a month would buy you one 23rd of a Blackwater guard. It’s about 1/150th of what it costs to run this war for one second. That $9 billion that we pissed down an unaccountable black hole would buy us one tenth the population of Iraq for three months. Disturbingly, stories like this imply that throwing tens of billions at corrupt contractors who aggravate the local population by flying in foreign (slave) labor and build leaky crap that doesn’t work was not necessarily the best use of our funds. I’m telling you, the American Enterprise Institute will be devastated.

Then we could revisit the genius decision to fire the Iraqi army. Even granting that this war might have been hopeless from the outset, some days it truly look like they wanted to lose.

So That’s It?Post + Comments (31)

Stem Cells, Again

by John Cole|  November 21, 20071:50 pm| 53 Comments

This post is in: Politics, Religion, Science & Technology

Sullivan:

Upon close reading, it really does seem as if the basic moral quandary in stem-cell research has now been overcome. That moral quandary was real, and it is a mark of a certain non-religious fundamentalism that some enthusiasts for the research refused to acknowledge that the objections were indeed serious. But we’re facing another moment when science in effect rescues us from our political and moral impasse.

Hogwash. It is only a moral dilemma in the sense that if I somehow, out of the blue, decided my sperm was a human being and then got myself wrapped into a moral quandary over whether or not I was committing murder while I had meaningless sex in the shower. It was a stupid artificial debate, little more than pandering, and pretending it is a real moral dilemma is to cede the ground to people we should be ignoring.

Additionally, no one on my side of this debate wanted to do this research because we just like ‘killing’ embryos. I will leave the sadism to the pro-torture right, of whom a not insignificant number are all wrapped around the axle about a blob of cells that is not human, will never be human, and shouldn’t be treated as such (in that regard, Sullivan is at least consistent with his regard for ‘life.’ He and I just strongly disagree as to what constitutes life- the folks we tortured in Abu Ghraib- human. A bunch of cells under a microscope- not human). Regardless, those of us who wanted this research to continue wanted it done because it had promise to help lead to cures that actual living people might need. If the science can progress without it, fine. If it can not, expect me to be calling out the faux moralists again.

*** Update ***

One thing I should probably make clear- I have no doubt that some people think this is a real dilemma, and are serious in their concerns. My position is not that they do not struggle with the dilemma, but that the dilemma/quandary really is no such thing.

Stem Cells, AgainPost + Comments (53)

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