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Notes from a bemused canuck

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Month: November 2004

Dubya, the war criminal

Posted on November 17, 2004 By admin 5 Comments on Dubya, the war criminal

When U.S. President George W. Bush arrives in Ottawa probably later this year should he be welcomed? Or should he be charged with war crimes?

It's an interesting question. On the face of it, Bush seems a perfect candidate for prosecution under Canada's Crimes against Humanity and War Crimes Act.

This act was passed in 2000 to bring Canada's ineffectual laws in line with the rules of the new International Criminal Court. While never tested, it lays out sweeping categories under which a foreign leader like Bush could face arrest.

In particular, it holds that anyone who commits a war crime, even outside Canada, may be prosecuted by our courts. What is a war crime? According to the statute, it is any conduct defined as such by “customary international law” or by conventions that Canada has adopted.

War crimes also specifically include any breach of the 1949 Geneva Conventions, such as torture, degradation, wilfully depriving prisoners of war of their rights “to a fair and regular trial,” launching attacks “in the knowledge that such attacks will cause incidental loss of life or injury to civilians” and deportation of persons from an area under occupation.

Outside of one well-publicized (and quickly squelched) attempt in Belgium, no one has tried to formally indict Bush. But both Oxfam International and the U.S. group Human Rights Watch have warned that some of the actions undertaken by the U.S. and its allies, particularly in Iraq, may fall under the war crime rubric.

The case for the prosecution looks quite promising. First, there is the fact of the Iraq war itself. After 1945, Allied tribunals in Nuremberg and Tokyo in an astonishing precedent ruled that states no longer had the unfettered right to invade other countries and that leaders who started such conflicts could be tried for waging illegal war.

Concurrently, the new United Nations outlawed all aggressive wars except those authorized by its Security Council.

Today, a strong case could be made that Bush violated the Nuremberg principles by invading Iraq. Indeed, U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan has already labelled that war illegal in terms of the U.N. Charter.

Second, there is the manner in which the U.S. conducted this war.

The mistreatment of prisoners at Iraq's Abu Ghraib prison is a clear contravention of the Geneva Accord. The U.S. is also deporting selected prisoners to camps outside of Iraq (another contravention). U.S. press reports also talk of shadowy prisons in Jordan run by the CIA, where suspects are routinely tortured. And the estimated civilian death toll of 100,000 may well contravene the Geneva Accords prohibition against the use of excessive force.

Canada's war crimes law specifically permits prosecution not only of those who carry out such crimes but of the military and political superiors who allow them to happen.

What has emerged since Abu Ghraib shows that officials at the highest levels of the Bush administration permitted and even encouraged the use of torture.

Given that Bush, as he likes to remind everyone, is the U.S. military's commander-in-chief, it is hard to argue he bears no responsibility.

Then there is Guantanamo Bay. The U.S. says detainees there do not fall under the Geneva accords. That's an old argument.

In 1946, Japanese defendants explained their mistreatment of prisoners of war by noting that their country had never signed any of the Geneva Conventions. The Japanese were convicted anyway.

Oddly enough, Canada may be one of the few places where someone like Bush could be brought to justice. Impeachment in the U.S. is most unlikely. And, at Bush's insistence, the new international criminal court has no jurisdiction over any American.

But a Canadian war crimes charge, too, would face many hurdles. Bush was furious last year when Belgians launched a war crimes suit in their country against him so furious that Belgium not only backed down under U.S. threats but changed its law to prevent further recurrences.

As well, according to a foreign affairs spokesperson, visiting heads of state are immune from prosecution when in Canada on official business. If Ottawa wanted to act, it would have to wait until Bush was out of office or hope to catch him when he comes up here to fish.

And, of course, Canada's government would have to want to act. War crimes prosecutions are political decisions that must be authorized by the federal attorney-general.

Still, Prime Minister Paul Martin has staked out his strong opposition to war crimes. This was his focus in a September address to the U.N. General Assembly.

There, Martin was talking specifically about war crimes committed by militiamen in far-off Sudan. But as my friends on the Star's editorial board noted in one of their strong defences of concerted international action against war crimes, the rule must be, “One law for all.”

Original link here: here

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4 months ago, my life took a turn for the better :)

Posted on November 16, 2004 By admin 7 Comments on 4 months ago, my life took a turn for the better :)

http://www.livejournal.com/~talisker/122925.html?nc=17

i was randomly sifting through, and i saw your user name, which happens to be a type of whiskey, so i was intrigued!! read your user info, read your journal, saw boris, fell in love and added you. so it's all boris' fault! i'm a sucker for animals! its nice to meet you to :)! and maybe i can be your first british person :) hope to talk more soon

I loves you Katy

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I don't like my body

Posted on November 16, 2004 By admin 6 Comments on I don't like my body

blergh.

Here I was, minding my own business, having lunch composed of all good stuff I've eaten tons before, when I feel all the annoying sighs of an allergic reaction. Not a big one, only itchy lips that are a bit red at the corners of my mouth, but still, it's a pain in the ass. Cause I start to worry about it, and that only serves to make it worse. Took some benadryl, my trusty companion, but still, fuuuuuuck. It's either the dijon mustard or the red pepper. Considering I've had that mustard before, in droves, it might be something as annoying as some sort of pesticide on the pepper cause I might not have washed it enough. Bleh. Still, it's always fun to play the worry game.

I'm perfectly fine now, itchiness and redness all gone, but the worry remains.

I hate my body.

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grrrr

Posted on November 15, 2004 By admin 5 Comments on grrrr

I have this huuuuge red button on my nose. I'm dead sexy, i tell ya.

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Oh where, oh where has my roommate gone…

Posted on November 14, 2004 By admin 12 Comments on Oh where, oh where has my roommate gone…

I haven't seen kit nor kin of Marc for over two weeks now, I believe. That has to be a record.

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Bathrobe observations

Posted on November 14, 2004 By admin 1 Comment on Bathrobe observations

I noticed something earlier today. Before I met Katy, my kimono was always hung on the 4-peg rack behind my door, and I'd hang it across the 4 pegs. Ever since she left, it's only been hanging on 2, and I just realized today that it was because her
killer-blue-fluff bathrobe used to hang there as well. Since she's been gone, I've been unconsciously hanging my kimono only on half the space, because I know that one day, that bathrobe will be there for good and it's going to need the space.

Yes, I am a big romantic sap. You may mock me now.

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God bless america, land of the pollution-free naps

Posted on November 14, 2004 By admin 2 Comments on God bless america, land of the pollution-free naps

Terri Leo is a popular villain in the science press right now. She's on the Texas State Board of Education, the second-largest textbook buying body in the country, and she has worked liked a demon to get references to evolution, global warming, pollution, overpopulation, and contraception from textbooks used in her state. Given that her state is the second-largest textbook buying body in the country, that gives her a scary amount of power in deciding what goes into textbooks. She's responsible for the acceptance of a “health” textbook that recommends, as a form of birth control, naps, on the grounds that “it may be harder to make the responsible decision to remain abstinent when you are tired.” (Rc note: Did you know that Texas is the #1 ranked state for teen pregnancy?)

This year, her target is “asexual stealth phrases.” She wants phrases like “married people” replaced with “A husband and wife in a life-long union,” claiming that the original phrase may confuse children into believing that men can marry men or something.

Original blog entry yoinked from [info]elfs

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SO WRONG!

Posted on November 14, 2004 By admin 11 Comments on SO WRONG!

Dog toy or marital aid :D

http://www.dogtoyormaritalaid.com/

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Daily recap

Posted on November 14, 2004 By admin 4 Comments on Daily recap

Today was a domestic day, for the most part. Did about a gajillion loads of laundry (and yes Katy, my laundry basket is empty!) and some dishes. My parents came over to meet my cat (my mom had seen him a long time ago, my dad, never), drop off the suitcase I'm going to use to go to the UK and give me a vacuum cleaner. They bought me one. I think it's a sign…

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For those of you who wanted to see

Posted on November 14, 2004 By admin 19 Comments on For those of you who wanted to see

I love that picture MJ.

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I once absend-mindedly ordered Three Mile Island dressing in a restaurant and, with great presence of mind, they brought Thousand Island Dressing and a bottle of chili sauce.
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