9.22.2006

I'll Meet Your Habeas and Raise You a Corpus

Following up the post by Mataliandy at Green Mountain Daily on the subject of torture, Rhetoric 101 has this to say (go here to read the rest):

While we focus on the immoral "torture" part of the new torture bill, we're missing a more insidious little tid-bit: removing the right to a trial.

In England, way back in 1679, it was made illegal to stuff people in prison without charges and leave them there to rot. This was done because imprisonment had become the government's favorite means of suppression. Parliament thought this was a really bad idea, mostly because the peasantry had become so fed up with being silenced in this way, that the Lords who ran Parliament were in fear for their lives. So Parliament wised-up and passed a law to stop the practice.