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Editorials invited: Savagery or the Rule of Law in Libya?

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Edited by John Stokes

Do you support the barbarity of the apparent clique who have now seized control of Libya?

Would the rule of law have been better served if Ghadaffi had been put on trial, and not through a lynch mob?

Libyans can now look forward a government which is inspired by the kind of human rights abuses they have used to execute, not just against Ghadaffi, but also against innocent civilians throughout their Libyan campaign.

The Canadian is paying writers $15 per 1000 views of their submissions on articles which are submitted in the next 24 hours on Libya, between October 22 and October 25. You would be paid $150 if your article gets 10,000 views within that time.

We pay via Google Checkout generally once per week.

We seek to affirm Canada through our newspaper, as a citadel of human rights, social justice and peace, which respects the rule of law that inspired the creation of our Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

Please feel free to ask any additional questions.

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October 22nd, 2011 at 6:31 pm

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Canada’s Intervention in Libya establishes crypto-fascistic precedent against international law

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by Joe Hueglin

Canada is participating in the ending of an international modus vivendi that has been accepted practice for over three hundred years. In international affairs since 1648 “The Treaty of Westphalia guaranteed that the internal affairs of a sovereign country were none of the international community’s business, so long as it did not violate any treaties or threaten another nation-state.” Libya has done neither yet other states including Canada are bent upon determining the direction of its internal affairs.

The Honourable Julian Fantino, Associate Minister of National Defence, in a statement made yesterday wrote: ” the time has come to open a new chapter in Libya’s history, with a strong commitment to the sovereignty, independence, territorial integrity and national unity of Libya.”

Fantino’s “new chapter” is to come about through achieving Canada’s aim: ““to rid Libya of the Qadhafi regime”.  Regime change in Libya is to come about not through internal actions by  Libyans but by military might of NATO forces being justified by a United Nations Resolution authorizing implementation of a “no fly zone”.

This action is ending the pattern established by the Treaty of Westphalia and replacing it with the precedent based on applying this new norm: “The RESPONSIBILITY TO PROTECT (“RtoP” or “R2P”) is a new international security and human rights norm to address the international community’s failure to prevent and stop genocides, war crimes, ethnic cleansing and crimes against humanity.”

Is the Government of Canada aware or unaware of the sea change in international relations it is engaged in bringing about? Is it prepared to argue this new norm be applied even handedly to all regimes applying military force to unarmed civilians?

Before Parliament approves continuing Canadian involvement until the Qadhafi regime is replaced this ought to occur: “the prime minister needs to conduct a focused foreign policy review for the post-Westphalia era.”establishingthe principles and criteria for military intervention in the affairs of other nations. And it should also address how and when Canada should disengage from such missions.

Will action be taken to establish the nature of Canada’s involvement before continuing our air attacks? “NO”, will undoubtedly be the universal response, with unknown repercussions into the future as the justification for the Libyan involvement is extended wider and wider in international relations.

Endnotes:
(1) Intervention in Libya erodes national sovereignty
     http://www.owensoundsuntimes.com/ArticleDisplay.aspx?e=3147013

(2) Canada Attends Latest Meeting of Contact Group on Libya
     http://news.gc.ca/web/article-eng.do?mthd=tp&crtr.page=1&nid=605199&crtr.tp1D=1

(3) Full Text of UN Resolution 1973 Authorizing Libya No-Fly Zone
     http://www.ibtimes.com/articles/124599/20110319/un-resolution-1973-libya-no-fly-zone-authorization.htm

(4) INTERNATIONAL COALITION FOR THE RESPONSIBILITY TO PROTECT (ICRtoP)
     http://www.responsibilitytoprotect.org/

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June 11th, 2011 at 5:12 am

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Canadian intervention in Libya erodes national sovereignty

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by Joe Hueglin

Canada is participating in the ending of an international modus vivendi that has been accepted practice for over three hundred years. In 1648 “The Treaty of Westphalia guaranteed that the internal affairs of a sovereign country were none of the international community’s business, so long as it did not violate any treaties or threaten another nation-state.” Though Libya has done neither others are set upon determining the direction of its internal affairs.

The Honourable Julian Fantino, Associate Minister of National Defence, in a issued a statement wrote the following: ” the time has come to open a new chapter in Libya’s history, with a strong commitment to the sovereignty, independence, territorial integrity and national unity of Libya.”

Fantino’s “new chapter” is to be initiated through achieving that which is now Canada’s aim: ““to rid Libya of the Qadhafi regime”.  Regime change in Libya is to come about not through the actions of Libyans but through application of external military might justified by a United Nations Resolution authorizing implementation of a “no fly zone”.

This action is in the process of ending the pattern established by the Treaty of Westphalia and replacing it with a precedent for this new norm: “The RESPONSIBILITY TO PROTECT (“RtoP” or “R2P”) is a new international security and human rights norm to address the international community’s failure to prevent and stop genocides, war crimes, ethnic cleansing and crimes against humanity.”

Is the Government of Canada aware of the sea change in international relations it is playing a proud role in bringing about? Is it prepared to act to ensure the new norm is applied even handedly to all regimes applying military force to unarmed civilians?

Before Parliament approves continued Canadian involvement until the Qadhafi regime is replaced this ought to occur: “the prime minister needs to conduct a focused foreign policy review for the post-Westphalia era.”establishingthe principles and criteria for military intervention in the affairs of other nations. And it should also address how and when Canada should disengage from such missions.

Will action be taken to establish the nature of Canada’s involvement in the new norm? “NO”, will undoubtedly be the universal response, with unknown repercussions into the future.

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June 11th, 2011 at 4:26 am

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Obama’s War on Libya vs the U.S. Constitution

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by Michael Boldin

With military action taking place in Libya right now, the essential question must be asked: Is it even Constitutional? For those of you who don’t want to read more than a sentence or two, here’s the short answer. Absolutely not.

Delegated Powers

The ninth and tenth amendments, while they didn’t add anything new, defined the U.S. Constitution. In short, they tell us that the federal government is only authorized to exercise those powers delegated to it in the American Constitution… and nothing more. Everything else is either prohibited or retained by the states or people themselves.

What does this have to do with Libya? Well, whenever the federal government does anything, the first question should always be, “where in the Constitution is the authority to do this?” What follows here is an answer regarding American bombs being dropped on Libya.

Who Decides?

Ever since the Korean War, Article II, Section 2 of the Constitution has been regularly cited as justification for the President to act with a seemingly free reign in the realm of foreign policy – including the initiation of foreign wars. But, it is Article I, Section 8 of the Constitution that lists the power to declare war, and this power is placed solely in the hands of Congress.

Article II, Section 2, on the other hand, refers to the President as the “commander-in-chief of the army and navy of the United States.” What the founders meant by this clause was that once war was declared, it would then be the responsibility of the President, as the commander-in-chief, to direct the war.

Alexander Hamilton clarified this when he said that the President, while lacking the power to declare war, would have “the direction of war when authorized.”

Thomas Jefferson reaffirmed this quite eloquently when, in 1801, he said that, as President, he was “unauthorized by the Constitution, without the sanction of Congress, to go beyond the line of defense.”

In Federalist #69, Alexander Hamilton explained that the President’s authority:

“would be nominally the same with that of the King of Great Britain, but in substance much inferior to it. It would amount to nothing more than the supreme command and direction of the military and naval forces, as first general and admiral of the confederacy; while that of the British king extends to the declaring of war, and to the raising and regulating of fleets and armies; all which by the constitution under consideration would appertain to the legislature.”

James Madison warned us that the power of declaring war must be kept away from the executive branch when he wrote to Thomas Jefferson:

“The constitution supposes, what the history of all governments demonstrates, that the executive is the branch of power most interested in war, and most prone to it. It has accordingly with studied care vested the question of war in the legislature.”

Words have meaning

If, like any legal document, the words of the Constitution mean today just what they meant the moment it was signed, we must first look for the 18th Century meaning of the words used. Here’s a few common 18th-century definitions of the important words:

–War: The exercise of violence against withstanders under a foreign command.
–Declare: Expressing something before it is promised, decreed, or acted upon.
–Invade: To attack a country; to make a hostile entrance

What does this all mean? Unless the country is being invaded, if congress does not declare war against another country, the president is constitutionally barred from waging it, no matter how much he desires to do so. Pre-emptive strikes and undeclared offensive military expeditions are not powers delegated to the federal government in the Constitution, and are, therefore, unlawful.

How it applies today

Here’s the quick overview of how this all plays out:

* In Constitutional terms, the United States is currently at war with Libya.
* Libya is not invading the United States, nor has it threatened to do so.
* Congress has not declared war. Barack Obama did.

Some would claim, and news articles are already reporting on it, that the 1973 war powers resolution authorizes the President to start a war as long as it’s reported to Congress within 48 hours. Then, Congress would have 60 days to authorize the action, or extend it.

The only question you should have to ask for this would be – “where in the Constitution is congress given the authority to change the constitution by resolution?”

It doesn’t. And that resolution, in and of itself, is a Constitutional violation. More on that in a future article, of course.

James Madison had something to say about such a plan when he wrote:

“The executive has no right, in any case, to decide the question, whether there is or is not cause for declaring war.” [emphasis added]

War Powers resolution or no war powers resolution – without a Congressional declaration, the president is not authorized to start an offensive military campaign. Period.

The bottom line? By using U.S. Military to begin hostilities with a foreign nation without a Congressional declaration of war, Barack Obama has committed a serious violation of the Constitution. While he certainly is not the first to do so in regards to war powers, it’s high time that he becomes the last.

  
About the writer:

Michael Boldin [send him email] is the founder of the Tenth Amendment Center. He was raised in Milwaukee, WI, and currently resides in Los Angeles, CA. Follow him on Twitter – @michaelboldin – and visit his personal blog – www.michaelboldin.com

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March 25th, 2011 at 7:53 pm

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Libyan War: Cancer-causing U.S. “coalition” bombs reign terror on local populations

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Canadian MP’s are Complicit in Crimes Against Humanity

http://media.thestar.topscms.com/images/9c/9b/1b1ae75846198124dc34d71c0dc8.jpeg

by Connie Fogal

Today I read in a local small paper that the vote in our Parliament for Canada to “invade” Libya was UNANIMOUS. So much for an existence of any humanitarian in our Parliament! Hiding behind the euphemism of a no fly zone while you dump depleted uranium is still invasion.

http://standupforamerica.files.wordpress.com/2010/02/smoking-enemy-dangerous-to-health.jpg

As with the Croation/ Serbian invasion by Canada, so with Libya, each and every Canadian Parliamentarian has blood on his/her hands. They have a blot indelibly scarred into their foreheads behind which their brains have shrivelled and their hearts have scorched as if in sympathetic reaction to the effects of the depleted uranium they are now dropping on the Libyans and the Middle East .
They are committing crimes against humanity.

http://weblog.timoregan.com/uploaded_images/depleted-uranium.2005-731227.jpeg

To watch our Prime Minister gloating about collateral damage with a face full of pompous arrogance and savage delight in running with the “big boys” was sickening. And now a unanimous parliament!!

I will never understand nor condone the weakness at best and the evil at worst of each and every elected representative at whatever level of government who fails us and all of humanity so miserably; who is so incapable of facing the truth; who is so unwilling to confront the power of the world. They are not only useless to us, useless to the world, and useless to themselves, they are agents for the criminals.

It is time for the mass to emerge moving in unison, silent, peaceful to take back Parliament by mental and emotional energy in a surge of spiritual power!

One thing is certain. Any one of us who votes this coming federal election for any incumbent member or party will be complicit by that vote in perpetrating crimes against humanity.

Even though our electoral system has deteriorated to being the instrument that delivers us to the evil powers of the world, and so long as that system is still in place, we still must not refuse to vote. We must seek out any independent or candidate for any party currently not represented in Parliament, provided that candidate commits to an end to participation in war, an end to servility to the USA, and a refusal to accept or promote the New World Order. That effort will energize the general consciousness propelling us to a noble way of being- a way of love, compassion, and peace.

Here is a specific way to be doing something. No need for any mass organization. Just each of us listening to and following our inner guidance; each of us saying no in the myriad of ways, from no to a vote for incumbent parties to no to the infiltrators who will try to co-opt our heart and mind.

Our conscience remains the guide. Our parliamentarians have abandoned theirs. But, their consciences can be salvaged! We can catalyze the good in not only our own souls, but theirs

Written by admin

March 24th, 2011 at 6:53 pm

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