As to the US extraditing you so they can export you to a third-party Tower of London, that’s stretching so far I’m not sure where to start. You have far more to worry about from the ICC than from the FBI in this regard. The US does not place anyone into "military custody" who wasn’t actually arrested by the military themselves, for doing things in a declared military zone that the military takes exception to. I’d lay off the Guardianesque conspiracy theories for a while….
]]>That was basically it for me. Whether we’re actually losing important rights or whether it’s just hyped, we should kick up a fuss about anything which sounds like it might be an infringement. If it actually isn’t, then we look shrill. If it was, and we didn’t protest, then we’d be fucked.
Incidentally, the US has been much better at protecting its citizens’ rights than the UK. The main catalyst for it was the discovery that because of changes made by the idiot Blunkett to extradition laws, if the US law allowing non-Americans to be sent abroad for torture were to pass, then the following chain of events could take place:
1) US government decides I’m a very bad man (I don’t foresee any plausible US government deciding this, but it may well happen to someone, somewhere) and requests my extradition from the UK.
2) Because of evil blind bastard Blunkett’s changes to the law, as long as the US promises not to execute me, I can’t contest this extradition request under any grounds other than not being me.
3) As soon as I arrive on US soil, as a non-citizen I can be taken into military custody.
4) I can then be sent to an unsavoury place abroad for limitless torture, forever.
]]>I’m trying to follow the logic of this post and thread, but it’s rather tortured. The rights that we have are an abberration of "civilization", not the norm of history by any means. Something to be jealously guarded, but there’s no reason to jump at shadows.
]]>Regard
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