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In reply to the discussion: A Shameful Day to Be a US Citizen [View all]treestar
(82,383 posts)8. Just because Snowden says so?
And Holder responds? To a country much more guilty?
Geez. Go live in Russia with Snowden then.
We have nothing to be ashamed of here. It is Snowden who went to Russia and then made outrageous claims.
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Well, he could use the "I promised not to take Wall Street criminals to jail" route. Promise kept.
Safetykitten
Jul 2013
#3
Almost every day is a shameful day to be a US citizen for the past 25 years or so. n/t
Triana
Jul 2013
#7
wow,. love it or leave it, eh. How about CARE about what it does in your name?
Civilization2
Jul 2013
#14
"We have nothing to be ashamed of here." I give you, especially, Exhibits A and B:
WinkyDink
Jul 2013
#27
No. Our own government created the situation and set it up. The whole kit and kaboodle.
RC
Jul 2013
#127
This thread is about a shameful day to be a US citizen, yet you want to compare us to Russia.
totodeinhere
Jul 2013
#62
And was the treatment of Manning as outlined by the special rapporteur alright with you?
totodeinhere
Jul 2013
#84
When people join the military they don't give up their human rights. Human rights
totodeinhere
Jul 2013
#156
The US government should be ashamed for tracking our metadata and storing other data that
JDPriestly
Jul 2013
#96
Except that for decades we bragged to the world about our civil rights record,
JDPriestly
Jul 2013
#92
The SHAME comes from America having to make the claim "we will not kill or torture our citizen",. .
Civilization2
Jul 2013
#12
How do we know that those aren't assurances that have been previously negotiated?
MADem
Jul 2013
#79
Because Obama's popularity would tank in time if he obtained extradition of Snowden.
JDPriestly
Jul 2013
#97
We've had so many shameful days since 9/11 it's hard to calculate the damage done
sabrina 1
Jul 2013
#11
The point is that America should not have to promise not to torture its own citizens
Jamastiene
Jul 2013
#105
People that keep harping on this statement from Holder are either completely disingenuous
tritsofme
Jul 2013
#26
No one disagrees we need a change and Obama has not been nearly as strong as I would
Vietnameravet
Jul 2013
#50
Nothing new? HOW sir, would you sue the government without the documents he released?
cascadiance
Jul 2013
#54
OT (somewhat), but your post reminded me of a funny joke I once heard. Seems
HardTimes99
Jul 2013
#99
Yes, shameful, but I am mostly neutral on Snowden himself, and I have an observation...
Maineman
Jul 2013
#34
I agree with those posters who say that this is simply diplomatic rhetoric.
searchingforlight
Jul 2013
#36
Sham followed by shame over and over again. I am reminded of another shameful day.
sgtbenobo
Jul 2013
#39
Thats funny because if he was a Russian he'd be sent off with the Pussy riot girls...
Historic NY
Jul 2013
#43
Because our government says it is legal, though operating almost in total secret, it is OK with you?
RC
Jul 2013
#142
I posted a section of the supreme law of the land, from the United States Constitution and
RC
Jul 2013
#146
And I referenced Art. 3 of the Contitution and Marbury v. Madison which say the courts, not you make
arely staircase
Jul 2013
#148
Bleh. You're comparing Holder's assurances re: death penalty and torture to Hanoi Christmas bombingo
Pretzel_Warrior
Jul 2013
#82
After Abu Ghraib, waterboarding and extraordinary renditions, the U.S. has
HardTimes99
Jul 2013
#147
How would you feel if he had promised not to beat his wife when falsely accused of doing so?
Hekate
Jul 2013
#108
Holder is the laughing stock of Wallstreet and the banksters. The shame is that he was selected...
L0oniX
Jul 2013
#123
Yes, standing up against torture is shameful. Cheney was totally right! Torture is awesome
Recursion
Jul 2013
#131