Monday, November 28, 2005

The Formerly Great Writ of Habeas Corpus

Just before President Bush selected the current Chief Justice Roberts of the Supreme Court, his brother-in-law crashed and died off the Tappan Zee Bridge across the Hudson River connecting Westchester and Rockland counties. He had been in a Land Rover, a few years old, about 4:00 AM. Currently the bridge is under study to be replaced, and many problems were also reported in the Land Rover management. Wouldn't it be a shame if someone was brought to trial for it, when perhaps under habeas corpus it could be shown that the either the car company or the bridge authority was at fault, which as I understand it would be required under the law Lincoln once suspended, leading to the summarily execution of over 20 native Americans in the Midwest without trial, which to this day I suspect may have contributed to the problems on the Great Plains, and in the film "Sitting Bull" (played by "Iron Eyes Cody" whom I met at a Choctaw pow-wow in 1979, the poster-Indian for a clean America) he was promised a meeting with the CiC (Commander in Chief, today CinC, and up until 2002, could also be a senior officer in a unified command, an edict by the Defense Secretary making it only refer to POTUS President of the U.S.)

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