U.S.
Gov’t Asks Federal Judge to Dismiss Cases of Americans Killed by Drones
By Joe Wright
Activist Post
December 18, 2012
Activist Post
December 18, 2012
As Americans mourn the deaths of 20 children and 6 adults
in the Newtown, CT tragedy – and the gun control debate has reached a fever
pitch – autonomous killing systems are being funded by American taxpayers, and
drone strikes continue
to kill an increasing number of civilians abroad.
Barack Obama and the U.S. government policy makers have
shown an incredible level of hypocrisy before; on the one hand
lamenting such senseless deaths as have occurred in “mass shootings” while
conducting their own mass killing, torture, and terror campaigns in foreign
lands.
A culture of violence can’t have it both ways, though, and
the welcoming of drones into American skies by Congress is sure to
unleash physical havoc shortly after concerns over surveillance and privacy are
dismissed.
As a clear sign of what can be expected, the U.S.
government has asked a federal judge to throw out a lawsuit brought by the families of three Americans
killed by drone strikes in Yemen.
If federal courts rule
that these cases are without merit, it will set a dangerous precedent that only
the executive branch of government can decide which Americans have a
constitutional right to due process, while further enhancing a framework
where the government will decide who is fit to be mourned and who should be
forgotten.
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