Với khoảng 20 tội danh, và tội danh lớn nhất "phản quốc giúp địch" đã buộc phải bị gạt bỏ!!! Nhưng với 20 tội danh cũng đủ tù hơn 100 năm!
Hơn 100 năm tù vì thi hành bổn phận công dân tố cáo tội phạm và tội ác!
Hơn 100 năm tù vì hành xử theo lương tâm và công lý, ở một đất nước đuộc mệnh danh là "lãnh đạo của thế giới tự do dân chủ và nhân quyền"
Tôn giáo thần quyền đã và đang nhân danh "chớ giết người, thượng đế bao dung lòng lành vô cùng" để nô lệ giết nhau và triệt hạ nhân phẩm trí tuệ của con người! Nhà nước đã và đang nhân danh bảo vệ tự do dân quyền pháp trị của nhân dân để đàn áp chà đạp quyền tự do con người của nhân dân! Tiến hành chiến tranh chiếm đóng liên tục vì "bảo vệ dân chủ và nhân quyền" khắp nơi!
Hàng trăm triệu nhân mạng vô tội đã bị tàn sát với bao cùng cực đau khổ mất mát của những người còn sống hôm nay vì một đám thiểu số nhân danh ảo thể "Thượng Đế" và "Quốc Gia"!
nkptc
Tuesday, Jul 30, 2013 5:31 PM UTC
Manning verdict: What you need to know
Today's verdicts may be about Bradley Manning -- but here's why they also have huge consequences for the rest of us
“I believed that if the general public, especially the American public, had access to the information contained within [the military’s own databases], it could spark a domestic debate on the role of the military and our foreign policy in general as it related to Iraq and Afghanistan.” That is — according to a statement Bradley Manning made before to the judge in his court martial, Colonel Denise Lind, on February 28 — what first led Manning to begin to leak large volumes of information to WikiLeaks: a desire to make Americans aware of the potential blowback of our counterinsurgency and counterterrorism policies.
Today, Lind found Manning guilty of 20 charges for that effort to inform the American people of the policies pursued in their name. But, in a hugely significant development, she also ruled that he was not guilty of the charge of aiding the enemy. The verdict was revealed with silence and a delay, as the Army imposed new reporting rules on the press, citing earlier “shenanigans.”
That Lind found Manning guilty of 20 charges is not a surprise. Manning himself had pled guilty to 10 lesser offenses the day he read his statement, pleading to “unauthorized possession” and “willful communication” of most, but not all of the items he was accused of leaking. On several of the charges — notably, Manning’s leak of a video of Americans shooting a Reuters journalist — Lind accepted Manning’s lesser pleas.
Moreover, Lind had refused to throw out charges — including the aiding the enemy charge — that Manning’s defense argued the government had not substantiated. Lind had also changed the wording of three charges against Manning after the end of the trial, adjusting them to the evidence the government had actually submitted at trial.
Marcy Wheeler writes at EmptyWheel.net and is the author of "Anatomy of Deceit."
Today, Lind found Manning guilty of 20 charges for that effort to inform the American people of the policies pursued in their name. But, in a hugely significant development, she also ruled that he was not guilty of the charge of aiding the enemy. The verdict was revealed with silence and a delay, as the Army imposed new reporting rules on the press, citing earlier “shenanigans.”
That Lind found Manning guilty of 20 charges is not a surprise. Manning himself had pled guilty to 10 lesser offenses the day he read his statement, pleading to “unauthorized possession” and “willful communication” of most, but not all of the items he was accused of leaking. On several of the charges — notably, Manning’s leak of a video of Americans shooting a Reuters journalist — Lind accepted Manning’s lesser pleas.
Moreover, Lind had refused to throw out charges — including the aiding the enemy charge — that Manning’s defense argued the government had not substantiated. Lind had also changed the wording of three charges against Manning after the end of the trial, adjusting them to the evidence the government had actually submitted at trial.
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