Amandaletta Photo
 
 
thedailywhat:

This Is Important, You Should Know About It of the Day: President Obama today quietly signed into law the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2012, which contains controversial provisions requiring military custody for any non-citizen suspected of terrorism and affirming the president’s authority to indefinitely detain any supporter of al-Qaeda “or associated forces, irrespective of citizenship.
In a signing statement, the President said he had “serious reservations” about the bill, and criticised lawmakers for interfering with the work of counterterrorism professionals.
“Moving forward, my administration will interpret and implement the provisions described below in a manner that best preserves the flexibility on which our safety depends and upholds the values on which this country was founded,” the statement said.
The Obama administration was successful in striking down a provision that would have removed the ability of the executive branch to override the military custody requirement. Additionally, US citizens and legal immigrants may not be subjected to military custody under the revised bill.
However, an amendment to explicitly exclude American citizens and lawful residents from indefinite detention was rejected by Congress.
“My administration will not authorize the indefinite military detention without trial of American citizens,” Obama said. “Indeed, I believe that doing so would break with our most important traditions and values as a nation.”
The President’s personal stance aside, in addition to creating myriad difficulties for counterterrorism agents working with suspected terrorists to gain information, the NDAA provisions leave the door wide open for future presidents to indefinitely detain American citizens without trial.
[ap / think / aclu.]

thedailywhat:

This Is Important, You Should Know About It of the Day: President Obama today quietly signed into law the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2012, which contains controversial provisions requiring military custody for any non-citizen suspected of terrorism and affirming the president’s authority to indefinitely detain any supporter of al-Qaeda “or associated forces, irrespective of citizenship.

In a signing statement, the President said he had “serious reservations” about the bill, and criticised lawmakers for interfering with the work of counterterrorism professionals.

“Moving forward, my administration will interpret and implement the provisions described below in a manner that best preserves the flexibility on which our safety depends and upholds the values on which this country was founded,” the statement said.

The Obama administration was successful in striking down a provision that would have removed the ability of the executive branch to override the military custody requirement. Additionally, US citizens and legal immigrants may not be subjected to military custody under the revised bill.

However, an amendment to explicitly exclude American citizens and lawful residents from indefinite detention was rejected by Congress.

“My administration will not authorize the indefinite military detention without trial of American citizens,” Obama said. “Indeed, I believe that doing so would break with our most important traditions and values as a nation.”

The President’s personal stance aside, in addition to creating myriad difficulties for counterterrorism agents working with suspected terrorists to gain information, the NDAA provisions leave the door wide open for future presidents to indefinitely detain American citizens without trial.

[ap / think / aclu.]

You’ll be seeing me there!

You’ll be seeing me there!

We Occupy!

We occupy Philly beginning Oct. 6 at 9am at City Hall!

Sept 17

This is not Photography but it is important. 

There is a protest going on now on Wall Street in NYC.  It is not being covered much by the news and is being treated as “a bunch of hippies”.

Inspired by the protests in Egypt’s Tahrir Square and throughout the Middle East.

We are trying to occupy Wall Street.  We want to end corporate personhood.  We want to end huge tax breaks to huge companies.  We want to see an end to the control corporations have on the American government and the world. 

I believe that there should be a flat tax that no matter how much money you make, you pay X% income tax.  No loopholes.  If you make $100,000 a year or if you make $30,000 a year, both will pay the same percentage in taxes.

I could go on and on.

Twitter hashtags (Twitter is blocking the trending of these, they reached #2 once…then vanished): #occupywallstreet #takewallstreet #ourwallstreet #sept17

Facebook (strangely people are having problems sharing things related to this): Occupy Wall Street FB

www.occupywallst.org 

Barack Obama and other politicians have thus far ignored us!  The media is making fun of us!  Celebrities are oddly silent.  We are being censored on Yahoo and Twitter is stopping our hashtags from trending.

Aasiyah at 4.5 months ish I think.  She’s a trip, she like stares at me…for like long periods of time…I think it’s the light hair and eyes that no one else she sees has.  It’s very amusing.

Aasiyah at 4 months old. 

Javi, Jose and Aasiyah!
Welcome to the world!

Javi, Jose and Aasiyah!


Welcome to the world!

Cell Phone Art

Slightly less than a year ago I got a smart phone (Google Nexus One) and I’ve put photo editors on it.  I’ve posted all the pictures I’ve worked on that I really like and think are pretty.  So, yeah, enjoy the cell phone art.