
Wasn't I just freaking about why anyone should feel the need to beg Obama to comply with the Geneva Conventions? Well, it turns out that they felt this need because he's not necessarily more interested in them than * was.
[And my hope for him to abandon the murderous drone attacks in Pakistan has been dashed as well. I knew he wanted to bring Pakistan into the Afghanistan theater, wanting to wrest their nukes from them, but the hot desire to be wrong about his means has been killed.]
And:
Obama administration tries to kill e-mail case
By PETE YOST – 4 hours ago
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Obama administration, siding with former President George W. Bush, is trying to kill a lawsuit that seeks to recover what could be millions of missing White House e-mails.
Two advocacy groups suing the Executive Office of the President say that large amounts of White House e-mail documenting Bush's eight years in office may still be missing, and that the government must undertake an extensive recovery effort. They expressed disappointment that Obama's Justice Department is continuing the Bush administration's bid to get the lawsuits dismissed.
During its first term, the Bush White House failed to install electronic record-keeping for e-mail when it switched to a new system, resulting in millions of messages that could not be found.
The Bush White House discovered the problem in 2005 and rejected a proposed solution.
Recently, the Bush White House said it had located 14 million e-mails that were misplaced and that the White House had restored hundreds of thousands of other e-mails from computer backup tapes.
The steps the White House took are inadequate, one of the two groups, the National Security Archive, told a federal judge in court papers filed Friday.
"We do not know how many more e-mails could be restored but have not been, because defendants have not looked," the National Security Archive said in the court papers.
"The new administration seems no more eager than the last" to deal with the issue, said Anne Weismann, chief counsel for Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, the other group that sued the EOP.
The Executive Office of the President includes the president's immediate staff and many White House offices and agencies.
Tom Blanton, director of the National Security Archive, noted that President Barack Obama on his first full day in office called for greater transparency in government.
The Justice Department "apparently never got the message" from Obama, Blanton said.
The department defends the government when it is sued.
Not, you will agree, any reasons to hold out "hope" for "change we can believe in". If this doesn't convince you that our real government is not at all what was set out in the Constitution and what so many continue to insist is manifest, you might be beyond helping.
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