Auteur Sujet: qdhy Shredding F-14s To Keep Parts From Iran  (Lu 2 fois)

MethrenRaf

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Messages: 161869
    • drwg The Quest TV Competition Turns Fantasy Into Reality Television
qdhy Shredding F-14s To Keep Parts From Iran
« le: Décembre 16, 2024, 06:53:26 am »
Rljs Striking Photographs Of Sea Slugs Expose The Alien World Under the Sea
 When Guantanamo Bay detainees challenge their status as  enemy combatants,  judges must review all the evidence, not just what the military chooses, a federal appeals court ruled Friday.The U.S. Court of Appeals for  stanley bottles the District of Columbia Circuit rejected the Bush administration s plan to limit what judges can review when considering whether the military tribunal acted appropriately.When detainees are brought before military tribunals, they are not allowed to have lawyers with them and the Pentagon decides what evidence to put forward. If the tribunal determines a prisoner is an enemy combatant, he can challenge that designation in a federal appeals court.But government attorneys argued that the federal judges only had the authority to review a summary of the evidence put forward during the tribunal hearing. The appeals court ruled Friday that they needed all the evidence.Without all the information, the court said, deciding whether the tribunal acted appropriately would be like trying to figure out the value of a fraction without knowing both the numerator and the denominator.         Counsel simply cannot argue, nor can the court determine, whether a preponderance of the evidence supports the tribunal s status determination without se stanley termos eing all the evidence. Therefore, we presume counsel for a detainee has a  need to know  all government information concerning  stanley cup his client,  not just the portions the government unilaterally decides to present to the tribunal, the justices wro Ncwx The Most Intrepid Superhero Spaceships
 I have always been sad that I never got to see the beginning of humanity   ultimate journey鈥攁nd even sadder to realize that in 1972 we abandoned a path that could have possibly gotten us to other planets by now. On December 5, 2014, we opened the gate to that path again. We should rejoice鈥攚e are going back to the stars.     In the 60s we swam in the sea of space for the first time. It was exciting. It lead to countless discoveries and technologies that made possible the world we have today. We swam into the cosmos but then we ran back to the shacks of that comfy beach we call Earth, scared, content to only dip our toes in the safe waters of Low Earth Orbit. 1972 marked humanity   last mission to the Moon and with it, all the optimism of the space era died. But on the brink of nuclear annihilation, with the war in Vietnam raging on, our journey to the Moon saved the w cups stanley orld   collective mind. As television reporter David Brinkley said during Apollo 8   live Christmas Eve television special, broadcasted from the lunar orbit: The human race, without many victories lately, had one today. Thank you Apollo 8. You saved 1968 stanley cup . Apollo 8 also brought us this photo. It had huge repercussions in humanity   common psyche, starting the environmental movement and the idea that we should collectively work to establish peace on Earth. After this photo鈥攁nd the Blue Marble鈥攈umans realized, at las stanley cup t, that we needed to work together. Slowly, things began to change. They