Chelsea Manning attempts to destroy 'grand jury' system using their actions as wrecking ball!

Zenaan Harkness zen at freedbms.net
Tue Dec 17 13:55:52 PST 2019


Manning, and he will to stand for our collective rights, is awesome -
a credit to higher intentions and all that is good!

Easily corruptible institutions ought be abolished.

Institutions which actually serve the people, can be used for good.

Institutions which have been corrupted, need to be either abolished
or uncorrupted. Since those who wield such instutions against us, are
corrupt and typically unwilling to relinquish their power which they
wield against us, in this situation one solution is again to end the
institution.

The Grand Jury was meant as an institution of the people, to hold to
account individuals within government, but of course it has been
turned upside down and is now regularly (exclusively?) used by
government, against the people.

What we need is competent education of people, so they can wield
power (including the grand jury) against corrupt government
individuals.

  “The original grand jury was more than an investigator. They were
  supposed to protect citizens not just from unjust indictments but
  from unjust laws,” Manning suggested. “In England, grand jurors who
  even allowed a prosecutor to come into the grand jury room were
  seen as having violated their oath.”

At least, the Grand Jury in the USA seems to be clearly problematic,
and either needs to be fixed, or removed altogether, in the interests
of our human rights.


Great article BTW - thanks for posting!




On Tue, Dec 17, 2019 at 08:16:33AM -0800, Razer wrote:
> 💝 Love you Chelsea! See you at the Barricades 🏴‍☠️
> 
> 
> "When  Judge Anthony Trenga ordered Chelsea Manning back to jail for
> refusing  to testify before the grand jury investigating WikiLeaks, he
> urged her  to “reflect on the principles she says she’s embracing” as
> well as  “whether those views are worth the price she’s paying for
> them.” Trenga  maintained there was “no dishonor” in cooperating with a
> grand jury  because the United States Constitution codified the grand jury.
> 
> Manning  took Trenga’s admonishment seriously and responded with a
> letter  containing research she did with the help of her attorneys. It
> presented  her position on the grand jury in a very clear and compelling
> manner.
> 
> In  doing so, Manning further demonstrated her resistance is about much 
> more than defying an investigation into a dissident media organization. 
> It is about publicly discrediting the institution and all its
> corruption  once and for all.
> 
> Manning,  who is in jail at the William G. Truesdale Adult Detention
> Center in  Alexandria, Virginia, was held in civil contempt of court on
> May 16. The  federal court not only sent her back to jail but also
> imposed a fine of  $500 per day after 30 days and a fine of $1000 per
> day after 60 days if  she continues her resistance.
> 
> If  Manning “persists in her refusal” for the next 16 months, according
> to  her legal team, she will face a total amount of fines that is over 
> $440,000. Both jail and fines may violate her Eighth Amendment rights 
> under the Constitution, especially since these sanctions are supposed
> to  be coercive, not punitive.
> 
> In her letter [PDF],  Manning contended the modern grand jury barely
> resemble the grand jury,  which the framers enshrined in the
> Constitution. She acknowledges much  of her opposition comes from their
> use against activists but also makes  it clear she believes the
> institution generally undermines due process  for all citizens."
> 
> https://medium.com/@kevin_33184/chelsea-mannings-resistance-brings-u-s-closer-to-ending-the-grand-jury-7b9d3ad6537a
> 


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