• Crimes of Peace

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    Darrell Castle talks about President Obama’s efforts to form a coalition to attack Syria.  Article 51 of the UN Charter calls aggression a crime of peace.

  • War and Famine

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    A presentation made to the Constitution Party National Committee on U.S. foreign policy and some of the consequences not discussed by the mainstream media. Presented at the Coeur d’Alene Hotel and Resort, Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, October 8, 2011.

  • Around the Middle East in 45 Minutes

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    Darrell Castle looks at U.S. foreign policy in the middle east. Darrell advises that “War is brutality, as in Libya today.  We go abroad looking for people to kill—come home and solve America’s problems.” Recorded in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, April 30, 2011.

  • Bush Confesses to Crimes Against Humanity: “I’d Do It Again”

    bush-speaks-at-u-n-general-assembly-public-domainIn a recent speech to the Economic Club of Grand Rapids, Michigan, former President George W. Bush confessed to ordering the torture of a suspect in the 9/11 attacks.

    “Yeah, we water-boarded Khalid Sheikh Mohammed,” Bush said of the man to whom The Grand Rapids Press referred as the terrorist who master-minded the September 11, 2001, attacks on New York and Washington. Bush went on to say that the event shaped his presidency and convinced him that the nation was in a war against terror.

    To contradict Mr. Bush, his Secretary of the Treasury Paul O’Neil said in the book The Price of Loyalty that the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq were planned from the first National Security Council meeting after the inauguration, obviously months before 9/11.

    Ron Suskind, a Wall Street Journal reporter and Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, wrote The Price of Liberty, a book about Mr. O’Neil’s time with the Bush administration.

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  • Used Up and Thrown Away

    A recent article in the New York Times which was picked up by many other publications indicated that programs designed to help physically and psychologically wounded veterans transition into civilian life is still failing miserably.

    The Warrior Transition Unit (WTU) at Fort Carson, Colorado, was the focus of the article, although there are many such units in the country. The WTU’s are supposed to help soldiers wounded in combat transition to civilian life or in some cases return to their units.