A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Thursday, January 28, 2016
How the US Supreme Court Could Legalize Direct Bribery
( January 26, 2016 , Boston, Sri Lanka Guardian) A recent bribery conviction may lead to the U.S. Supreme Court further corrupting the U.S. political system.
How does one even get convicted of bribery in a system that has
legalized it to the extent that ours has? Look at Congress members’ and
other federal office holders’ actions and their sources of funding.
There is debate only over whether they are bribed to act or rewarded for
having acted, but the correlation between action and funding is
undisputed, and the sources of funding unrestricted. A headline like “Clinton Foundation Donors Got Weapons Deals From Hillary Clinton’s State Department” raises a few eyebrows but no indictments.
The correlation is even more strongly documented between funding and gaining access to Congress members, and the general trend so clear that an academic study has identified the U.S. form of government as an oligarchy.
Many political observers now think of elections as a corrupting
influence, which no doubt fuels a taste for pseudo-solutions like term
limits and billionaire politicians who don’t have to sell out.
And yet, two U.S. state governors have recently been convicted of taking
bribes: Alabama’s Don Siegelman and Virginia’s Bob McDonnell. Siegelman
has been in prison for over four years though he was targeted by
politically motivated prosecutors and was never accused of any personal
gain. McDonnell was bribed with
a Rolex watch, plane tickets, dinners, trips, loans, catering, golf
bags, and iPhones, and, according to his successful prosecutors took official actions in
his capacity as governor to benefit the person bribing him within
minutes of receiving various loot. The U.S. Supreme Court has kept
McDonnell and his wife (also convicted) out of prison as it considers his case. A bipartisan collection of 113 current and former state Attorneys General urged the Supreme Court to correct the injustice to Siegelman, and it declined to consider it.