First Yemeni Detainee Released from Gitmo in Years | Center for Constitutional Rights

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Mr. Alhag was the subject of prior resettlement efforts that failed for no fault of his own. Cleared for release unanimously by all relevant government agencies, his transfer was delayed for years as the U.S. inexplicably opposed his release in court. The U.S. finally transferred him on the eve of new litigation by the Center for Constitutional Rights challenging his continued indefinite detention based on or because of his Yemeni citizenship. Such arbitrary detention violates U.S. and international law, including the Geneva Conventions, which the U.S. is obligated to uphold.

Of the 143 men who remain at Guantánamo, 84 are from Yemen. Of those, 54 Yemenis are currently approved for transfer. CCR attorneys say they should not be held because of perceived instability in their home country.

First Yemeni Detainee Released from Gitmo in Years | Center for Constitutional Rights

Police expert: War on terror has turned our cops into occupying armies — and we’re the enemy

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He said Americans have found themselves in danger from their own police officers because they did not object to previous abuses – and he said the police response to the Boston Marathon bombing proves the situation can only get worse.

(Emphasis mine.)

Police expert: War on terror has turned our cops into occupying armies — and we’re the enemy

Anthropologists Are On The Verge Of Figuring Out How You’re Supposed To Read Tumblr Comments | ClickHole

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Anthropologists have long struggled to decode the curious markings that appear under Tumblr posts, cryptic combinations of vertical lines and horizontal text all arranged in strange triangular tableaux. But Dr. Waldrop’s team made a crucial breakthrough this month when they realized that maybe you can tell who wrote a comment by following the line that goes from the comment to the username above.

Anthropologists Are On The Verge Of Figuring Out How You’re Supposed To Read Tumblr Comments | ClickHole