pjc50 2 hours ago

> The House and Senate Armed Services committees have long had an interest in ensuring that unfiltered news went to the troops who are fighting for our country and deserved to read the truth, not propaganda. In the late 1980s Congress was alarmed at attempts of military personnel to “suppress unfavorable news” of the Iran-Contra affair and other issues. Congress mandated that Stars and Stripes be editorially independent and created the position of ombudsman in 1991 to monitor the situation and report to Congress at least once a year.

Funny how the same situations of recent history keep resurfacing. Not only "Iran", but we should recall the details of Iran-Contra: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iran%E2%80%93Contra_affair

> further funding of the Contras by legislative appropriations was prohibited by Congress, but the Reagan administration continued funding them secretly using non-appropriated funds

Oh look, it's presidential power contradicting Congress again!

> "what began as a strategic opening to Iran deteriorated, in its implementation, into trading arms for hostages."

US attempts to deal with Iran, has incoherent strategy, gets rolled, lies about it.

> Eleven convictions resulted, some of which were vacated on appeal. The rest of those indicted or convicted were all pardoned in the final days of the presidency of George H. W. Bush

Misuse of the presidential pardon power, again, which enables the president to direct people to commit crimes in the sure knowledge that they will not be held accountable to the law or other branches of government (Americans call this "checks and balances" for some reason).

One of those people was Oliver North, who turned his experience providing arms illegally to enemies of the United States into a long career at propaganda organizations the NRA and Fox news.

And so here you are again.

  • kakacik 24 minutes ago

    One would expect that system would learn and change, and we wouldn't have trump fucking up half of global economy so beautifully on his morning whims just to get rich as a side business of being potus (or reverse, probably).

    Something tells me that after this dark period is over, there won't be many lessons learned and things changed for the better in the system. 'Great system' not being so great after all (which it isn't, there are much better and more democractic systems implemented all around the world).

    Republicans as usually will shield just about anybody including mass rapist and murderer just to not lose face, and democrats will just again have this inept look with 'we couldn't change a damn thing because XYZ but we asked nicely'.

    • pjc50 21 minutes ago

      > One would expect that system would learn and change

      The system did learn and change: they got a lot better at exploiting it. The effort to stack the Supreme Court with Republican partisans took decades.

jimnotgym 3 hours ago

Favouriting this for the next time someone on here tells me we don't have free speech in Europe, only in the US

  • benterix 2 hours ago

    People who say there is no free speech in Europe have never lived in an authoritarian country.

    • tokai an hour ago

      But its mainly Americans saying it here on HN.

      • kakacik 6 minutes ago

        I haven't seen it here much (apart from proper rednecky comments equating carrying gun everywhere with some actual personal freedoms but those are rare).

        But most US population ain't HN, at all. Most don't travel, get their opinion on the world from CNN or Fox news with corresponding results and thus have rather primitive view on rest of the world (sorry, that is true, one needs to travel a bit to understand world).

        You don't travel when you are crushed by debt and rising costs from all sides, do you.

  • tick_tock_tick 3 hours ago

    Why? The police aren't at his door and he's not been arrested it's not a good thing but we are still miles away from Europe.

    • koliber 2 hours ago

      She is a woman.

      There are so many shades of gray in freedom of speech. In free European countries the police are also not at the door of outspoken government critics.

      If you are alluding to dictatorial European countries like Russia and Belarus, the US is miles away and moving in their direction. Compared to Western Europe, there is no difference.

    • piva00 2 hours ago

      Europe where? Europe is a whole continent with 40+ different countries...

    • ilogik 2 hours ago

      Where is there a problem in Europe?

      I if want to go to the US on the other hand, I need to give them my social media accounts. That doesn't sound like free speech to me

      • bjourne an hour ago

        You will be subject to mandatory facial recognition technology with long-term storage, though. The US may certainly be the worst but Europe is also going in an authoritarian direction.

        • pjc50 40 minutes ago

          In "why not both" news, both sides are pursuing increasingly aggressive immigration enforcement, which is imposed on everyone who goes through an airport.

          (Intra-Schengen flights lets you avoid most of this, but the heavier enforcement on extra-Schengen is the tradeoff)

  • fragmede 3 hours ago

    Who's still claiming the US has free speech?

    • tdeck 2 hours ago

      Freedom House. But then again, most of their funding comes from the US state department.

    • rob74 12 minutes ago

      The US constitution?

    • watwut 3 hours ago

      People who frame UK as oppressive hellhole, but somehow like former Hungarian leader and know all the talking points of the American conservative right.

      • freehorse 2 hours ago

        Moreover, the repeating talking points of these people seemed to exclusively be around some cases where police intervened for certain comments on transgender issues (and imo indeed police shouldn't). It was a big issue back then, but when police intervenes now (mostly UK/germany) for certain comments on the palestinean issues, or when bank accounts are blocked for this reason (under cross-border requests from the US no less), they no longer seem to care. Makes you think whether they did not really care as much about free speech itself, actually.

        • pjc50 32 minutes ago

          > exclusively be around some cases where police intervened for certain comments on transgender issues

          Those tended to be gratuitously misreported as well, where the reports would say "this person was arrested for making [relatively innocuous comment] on social media]" and then you discover that the actual issue was a lengthy period of harassment and doxing directed at a specific trans person. Or encouraging other people to burn down a hotel, or so on.

        • saidnooneever 41 minutes ago

          most ppl only care about their own speech being free

  • linohh 3 hours ago

    JD Vance has to save all of Europe because of checks notes lack of free speech. /s

    • generic92034 2 hours ago

      Well, he did a good job of freeing Hungary from Orban. So, cut him some slack.

      /s

      • lostlogin 27 minutes ago

        After seeing how meeting the pope went, I’m surprised Orban was keen for a visit. He was lucky it was just his political death.

      • benterix 2 hours ago

        Paradoxically they are so stupid they thought they are actually helping Orban not realizing Europeans consider them idiots.

        • lostlogin 26 minutes ago

          Vance is far shrewder than many of the surrounding idiots. My guess is that he went because someone like Trump thought it a good idea, and kissing arse is Vance’s current strategy.

niemandhier 5 hours ago

Historically the codified office of the Ombudsman came to Sweden after the Swedish King had to search refuge in Turkey and observed a similar position there.

I love that story, shows you that the world always was quite small and that what we perceive as progressive and backward countries is just a matter of time.

  • gostsamo 5 hours ago

    Can you give some more context? I looked into Wikipedia and the relevant text there is giving different vibe:

    > Charles XII was in exile in Turkey and needed a representative in Sweden to ensure that judges and civil servants acted in accordance with the laws and with their duties. If they did not do so, the Supreme Ombudsman had the right to prosecute them for negligence.

timfsu 6 hours ago

Did not know this was a thing, kudos to her for speaking out!

  • J0nL 5 hours ago

    You don't get that job without being the type of person who will only ever respond to coercion attempts with an equal amount of indigance. The sole reason for the position to exist is to act as a canary in a coalmine so to speak

    She even admits she was due to stand down at the end of the year, they could have just waited her out. Instead it seems her calling a spade a spade was just too intolerable for them to bare

    If that's all it takes to provoke the desired reaction from them it doesn't bode well at all. It's no wonder they were so easily led into a war with Iran on a leash

    • lukan 2 hours ago

      "they could have just waited her out. "

      Well, they need the troops willingness to do whatever Trump tells them now, not next year. So they want propaganda for the troops and stars now and Stripes should be the medium, not annoy the administration by providing the troops with uncomfortable truth or facts.

      • pjc50 an hour ago

        Despite my other post I find it grimly amusing in a sort of Eastern European fatalist way that people expect the military to be anything other than a total propaganda-and-secrecy argument. You're the people who will kill who you're told to, guys.

        • lukan an hour ago

          "You're the people who will kill who you're told to, guys."

          Yes, but sometimes they think for themself, refuse stupid orders and sabotage equipment (or even toilets), like what seemingly happened to some US battleships.

      • t-3 an hour ago

        "The troops" don't read that stuff any more than you or I do, at least none of those I've asked had. Maybe it's more popular among officers.

        • lukan an hour ago

          Well, I ain't even from the US, but I did sometimes stumble upon a stars and stripes article.

system7rocks 6 hours ago

This is deeply disturbing. The terrible, incoherent messaging and strategy around the Iran war (unapproved by Congress) is connected. This is an administration that is seeking less freedom, not more. What entity would sue on behalf of the ombudsman?

  • Terr_ 3 hours ago

    > What entity would sue on behalf of the ombudsman?

    What entity could? Most of the unprecedented madness of the last few years boils down to:

    1. The President does something flagrantly illegal.

    2. The remedy is Congress impeaching and removing the President from office.

    3. Republicans legislators are completely complicit, and have enough votes that #2 doesn't even start to happen.

    The crimes will continue until something about #3 changes or until #47 finally succumbs to dementia.

    • tdeck 2 hours ago

      Democratic leadership are also all Zionists who not-so-secretly approved of the war, which is why they stalled the war powers vote until after he attacked.

      https://capitalandempire.com/p/top-democrats-try-to-stop-vot...

      • benterix an hour ago

        But if Republicans are Zionists, and Democrats are too, what hope is there for peace in the Middle East?

        I can understand that Israel's long-time strategy is to keep all their neighborhood in a state of permanent mess so that nobody is strong enough to be an existential threat. But after almost a century, it's clear this is not working.

        • pjc50 20 minutes ago

          "Make a desert, and call it peace"?

  • deepsun 6 hours ago

    It cannot be "unapproved by Congress".

    A US president does not have authority to start a war, Congress has, according to Constitution. The president only serves as a Commander in Chief.

    So at any point Congress can stop any military action issuing an immediate ruling preventing the president doing anything. If our congressmen don't do that it means they approve it.

    It's our, USA, war, not Trump's war. Because we elected the congressmen.

    • xnx 5 hours ago

      > If our congressmen don't do that it means they approve it.

      These needs to be repeated everywhere until people understand it. Same situation with tariffs.

      • voidfunc 4 hours ago

        Why would they stop something that a huge majority of people voted for and want?

        Trump won the popular vote and if we use logic from above all the non-voters are in fact supporters as well.

        • piva00 2 hours ago

          As far as I understand the US president is not a king that governs by decree, there's a whole other branch of government also elected to represent the will of the people, a branch where negotiations, debates, voting takes place to determine how the country should be.

          People voted for Trump which had as one of its key promises during election "no more wars", perhaps it's ok that the another branch of government stop something which people didn't vote for?

        • watwut 2 hours ago

          How come this logic does not apply to democratic politicians? Why is it that them winning election by small margin does not imply that everything they do is good and legit for conservative people like you?

        • NDlurker 2 hours ago

          Trump had 2,284,967 more votes than Harris. 77,302,580 people voted for him. That's not a huge majority of people.

        • Hikikomori 3 hours ago

          Did they? Or did Trump say no more wars?

        • DiabloD3 4 hours ago

          Unfortunately, there seems to be no proof he actually won the popular vote.

          Trump has admitted openly that he won due to mass tampering with voting machines, and thanked Elon Musk for his help.

          Your analogy falls apart.

          • ozlikethewizard 4 hours ago

            Citation needed. You lot elected him before, seems likely you elected him again. Pretended he won by cheating instead of because your democracy is in dire need of a refit will do little but alloallow the next facists to win as well.

            • HerbManic 3 hours ago

              Not OP. I believe it is from folks like this. It is compelling but it can also difficult to pin down the exact details. They rely mostly on statistics based oddities.

              I do appreciate that they are not interested in over throwing the 2024 election, just ensure that any possible gaps are covered for future elections.

              > The Election Truth Alliance is initiating a call for hand counts of paper voting records associated with the 2024 U.S. General Election, and is advocating for full hand counts prior to certification for all future U.S. elections.

              https://electiontruthalliance.org/

    • user3939382 5 hours ago

      They passed a bill saying in 60 days stop without further approval. Admin said days we don’t attack dont count toward the 60…

      • jauntywundrkind 5 hours ago

        Congress voted to stop counting days to allow the tariffs to keep going without having to actually act on it! Congress overruled time passing. These people are fundamentally breakers of reality, aren't just unserious: they are anti serious. RFK and all of this is a perpetrated act to be grossly anti reality, to defy all reason. No reality supports any of what's happening, there's no reality where any of that GOP agenda can win, so they have declared war on reality. https://www.ntu.org/publications/detail/congress-should-not-...

        This stopped being alternate realities a while ago, as it became a collective project to form anti-realities.

    • AlexCoventry 5 hours ago

      Yes, if this turns into a mass famine/deindustrialization, Americans are going to own it the way Germans owned the holocaust.

      • voidfunc 4 hours ago

        The Germans owned the holocaust because they lost WW2 and afterwards became a vassal state of the Allies and later just the US. History is written by the victors.

        • rswail 2 hours ago

          The Germans "owned" the holocaust because the Nazis (German) started, conducted, and maintained the systematic collection, extermination, and destruction of certain classes of the population under their control.

          Who else should have "owned" it?

      • LNSY 5 hours ago

        We've already taken 600,000 lives by being complicit with foreign national Elon Musk's genocide in Africa. Most of them children.

        • logicchains 20 minutes ago

          It's not genocide to stop handouts to the third world. It's genocide to go around murdering white farmers in mass to take their land, as is happening now in South Africa and previously happened in Zimbabwe.

rob74 an hour ago

> It took four months from the time I applied and went through a series of three interviews before I was selected from a field of 20 applicants and brought onboard. This is a critical time for the newspaper to be without an ombudsman who can fight against censorship and control.

Something tells me the process of finding a replacement ombudsman will be much faster. Hegseth probably already has someone in mind...

jmward01 4 hours ago

We are past the point in history where it was hard to tell who the bad guy was.

  • vrganj 4 hours ago

    We're at the point of history where your grandchildren will ask you "Where were you when...?"

    • ethagnawl 3 hours ago

      This and also, "Wait, so you didn't do anything when ... ?"

      It gives you a new found level of empathy or, at least, understanding for the people throughout history who "should have done something". We all (well, most of us) grew up thinking that if we were a workaday German (fill in the conflict) with Jewish neighbors that we'd have obviously hidden them in our attic or whatever. It turns out the reality of taking that class of action is actually a lot more fraught that your 4th grade self thought it was.

      Would you harbor a neighbor facing deportation to some far flung prison camp? You have to be willing to face the consequences of losing your home, job, liberty and life. If not, what would change the calculus enough for you to do so? If you know they're in your country legally? If they were pregnant? If the prison was rumored to be executing people?

      • pjc50 2 hours ago

        It was notable that in Minneapolis enough people were doing this kind of thing that ICE were seriously impaired, and had to resort to escalation and shooting Americans in the street.

      • 47282847 2 hours ago

        „Wait, you really had access to fresh air and water, and you didn’t party all day to celebrate it while it lasted before all went to shit?“