HANDS OFF DREAMING AWAY OF US?: Simple theme. Powered by Blogger.
Sobre "dream away" y Jorge Luis Borgeshttps://t.co/78L5e3ZPao pic.twitter.com/33wqzlgief
— Guillermo Ruiz Zapatero (@ruiz_zapatero) March 24, 2025
El blog pretende publicar, principalmente, traducciones al español de textos y poemas de Henry David Thoreau y referencias a trabajos sobre dicho autor.
HANDS OFF DREAMING AWAY OF US?: Simple theme. Powered by Blogger.
Sobre "dream away" y Jorge Luis Borgeshttps://t.co/78L5e3ZPao pic.twitter.com/33wqzlgief
— Guillermo Ruiz Zapatero (@ruiz_zapatero) March 24, 2025
La improvisación, sentimiento originario en estado naciente, es un don divino
El don de los poetas
Por eso la poesía tiene carácter religioso o sacral
"Todavía hay fuentes
que manan en Granada,
es lo que quizás diría,
ahora, Luis Rosales.
Y una Iglesia,
Evangélica,
En el callejón del Pretorio.
Y el Genil
corriendo
hacia el río grande y el mar,
que hoy, sabemos,
no es el morir."
Citizen Clark...A life of Principle
Katzenbach has been credited with providing advice after the assassination of John F. Kennedy that led to the creation of the Warren Commission.[15] On November 25, 1963, he sent a memo to Johnson's White House aide Bill Moyers recommending the creation of a Presidential Commission to investigate the assassination.[15][16] To combat speculation of a conspiracy, Katzenbach said the results of the FBI's investigation should be made public.[15][16] He wrote, in part: "The public must be satisfied that Oswald was the assassin; that he did not have confederates who are still at large".[16]
Four days after Katzenbach's memo, Johnson appointed some of the nation's most prominent figures, including the Chief Justice of the United States, to the Commission.[15][16] Conspiracy theorists later called the memo, one of thousands of files released by the National Archives in 1994, the first sign of a cover-up by the governmen
In 2004, Clark joined a panel of about 20 Arab and one other non-Arab lawyers to defend Saddam Hussein in his trial before the Iraqi Special Tribunal.[33] Clark appeared before the Iraqi Special Tribunal in late November 2005 arguing "that it failed to respect basic human rights and was illegal because it was formed as a consequence of the United States' illegal war of aggression against the people of Iraq."[34] Clark said that unless the trial was seen as "absolutely fair", it would "divide rather than reconcile Iraq".[35]
Clark was not alone in criticizing the Iraqi Special Tribunal's trial of Saddam Hussein, which drew intense criticism from international human rights organizations. Human Rights Watch called Saddam's trial a "missed opportunity" and a "deeply flawed trial",[38][39] and the UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention found the trial to be unfair and to violate basic international human rights law.[34] Among the irregularities cited by HRW, were that proceedings were marked by frequent outbursts by both judges and defendants, that three defense lawyers were murdered, that the original chief judge was replaced, that important documents were not given to defense lawyers in advance, that paperwork was lost, and that the judges made asides that pre-judged Saddam Hussein.[40] One of the aforementioned outbursts occurred when Clark was ejected from the trial after passing the judge a memorandum stating that the trial was making "a mockery of justice". The chief judge Raouf Abdul Rahman shouted at Clark, "No, you are the mockery ... get him out. Out!"
Citizen Clark ... A life of Principle