Saturday, May 27, 2006

The Method and the Madness of King George

Recently, with his pet poodle Tony Blair in tow, Bush said he regretted having said "Bring it on!" He called it "tough talk". Is this mere alcoholic's remorse publicly confessed until he can spin and sin again? It is more accurately described as "misdirection". He is publicly contrite to disarm opponents while he spoils for a showdown that will have the effect of consolidating power already claimed for himself.

A raid on congress, for example, is not a "big deal" if you buy Bushco's logic that the executive can routinely raid an independent and equal branch of government. A raid on congress is not a "big deal" —if one buys the Bush/Gonazales re-write of the Fourth Amendment. It is a "big deal", if you don't.

I don't buy the Bush rewrite of both history and Constitution; and I deny that Bush, Gonzales and Hayden have the authority to rewrite the Bill of Rights. The standard is "probable cause" —not "reasonableness". I don't care what Gonzales or Hayden may say to the contrary. They are either wrong or lying or both. There is no excuse for Hayden's not having read the Fourth Amendment and his ignorance of it should have disqualified him from heading the CIA where his pig-headed ignorance will further harm the nation.

What Bush has really done is to throw down the gauntlet. The range of issues taken together makes a sinister mosaic.
  • Bush has apparently completed what many of the right wing have desired: an unconstitutional usurpation of Congress' sole authority to wage war:
  • The power to declare war, including the power of judging the causes of war, is fully and exclusively vested in the legislature.

    —James Madison

  • Bush has both defended and denied a campaign of wide spread domestic surveillance;
  • The Bush administration is most certainly continuing —amid world wide outrage —a policy of outsourced torture —called "rendition" in our Orwellian world. Contrary to administration obfuscation, lies, and spin, this program thumbs its nose at international principles that the United States itself insisted upon at the end of World War II;
  • And, at last, Presidential "signing statements" —Bush's way of reminding Congress and the nation that it matters little what Congress has done; the law is what Emperor Bush says it is.
It all takes on the appearance of a well-organized plan. Bush is spoiling for a judicial showdown —but only because he thinks the fix is in! "Rendition" seems to be the only issue to have surfaced prominently prior to the confirmation of Alito.

My memories of Bush v Gore are too vivid to desire a resolution of this issue in a court that I no longer trust to rule upon the Constitution but upon a Bush/Scalia/Gonazales perversion of it. Certainly, the GOP seems eager to get the recent raid on Congress to SCOTUS.

Too eager!

There is little downside risk for Bush. The worst that could happen is that SCOTUS slaps his limp wrist and tells him to make nice-nice with Congress. On the other hand, Bush is willing to gamble that he will come away with a novel NeoCon friendly interpretation of the Fourth Amendment that only Alberto Gonzales, John Ashcroft or Michael Hayden could love. There is a reason the right wing wanted to pack the court.
Like Ashcroft, Gonzales favors greater executive branch secrecy. Like Ashcroft, Gonzales favors the centralization of presidential power -- as well as its expansion. Indeed, Gonzales provided the legal arguments used to claim that the president has the power, under the Constitution, to order torture, despite the fact that torture violates the Geneva Conventions and other international agreements the United States has ratified and implemented.

Indeed, Gonzales deemed international law -- which becomes the law of the United States, under our Constitution, when properly ratified by the Senate -- to be "quaint" and outdated when applied to the war on terrorism. To say this, is to say, in effect that the Constitution itself is quaint and outdated.

Unsurprisingly, Gonzales -- like Ashcroft -- has been a strong supporter of the Patriot Act, and the president's recent calls to renew its key provisions which are set to sunset next year. And Gonzales, like Ashcroft, has been a proponent of the administration's policy of detaining any person it labeled an "enemy combatant" without giving them access to the courts to make an effective determination of their status.

According to Gonzales -- and to Ashcroft before him -- even judicial review to determine whether the facts support the "enemy combatant" designation should not occur. Gonzales, like Ashcroft, believes that the president's -- and attorney general's -- kingly power trumps even some of the most prized of American's basic rights, the rights to physical liberty, and to due process of law.

CNN: Alberto Gonzales, a gentler(?) Ashcroft

The two words —probable cause —seem more precious than ever when they are so ominously threatened. A favorable ruling for Bush could all but consolidate his dictatorship. Just two words —probable cause —now stand between us and tyranny.

There are some interesting comments on this article at the Smirking Chimp.

Bush Administration’s Lies About Iraq: A Compendium





The Existentialist Cowboy

7 comments:

Unknown said...

Thanks, elendil. I will definitely get involved. As you may have gathered: I find the idea of the U.S. involing itself in torture to be morally repugnant and especially as Thomas Jefferson had expressed hopes that our republic might become an example for the world. Bush is the anti-thesis of our founders' enlightenment. Unless Bush is stopped he will have ushered in a new dark age.

elendil said...

I agree. As serious as these abuses are for the victims, there is a lot more at stake than that. Thank you for signing up :-)

Question Girl said...

Great blog.....excellent read. I'll be baaack!

Anonymous said...

There's a nice backgound piece on Sibel Edmonds which confirms what you were saying, Len, about possible links between the Saudis and 9/11. It may interest some of your readers.

Unknown said...

welcome question girl and olive ream and thanks for the links. I fully commend "bloggers against torture" as well as good blues and Count Basie.

damien, thanks for the Sibel Edmonds link. Will have to browse it later as the server appears to be temporarily down. As you well know, the real Axis of Evil is Bush/Saudi Royals/The Military Industrial Complex. There are some spurs, of course, like "Al Qaeda" —a creation of the CIA.

Sadly, Thomas Jefferson warned of the dangers of American empire. Too bad that the current crop of Washington demagogues thinks anything written by Jefferson or the founders to be "quaint". The government itself —under Bush —has become "Anti-American".

Anonymous said...

You people who hate Dubya should read this and realize that he suffers from mental illness.
Tree Envy
For a long time now I have wondered why George Bush seems to hate trees. I mean he seems to delight in seeing them cut down. This seemed a little strange to me until I realized that he is just suffering from TREE ENVY. If you don't know what this is it is where a little Bush can't stand the fact that there are these huge trees thrusting up into the sky. He can't stand that he is just a little Bush that just hugs the ground. He displaces these feelings of inadequacy by chopping down trees with a chain saw, or having others cut down the trees.

Although killing a tree gives him temporary satisfaction, the feeling of inadequacy keeps returning and he must destroy more and more trees. So the next time you feel anger at the President for destroying or national forest remember he is mentally ill and suffers from debilitating tree envy, and needs our pity.

Unknown said...

The following is an excerpt from Damien's Sibel Edmonds link:

In his legal appeal to Judge Reggie Walton to silence FBI Whistleblower Sibel Edmonds, Ashcroft has inadvertently, through the very language of the appeal, provided eloquent proof of treason and misprision of treason within the highest levels of government.

[]

In Ms. Edmonds' unimpeachable testimony to the Senate Judiciary Committee almost three years ago, she named countries and people who had contributed to the attacks of 9/11.

[]

What Ashcroft has done is to admit that those who have read the reports (Ashcroft himself plus the members of the Senate Judiciary Committee including Senators Grassley and Leahy) know the identities of the countries and persons who are responsible for the attacks. And he has confirmed that those responsible must be protected.


There is enough probable cause right now to arrest many members of Bushco and bring them to trial for for complicity in the events of 911.