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Rights and Liberties

Forty Years of Extremists

By Robert S. Rivkin, Pacific News Service. Posted May 18, 2005.


In the battle over the Senate filibuster, Democrats would do well to simplify their message to expose the president's real agenda.
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You've got to hand it to the Senate Republican leaders. Launching debate on May 17, Majority Leader Bill Frist offered the most succinct argument for ramrodding President Bush's most extreme judicial nominees through the Senate confirmation process. With dazzling simplicity, he opened the debate with the statement that, as a matter of simple fairness, all 10 of Bush's nominees are entitled to "an up or down vote" because a majority of senators supports their confirmation.

The Republicans have identified a theme -- or as linguistics professor and commentator George Lakoff would put it, a "frame" -- that the average American can understand. "Up or Down Vote" -- what's complicated about that?

The Democrats have tried to expose the hypocrisy of this propaganda by pointing out that the Republicans, in effect, "filibustered" over 60 of President Clinton's judicial nominees by killing their nominations in committee -- and preventing a vote on the Senate floor. Moreover, Frist was required to admit that even he voted in favor of the filibuster on at least one occasion.

In TV ads placed by radical right groups that are closely connected to the Republican Party, another deceptive theme has been pushed: that Bush's most controversial judicial nominations are designed to stop "judicial activism" by "arrogant" courts. Would Republicans admit that the 1896 decision in which the Supreme Court interpreted the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment to permit racial segregation, was an act of judicial activism? Would Republicans admit that another 19th century Supreme Court decision that allowed corporations to be cloaked with the constitutional rights of a "person," was an act of judicial activism?

Despite Justice Antonin Scalia's philosophy to the contrary, judges are not mechanics. No jurist challenged to interpret a basic text in a case that has engendered political controversy can decide a case based only on the text. There is always room for interpretation of words. That is why the identity of the judge who interprets the law is important. All we can hope for is a judge who is honest and open-minded -- not one who is known to twist words or to have a radical agenda like undoing the New Deal.

The radical right went ballistic when truly conservative federal judges refused to be "activist" -- by turning back the shabby attempt by a Republican-dominated Congress to reverse a Florida judge's decision favoring Terri Schiavo's husband in that tragic case. What is clear is that Bush doesn't want to curtail judicial activism -- he wants to stack the judicial deck for the next 40 years by appointing activists of the far right.

Once the religious right's theocratic agenda has been fulfilled, it will not be reversible or derailed during the lifetime of Bush's judges. Even if the religious right's current agenda were to be overwhelmingly rejected by the voters for the next 30 or 40 years, it would be locked in -- by "activist judges" of the radical right.

If some are still confused over the meaning of this filibuster battle, it is because the Democrats have so far failed to explain the long-term stakes.

The "nuclear option" is designed to help Bush stack the judicial deck with extremists for the next 40 years.

That, more than anything else, is what the Democrats should be shouting from the Senate's rafters. It is a theme which easy for the public to understand. And it is true.

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A Puzzle is a whole composed of pieces, this is just a piece!
Posted by: Pepper on May 19, 2005 4:09 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Lets keep our eye on the ball! This is not even about the radical right agenda, as evidenced by action recently of the courts ruling in favor of the the Cheney energy policy development decision. It was another piece in the closing of government and the elimination of citizens to know what is going on in their government.

Its simply another piece in the puzzle being put out daily by this administration to complete the agenday of tyranny they have put in place over the past 4.5 years with our help and cooperation.

These judges are important as an excuse to eliminate one more protection for the citizens of this nation. I think this is a game and they are playing to the audience (us). Between this, the National ID, and the "new" patriot Act coming down the road which allows the FBI to spy on us without a warrant, the puzzle is almost complete. Its obvious, Just a few more pieces with the last one being the declaration of martial law.

Watch for some bogus terrorist attack that will push for martial law and the end of elections and representative government. Its all just for show and its all a game in which we are the losers.
Nazism and Corporatism has arrived. Hitler never died, he just morphed into Bush with Goerbels as Rove and Himmler as Cheney. Its classic and almost spooky, the similaries, the process and the timing.

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» RE:We had enough warning signs Posted by: Iamnotafruittree
A Theme For Democrats
Posted by: monkeywrench on May 19, 2005 8:05 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You want a theme understandable by today's population? How about: "No filibuster means Kangaroo Legislation?" Without the filibuster, a radical president and Congress could "up or down" vote ANY law, including Martial Law, in a matter of minutes, if they deem it necessary, WITHOUT DEBATE! The filibuster is a last-ditch device to force debate and compromise.

Here's another theme concerning the long-term outcome: "Judges today, laws tomorrow, and your freedom the day after that." What's to stop a radical Congress from removing the filibuster from legislation as well? After all, if the filibuster is banned for use against judicial nominations, the "camel's nose will be under the tent"; and if history holds any lessons, there will be little resistance to keeping the whole stinking animal from crawling in.

A "Kangaroo Congress" doing the bidding of a radical president, without meaningful resistance, is a recipe for dictatorship.

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Setting the record straight on one point
Posted by: themikeaustin on May 19, 2005 9:30 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
No court (that is, no judge) granted corporations the right of personhood. A court clerk, who happened to have very strong ties to railroads (no pun intended - railroad "ties", get it?), added the offending statement to the "preamble" to a Supreme Court decision in 1886(?) that involved the Southern Pacific Railroad. This statement became the camel's nose under the tent flap in corporations' battle to get the same rights as citizens.

Thom Hartmann wrote an excellent book on this subject, called "Unequal Protection: ..." that is a real eye-opener.

Mike

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stolen election
Posted by: baritone on May 19, 2005 11:53 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There is a whole lot of truth to what Pepper wrote on may 19.
Also those that agreed with Pepper spoke the truth and revealed what the neo-cons agenda is.
What your comments lacked is the fact that the neo-cons stole the last presidential election. Many articles have been written about precincts in PA, OH and FLA (and many others)that had Kerry winning in the exit polls (a decades old bellweather of who is winning those precincts) only to find that bush won those precincts and two of those states. Electronic voting machines with paper were the predominant method of voting in these places.
So not only are the neo-cons forcing their agenda on us, they are doing so because they stole the election!!!

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America as it was when we were born is dead gone, fini, kaput
Posted by: apodapa on May 19, 2005 7:46 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We ARE living in a police state in it's infancy and it will get worse, soon.

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Agenda
Posted by: gogm on May 20, 2005 10:36 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The radical right will start with Roe v. Wade, go on to Gideon, and then go for the prize, Brown v. Board of Ed'. After putting uppity women in their place, allowing the police to do whatever to any citizen who isn't rich, they'll enshrine segregation by circumstance.

Workers will loose many of their rights. A worker, such as an abandoned pensioner, won't have a chance. A wronged customer won't stand a chance. The public will have no rights either. I can even see workmens' compensation being unravelled.

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According to the L.A. Times...
Posted by: Sojourner on May 20, 2005 5:08 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...its opposition to the filibuster was worth two editorials over one week's time. Neither had anything to say you probably could not have heard on Fox News.

The heavy hand of the Chicago Tribune, which bought the Times a year or so ago, seems to be slipping from its velvet glove.

I gave up tv five years ago because its news coverage made me sick. The L.A. Times seemed a lonely voice for moderation. I guess the prospect of stacking the courts was too much to resist. Like money in the bank!

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Barba
Posted by: Barba on May 20, 2005 5:19 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'll say it again, You're not listening. MoveOn, Alter.Net and Commom Sense (Tom Paine) are all doing the same thing, bitching and moaning. Stop the preaching and sad stories and give us a better life. Stop telling us what's wrong with the Conservatives, the Christian Right and Republicans and tell us what you're going to do. It's that simple. Why, WHY INDEED, are Democrats in the Senate supporting most of Bush's policies, programs and what would you do better? Tell me? But quit moaning like a wounded animal. If you want my empathy (or sympathy), get up and do something to make me support your candidates, issues and changes. DO IT! I don't want to vote for quitter, moaners and losers. Make me part of a winning team. Barba

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» RE: Barba Posted by: sterlingwisdom
How can we resist effectively?
Posted by: Lori1 on May 20, 2005 6:16 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have all the info and I understand what is happening. I sign all the petitions and donate money. What we need is the Republicans to stand up to this BULLY ADMINISTRATION and not follow their every order. What is more important, their careers or the Country? They are whimps.
Janice A. Henry

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Nuclear option - would it be that bad?
Posted by: 90210GOP on May 23, 2005 8:44 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Every party wants to bring in it's own people - judges and cabinet members - people that will be likely to support their agenda.
Does it have to be a bad thing?
What if the rules change - suppose Bush gets his nominees, and even one supreme judge squeaks in. In a few years, maybe a Democratic White House gets it's judges voted without being fillibustered. Then, by way of the elected President, the will of the people may ultimately be served.
What I'm saying it, what if the so-called 'nuclear option' is used? Would it really be that bad?

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