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Rights and Liberties

Why Gonzales' Resignation Won't Restore Justice

By Aziz Huq, The Nation. Posted August 28, 2007.


The resignation of Alberto Gonzales has brought a smile to the faces of many Bush Administration critics, but will it bring real change?
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The resignation of Alberto Gonzales has brought a smile to the faces of many Bush Administration critics, but will it bring real change? Unless the Senate Judiciary Committee seizes its chance in a new Attorney General's confirmation hearings, the danger is that Gonzales's exit won't just leave Justice tarnished -- it will also mean justice denied.

Denial of justice is a theme for this Administration, as illustrated by some very strange bedfellows. Take Jose Padilla, originally accused of a plot to explode a dirty bomb but convicted two weeks ago of being a third-tier member of a fourth-tier conspiracy to aid foreign fighters. Or Scooter Libby, convicted and then pardoned of perjury and obstruction of justice before any full accounting of how the decision to leak Valerie Plame's identity was taken, and what role partisan politics may have played.

Then there's George Tenet: As the CIA's own Inspector General made clear, Tenet "did not use" the resources he had to head off the attacks of 9/11. Yet rather than explore what went wrong or require Tenet to account for himself in ways that clarify the ongoing management and policy weaknesses of the intelligence community, CIA director Michael Hayden has rejected any accountability or even discussion, claiming these would "distract" the nation. (The suggestion is demeaning: Does Hayden think we are all 5-year-olds? It is also perverse: How can any government agency get better at its job if it says that understanding its past mistakes is a "distraction"?)

In each case there are serious allegations of criminal wrongdoing or shameful negligence. In each case, accountability has been stymied. The public rightfully resents the official obfuscation as to whether the government is using its awesome security powers responsibly, and whether legitimate fears of terrorist attack are being twisted into grist for a partisan political mill.

Will Gonzales's departure leave the nation permanently in the dark? Will the rule of law be further undermined?

Gonzales leaves the Justice Department tarnished in two ways. First are the allegations of politically motivated firings of US Attorneys and concerns that criminal prosecutions and dubious charges of "voter fraud" have been timed to influence the results of close federal and state elections.

Second, less noticed and perhaps more serious, Gonzales has presided over a wrecking of the rule of law. The Gonzales Justice Department has consistently taken the position that bedrock laws enacted to protect Americans' liberty and constitutional rights -- and the nation's standing in the world -- can be shrugged off at a moment's notice -- in secret and without public debate or even notice to Congress.

Thanks to Gonzales and his allies, too many citizens of the world know America as a country that treats international law as "quaint," that recklessly and lawlessly spies on its own citizens and that engages in torture. If we are lucky, that is the America of yesterday; it need not be the America of tomorrow.

Yet, Gonzales's resignation will do nothing to repair the deep wounds inflicted on the Justice Department: It will not repair the harm done by politicization. It will not undo the wildly flawed legal opinions licensing torture and warrantless spying. It will not restore the rule of law.

Solicitor General Paul Clement, who has become Acting Attorney General, is a very fine courtroom advocate, but he is unlikely to linger in that managerial post. And speculation about Michael Chertoff, who presided over the Katrina catastrophe and has overseen a sinister growth in the intelligence activities of the Homeland Security Department, hardly inspires confidence.

Like Libby and Tenet, Alberto Gonzales rides off into the sunset just in time to evade a full accounting for his actions. Like Libby and Tenet, he leaves behind a government that knows how to scare Americans by invoking the threat of a dirty bomb or a mushroom cloud, but that seems to possess insufficient capacity to accurately target those who present a real threat. What remains in place is a government good at fostering the impression of toughness but dangerously incompetent at delivering the goods, as the failure even to prosecute Padilla for his alleged conspiracy shows.

The Senate Judiciary Committee can use the confirmation process for a new Attorney General to force disclosure of the legal opinions and mandates by which law has been distorted and justice turned from its proper course. It should make plain for the public record what, we hope, has been a low watermark for Justice.

But that is only a beginning. The Gonzales resignation can mark a rising tide for the rule of law. For that to occur, the next Attorney General -- and the next President -- must vigilantly repair the corrosion of, and the disrespect for, the rule of law, that Gonzales leaves behind.

In November 2008, let the people choose accordingly.

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See more stories tagged with: bush administration, gonzales

Aziz Huq is co-writing a book on national security and the separation of powers called Unchecked and Unbalanced, to be published by the New Press.

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View:
Nope
Posted by: chomsky on Aug 28, 2007 1:41 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As long as Bush is the one chosing, it will just be another "loyal bushy".
Do you really think he is going to let an honest person at the head of the justice department???

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» RE: Nope Posted by: JayMagoo
» RE: Nope Posted by: attw3
» RE: Nope Posted by: JSquercia
» RE: Nope - Reid fixed that Posted by: UnEasyOne
Well, when the boss is mafioso...
Posted by: NumberSix on Aug 28, 2007 2:44 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
One critic of Gonzo said he sat there at those hearings and acted like a Cappo's pet shark. Excellent, yes, but then, we do have a crime family running this nation.....

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

now you know what it's like to live in a monarchy
Posted by: Suzon on Aug 28, 2007 5:08 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
More than any other president, George Bush has all but reversed the winning of the Revolutionary War, the War of 1812 and the Civil War.

Having lived in England for over 20 years, I recogise the high-handedness, the scorn for the rule of law and the sickening pretense of virtue.

It's no accident, folks. Just as the Norman lawyers stitched up England for William the Conquerer, their descendants have done the same for the US of A. Ideas know no national boundries and the trick is to "normalize" corruption and grab as much as you can. The bigger the misdeed, the more that you're likely to get away with it.

The Bush administration has ripped up an already battered Constitution and Bill of Rights. It may well have murdered thousands on 9/11 or at least let it happen. And the illegal invasion and occupation of Iraq under false pretenses has vastly increased the sum total of human suffering.

Misuse of public office should be an imprisonable criminal offense. Big time!

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» sorry, forgot the "W" Posted by: Suzon
The Conservative talk radio nuts acted like nothing happened
Posted by: JayMagoo on Aug 28, 2007 5:39 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Conservative talk radio blabbermouths acted as though noting happened. The attorney general of their hero, Bush, resigned under the cloud that he had deliberately lied to Congress, that he was complicit in perverting the mission of the US Dept. of Justice, and that he acted in contempt of the American people, and what did we hear from the likes of Limbaugh, Hannity, etc? Nothing. Absolutely nothing. They pretended it didn't happen.
All the conservative blabbermouths yesterday were interested in with some football player named Vick. One of the biggest injuries the Bush adminsitration could recieve and they were silent.
It simply proves once again that conservative talk radio does not serve the public. The airwaves that the FCC should assure serve the public interest are dominated by radio stations owned by conservatives and are being used by Conservative talk radio to promote a strictly partisan agenda, as biased and one-sided as though their programming came directly from the Republican National Committee.

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my thoughts exactly
Posted by: skydog on Aug 28, 2007 6:08 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Gonzo's resignation is not a victory by any means. The Constitution remains in tatters. The criminals are still in power, aided and abetted by a "loyal opposition" that's far more loyal than they are opposition.

"Alberto Gonzales was never the right man for this job. He lacked independence, he lacked judgment, and he lacked the spine to say no to Karl Rove," said Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nevada).

That's funny, Harry, because we could say the exact same thing about you and the rest of the Democratic leadership in Congress.

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Are YOU ready to RUMBLE!!!!!!
Posted by: Conservasaurus on Aug 28, 2007 6:14 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"he resignation of Alberto Gonzales has brought a smile to the faces of many Bush Administration critics, "

No doubt.. but poor handling firing fed judges (totally within the administrations right) just gave critics enough ammo to force his resignation.. Gonzales served in a time whenhe had to make critical decisions that balanced the nations security with personal freedoms.

his accomplishments, especially concerning missing children etc go completely unnoticed by the opposition..

- it is interesting how the dems are chipping away bit by bit to effect regime change - and the political game continues.. Dems 10, repubs 0!!

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» RE: Are YOU ready to RUMBLE!!!!!! Posted by: Conservasaurus
» RE: Are YOU ready to RUMBLE!!!!!! Posted by: surfreality
» RE: Are YOU ready to RUMBLE!!!!!! Posted by: Conservasaurus
» RE: Are YOU ready to RUMBLE!!!!!! Posted by: surfreality
» RE: Are YOU ready to RUMBLE!!!!!! Posted by: Conservasaurus
» RE: Are YOU ready to RUMBLE!!!!!! Posted by: surfreality
» RE: Are YOU ready to RUMBLE!!!!!! Posted by: MarvinBeaty
» RE: Are YOU ready to RUMBLE!!!!!! Posted by: TexasJewGirl
» RE: Are YOU ready to RUMBLE!!!!!! Posted by: Conservasaurus
» RE: Are YOU ready to RUMBLE!!!!!! Posted by: surfreality
no difference expected
Posted by: zooeyhall on Aug 28, 2007 6:47 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You can bet your behind that they will just appoint another Gonzales clone.

And as for Gonzales himself, I am sure he already has a lucrative job lined up with some Wall Street firm or other.

Justice in America---what a joke.

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» RE: no difference expected Posted by: Conservasaurus
» RE: no difference expected Posted by: MarvinBeaty
MAYBE SOME OF YOU LIKE THINGS THE WAY THEY ARE
Posted by: VZEQICVA on Aug 28, 2007 7:03 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The collection of people who have left the Bush Admin. is significant. And yes it does make a difference. We cannot change everything before the 'next commercial'. Gonzales was a horrible choice but his next stop might have been the Supreme Court. Bush is not the powerful force that he was a year ago. Don't forget these resignations don't get the endless news coverage that is given to nonsense. And we tend to forget. And this is NOT a monarchy. Thank you, ANNA

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It's about a Pardon!
Posted by: Gisele on Aug 28, 2007 7:12 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There's no doubt the Congress, Senate and nation know that Gonzales lied under oath...there's no doubt that they're not even close to being done with him either. He didn't really have much choice about stepping down, but that he chose now as the time to do it is interesting!

If he's sentenced to prison for his lack of judgement, the pardon will be granted before the ink dries on the Judges decision. It would be no different if the "loyal" opposition put the full weight of law on Karl Rove...he's a citizen now, a full pardon would be granted. The rats are leaving a sinking ship, but a life preserver waits in the wings. It's all about payback for the gifts given to the president...that no one but his "select few" could give him. Those well chosen, well placed people have served their purpose - soon their reward will be given.

But I have to wonder what is going on behind the scenes, while everyone's attention is focused on Gonzales/Rove - what is the White House really up to?

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» RE: It's about a Pardon! Posted by: babs
» RE: It's about a Pardon! Posted by: Gisele
» RE: It's about a Pardon! Posted by: Nick
» RE: It's about a Pardon! Posted by: Gisele
My fear is the resignation attention will cover his tracks!
Posted by: vomeggido on Aug 28, 2007 8:54 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Of course all the attention and relief that this pig, Alberto Gonzales is out of the white house will take away from the fact that he committed all of these treasonous crimes- and that the general sigh of relief that he is gone will take the focus off him and remove the spotlight so he can slink off into the shadows.

This man should be in jail and nothing should change this. Screw the subpoena's and just indict his lying ass. Of course Bush will pardon him- but this would be very difficult if Bush/Cheney got impeached.

This is my call for a Bush/Cheney joint impeachment. The we could easily go after Rove, Rumsfeld, Rice and the rest. Round em all up and show the world this is not America or American government. I seriously doubt that my idealistic, iconoclastic beliefs will ever see the light of day as the road to the New World Order is completely paved and ready for traffic.

The last statement is too big for the average American to comprehend. All these eternal optimists who still believe in the foundation of Democracy as the seed of freedom and liberty and justice for all- have no clue that this American Dream was devoured by greedy, uncaring, murdering monsters decades ago.

It would take a revolution to get it back and lets face it- we have become complacent and believed that things were being taken care of- long ago.

At this point a total revolution is unlikely due to the confusion and remaining belief that we will pull it together in the end- somehow.

The powers that be have been very busy lately trying to figure the "SPIN" because the current administration so drunk on arrogance- fucked up and revealed the evil plan.

Hitler did the same thing- but he had an edge and damn near did it- so the power elite devised a much more devious road that included the slow indoctrination (decades worth of propaganda and media manipulation).

The entertainment industry was the tool most used to quell the masses with misinformation- and this industry was also infiltrated to tighter control and is now nothing more than a bunch of corporate conglomerates who produce glossy- high tech-special effect ridden devices designed to "shock and awe" with a feel good ending encompassing heroics for the underdog endings which used to inspire much more trust than it used to.

Of course the inspiration came from truly talented people- who are now all but gone and/or caught up in the endless political propaganda cesspool where the real money is.

This trend is far more noticeable on television which the American public is beginning to get a clue as to how they have been manipulated into believing this are going normal and on the American track.

The internet exposed the lies and propaganda machine and thoroughly exposed the news media as super neocon spin doctors- this was completely unexpected and is now a huge source of consternation for the powers that be.

So naturally they want to destroy it so they can get back to producing their daily doses of American mind medicine.

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Gonzales- Continued
Posted by: vomeggido on Aug 28, 2007 8:54 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Enter online predators. Never mind there are software programs which can create a safe place for the children on the net. Never mind that less than 1% of child attacks occur online. Never mind that education and monitoring is more effective than prohibition because children want to learn.

The internet is completely safe when in the hands of caring and nurturing parent- like everything else in life there will always be parents who either don't care or neglect putting safeguards in place and those incidents will receive much publicity and create danger propaganda designed to keep people from the internet for fear of predators lurking about online.

The totals are in: 12,750 online predators have been arrested in various stings the world over. Now out of 3 billion online people- that makes the figures less than 1%- which is no reason to rebuild and/or shut down the net- but the powers that be will use it to try!

And people will support it to protect the children.

TAKE YOUR CHILDREN OUT OF THE EQUATION. DO NOT ALLOW THESE MURDERS TO USE YOUR KIDS TO DESTROY ANOTHER FREEDOM.

Gonzales did not resign of his own free will. This was a political move specifically designed to give more false hope to the American public and to take the spotlight off him and his nefarious ways.

Bush will still utilize Gonzales on the sly- I guarantee it.

Congress is absolutely no help and are for the most part- powerless sellouts who opted for money and luxury- which was the only option they were given. Not one of those lame fucks deserves to call themselves an American.

They are all running around at the worst party in history playing pin the tail on the donkey. They are all a bunch of jackasses.

Just keep your eyes on the prize and that is Gonzales is a liar- a murdering treasonous liar who has been betrayed into playing the second act off stage.

Don't get angry- just watch and comment with complete skepticism and utter congruently and don't let them get away with shit.

Let them jump through hoops until they die of exhaustion. Its time for them to thin out their own damn herds for a while.

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Sorry for the typos!
Posted by: vomeggido on Aug 28, 2007 9:01 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I should have proofed my posts a little better- but those of you who know me get the point. I seriously love my American brothers and sisters. Which is why I will always stick my neck out. There will come a day in the very near future when these posts will land me in an internment camp.

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Bilge rats always find a way to raid the ships stores
Posted by: common intelligence on Aug 28, 2007 10:10 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The problem is not with whom is voted in or appointed. The problem with "injustice" is a relative point if laws and the process are not secured by following clear cut proceedures in "justifing" the methodology used to accomplish the serving of justice.

Evidently the laws that regulate those proceedures and secure people from injustice are open to interpetation. Thousands of people have been unfairly tried and convicted ( and fired!) by only the whim of a manipulative judge that has become the protector of special interests and corporate funding. These facts influence the out come of many "unjustifiable" judgements.

Unless provisions are made law, clearly defining the process with safegards included to protect people from being railroaded down a path of
irreconsilable consiquences there can be no justice.

The constitution must be augmented having congressional over rides to clearly secure this nation from domestic piracy such as what Bush and Co. have done.

The next administration must include actions to put forth a program to safegard the nation from domestic piracy, such as what the Bush administration has done to our country. Other wise the damage has been done and there is no hope for justice in these un-United States.

This country is not what we call America or the United States any longer except in name. The people must be aware of This. The propaganda that we are pounded by daily, is made to keep people from free thinking and realizing this.

It's the same as insisting the "insurance" company process is the only model we can follow in order to have any national health care. This is BS.
Laying the burden on the people of dedundant fathomless execises in finding a provider is a relentless futile waste of resources. A single national health care system would eliminate the waste in all areas and actually benefit the country as a whole.

Returning justice has to do with securing the constitutional method and the constitution than with whom is in the judicary seat.

Unlike Alberto, or Rove, or Rummy, or Wolfowitz....(hey where's Condi been hidding out lately?..her too!) house cleaning must start at the top!

"So now you scalliwags, who'll be next to walk on to the gang plank? Arg. Dem. dar sharks are gett'n hungry and Davie Jones is a wait'n!

Avast ye seadogs, less ye be keel hauled. Better ye jump ship ur be run up the yard arm by yer ears!"

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» RE: Next administration? Posted by: vomeggido
» RE: Next administration? Posted by: tripper10
~~~S.O.S. for the U.S.A.~~~
Posted by: CaptainChurch on Aug 28, 2007 10:36 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"The Declaration of RE-Independence", America's last chance to re-invent itself in time!~~~On web sites below, or go to google search and type in "The Declaration of RE-Independence"......
To: ALL intended recipients ~~~S.O.S.~~~
http://CaptainChurch.proboards57.com
http://s2.excoboard.com/exco/index.php?boardid=24582
http://s2.excoboard.com/exco/index.php?boardid=15311
http://b4.boards2go.com/boards/board.cgi?user=ChurchCaptain


Jim Sorrell

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I highly doubt
Posted by: hurricane hugo on Aug 28, 2007 11:58 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
than anyone here thought that Gonzales' resignation would bring about the restoration of all that's been stolen from us these last few years. Article = waste of time/bandwidth.

plur

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It's an icecube falling off an iceberg
Posted by: jeffrey7 on Aug 28, 2007 12:36 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
OK, so gonzo is gone,big deal. He was just another goodguy who followed orders and looked stupid for the American people. Just like everyone else in this Administration. That seems to be the way they deal. Treat us like foole while they pull a bunch of crap. Right before our eyes too!! Worse yet,they did'nt give a damn if we caught them. They already had the 'I can't recall' defense in line. Another President used that one too, Nixion. Another crook in the oval office. A lot of the folks that helped Tricky Dick were and are in the Executive branch today.
Our System is corrupted by thieves and fools bent on destruction and profiteering on it.
We have to Think Outside the System
Draft jeffrey7 for Prez
www.youtube.com/RevJeffrey7

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Alberto's skewed world
Posted by: sliver on Aug 28, 2007 12:52 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I read that during his resignation speech, Alberto Gonzales said his worst day as Attorney General was better than his father's best day as a construction worker. Isn't that a slap in the face to all construction workers? He's telling them their lives are so miserable that they would be better off as a partisan hack hatchet man who deliberately takes freedom away from his fellow Americans.

In reality, I would say that nearly everything built by hard-working construction workers has a positive impact on this country, while A.G. the A.G. has been a big negative. Perhaps we need to construct another jail to hold political criminals.

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Rumor on the street...
Posted by: sausage on Aug 28, 2007 12:54 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
WASHINGTON (CNN) — President Bush may nominate Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff to replace Alberto Gonzales as Attorney General, senior administration officials told CNN Monday.
CNN.com

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Of course not
Posted by: owleyes on Aug 28, 2007 2:10 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
So many people have left this administration in disgrace, but nothing improved after they left. Well, on second thought, maybe things are a little tiny bit better. I haven't heard of a Padilla-type rape of justice in a while. But that has more to do with the passage of time and people's general fatigue with this war than anything else. All the people who have been in power since 9/11 must leave and never more be heard from. Only then will things have a chance of getting better in any meaningful way.

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Soon
Posted by: famouspipeliner on Aug 28, 2007 5:58 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
All will have left except George and his dog.

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Pelosi should join Gonzo
Posted by: Nick on Aug 29, 2007 8:45 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
She is no different from Bush and his criminals

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No Kidding!
Posted by: vomeggido on Aug 29, 2007 8:53 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The title of this article and its contents are redundant, insipid and banal.

We all know this information. What a colossal waste of time and space.

Why don't you people write what we don't know about- you know the shit that is in there very deep and will likely cause the demise of freedom completely or the scary holocaust shit that is being prepared for the sheeple.

Reason: Cause you are scared you'll end up in a camp labeled a cyber terrorist.

Most journalists today are ball less blabbermouths- soulless propaganda gestapo, or verbose sondercommando's- who paper us to death with a bunch of shit we already know- so the roots of what's really happening stay buried and can germinate.

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sept 17 constiution day
Posted by: whealeydj on Aug 30, 2007 1:03 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
ACLU reminded me that gonzales day of resignation is constitution day--220th anniversary of Constitution. maybe judiciary Committee can hold up approval of anyone until habeas corpus and Bill of rights and constituional oaths of w and big time are reaffirmed and they are informed they are not monarchs but sworn to faithfully execute the law not make up own rules for own cronies. but im not holding my breath.

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Wake up! We are not 5 year olds ....
Posted by: JinpaG on Aug 31, 2007 8:36 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"CIA director Michael Hayden has rejected any accountability or even discussion, claiming these would "distract" the nation. (The suggestion is demeaning: Does Hayden think we are all 5-year-olds? It is also perverse: How can any government agency get better at its job if it says that understanding its past mistakes is a 'distraction'?)"

I think, more to the point, Michael Hayden and a host of others who use such arguments would like to encourage or berate us into remaining as uninformed and unquestioning as 5 year olds by means of obfuscation and distraction, so that we don't use our powers of perception and intelligence to see and understand what is actually going on below the surface of Gonzales' actions and the actions of the government that positioned and encouraged him to break or bend the law in their favor. This is not to say that Democrats have not engaged in the same kinds of behavior ... it is shamefacedly the norm of politics at high levels in the United States of America. We can do better. We need not be ashamed to be smart, perceptive, and active, nor need we be sheep in the face of big business and shady federal politics. We can take back our democracy and our country, but we probably have to be very brave to do so. I cannot imagine we can do this overnight.

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