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The President Does Not Know Best

By Elizabeth de la Vega, Tomdispatch.com. Posted January 19, 2006.


Using his wholly fabricated 'Unitary Theory of the Executive,' Bush has decreed his administration to be entirely above the rule of law.
011806_story
The President Does Not Know Best

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OK, everyone who has studied the Unitary Executive Theory of the Presidency, raise your hand. Anyone? Anyone?

If you are not raising your hand, you're not alone. As regular readers are aware, only recently has the world received notice that President Bush's "I can do anything I want" approach to governance has a name: the Unitary Executive Theory of the Presidency.

Not having heard of this concept, and thinking perhaps that I had missed something in Constitutional Law, I decided to survey a random sampling of attorneys about it. The group included civil practitioners, prosecutors, a federal judge, a former federal prosecutor who has a PhD as well as a J.D., defense attorneys, and a U.S. magistrate.

The precise question was, "When did you first hear about the Unitary Executive Theory of the Presidency?" Most said, "The past few weeks," but my favorite was, "A few seconds ago, when you asked about it." All agreed that the term does not appear in the U.S. Constitution and that, the last time they checked, we still had three branches of government.

Discussion of this "theory" has been prompted, of course, by President Bush's recent confession to a crime: repeatedly authorizing the National Security Agency (NSA) to intercept domestic electronic communications for foreign intelligence purposes without a court order in violation of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA). FISA contains no exception for the President, but Bush claims his action is legal because: (1) Congress endorsed it in its September 18, 2001 Authorization to Use Military Force in response to Al Qaeda's September 11th attacks, and (2) he has inherent power as Chief Executive to act as he deems necessary in wartime. Many scholars, including Georgetown University's David Cole and former New York State Congressional Representative Elizabeth Holtzman have thoroughly debunked these arguments.

You don't have to be a constitutional scholar to know that Bush's legal justifications are weak. You merely have to consider the administration's duplicitous conduct. The Bush team has deliberately concealed this program, not only from the public and Congress, but, most damning of all, from the very agency that is responsible for executing the laws of this country: the Department of Justice (DOJ).

It has been widely reported that even Bush appointees, such as former Assistant Attorney General James B. Comey, and possibly former Attorney General John Ashcroft, objected to the NSA's wide-ranging warrantless spying. After 20 years as a federal prosecutor, I am absolutely certain that the vast majority of career attorneys at DOJ and criminal prosecutors from U.S. Attorneys' Offices around the country, as well as federal law enforcement agents, would have refused to participate knowingly in this program. Bush and his coterie knew that their legal arguments were weak and intellectually dishonest, if not ludicrous, so rather than making their case honestly, even to their own people, they avoided dissent by acting in secret and affirmatively misleading the entire country. Using a tragically familiar modus operandi, Bush has carried out his unlawful spying scheme by acting not as a unitary executive (whatever that is), but as a solitary executive -- as if the President Knows Best.

To understand the extent and complexity, not to mention frightening consequences, of Bush's deception with regard to the NSA's warrantless surveillance, it is necessary to consider some of the practicalities of FISA, both before and after it was changed by the PATRIOT Act.

As anyone who took high school civics knows, the government must get a warrant before conducting electronic surveillance on people within the United States. But before the September 11 attacks, few citizens knew that law enforcement had to follow different procedures to get that warrant, depending on the investigative purpose. If the purpose was chiefly to aid a criminal investigation, such as in a drug or bribery case, the agents had to get what was called a Title III warrant from the U.S. District Court. If the object was primarily to get foreign intelligence on someone within the U.S., regardless of whether they were communicating with someone in or out of the country, agents had to go to a secret court called the FISA court.


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Elizabeth de la Vega has recently retired after serving more than 20 years as a federal prosecutor in Minneapolis and San Jose.

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Very nice and all...
Posted by: Colin on Jan 19, 2006 3:04 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...but it counts for nothing if no-one is prepared to (or should that be: can do?) anything about it.

The author finishes with the rhetorical question: 'When will we, as a country, finally stop thinking that the President Knows Best?'

I don't think I've ever met anyone who believes 'Bush knows best', American or otherwise. Perhaps a better question to ask of the public would have been: 'Who's got the nads to challenge him head on?'*




* Obviously that should be qualified by saying if you are 1) poor 2) of little social standing, then don't bother applying.

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I took High School Civics...
Posted by: adp3d on Jan 19, 2006 3:24 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...and any first-grader knows that when you break the law you go to jail. So who is going to stand up to these guys and issue arrest warrants?

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What suit is bush?
Posted by: Spot on Jan 19, 2006 5:04 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Can we please rename the suit of spades to the suit of dumbass?

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Unitary Theory = The Furher State
Posted by: Jennelle on Jan 19, 2006 5:58 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Some of us have been paying attention. The Unitary Theory is lifted almost whole from the writings of Carl Schmitt, the father of Nazi jurisprudence, and the creator of the legal justifications of the Fuhrer state. Most of the neo cons subscribe to the ideas of Carl Schmitt, and to Leo Strauss, who, though a Jew, subscribed to the Nazi ideas of governance. Both men wrote numerous books on the subject of justifying the ending of a democratic system, and the legal steps to go through, to minimize the social unrest. I also remember Bush stating many times that his favorite book is 1984, and his statements that he would like to be a dictator. It may very well be too late for the US republic.

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» Bush's favorite book is 1984? Posted by: brasilaron
Carl Schmitt,Third Riech, Bush
Posted by: citizenjoe on Jan 19, 2006 6:15 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Fascist legal theorists developed a theory that the real constitution of a nation-state grants the head of state unlimited authority. The idea is a kind of legal fundamentalism. Hitler’s philosopher and jurist, Carl Schmitt, said such things forthrightly. Spokesman for George Bush and Richard Cheney say so, but with some obfuscation, as they don’t care to be closely associated with the name and language of the well known Nazi, Carl Schmitt. All trace their lineage to the revered Thomas Hobbes who spoke of the state as a great organism, a Leviathan, with absolute authority, and of nature as a state of war between states as well as individuals. In terms of constitutional theory, this school of extreme conservatives is called “decisionist”. This name describes the official legal view of the German National Socialist Party, the view of many contemporary ultra conservatives, and also that of the Bush Administration in America today .

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Impeachment
Posted by: kgs1947 on Jan 19, 2006 6:42 AM   
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Impeach the man! Get him out of there before he does any more harm and we become a dictatorship! Down with the king!

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» RE: Impeachment Posted by: doombilly
"When will we, as a country, finally stop thinking that the President Knows Best? "
Posted by: eileenflmng on Jan 19, 2006 6:59 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When we WAKE UP that we have been manipulated by FEAR ever since 9/11 when we looked to Big Brother to 'save' us without reflecting on the root cause of WHY do some people in the world hate us?

Their methods were evil but their hate has basis we Americans have yet to fully explore and openly debate the fact that USA Foreign Policy is the reason WHY so many more in the world now see us as ugly Americans than ever before in history

Learn more on WAWA:
http://www.wearewideawake.org

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Bush/Nazi Connections HUGE
Posted by: haystack1317 on Jan 19, 2006 7:20 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Anyone who doubts the connection between the Bush dynasty and the Nazis should check out this webpage: http://www.tarpley.net/bush2.htm

Many people know that Bush's grandfather, Prescott Bush, was reprimanded in 1942 under the Trading with the Enemy Act for actively doing business with the Nazis. Few people know that he had been involved with them for over 15 years, preceding their rise to power, and had controlled dealings that allowed the Nazis to build their war machine. The profits he reaped from this partnership - and it was a direct, personal partnership - are staggering.

It's true that one can't equate the grandson with the grandfather without qualification. But when the policies and actions are this closely aligned with Fascist ideals, it becomes clear that the ties have not been cut.

In almost unfathomable hypocrisy, Bush played comparisons between Saddam Hussein and Hitler for everything they were worth while adopting Hitler's "pre-emptive defense" policy and renaming it the Bush Doctrine. Orwell cound't have imagined a more accurate enaction of his fears.

I have a friend who fled Austria in 1937. He lived through the Nazis' rise to power in Germany. As he watches George Bush's gradual destruction of our rights, it feels like the 30s all over again. He says, quietly, "This is how it happens."

One of the most relevant quotes I've read on the current state of our country:

As nightfall does not come at once, neither does oppression. In both instances, there's a twilight where everything remains seemingly unchanged, and it is in such twilight that we must be aware of change in the air, however slight, lest we become unwitting victims of the darkness. - Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas

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» RE: Bush/Nazi Connections HUGE Posted by: badkitty53
» RE: Bush/Nazi Connections HUGE Posted by: TagsNOLA
» RE: Bush/Nazi Connections HUGE Posted by: YinRising
» RE: Bush/Nazi Connections HUGE Posted by: Roverton
» RE: Bush/Nazi Connections HUGE Posted by: turbocrusher
Its NOT COMPLEX!
Posted by: owlbear1 on Jan 19, 2006 7:22 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Its really VERY simple, The Republican Whitecollar Mafia is using lawyers to write up a permission slip.

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THE UNITED FASCISTIC STATES OF BUSH
Posted by: krose on Jan 19, 2006 8:02 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
WE LIVE HERE, PEOPLE, AND THE PROBLEM IS, HOW DO WE END IT??? This is quite a problem, because he has all the power! We cannot count on the next election, because his "party" controls the voting machines, the media, and the money! This is an extremely frightening situation, and what makes it even more frightening is that the majority of the population is uninformed and apathetic! And with the education system deteriorating under this tyrant, the people are becoming even less intelligent than before, which helps his cause all the more!

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Ladies and gentlemen, we are screwed
Posted by: sausage on Jan 19, 2006 8:31 AM   
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"If this were a dictatorship, it would be a heck of a lot easier - so long as I'm the dictator." -George W. Bush, Dec. 19, 2000

"A dictatorship would be a heck of a lot easier, there's no question about it." -George W. Bush, July 27, 2001

Gaffs? Jokes? Wishful thing?

This is no longer a laughing matter. Yet Congressional Democrats will not set up to the plate and denounce the pResident for his dictatorial delusions. Hell, they are no longer mere delusions but rapidly hardening into reinforced concrete reality.

This didnot happen over night, either. The ground work for this fascist nightmare was laid during Berry Goldwater's unsuscessful presidential bid in 1964. The frame was completed with the election of Ronald Reagan, who will go down as one of the worst American presidents ever, in 1980.

But why did the Dems sleep?

Because fascism provides the illusion of "stability" and that's is good for business and Democrats are pro-business, so why fight it.

Ladies and gentlemen, we are screwed.

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we gotta do our homework, folks
Posted by: JoeBackward on Jan 19, 2006 8:40 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I don't think we're ready to start an impeachment drive.

(I DO think the Bush regime has already committed impeachable "high crimes and misdemeanors".) We have to do our homework and get the message straight. Because, the impeachment drive, once started, needs to be successful. A right wing victory over an impeachment drive will put us in a worse situation than we are in now.

Simply accusing the Bush regime of intellectual ties to National Socialist philosophers is not a good message. While true, this message makes it easy to paint the progressive movement as a bunch of looneytunes screaming "Bush is a Nazi."

I think we're better off figuring out how to mock the "unitary theory," so people just roll their eyes when they hear it. We should put the impeachment focus on how the President promised at inauguration to uphold the laws of the country, and broke that promise.

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NEW BIN LADEN STUFF!!! (The downside to Bush's little games...)
Posted by: Colin on Jan 19, 2006 8:42 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"In an audio tape broadcast on Aljazeera, Osama bin Laden has warned that al-Qaida was preparing an attack very soon, but also offered Americans a "long-term truce".

"The new operations of al-Qaida has not happened not because we could not penetrate the security measures. It is being prepared and you'll see it in your homeland very soon," the voice attributed to bin Laden said, apparently addressing Americans.

But the voice on the tape, which appeared to be aimed at the American public, also offered a truce: "We do not mind establishing a long-term truce between us and you."

The transcript went up on Al Jazeera about an hour ago. The link to the story is here.

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» RE: Wasn't it a few days ago.... Posted by: Againstthewindwalking
All hail the King
Posted by: NamVeT on Jan 19, 2006 8:45 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is already too damn late to do anything. They own OUR country and will do what they damn well please. King georgie halibush and his "adviser" Lord High dicky poo cheney have us by the balls. I pray that it is not too late to take back OUR country, but it does'nt look good. georgie has all of his pals in all the places in govt. They essentially rule as "kings" already. We need a full scale REVOLUTION. In the movie "DUNE" when Maud Dib asked "do you see wormsign", the response was "we have wormsign the likes of which GOD has never seen. The fucking worms are in the White House and we are toast.

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Blogging? Fighting? Nothing?
Posted by: haystack1317 on Jan 19, 2006 9:03 AM   
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I want to ask everyone reading this a question. Has the internet and the ability for us to express ourselves in forums like this one increased our capacity to actually change what's wrong in our government or has it become a vent that satiates our desire for actual rebellion, discouraging action while we all sit in our homes or offices looking into electronic screens?

I don't know the answer. I do know that everyone talks about how great the internet and new technology is for uniting people and spreading political ideas. But is it not this same technology that allows media conglomerates to control the news and electronic voting companies to steal elections? Does the internet actually change peoples' opinions or do they seek out only those sites which reinforce what they already believe?

While sites like Alternet mainly attract those who already have alternative views, or those who want to pick at them for sport, the mainstream media is also all over the web. Their spin on things is also on hundreds of millions of TVs, 24 hours a day. Sitting in an airport, I often find myself with clear vision of 4 or more screens of CNN. Perhaps I'll hit Buzzflash later on and momentarily feel like others are as upset as I am. But nothing has changed other than my perception. You can make your own trail on the web, finding someone in Australia, perhaps, who already thinks like you rather than having to deal with a next-door neighbor who doesn't.

I fear that what we see as a great tool for raising awareness will end up being merely a big flatulent valve by which we lose all the pressure that would produce actual results. People get excited when someone in contact with true power mentions MoveOn or another web-based group. I don't trust those in power enough to believe that they wouldn't prefer to have hundreds of thousands of e-mails from MoveOn rather than some of those letter writers out in the street taking action.

I refer to direct action because I think that's what it's going to take to remove a government that has subverted the democratic process and stolen elections. It's one thing to say "get out and vote." It's another to realize your vote has become meaningless.

Perhaps I'm a hypocrite, sitting here typing away, but I'm trying to figure it out.

Here is a quote from Ben Franklin, which says a lot, to me:

Never confuse motion with action.

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» RE: Blogging? Fighting? Nothing? Posted by: Lincoln fan
A deck of cards
Posted by: AlienSlave on Jan 19, 2006 9:28 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Who is the Ace of spades? If george is the King, I think I know the Queen of Spades, The Jack and Defently the Joker.
AlienSlave

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» RE: A deck of cards Posted by: saywhat?
What has happened to my country?
Posted by: NoPCZone on Jan 19, 2006 9:53 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This administration has done a whole laundry list of things that should have gotten them in an ocean of hot water. Nixon, Johnson and other scoundrels are amateurs compared to this bunch.

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OK Pass the potato chips
Posted by: saywhat? on Jan 19, 2006 10:01 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
NOT!

This 2006 congressional election is probably the most important election of our lifetime. This congress has got to go. Otherwise impeachment won't happen, and even though the american public knows it is ludicrous to go war, you bet we will go into Iran with our frazzeled troops! This time with mobile nukes. Because that crazy fear nerve in our brain gets a charge everytime we hear "weapons of mass destruction."
It is all lined up!

Now i have to constantly ask myself, "if i were a native of another country, say, in
South America, or in the Middle east, or Asia, or even Europe, how would i feel about this crazed country called amerika, and why does my country have to put up with their shit? It never lasts. If we accept it , the rest of the world eventually won't. This country has got to be put in check by us, and in this up and coming election.

Every district has to be checked for fair monitoring of the polls. Otherwise say something. Say somethng here, to your friends, to people you trust in your community. Second dump your braindead congressman and get someone who is opposed to this war and supports articles of impeachment.

Otherwise this world is up for grabs. Best to learn now how to get in the dirt now, because our choice is another wage slave state here, unless you're rich, (in which case, to hold on to your assests you may have to lose any sense of decency, and become a moral outrage along with this government).

Now how freaky is this administration really? I quote the article:

DOJ has an entire website devoted to internal and external propaganda about the administration's commitment to civil liberties. Prominently displayed on the website entitled, The Patriot Act: Preserving Life and Liberty is a smiling photo of Attorney General Alberto Gonzales and the following quote: "We are waging a war…each day in a way that values and protects the civil liberties and the constitutional freedoms that make our Nation so special."

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Be afraid! Be very, very, afraid!!!
Posted by: Againstthewindwalking on Jan 19, 2006 10:12 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Go to "http://.stoneysrage.blogspot.com". Read the latest post entitled "King George the Dim"! Be afraid! Be very, very, afraid!

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Insightful article but...
Posted by: Wacre on Jan 19, 2006 11:03 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
George Bush is doing nothing the Congress isn't allowing him to. Our current president is hardly a subtle man, so I would imagine that it must be fairly obvious that he's up to no good (especially since the average person that doesn't buy into the whole "War on Terrorism" nonsense can rather easity see that the emperor not only doesn't have any clothes, but he's anorexic).

If you doubt the point(s) raised above, I would ask that you really pay attention to what the President is doing, as opposed to listening to the current crop of Administration apologists and attack dogs. There is no "War on Terror" because, besides the fact that you can't defeat terrorism by, let's say, invading a country, that terrorism is generally a response to a particular incident(s) and/or policy(s).

So if we really wanted to stop terrorism we would be doing much, much more to help erode the differences between the haves and have-nots, which--underneath it all--I believe to be at the heart of much of the problems people all over the world are experiencing.

So, as far as I can tell, the "War on Terror" is pretty much an excuse for the US to wage pepetual war against nations that we happen to disagree with (or that have resources that we covet) and to act as an engine of economic growth (after all, imagine how many jobs building the next generation of smart weapons will create).

Though, on the original topic, the idea of an imperial presidency, as the article states, is hardly a new one (Just as an imperial Congress is a possibility--which I prefer because they are the elected representatives of the People).

The waters become somewhat muddier when the Congress is dominated by Republicans, but not by much because could a Presidency with such overwhelming powers (real or otherwise) be in the best interests of anyone other than the President?

It probably wouldn't be in Republicans' long term interest because they will not be in power forever, and what would they do then?

This is a power struggle, and I think that it only serves to illustrate the relative weakness of the Congress, as opposed to any particular strength of the Presidency because I think that many Americans are already tired of George Bush using this "War on Terror" as justification for just about everything he does.

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» RE: Insightful article but... Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: Insightful article but... Posted by: drricklippin
I think This says it all about Fear!!
Posted by: zappa33 on Jan 19, 2006 11:09 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I keep this posted in front of my desk so I can see it everyday.

“Why of course the people don’t want war. . .
That is understood. But after all, it is the leaders of the country who determine the policy and it is always a simple matter to drag the people along, whether it is a democracy, a fascist dictatorship, or a parliament, or a communist dictatorship. Voice or no voice, the people can always be brought to the bidding of the leaders. That is easy. All you have to do is tell them they are being attacked, and denounce the peacemakers for lack of patriotism and exposing the country to danger. It works the same in any country.”


- Hermann Goering
Nazi SS Officer, on or about 18 April 1946
Nuremberg War Crimes Trial

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IMPEACH!!!! VOTE!!!
Posted by: ccBallagh on Jan 19, 2006 1:11 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
listen its obvious the ONLY power we have left (if we still even have that by november) is the right to vote. while republicans and democrates are equally as evil, it seems democrats will be more sympathetic to OUR NEW AMERICAN CRISIS. We need to pack these guys in the house and senate during these november congress elections. we need to assemble, and open the eyes of the still asleep. I have great respect for any other brothers of this NEW AMERICAN REVOLUTION that are trying to tear down this massive media/culture/business BLOC that is stifling our democracy!!!!!! WE ARE HERE NOW AND ONLY WE CAN CHANGE IN THE TRUE SPIRIT OF AN ENLIGHTEND REVOLUTION!! stand strong, god bless america!

email me at frater_jeheshua@yahoo.com

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» RE: IMPEACH!!!! VOTE!!! Posted by: AlienSlave
» RE: IMPEACH!!!! VOTE!!! Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: IMPEACH!!!! VOTE!!! Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: IMPEACH!!!! VOTE!!! Posted by: drricklippin
Magnetic Ribbons...
Posted by: rockpicker on Jan 19, 2006 2:54 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Magnetic Ribbons and the Yellowcake of Faith

When we wake puking shame
at last, and know the dream
for sham, embraced en masse...
When bells that rang victorious
hang mute, their tarnished claims
ignored in disrepute, and
bitter sons, having been all they
could be, can't wish back innocence
or the leg below the knee...

(This brash regime's trimmed reason
from its ranks, its black guard
in the street, protecting flanks.)

...then will we heed the schemers'
gloating leer? "There's no future
for any of you here."
Row on row, with hand
in trembling hand, it's come to this.
WE DREAMERS NEED TO STAND!



-- rockpicker

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Who Can AND DID beat BUSH
Posted by: drricklippin on Jan 19, 2006 5:13 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
AL GORE=GIVE HIM BACK THE PRIZE THE US SUPREME COURT STOLE FROM HIM IN 2000!- "Blake"

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» RE: Who Can AND DID beat BUSH Posted by: Roverton
CARDIO PULMONARY RECUSITATION
Posted by: tomcat on Jan 19, 2006 7:05 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Hey folks, if the Constitution is a living and breathing document, then maybe old Bush is just giving it CPR. After all a 200 year old document can't possibly be adequate for today's challenges. At least, so voteth most of the Supremes. When you open Pandora's box, all sorts of nasties may fly out. If understanding the Constitution requires the keen intellect of a Stephen Breyer, why would we expect dumb old Bush to understand it? But go ahead and impeach him. He'll just say he thought he was acting legally, and he'll get a real sympathetic hearing from the American public. After all, we know you can't infer intentionality from what the signers said anyway, don't we?

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bogtrotters
Posted by: bogtrotters on Jan 19, 2006 7:27 PM   
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These people have kidnaped reality and they won't give it back. Their response to criticism is to lie even more brazenly and to "package" the President even more craftily (e.g., the stage Bush stood on for his remarks today about small business growth. It looks like Ward and June Cleaver's front yard.) I don't think it's at all hyperbole to compare the Bush Administration's approach to the truth with that of Joseph Stalin: The Potemkin Village. How long can they get away with this--and why ARE they getting away with it?

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Its about time
Posted by: fixitt on Jan 19, 2006 11:55 PM   
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Its about time to give those 'brown shirts' brown pants.

"Throughout history, it has been the inaction of those who could have acted; the indifference of those who should have known better; the silence of the voice of justice when it mattered most; that has made it possible for evil to triumph." - Haile Selassie

Fortune favors the bold... www.nocrony.com

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citizen
Posted by: justgreenleaf on Jan 20, 2006 7:18 AM   
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Remember Shakespeare? He wrote "one may smile and smile and be a villain still."
Anybody notice how much Mr. Bush smiles.

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» RE: citizen Posted by: Roverton
Miers/Bolton/and NSA
Posted by: covalentbonded on Jan 20, 2006 7:23 AM   
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Wasn' there some noise about Harriet Mier's role in signing the authorizations to spy? I seem to remember that right before she withdrew her nomination the Democrats had said they wanted to look into this matter.

Ditto on Bolton

Would appreciate links or knowledge of this.

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Where Is Our Backbone?
Posted by: tresdelsol on Jan 20, 2006 10:00 AM   
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What has happened to our nation? The liberals MUST unite, forget the minor differences, and impeach this entire administration. Whether they know it or not, we are in extreme danger and we have little time left. A President who maintains that he is above the law is either uneducated or has an agenda that is beyond belief, both of which I believe apply to Bush. Please, Congress, DO something other than sitting on your collective thumbs.

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rover
Posted by: Roverton on Jan 21, 2006 7:44 AM   
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America was the best place on Earth.

Why wouldn't the devil want it?

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rover
Posted by: Roverton on Jan 21, 2006 8:04 AM   
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Like a Somking Section in a restaraunt, evil can make it's way into the Liberal movement as well. Passive aggressive nay saying can be the surupticious poison they use.

Put light on it when it happens at a meeting and watch the fun. Hitting dark with light is the only way to avoid becoming just like the thing we're trying to fix.

Ask for details on why they are so negative. Why a prejudice a certain notion? Sometimes it's "Thanks for opening my mind to that idea." and sometimes it's "Pop goes te waesel!" and they storm out.

Why wouldn't there be goons inside our movements, gumming up the works? Either way, they're humans too. Same family. Don't hate them. They're stooges sent by a sick and abusive parent to send a message of fear. Just messengers.

The day when they're not needed any more and are dumped roadside - they'll be glad that we're still here, somehow.

People are being forced to become "Human" again.

I pledge allegence to my species.

Virtually ALL my customers are human.

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Unitary theory of the executive
Posted by: soya on Jan 21, 2006 12:07 PM   
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There is such a theoretical interpretation of the Constitution which Alioto will further strengthen...see this link...http://www.consortiumnews.com/2006/011106.html

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Inspired by Mussolini ?
Posted by: redmiguel on Jan 23, 2006 3:29 AM   
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To me this political formulation apes Mussolinis' choice for the symbol of Italian fascism... the 'fasci' - the axe with the rods fastened to it illustrating the ''unitary nature'' of his 'Italian Social Republic'...

I have written some stuff on post-modern fascism in my blog in case anyone would like to read/comment on it.

www.redsquare2.blogspot.com

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morality
Posted by: isidro on Jan 24, 2006 11:28 AM   
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i think not only bush is guilty , but all that folows his illegal ordening , because is a constitutional duty not to abey illegal orders

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Are the Republican People Cowards
Posted by: patti_s on Jan 25, 2006 4:52 AM   
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I hesitate to call any one a coward, but after hearing a constant barrage of "Oh, The President is just trying to keep us safe" I believe I might just have to. The Republican base seems to think that Bush's war crimes, domestic crimes, and in general corruption are alright if we are safe. This administration knows and exploits this.
I heard a woman on C-Span's call-in show, say that liberty takes away our freedom. Do these people not understand that liberty is our freedom? I can't believe that Republicans can not see that giving up any freedom means it is that much easier to take away the next freedom. It seems they can't see anything but fear, aided of course by the ironic appearance of a Bin Laden tape everytime Bush gets caught in something illegal.
What happened to the days when Republicans were ready to fight to keep this country together? Have they all decided to bury their heads in the sand and not see that the biggest act of terrorism occurring these days, is the terror in which the Bush administration keeps the Republican moms and pops of the heartland?
These same people are perfectly willing to have their conversations listened to on the phone, saying " If you are not doing anything wrong why do you care?". I care because it is against the law. "Well, Trust me " is not good enough. How do we know what these phone records are being used for? How many times have any of us trusted someone, only to have our fingers burned. Has George Bush not proved over and over again that if we trust him he will lie to us?
Do they not care that he has even had people kidnapped from the streets of other countries, held and tortured, only to be set free months later, when we determined they had done nothing wrong. Is it not cowardly to let innocent people be tortured so that we feel safe? Patti_s

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