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Revealed: Bush's Presidential Signing Statements Have Been Used to Nullify Laws

By Brian Beutler, Media Consortium. Posted June 18, 2007.


A Government Accountability Office report confirms that Bush's use of presidential signing statements have the effect of nullifying the law in question in about 30 percent of cases.
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Well, it's official: President Bush doesn't much respect the laws Congress passes. A Government Accountability Office (GAO) report -- commissioned by Sen. Robert Byrd, D-W.Va., and Rep. John Conyers, D-Mich., and released today -- confirms that Bush's use of presidential signing statements are, in fact, utterly without precedent.

Though they've been used by American presidents for about 200 years, signing statements -- edicts issued by the president to declare his intent to construe a provision within a law differently than Congress does -- are constitutionally questionable. But George W. Bush's use of them far exceeds his predecessors', both in number and in severity, and he has consistently used them to flout the will of the legislative branch.

Though the GAO report makes no claims about the legitimacy of Bush's statements or of the use of statements in general, it indicates that, in practice, the statements have the effect of nullifying the law in question in about 30 percent of cases. The issues are important: They include accounting for Iraq war funding and security measures for the border patrol.

And that's just from the GAO's inquiry into the 11 signing statements Bush issued against appropriations acts in 2006, which constituted objections to 160 different provisions. Bush has released more than 100 signing statements in his presidency, taking exception to hundreds of provisions of the law.

The report was conducted fairly simply. GAO officials surveyed 19 of last year's 160 objections to determine how the statements had impacted the implementation of laws. According to the report: "We contacted the relevant agencies and asked them how they were executing the provisions. After evaluating the responses we received, we determined that agencies failed to execute six provisions as enacted."

Alongside the failures of law, the reports also list the rationales that the president used to strike down the provisions. For instance, GAO found that, by citing the Unitary Executive Theory, Bush allowed the Department of Defense to exclude "costs for any other contingency operations, such as those in Iraq" as Congress had mandated.

Indeed, it's the Unitary Executive Theory -- another constitutionally dubious concept -- that has made Bush's use of signing statements especially damaging. Last year, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., inserted a provision into the Department of Defense emergency supplemental bill that would have criminalized the use of torture by U.S. military interrogators. In order to protect the measure's effectiveness, McCain included a provision that aimed to stop all interference by the president, save for a veto of the entire package. "The provisions of this section," it read, "shall not be superseded, except by a provision of law enacted after the date of the enactment of this act, which specifically repeals, modifies or supersedes the provisions of this section."

But upon signing the law, President Bush declared his intent to interpret the law "in a manner consistent with the constitutional authority of the president to supervise the unitary executive branch and as commander in chief and consistent with the constitutional limitations on the judicial power."

Supplying much of the jurisprudential weight to the president's practice has been Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, who has written widely in support of the statements. In particular -- as the Boston Globe's Charlie Savage has reported -- in his dissent against the court's decision in the case of Hamdan vs. Donald Rumsfeld to block Guantanamo Bay military tribunals, Scalia wrote that "in its discussion of legislative history the court wholly ignores the president's signing statement, which explicitly set forth his understanding that the [Detainee Treatment Act] ousted jurisdiction over pending cases."

Scalia appears to have laid out his philosophy on signing statements in a 1986 memo, wherein he wrote, "Since the president's approval is just as important as that of the House or Senate, it seems to follow that the president's understanding of the bill should be just as important as that of Congress."

In 2006, Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa., introduced legislation that would have forbidden federal courts from legitimating presidential signing statements and allowed Congress to bring up the question of their constitutionality before the Supreme Court. But the bill never made it to the Senate floor and expired at the end of the 109th Congress.

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Another indicator of White House corruption.
Posted by: HughScott on Jun 18, 2007 3:26 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
George W.'s excessive use of signing statements to circumvent the Constitution is just another example of his admininistration’s dishonest nature -- as shown by following White House transgressions, distortions and outright lies:

So-called Iraqi WMDs.
"Immediate" threats.
Yellow-cake uranium.
Aluminum tubes.
Mobile biological weapons labs.
Ties to Al Qaeda.
A 9/11 connection.
The Valerie Plame/CIA leak case.
Scooter Libby’s conviction for perjury and obstruction of justice
Secret overseas prisons.
Torture.
Warrantless wiretaps of United States citizens.
Phony Al Qaeda plots.
False claims that America is safer now from terrorism than before 9/11.
Concealing the real cost of Gulf War 2.
Understating Iraqi civilian casualties.
Embellishing U.S. successes in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Misrepresenting the only wartime tax cut in American history.
Economically betraying senior citizens, the middle class and working poor.
Downplaying global warming.
Bush going on vacation during Hurricane Katrina while fellow Americans drowned in New Orleans.
Claiming wounded GIs got the best treatment possible at Walter Reed.
Preventing the coffins of returning GIs from being seen by the public.
Hiding injured Iraq veterans from the press after landing stateside.
Declassifying intelligence information for political purposes.
Firing U.S. attorneys for the same reason.

Also add to the above list the falsified presidential biography I found on a State Department website in February 2004 and reported to the Boston Globe. Impressed, it ran the story the next morning, on 02/28/04, under the headline, “Bush Bio on Web Inflates Guard Service,” and gave me credit as the source.

You can learn about the “Bogus Bush Bio Caper” on my nonprofit website, King-George.biz -- the only one with hardcopy proof of White House corruption (Shrub’s fabricated Guard history).

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

» Your words speak for themselves, Hugh Posted by: thoughtcriminal
» No comment on your Petraeus comment? Posted by: thoughtcriminal
» RE: HughScott---thoughtcriminal Posted by: wmGreybeard
Unitary Executive Theory
Posted by: fanny666 on Jun 18, 2007 3:39 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Unitary Executive Theory

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

Signing statements are a clear path to tyranny
Posted by: UnEasyOne on Jun 18, 2007 4:09 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Given time, the Orwellian thrust (clear skies = more pollution, healthy forests = more roads and clearcutting) of this administration will be that tyranny equals freedom and justice requires arbitrary arrest and imprisonment for the masses and impunity for the favored few.

Electing any Democrat to the presidency in 08 (if he/she is allowed to take office) is crucial. The republic cannot survive eight more years of this. Elections still have some meaning thanks to the defeat of some of the corrupt Republicans last November. That can change faster than you can say Adolph Hitler and will - count on it - if the rethugs have more time to stack the deck in their favor.

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» HA!!! Posted by: Illiteratilumen
» RE: HA!!! Posted by: Lauren
» Elect any Democrat? Posted by: EKSwitaj
» RE: lect any Democrat? Posted by: JoshuaLudd
» Excuse Me.... Posted by: CatDad
Just what the founders warned us of...
Posted by: Michael Boldin on Jun 18, 2007 4:14 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
That's what the Bush criminals are. We have, for far too long, allowed our politicians to break the rules - ostensibly to do good things. But, it's not the abuse of power we should be most concerned with, instead, we should be most wary of the power to abuse.

Bush is the logical progression of years and years of constitutional rule bending and breaking. When a society allows its government to bend the rules over and over - eventually they'll get politicians that feel the rules don't apply at all.

But, the constitution isn't some mere suggestion. It's the law. It's high time we started demanding that these people follow the law. period.

Some follow up reading:

"We Must Return to Our Constitution" - click here

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Articles of Impeachment gain more support in the House.
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Jun 18, 2007 4:35 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Cloud Over Dick Cheney

"When Rep. Kucinich introduced his Articles of Impeachment in the House, he made this cogent charge: “Cheney has purposely manipulated the intelligence process to deceive the citizens and the Congress of the U.S. by fabricating a threat of Iraqi weapons of mass destruction to justify the use of the U.S. forces against the nation of Iraq in a manner damaging to our national security.” (2) In his three Articles of Impeachment, Rep. Kucinich detailed the dates, the times and the places, where Cheney chose to “deceive the citizens” about the alleged threats of Iraqi WMD...."

"Rep. Kucinich also underscored in H Res 333, the lethal consequences of Cheney’s warmongering: namely, U.S. service members killed in Iraq (now at 3,521); the death toll of Iraqis (estimated by the “Lancet Study” at 655,000, as of July, 2006); 4.2 million Iraqis forced from their homes; and the cost of the war to U.S. taxpayers, (now $435.4 billion). There are currently six cosponsors of H Res 333, in the House of Representatives. In addition to Reps. Kucinich and Waters, they are: Lynn Woolsey (D-CA); Barbara Lee (D-CA); Yyette Clark (D-NY); Jan Schakowsky (D-IL); William Lacy Clay (D-M0) and Al Wynn (D-MD)."

"The charges in the Articles of Impeachment, raised by Rep. Kucinich, if proven, are clearly impeachable offenses under the U.S. Constitution. Keep in mind, that under Article 1, Section 2 (5), of our National Charter, the role of the House in any impeachment inquiry is to “only” act as a Grand Jury. If it finds that there is probable cause, that is reasonable grounds, to believe the truth of the charges against Cheney, in H. Res 333, then it would have a duty under the law to impeach him. The U.S. Senate, then, would sit in judgment on the V.P. and decide his guilt or innocence. See, Art. 1, Sec. 3 (6)."


Now would be a good time to contact your House representative (available at http://www.house.gov/) and demand that they sign on.

It would also be good to let them know that you want to see hearings into Cheney's Energy Task Force, and that you want to see him testify under oath as to why maps of Iraqi oilfields were included in that secret, unreleased report (which should itself be subpoenaed).

All the evidence points to the facts:

*that Cheney and Bush had wanted to go to war in Iraq well before 9/11,

*that they knew that Saddam had no nuclear or biological weapons,

*that they deliberately manipulated intelligence using British help,

*that they cynically exploited the events of 9/11 by attempting to link that atrocity to Saddam,

*and that they deliberately lied to the American public in order to get the country to back a war in the Middle East - a war whose real objective was control of Iraqi oilfields for the benefit of their cronies in the fossil fuel and finance industries.

That, of course, is in addition to the bribery and corruption in the no-bid government contracts delivered to Bechtel, Halliburton, etc, the illegal spying on the American public, and the outing of covert CIA operatives for political purposes. If anyone ever deserved to be impeached and imprisoned, these clowns do.

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» Strap on the tinfoil Posted by: eddie torres
» RE: Strap on the tinfoil Posted by: Lauren
» Way to keep the MAN on his toes, Lauren! Posted by: Illiteratilumen
» uhhhh..... Posted by: Illiteratilumen
the sole organ??
Posted by: particle61 on Jun 18, 2007 4:55 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
www.redstateupdate.net has doggedly reported on the 'signing statements' made by the 'sole organ' for two years...see stories
Presidential Signing Statements Inaugurate Legislator-in-Chief, issue 72
Signing Statements Signal Sentiments for Sidestepping Statutes-issue 36,
Bush Administration Opposed to Letters of the Law-issue 85,
Objections to Signing Statements Sustained-issue 65,

redstateupdate.net follows the subversion of the constitution beat- whether its the illegal wiretapping of millions of American phones or sending kidnapped citizens to underground penal colonies-with humor and prescience, and a new gwbush comic every week

www.redstateupdate.net
funny, frightening, free
and 'it's all true'

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

A special response to ThoughtCriminal.
Posted by: HughScott on Jun 18, 2007 5:56 PM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Whoever he or she is, ThoughtCriminal accused me in a comment above of being a “Republican makeover artist and war apologist.”

Anyone who has visited my King-George.biz website and read its content knows that ThoughtCriminal’s characterization of me is a malicious smear unworthy of comment. At the same time, ThoughtCriminal must be exposed as the divisive Stealth Bushie he or she is.

One thing I’ve always tried to do on AlterNet is present FACTS, not empty rhetoric. Being a Vietnam veteran with a family history of honorable military service going back to 1776, I objected to a toilet-bowl characterization made by another reckless blogger, Howie Klein, who called General Petraeus a “disgrace to his uniform.”

Klein based his slur on a remark made by Petraeus that Iraq was showing “signs of normalcy.” On a very small scale, that's true. Yes, chaos reigns in the country but not TOTAL chaos. As I pointed out in my rebuttal, a popular recreation park in Baghdad named “Fun City” has never been struck by terrorists -- homegrown or Al Qaeda.

Does that mean the troop surge is succeeding? Not for a minute and Petraeus never said so.

Moreover, he reportedly predicted yesterday that it would take 10 years to get Baghdad under control. You can bet President Bush wasn’t pleased by that blunt assessment.

So until proof is provided that I'm wrong about Petraeus, I will stick to my original opinion of him. I have no doubt that the general will be truthful about the troop surge when he testifies before Congress in September. One indication is Tony Snow Job's backpedaling on how important the general's report will be.

Meanwhile, I suspect, ThoughtCriminal will continue spreading his criminal thoughts on AlterNet. Such is the price we pay for free speech.

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» You, sir, are a pompous moron. nm Posted by: JoshuaLudd
» RE: A special response ... Posted by: Lauren
» RE: A special response ... Posted by: sethmo
» RE: A special response ... Posted by: Lauren
The Executive Executes, The Legislature Legislates
Posted by: edgar_michel on Jun 18, 2007 6:59 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The branches of government were kept separate in their respective roles so that neither could become despotic. The founders of this country reasoned that if we had a democracy as soon as one faction gained significantly more control than all the others, a dictatorship denying rights to all others would follow. So they looked upon the House of Representatives as the democratic part of government and realized that this body had to be checked. They also reasoned that if we had an imperial ruler, he or she would quickly seize all power to themselves and we would immediately be ruled tyrannically, so they reasoned that the president's power also needed to be restricted. If government was ruled by a few, or an elite, they would similar to the president seize all power to themselves and we would then be ruled by oligarchy, so they reasoned that the senate too requiered restriction to it's authority. In order to keep all three bodies in check they envisioned the judiciary as the independent body that would interpret the laws made by the House of Representative and the Senate so that there would be no question as to what action the president was to take. Beyond this, the founders saw that power had to be distributed among the states so that power wouldn't be absolutely centrally concentrated lest despotism set in. So the states were given sovereign jurisdiction over matters that involved only the territory of the state, yet they were bound together in matters that affected them all collectively so that one state wouldn't conquer all the other states. In every aspect of the government of the United States there were checks and balances built in. The president was never intended to interpret law, he was only every intended to carry out the will of congress as interpreted by the Supreme Court. Presidential signing statements came about outside the Constitutional framework of the United States and are hence illegal because they compromise the balance of power built into the system. Just because signing statements weren't brought into question prior to George W. Bush's tenure in office, doesn't make them any more legal.

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» Excellent analysis. N/T Posted by: Illiteratilumen
THIS MUST STOP!!!!
Posted by: aussidawg on Jun 18, 2007 7:41 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What is it going to take to convince our sleeping countryfolk to wake up? We are in a nightmare that is soon to become a night terror. Bu$h and everybody associated with this parasite think they own this country and as such are free to do as they wish. We must make certain they realize that we , not they run this country and we have the law behind us to do so. WE can put these criminals behind bars (or better) if we will just do it. However, WE HAD BETTER DO IT AND DO IT FAST!!! Time is running out.

I recommend an article for all to read. This is a review of the book by Michael Chossudovsky entitled "America's War on Terrorism." This is a long review, but is loaded with valuable, awakening information. This article and the book represented by it describe step by step what is happening here in the "land of the free." Read it!!! I insist.

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» Ehhh Cuossudovsky..... Posted by: Illiteratilumen
» RE: hhh Cuossudovsky..... Posted by: aussidawg
» RE: hhh Cuossudovsky..... Posted by: kelly.nickell
» RE: hhh Cuossudovsky..... Posted by: Lauren
» RE: hhh Cuossudovsky..... Posted by: kelly.nickell
» RE: THIS MUST STOP!!!! Posted by: gracefounddog
» RE: THIS MUST STOP!!!! Posted by: kelly.nickell
» RE: THIS MUST STOP!!!! Posted by: aussidawg
» RE: THIS MUST STOP!!!! Posted by: kelly.nickell
» RE: THIS MUST STOP!!!! Posted by: aussidawg
» RE: THIS MUST STOP!!!! Posted by: kelly.nickell
My guess is if only 30% of the 'signing statements' can be associated with ignored laws, it's an...
Posted by: Sojourner on Jun 18, 2007 9:54 PM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...improvement over the feds standard operating procedure. My uninformed speculation is that most of the laws go unenforced most of the time.

I do not intend to defend Bush. But I do believe that the pileup of laws written in order to make legislators look and feel good, and which amount to nothing more than gestures thrown at problems, needs to be simplified rather than elaborated. Therefore the signing statements amount to just another tempest in a teapot.

The administration's job is to enforce the laws. A poor administration does a poor job of it. How is it more harmful to be told where the administration does not plan to enforce laws than to be kept guessing? The issue is a pile of pasteboard and persiflage, to borrow a historic description.

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Impeachment and prosecution now!
Posted by: Col. Jackleg on Jun 19, 2007 1:57 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Enough of this bullshit. When are the feckless Democrats going to do something about this pariah and his accomplices? You got it.....never!

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» RE: Impeachment and prosecution now! Posted by: kelly.nickell
Hello EagleMB?!?
Posted by: themotie on Jun 19, 2007 3:18 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You were talking in another thread about Bush's respect for the law. Why don't we continue that discussion here?

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» RE: Hello EagleMB?!? Posted by: kelly.nickell
Justice Scalia should go back to law school.
Posted by: KeepsonTickn on Jun 19, 2007 4:49 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I love Justice Scalia's logic:
"Since the president's approval is just as important as that of the House or Senate, it seems to follow that the president's understanding of the bill should be just as important as that of Congress." Understanding, to Scalia seems to include xing out provisions Bush has explicitly agreed to by signing the bill.

Does this mean that, if I buy a house, and I am given the contract the other party has already signed, I can simply add a clause revising the contract any way I like before signing it, then hold the other party liable for my changes?

This guy should be impeached along with Bush.

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» To further elaborate Posted by: brunowe
» RE: To further elaborate Posted by: SatanicJamboree
» RE: To further elaborate Posted by: kelly.nickell
More Crazy Talk
Posted by: dlf on Jun 19, 2007 5:42 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Well I guess the remarks following this story will be construed by some as more crazy talk by a fringe group. For anyone who thinks that the NAU is implausible, this story should be a wake up call. Did you read the part where he xed out the border security provision? There is no such thing as the WILL OF THE PEOPLE. This story makes it abundantly clear we have a unitary government.

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It’s Official: Majority of American People Are Suffering From Abject Complacency and Apathy
Posted by: freethink7 on Jun 19, 2007 6:04 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Most Americans just continue to behave as though, ‘oh nothing, oh nothing’ in response to Bu$h tyrannical behavior. I’ve never seen so many people so complacent and apathetic. That’s how this installed unelected puppet president continues to get away with all the constitutional crimes, jurisprudence abuses, and unprecedented assaults on civil freedoms and civil liberties……people are just too indifferent to the myriad of crimes committed by this tyrant. We the people have the power to organize + fire Bu$h Cheney Inc from their jobs in D.C. and imprison them for all the treason + sedition they’ve committed against our country.

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Network media is the problem
Posted by: Trazom on Jun 19, 2007 6:42 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The demographics of the United States is such that a significant, and increasing, portion of the population is reaching age 55 and above, as the first wave of baby boomers starts to retire. The majority of these people do not know how to operate computers much less own a computer, hence their access to alternative news is limited at best. We also have an entire new generation of kids and young adults who, for the most part, are indifferent or apathetic toward their own government. Throw in the Superficial Fake News and Celebrity Glamour fascination that is so entrenched in this culture today and you have a recipe for a country in which most people are severely uninformed and/or misinformed.

The people here at Alternet represent only the slightest minority of the American public, probably on the order of 0.1 to 0.5%., once you account for the groups discussed above. Therefore things stated here do not reach that 99.5% of the population, and never will on the present course.

The media is perfectly complicit in their omission (denial?) of coverage of events regarding our body politic in Washington. Since it is a busines first, and purveryor of honest journalism second (and ethical reporter a distant third), we know what stories will continue to win night after night on the boob tube. We need to figure out how to reverse this course. We cannot effect change until a critical portion of the population becomes enlightened about this administration's actions, and future intentions. We can have all the damning evidence we think we need, and the passion that goes along with it, but coming from this small minority it simply won't amount to too much.

As I replied in a previous post I asked how many times have listeners heard the words "signing statements" mentioned on the nightly news, with regard to despotic intentions and/or constitutional infringement. I counted zero. I remember it mentioned once, quickly after Congress passed its Iraq spending bill complete with interim goals, to which the First Fool nullified with yet another signing statement.

We have a perfect storm brewing in Orwellian terms, as the Media reports all is well, the economy is healthy, and terrorism is being kept at bay. Meanwhile, the Constitution is being denigrated, median income is falling and the middle class is disappearing, more people are losing health insurance, and we are slowly losing our civil liberties and freedoms in the name of security.

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» RE: Network media is the problem Posted by: VannaLaRoche
Positive Grant...
Posted by: Michael Boldin on Jun 19, 2007 6:55 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Constitution was written under what's called "positive grant"

That means, the federal government is only authorized to exercise those powers which are specifically listed in the constitution.

I've read the Constitution and the Bill of Rights plenty of times. I've found absolutely nothing in there which allows the President to do this. It doesn't even mention "signing statements" at all!

Thus, his actions are clearly in violation of the constitution - the law.

Some follow up reading:

"We Must Return to Our Constitution" - click here

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» RE: Positive Grant... Posted by: Trazom
» RE: Positive Grant... Posted by: Lauren
» RE: Positive Grant... Posted by: Trazom
» RE: Positive Grant... Posted by: Lauren
The smirking ape-king
Posted by: willymack on Jun 19, 2007 8:13 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
How fed up are Americans now? Apparently not enough to DO something about the situation. Oh, sure, we complain and loudly grumble to each other, and not nearly enough to those we hired to look after our best interests. In the meantime, our democracy is becoming unravelled-a veto here, a signing statement there while an emasculated Congress cowers in the shadows, the whole thing presided over by a hideous parody of a man who lacks the brainpower to conceive of, let alone, direct our descent into a ruthless dictatorship. How do you like our situation now?

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» RE: The smirking ape-king Posted by: Trazom
» RE: The smirking ape-king Posted by: Lauren
Thankfully we have the Democrats in power
Posted by: Soco on Jun 19, 2007 8:23 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In my commonly sarcastic way I state the obvious yet again...

Just be happy Lieberman isn't the Vice President