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Saturday, June 23, 2007 - 9:26pmSanction this postReply
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http://www.capitolhillblue.com/cont/node/2192

Maybe, just maybe, it's time to pull the plug on this failed democratic republic called The United States of America.

Turn off the life support. Disconnect the IVs. Bring in the priest for last rites. The US of A is brain dead with no chance for revival.

Some 40 years ago, I lost friends in the heat and squalor of Vietnam. They died in a war that never needed to be fought, supporting a cause that didn't exist for a government that lied to justify the fight.

A few years later, as a young reporter, I wrote about the attempts of Richard Milhous Nixon to destroy the Constitution of the United States. He failed because the system worked and both Congress and the Supreme Court exercised their powers in our system of checks and balances to restore order to a faltering nation.

"The lessons of Vietnam and Watergate provide a roadmap for the future," I wrote at the time. "With luck, our leaders can use that roadmap to avoid the mistakes of the past."

Now, 33-and-a-half years after the Vietnam War came to an end without resolution and Nixon left office without honor, I'm losing family of friends in the heat and squalor of Iraq. They die in a war that never needed to be fought, supporting a cause that doesn't exist for a government that lied to justify their sacrifices.

Another abuser of the Constitution occupies the Presidency, a man whose lust for power surpasses Nixon and who poses a far greater danger to the Constitution.  This time, however, the system is failing to protect America. George W. Bush rides roughshod over a compliant Congress. The Supreme Court, packed with knee-jerk right-wingers who helped put Bush in office in 2000, abdicated its role long ago.

For a moment - a brief one to be sure - we held out hope that the voice of the voters might be heard after the November midterm elections. But turning out the corrupt Republican leadership of Congress was not enough. Democrats who control the House lack the balls to take Bush on and the razor-thin majority in the Senate can't even get a vote together on a non-binding resolution.

Democrats Thursday unveiled a plan to bring troops home by the end of 2008 but Bush is already threatening a veto if the bill gets out of Congress, which is probably won't.

In the meantime, we've learned that Bush lied about both the size and cost of his "troop surge" that he claims will bring peace and stability to Iraq. Not only are we sending more troops in than he said, at a cost far higher than he projected, his own general on the ground says they will have to stay longer than he told the American people earlier this year.

Over at the U.S. Department of Justice, an contradiction of terms if we over heard one, the FBI has lied repeatedly about its use, and abuse, of the rights-robbing USA Patriot Act to obtain information on U.S. citizens. I find it disturbing that in all their rhetoric about restoring America to the people, the new Democratic leadership of Congress doesn't say a thing about repealing the USA Patriot Act, an ill-conceived bill crafted by former attorney general John Ashcroft, and hastily voted into law after 9/11 by shell-shocked representatives and Senators who later admitted they hadn't even read it.

Today we learn that the federal government, at the direction of the White House, routinely ignores the Freedom of Information Act and hides more and more government documents under a cloak of secrecy.

Both Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid joined with Republicans to vote not only for original passage of the USA Patriot Act but also to reauthorize it. Bush has used the act to justify spying on Americans, wiretapping without warrants and strip away the last protections of the Constitution.

While Congress slept and the Supreme Court looked the other way, the Bush administration has gone on its merry way seizing absolute control of the United States government. He fired independent thinking U.S. attorneys, replacing them with lockstep right-wingers who share his view of totalitarian control of government. He ignores the laws of Congress, issuing "signing statements" that give him the power to do whatever he wants. When the federal courts declared his wiretapping of Americans illegal, he ignored the ruling and appointed an in-house review panel that declared the program "legal."

It doesn't matter who controls Congress. Congress is a dead institution, ruled by timid legislators who no longer exercise any real role in the governing of this nation.


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Tuesday, July 3, 2007 - 8:12pmSanction this postReply
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Chris, maybe I'm an optimist, but I wouldn't give up hope just yet. Thankfully we have term limits, right?

Your post made me think of an interesting characteristic about how we view our democracy in a historical sense. Now stay with me for a second. The three greatest presidents we've had are usually considered George Washington, Abraham Lincoln and FDR. The first for laying the framework of our democracy and the ladder two for deftly handling major crises. And I would agree that they handled those crises very well and desrve much praise. But in turn, these three men, our three greatest presidents, all dramatically increased the size and/or power of government... more than any other president. Washington created the Federal government after a decade of a loose confederation, albeit this was decided before he took office. Abraham Lincoln vastly increased federal powers while simultaneously weakening state rights, albeit for a very worthy cause. And FDR brought an influx of socialism into our society that has increased ever since, albeit with good, yet flawed intentions. By increasing the power of the government over the years, they have made it much easier for our government to become corrupt and start these pointless wars and tear up the constitution and lie to us and keep those lies hidden. Maybe we don't need to scrap the system, we just need a cultural awakening. We need to realize the unintended consequences of continuing the policies of these great leaders who created these policies to deal with a crises, not to last forever.


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Post 2

Wednesday, July 4, 2007 - 8:10amSanction this postReply
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Andrew, Objectivists would disagree with your assessment that FDR was a great president who restored the American economy after the disastrous contraction of 1929 to 33, if that is what you're suggesting. They would argue that, on the contrary, Roosevelt's New Deal hampered the recovery and prolonged the effects of the Great Depression. See in this connection, The Roosevelt Myth by John Flynn and FDR's Folly by Jim Powell.

- Bill

Post 3

Thursday, July 5, 2007 - 1:01amSanction this postReply
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Bill, I essentially agree with you about the New Deal. My understanding is most historians believe it did relatively little if anything to resolve the Great Depression. When I referred to FDR as "great" I was describing how most historians view him. However, I do believe he did a very good job during World War 2. While I usually believe it isn't our place to get involved in other country's wars, aside by perhaps a mediating role, World War 2 was an exception IMO. There was too much at stake to let Hitler and Hirohito continue their rampage. However, I think we mostly agree on the subject; FDR's economic policies were not effective.

Post 4

Thursday, July 5, 2007 - 1:14amSanction this postReply
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Amity Shlaes' recent The Forgotten Man is a history of the Depression focussing on the uncertainty engendered by the capricious acts of both Hoover and Rooseveldt. Shlaes is a cogent free-market analyst.

Ted

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