07/03/06 "Information
Clearing House" -- --And so we sit,
shackled by self-imposed chains of fear, captivated
by shadowy forms that move discordantly across the
walls of our perception. Once again we are eager to
accept appearance for reality. The Supreme Court
ruling last week rejecting George Bush's military
commissions to try Guantanamo detainees casts a huge
shadow on the wall. Many are saying it not only
curbed Bush and Cheney's unlimited presidential
power grab, but absolved us of the responsibility of
having to do anything about it.
Everybody's talking about this stunning victory for
democracy. That'll show Bush that he doesn't get to
decide everything. The
New York Times
opined the victory would "likely force negotiations
over presidential power." In a
separate editorial,
"A Victory for the Rule of Law," the
Times
wrote the decision "is far more than a narrow ruling
on the missue of military courts. It is an important
and welcome reaffirmation that even in times of war,
the law is what the Constitution, the statute books
and the Geneva Conventions say it is -- not what the
president wants it to be."
The
Washington Post
chimed in with,
"For five years, President Bush waged war as he saw
fit. If intelligence officers needed to eavesdrop on
overseas telephone calls without warrants, he
authorized it. If the military wanted to hold
terrorism suspects without trial, he let it...Now
the Supreme Court has struck at the core of his
presidency and dismissed the notion that the
president alone can determine how to defend the
country."
The
Post's David Ignatius
writes, "The Hamdan
ruling should be a cause for celebration, at home
and abroad, because it demonstrates that the
self-correcting mechanisms of American democracy
remain healthy." Thanks to checks and balances from
the courts, Congress and the press, Ignatius
believes "this administration's mistakes are being
reversed."
And you have to smile at the
Post's
wonderfully talented
Eugene Robinson,
whose relief was palatable when he wrote, simply,
"Finally. It seemed almost too much to hope for, but
the Supreme Court finally called George W. Bush onto
the carpet yesterday and asked him the obvious
question: What part of 'rule of law' do you not
understand?"
Such giddiness -- wishful thinking -- can almost be
excused when you consider this is the first time in
more than five years Bush has been confronted with a
single check or balance. Almost. The media's refusal
to delve into the shadows and ferret out the reality
behind them is cowardly, dishonorable -- a blot on
the Fourth Estate. Anyone who thinks this Straussian
pack of jackals whose thirst for power borders on
madness will back up and adhere to the rule of law
or obey the Geneva Conventions doesn't know Jack
about George. Or Alberto. Or Donald.
The Court's ruling offers no relief to the more than
450 prisoners serving life sentences at Guantanamo,
nor does it address the hundreds -- perhaps
thousands -- of those detained without charge in
Orwellian Room 101 prisons in other countries. These
poor creatures are being held like caged animals in
countries infamous for torture without legal
consequence. They are of no further use to Bush.
They cast no shadow on Congressional or media radar
screens.
Guantanamo Bay is but a mere scab on the corrupt
boil of secret CIA "rendition" operations. In a
revealing Jan. 14, 2005
piece in the UK
Guardian, Jonathan Steele writes that one CIA
officer told the
Washington Post, "The
whole idea has ecome a corruption of renditions.
It's not rendering to justice. It's kidnapping."
Steele says, "The administration sees the US not
just as a self-appointed global policeman, but also
as the world's prison warder. It is thinking of
building jails in foreign countries, mainly ones
with grim human rights records, to which it can
secretly transfer detainees (unconvicted by any
court) for the rest of their lives -- a kind of
global gulag beyond the scrutiny of the
International Committee of the Red Cross, or any
other independent observers or lawyers." Since then,
with The Decider's enthusiastic approval, Donald
Rumsfeld, Alberto Gonzales and the CIA have done
exactly that.
So, what was the Supreme Court really up to in its
shadowy 5-3 decision that did not challenge Bush's
policy of indefinitely detaining enemy combatants --
the worst of the worst -- forever, if need be,
without access to due process? It was simply telling
him it was time for him to cover his ass by forcing
Congress to make tribunals legal and then he could
continue to do whatever the hell he wants. It
provided a distraction from the torture, murder and
suicides that have become hallmarks of the
Guantanamo Bay gulag and of the United States
itself. It placated the media, and calmed things
down for the upcoming elections. Democracy is alive
and well. Why change horses in the middle of the
stream in a time of war?
When news of the ruling broke, a tight-lipped
Decider stared woodenly into the cameras, saying
only that he would look at the findings of the court
"very seriously," while working with the Congress to
continue the tribunals. Bush watchers, however, know
that behind the shadow of this concession lies the
stubborn insistence that he is the
Commander-in-Chief; a war president who is not just
above, but outside the law. Bush is prone to brag
that he is the most powerful man in the world and,
as such, will accept no limits on his power. Back
off? Cut and run? Not likely.
The
"Military Order"
Bush issued two months after 9-11 concerning
detention of non-citizens and their trials, if any,
by military tribunals in his war on terror remains
in effect. In that order, Bush flatly states that
any non-citizen whom
he determines from
time to time in writing caused -- or even "aims" to
cause -- adverse effects on the US will be detained
and will "not be privileged to seek any remedy" in
any court of the United States or any court of any
foreign nation or any international tribunal.
The Congress was dragged reluctantly from the
shadows to perform a nonpartisan role foreign to
them, that of oversight. The Republicans chose
instead to attack the "traitors" on the Supreme
Court and the cowardly "cut and run" Democrats who
are on the side of the terrorists.
Kansas Senator Pat Roberts,Chairman of the Senate
Intelligence Committee and 9-11 Commission cover-up
chief, was angry and shouted indignantly at CNN's
Wolf Blitzer, "The Supreme Court gave the protection
of the Geneva Conventions to people who don't
qualify -- the Supreme Court made a pact with Al
Qaeda -- it ursurped presidential authority!"
The Democrats scrambled to assert their total
alligience, not to the US Constitution and the rule
of law, but to The Decider, and promised to give him
everything he wants to continue his perpetual war
against enemy combatant plotters and planners and
killers.
And so it goes. We are oblivious to the reality of
impending martial law, strict media censorship, and
the vanishing power of any government entity over
The Decider and his minions. We are blissfully
unaware that we have been transplanted into another
realm -- a dark place from which there is no escape
-- and nothing to do but sit here and watch the
hideous shadows on the wall.
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