The Real Foley Scandal is Much Bigger than Foley
By Dave Lindorff
01/04/06 --Information
Clearing House -- It's a sad commentary on the state of American
democracy, on the instincts of the American citizenry, and on
the standards and judgment of the American news-media that the
unsavory advances of a pathetic Florida congressman can have the
nation in high dudgeon, while the ramming through of a patently
illegal piece of legislation undermining a crucial 13th century
civil liberty (habeas corpus), and the Fourth and Eight
Amendments of the constitution, and the secret planning for an
illegal and catastrophic attack on Iran, both merit almost no
complaint or mention.
Far be it from me to complain if Rep. Mark Foley's sexual
obsession with teenage boys ends up sinking Republican hopes for
hanging onto the House and Senate. But how sad that it would be
if it is this, and the cover-up of his crimes by the Republican
leadership, that undoes the Bush administration, when its real
crimes are of such grandeur and seriousness?
How are we to compare seeking to screw an underage youth with
totally screwing the Constitution? How are we to compare secret
email solicitations with a secret plot to attack a nation of 23
million that poses no immediate threat to the U.S.?
How are we to compare the Republican Party's cover-up of a
member's efforts to corrupt young pages with the same party's
conspiracy to cover up the Bush administration's ineptness and
possible foreknowledge of the 9-11 attacks, and of the campaign
of lies and misinformation it used to drum up hysteria for an
illegal and totally unwarranted invasion of Iraq?
How are we to compare the media feeding frenzy over the Foley
scandal with the profound silence about Bush's Iran invasion
planning, and with the deliberate brownout about information
regarding a growing popular movement to impeach the president
for his crimes?
And finally, how to we to compare the public revulsion over
Foley's indiscretions with the widespread acceptance or, or even
support for abuse of American captives in the War in
Afghanistan, the Iraq War, and the so-called "War" on Terror,
which has included rape, sodemy, sexual humiliation and torture
of all kinds, and murder--especially when it is known that the
vast majority of those captives were either guilty of nothing
but being in the wrong place at the wrong time, or of simply
being honest fighters for their respective countries, deserving
of decent treatment under the Geneva Convention, and of a fair
hearing into the propriety of their detention?
What kind of nation have we become?
At least the Foley saga makes it clear why the farcical
impeachment of Bill Clinton for his extramarital escapade moved
forward through the House to a Senate trial, while George Bush,
whose crimes far exceed those of any president before him,
including Richard Nixon, and place the whole American experiment
in jeopardy, has not even faced censure, much less a bill of
impeachment.
Democratic Congressional leaders Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid
should be ashamed of themselves for leaping so boldly to the
attack over Foley's crime and the Republican leadership's
cover-up, while continuing to assert that there will be no
effort to impeach the president for his own crimes even if they
manage, with Foley's assistance, to wrest control of the House
November 8.
The American media should be ashamed of themselves for wallowing
in swill, when there is a cancer in the White House that is
attacking the very foundations of the nation.
The American public should be ashamed for its sheer inanity and
inattention to the responsibilities of citizenship.
Dave Lindorff <dlindorff@yahoo.com> has been working as a
journalist for 33 years. Author, with Barbara Olshansky, of The
Case for Impeachment: Legal Arguments for Removing President
George W. Bush from Office (St. Martin's Press, June 2006), he
is also the author of three earlier books--This Can't Be
Happening! Resisting the Disintegration of American Democracy
(Common Courage Press, 2004), Marketplace Medicine: The Rise of
the For Profit Hospital Chains (Bantam, 1992), an investigative
report on the for-profit hospital industry, and Killing Time: An
Investigation into the Death Row Case of Mumia Abu-Jamal (Common
Courage Press, 2003), the only independent examination of this
important capital case. Visit his website
http://www.thiscantbehappening.net/
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