|
An Attack on
Democracy
The Bush
White House is the most corrupt we have seen in recent
history.
Dr. Robert Abele
08/31/04 "ICH" The November presidential election is arguably the most
important one in at least fifty years.
As citizens, we are being asked whether or not to
“continue the course” that we are on as a country.
Stated another way, we are being asked whether or not we
want to keep the current regime in power in the White House.
However, a better question for this election year is why
would we want to keep the Bush administration in power, given
their misdeeds these past three years? “Misdeeds” is perhaps an understatement, but whatever
term one uses, the important case to be made is that the Bush
White House is the most corrupt one we have seen in recent
history. By
“corrupt,” I mean that the actions and policies of the Bush
administration are unconstitutional, undemocratic in principle,
unethical, and/or illegal.[i]
Although the misdeeds that characterize this
administration are almost innumerable, I will limit my examples
for sake of space.
I. Unconstitutional Acts
James Madison, the
author of our Constitution, stated that this document is a
sacred trust between the people and the government.
Thus, “every [government] usurpation [of power over the
people] is an encroachment on the private rights not of one, but
of all.” How has
the Bush administration encroached upon the “rights of all”?
The USA PATRIOT Act—This is the legislation pushed through the
Congress immediately after 9/11/01 by Mr. Bush and Mr. Ashcroft.
When the Judicial branch of government drafts legislation
that allows itself permission to spy on its citizens, often
without warrant and without judicial oversight, and to search
and seize the property of its citizens with the same lack of
warrant and oversight, then manipulates that proposal through
Congress instead of relying on the usual period for reading and
debating the law, our democracy is in peril.
One cannot argue that it is needed to “protect us from
terrorism,” not only because one cannot preserve rights by
rejecting them, but also because the dismantling of our
rights-based system is precisely what the terrorists seek to do!
Here are the main rights under attack by PATRIOT:
·
Probable
Cause (the Fourth Amendment)—First, PATRIOT allows
governmental spying on U.S. citizens for “suspicion” only,
which is a direct contravention of the Fourth Amendment
requirement for probable cause. Second, Section 214 states that no warrant is required for use
of devices designed to monitor incoming and outgoing phone
numbers from citizens phones; just “relevance to an ongoing
terrorist investigation;”
·
Privacy
(the Fourth Amendment)—First,
Section 206 allows “roving wiretaps.” Thus, if the FBI is
investigating someone who uses a library computer, any
person who also uses that computer can be monitored by the FBI without
their knowledge or consent. Second, Section 213 permits “sneak-and-peek” searches of
one’s home and/or office by Federal agents, without notifying
the person they were there.
Further, this Section allows delayed notification of
search warrant, and prohibits the person searched from
monitoring what was searched or what was taken’
·
Checks and
Balances between the Judicial, Executive, and Legislative
branches of government, which provide a guarantee that
governmental power will not be consolidated or abused by one
branch. First,
Section 206 rules that no judicial review is permitted of roving
wiretaps. Second,
Section 215 requires a judge to court order seizures of “any
tangible thing” the FBI requests, merely by claiming that it
is “sought for” a terrorism investigation or that it is for “clandestine intelligence activities;”
·
Free Speech
(the First Amendment)—First,
Section 218 permits surveillance of any “U.S. person” for
any criminal investigation, as long as information gathered is
for “a significant purpose.”
Second, Sections 215 & 505 issues gag orders on those
visited by the FBI. Third,
Section 412 allows detention and deportation of any immigrant
who even verbally supports a terrorist organization. Fourth, Section 802 defines “domestic terrorism” as
“acts dangerous to human life that are a violation of criminal
laws…[that] appear to be intended…to influence the policy of
a government by intimidation or coercion.”
II. Circumventing the Principles of Democracy
The Bush administration has circumvented democracy in at
least two particularly horrific ways.
First of all, its secrecy.
Judge Damon Keith stated from the bench, in a ruling
against the use of the PATRIOT Act by the administration that
“democracy dies behind closed doors.”[ii]
By most accounts, this administration has maintained the
highest degree of secrecy of any administration in recent
history. This
includes the following actions taken by Mr. Bush and/or his
administration:
·
withholding the names and treatment of the
prisoners at Guantanamo Bay;
·
barring the press and public from immigration
hearings;
·
most prominently, the extreme secrecy surrounding
the events leading up to 9/11, including the long stonewalling
the administration did to prevent an investigation into
intelligence and other failures leading to 9/11. Even though Mr.
Bush eventually acquiesced to such a panel under political
pressure, he continued to stonewall on providing them timely and
important information;
·
excluding members of Congress from gaining
information they have legally asked for in order to perform
their constitutional duties.
The Bush Whitehouse has told Congress flat out that no
more questions from them concerning its spending of taxpayer
money will be accepted or answered;[iii]
·
the new legislation creating the Department of
Homeland Security forbids disclosure of any information
concerning public health, safety, and the environment that private
industry labels “sensitive.”[iv]
Thus, businesses are now allowed to conceal even the most
minor of safety violations which concern the public health;
·
Vice President Dick Cheney has successfully
blocked public knowledge of his meeting with energy company
lobbyists who were involved with his energy task force;
·
The Vice President refuses to answer questions
concerning the his four heart attacks, and his current health
status. He has
consistently told reporters that he would give them information
on his health, but he never does.
It is fully within bounds that citizens be informed about
the failing health of the second-highest leader in our land;
·
Mr. Cheney’s secrecy concerning the fact that
while he was in charge of Halliburton, the company did oil
business with Iraq, Iran, Libya, Indonesia, Saudi Arabia, and
Azerbaijan. These are all countries that are well known for massive human
rights violations.[v]
Not only that, but Congress had passed legislation
forbidding economic aid to Azerbaijan due to such rights
violations. But Mr.
Bush signed a presidential order overriding the law, and Mr.
Cheney’s company was right back in business there;[vi]
·
Bush tightly controlled the media by bringing
friendly and out of town journalists in to cover his official
doings instead of relying on the usual White House press corps;[vii]
·
The administration’s involvement in the Project
for a New American Century.
It’s first publication came in 1992, and outlined plans
for U.S. hegemony in the world by attacking Iraq, Iran, Syria,
and North Korea, and all they needed was something “like a new
Pearl Harbor;”[viii]
·
Mr. Cheney’s creation of a secret government,
making decisions out of the spotlight and with no accountability
to Congress or to the public;[ix]
·
The White House covering up the Red Cross report
concerning prisoner abuse in Abu Graib, which was delivered to
Mr. Bush a full two months before the pictures that came out
that shook the world. Not
only have they kept that report secret, but they have also
stifled the report from Army Major General Antonio Taguba, which
was presented to the Pentagon in March of this year;[x]
The second
alarming way in which the Bush team has inhibited democracy from
functioning as it should is in its secret
executive orders—Any of the following executive orders can
be researched on www.whitehouse.gov,
or by perusing journalistic articles on them:
·
Postponed public release of thousands of
declassified presidential documents that are 25 years old or
more;
·
stopped the Reagan presidential papers from being
released to the public, even though President Reagan had signed
off on doing so, as required by law;
·
sent hundreds of millions of dollars to religious
organizations with no obligation to show us where the money is
going or how it’s being used;[xi]
·
signed an executive order shifting the approval
needed for use of the Carnivore computer system, used to collect
and store massive amounts of information on citizens from their
Internet Service Provider use, from the Assistant Attorney
General’s office to the field offices, which means easier use
and less judicial oversight;
·
A Canadian citizen was secretly deported to Syria
last year by the U.S. government, where he was beaten and
tortured for ten months before his release. This was done on a
secret presidential “finding” authorizing the CIA to deport
foreigners without due process;
·
order takes the entire court system out of the
process of arrest and detention of alien terrorist suspects;[xii]
·
Removal of information from government websites
concerning “the use of condoms to prevent HIV/AIDS, the fact
that abortions do not increase the risk of breast cancer, Labor
Department statistics on mass layoffs, and budget information
showing state-by-state cuts in federal programs.”[xiii]
·
Placing judges on the bench by fiat when it
becomes clear that they will not obtain congressional approval;
·
Three executive orders expanding whom in his
administration can classify records to make information
unavailable to reporters or the public (e.g. secretary of
agriculture, secretary of health and human services, and the
head of the EPA).
The third, and
perhaps the most chilling, undermining of democracy Mr. Bush has
engaged in concerns his involvement religion.
Siding with the extremists of the so-called
“religious right” (who are neither religious nor right but
rather represent the viewpoints of the equivalent of an American
Taliban), Mr. Bush has systematically excluded all other faith
perspectives from having an influence on his policies, and has
engaged policies calculated to solidify the far-right base of
the Republican Party, which has far more power than its numbers
should allow. For
example:
·
he rejected the plea of not only the pope, but of
many mainstream religious voices in the U.S. and in the world,
not to rush to war in Iraq.
For example, the American Catholic Bishops, Archbishop
Desmond Tutu, Episcopal Bishop of Washington John Chane, and
Shelby Spong, all made appeals that were flatly rejected by
Bush;[xiv]
·
his rejection/limitation of stem-cell research,
opposition to abortion, and his public opposition to gay
marriage are issues focused on by the “religious right;”[xv]
·
continuing with this theme, Mr. Bush is quietly
involvement with the hard-right group “Focus on the Family,”
and joined them in crafting a political move against gay
marriages well before mayors and states began to discuss and/or
act on the question.[xvi]
·
Bush and members of his administration meet with
evangelical Christians (organized into the “Apostolic
Congress” and calling themselves “the Christian Voice in the
Nation’s Capital,” and openly advocating a “one-state
solution” in Israel [i.e. no Palestinian state]), before
formulating or announcing mid-East policies;[xvii]
·
Mr. Bush has allowed religious groups to obtain
federal grants to build centers for religious worship, something
never before done in the history of this country, which
traditionally has respected the First Amendment more than
apparently Mr. Bush does;[xviii]
·
his nearly single-issue litmus test for nomination
of new federal judges of being anti-abortion;[xix]
·
his “faith-based initiatives” which clearly
violate the First Amendment and also steer needed funds away
from those in need;
The fourth way the
Bush administration has undermined democracy is by overturning environmental legislation by fiat, and by replacing scientists and
scientific research with committee members and findings that are
ideologically determined, not scientifically and objectively
researched
·
the Union of Concerned Scientists, with support
from many other organized and unorganized scientists, have
charged the Bush administration with suppressing research and
manipulating science in favor of ideology “on global warming,
air quality, sexual health, cancer and other issues.”[xx]
When the White House denied the charges, a group of
scientists, including 20 Nobel laureates, responded to the White
House denial with a point by point rebuttal;[xxi]
·
Bush has also become known for dumping respected
scientists from governmental panels and replacing them with
political appointees whose opinions are more in line with his
and corporate America’s business ideology.[xxii]
·
Robert F. Kennedy has accused the Bush
administration of drastically changing over 200 environmental
laws to favor corporate and polluter interests;[xxiii]
·
the EPA now does the bidding of corporate America,
and where they do not, Bush simply orders them to do this.
For example, the agency mysteriously killed the EPA’s
planned emergency announcement that 16 billion tons of termolite,
a substance that contains lethal levels of asbestos, had been
mixed with fertilizers and home insulation.[xxiv]
For another example, telling the EPA that carbon dioxide
is not a pollutant that the agency is permitted to regulate;[xxv]
·
his “Clean Skies Initiative” will allow 17,700
older coal-burning plants to continue to pollute by avoiding
having to purchase expensive “scrubbers” to clean their
emissions;
·
the refusal of the Bush administration to sign or
to abide by the Kyoto agreement to reduce carbon dioxide
emissions, which cause global warming, even though the U.S. is
the greatest producer of these emissions, will make it extremely
difficult for the world to avoid environmental catastrophe in
the near future;[xxvi]
·
Bush has also covered up and suppressed his own
scientists’ research into the seriousness of global warming.[xxvii]
For example, it is already known that global warming
kills over 150,000 people a year worldwide. In addition, a German government study states that measures
four times greater than the Kyoto agreement that Mr. Bush
refused to sign will now be needed to stem the tide of global
warming and stop the polar ice caps from melting.[xxviii]
In fact, the chief scientist in England has warned that
global warming is a bigger threat than terrorism, and the
environmental policies of the U.S. President are also worse than
terrorism.[xxix]
·
the Bush administration has announced plans to
scuttle the “Roadless Area Conservation Rule” passed in
January, 2001. This
law limits logging and development where no roads were already
built. When Bush
cuts this law down, his friends in the logging industry will be
cutting down our national forests as well;
·
Bush’s EPA has also dropped investigations into
over 100 power plants and factories for violating the Clean Air
Act, and also dropped 13 cases in which it was determined that
pollution laws had in fact been violated.[xxx]
In response, Democratic senators, attorneys general, and
lawyers from seven Northeastern states are not only pressing for
an investigation, but have sued the Bush administration for
failing to regulate power plant emissions of carbon dioxide;[xxxi]
·
Bush has proposed a new directive, which would
exempt numerous governmental agencies from following
environmental law, under the guise of “national security.”
The plan includes allowing the “degradation of public
resources--such as building new roads through national forests
for use by the border patrol—with no input from the public
whatsoever;”[xxxii]
·
In July of this year, Bush proposed to scrap a
rule “that put nearly 60 million acres of national forest
largely off limits to logging, mining or other development in
favor of a new system that would leave it to governors to seek
greater—or fewer—strictures on road construction in
forests;”[xxxiii]
·
Bush has made an effort to amend the 1973
Endangered Species Act so U.S. companies can import endangered
animals if they pay the country they are taking it from, for
conservation efforts. Renowned
primatologist Jane Goodall calls this effort “terrifying,”
and blames lobbyists from businesses that use animals for
entertainment in the U.S. for these attempts to undo important
legislation;[xxxiv]
·
Mr. Bush said of his energy plan, unveiled in May,
2001, that it would “make this country the world’s leader in
energy efficiency and conservation in the 21st
century.” However, the bill he presented “devotes less than ten
percent of the $25.7 billion in tax breaks to energy
efficiency;”[xxxv]
·
The Bush administration is also in the process of
weakening laws regarding the levels of mercury in the air;[xxxvi]
III. Class wars (economics)
James Madison and
Thomas Jefferson agreed that taxation should be proportional to
one’s share of property, and that the purpose of the tax was
for “the general welfare.”[xxxvii]
As these founders recognized, there is certainly nothing
wrong with people having different levels of income.
But when the tools of government are used to enhance the
standing of those at the top of the economic scale and to
exacerbate the tension-filled gap between the “haves” and
the “have nots,” then government has ceased to live up to
its end of the sacred trust that the people at large put in it.
Here are some of the ways in which Mr. Bush has failed to
live up to his duty to allow general prosperity, preferring
instead to assist the wealthy to become wealthier:
·
He has given massive tax cuts to the wealthy ($726
billion proposed for this fiscal year alone, cut back at the
last minute by more level-headed Republicans who joined with
Democrats to cut that amount), combined with massive spending,
especially for the military, combined on the other side with
massive cuts in government services such as Medicaid, foster
care and adoption programs, school lunch programs, and student
loans.[xxxviii]
The proposed tax cuts would
give more than $93,000 to a family with a million-dollar income,
while half of all taxpayers would receive $100 or less, this
according to the Tax Policy Center of the Brookings Institution.
According to the Financial
Times, the stimulus the cuts can be expected to give to the
economy would be "negligible;" b) in a related item,
the Congressional Budget Office states forthrightly that the
biggest cause of the massive deficit we have accumulated under
Bush is the massive tax cuts for the wealthy;[xxxix]
·
The Bush administration
has claimed that “outsourcing,” that is, the movement of
jobs overseas, is good for the economy.
But a list of the main “outsourcers” in corporate
America just so happens to coincide with the top contributors to
the Bush campaign: American Express, Bechtel, Dell Computers,
Ford, General Electric, Hewlett Packard, and Sallie Mae, to name
just some of them;[xl]
·
The leading Republican
strategist today, Grover Norquist, has made public the economic
plans for the Bush administration and the right-wing ideology. He said the goal is “to starve the beast” (government)
with trillions of dollars in deficits, until, as Bill Moyers
summarizes it, “the United States government is so anemic and
anorexic it can be drowned in a bathtub;”[xli]
·
He has re-classified
low-paying fast-food jobs as “manufacturing jobs” in order
to cover up the massive loss of the latter type of job during
his tenure as President;[xlii]
·
While giving tax cuts,
he opposed giving health care to National Guard members, and
proposed cutting $1.5 billion from funding for military family
housing and medical facilities.
In addition, he has cut $700 million from job training
programs for those recently displaced by the movement of jobs
overseas, and $225 million in funding for youth job training
grants,[xliii]
and;
·
his ideas for funding
education include a cut of $270 million from Pell Grants for
students,[xliv]
a cut of $230 million from vocational and community colleges,[xlv]
a freezing of Teacher Quality State Grants for teacher training,
and an increase in his “No Child Left Behind Initiative” by
elimination of 45 education programs and cutting back 18
education programs; [xlvi]
·
his (failed) attempts to
cut overtime pay for American workers can only be considered a
war on the lower and middle class;[xlvii]
·
Bush’s veteran’s
package includes denials of hundreds of thousands of claims or
“better-off” veterans, $250 annual enrollment fees.[xlviii]
IV.
Moral issues
It is certainly no secret that every President has lied
on occasion to the American people.
But when lying becomes pervasive and thus a modus
operandi for a given presidency, that President and his
administration have failed to set and lead by example of moral
rectitude. Here are
a few of the Bush administration’s serious lies:
·
Bush has claimed that he served a complete term in
the Texas Air National Guard, but records show that Mr. Bush
accumulated no flying experience during the entire year of 1972,
nor is he on the payroll for the third quarter of that year.[xlix]
Furthermore, in Mr. Bush’s annual performance review
while in the service, dated May 2, 1973, it stated “Lt. Bush
has not been observed at this unit” for the past year;[l]
·
Continuing with this theme of his military
service, Mr. Bush stated that he has already released all
records of his military service.
The Washington Post, in response, stated that “no such
information has been released,”[li]
in response to which the administration released documents which
they claimed “proved” Bush served during 1972-1973.
However, the third quarter pay period records were
missing from those documents.
When the New York Times filed a Freedom of Information
Request with the Pentagon to obtain them, the Pentagon said
those records were “inadvertently destroyed,” and that no
paper back-up of them existed;[lii]
·
the untrue charge that
government labor unions were refusing to cooperate in key
homeland security measures;[liii]
·
Mr. Cheney has told
almost too many lies to count, particularly about Halliburton
and during the lead-up to the Iraq war.
John Dean has the best collection of them I have read so
far,[liv]
but here are three that did not make the Dean’s list: i) Iraq
is “the geographic base of the terrorists who have had us
under assault now for many years, but especially on 9/11.”[lv]
Mr. Cheney has apparently forgotten about Osama bin Laden, the
Taliban, and Afghanistan; ii) his insistence that Mohamed Atta,
the head of the 9/11 hijackers, met in Prague with Iraqi
intelligence officials before the attacks, even in the face of
Czech President Havel’s conclusion, along with his
intelligence community, that there is no evidence for this; iii)
Cheney’s doing business with Cayman Islands and with Iran in
defiance of a U.S. ban against such activities.
The Grand Jury is now investigating these
Cheney/Halliburton actions;[lvi]
·
The Bush administration kept
the true cost of Medicare from the country, with prescription
drug cards costing more than they claimed they would, with
evidence that they knew this in advance. Even Richard S. Foster,
the government’s chief analyst of Medicare costs, said that
the White House had participated in the decision to withhold
information that indicated that Mr. Bush’s proposed
legislation would “be far more expensive than lawmakers
knew;” [lvii]
·
Mr. Bush has stated, concerning his tax plan, that
“by far the vast majority of the help goes to the people at
the bottom of the end of the economic ladder,” when in fact,
the Congressional bipartisan Joint Committee on Taxation stated
that households making less than $40,000 a year (i.e. the bottom
half of the “economic ladder”) received only 10% of Mr.
Bush’s tax cut;[lviii]
·
For more, Senator
Charles Rangel has edited a documentation of the 237 most
pernicious and important lies Bush has told.
There are quite a few impressive collections of Bush
lies, and the list is growing.
See also David Corn, The Lies of George W. Bush; Al Franken, Lies and the Lying Liars Who Tell Them; Michael Moore, Dude,
Where’s My Country?; Jim Hightower, Thieves
in High Places. I
have also done a Google search on “Bush lies,” and
“lying,” and it turned up over three million hits!
The second way in which Mr. Bush
has failed as a moral leader include a host of immoral actions
that violate the general sanctions of any given moral code.
These include the following actions:
·
Mr. Bush bilked
the taxpayers of Texas millions of dollars, which he put into
his pocket, through his shady dealings concerning the Texas
Rangers baseball team and their new stadium;[lix]
·
He has rewarded his main corporate supporters by
giving them billions of dollars of business in Iraq;[lx]
·
Mr. Bush regularly has protestors removed from his
sight, from his vicinity, and from his motorcade route, to the
point of having them arrested;[lxi]
·
Bush takes revenge on people who either criticize
or leak even unclassified information to the press;[lxii]
·
he deliberately refuses to count Iraqi civilian
casualties inflicted by our military;
·
his administration has revealed the name of a CIA
agent’s wife, putting her life in danger and her career at an
end, all for retaliation for taking issue with the President’s
lies about Iraq’s attempting to buy “yellow cake” from
Niger for nuclear weapons. This is still “under investigation” by our Justice
Department;
·
The Bush administration has planned to develop
what they euphemistically call “mini-nukes” so that the U.S.
can use nuclear weapons in a future war without destroying the
world. Destroying
even a part of the environment and the people for hundreds if
not thousands of miles around the explosion by radiation is
highly immoral and irresponsible.
It also will lead to a new arms race, something from
which we just emerged;
·
the administration constantly attempts to keep
Americans living in fear and thus quietly submissive to
administrative actions by crying wolf regarding possible
terrorist threats. This is especially disturbing because, in case after case,
after the warning has been made, others come forward to
demonstrate that the administration had no or very little
evidence on which to base its warning.
All the warnings that have been coming out this summer
had little evidentiary basis to sound the alarms they did,
including the so-called “threat to U.S. financial
institutions;”[lxiii]
·
they have obstructed investigators from everything
from the 9/11 Commission to the latest investigation, that of
the leak of the CIA operative’s name (Valerie Plame).
The delaying tactics of the administration on this case
has caused not only a letter from four senators asking the
President what he is doing, but it is raising suspicions about
evidence tampering and legal obstruction of justice.[lxiv]
V. Violations of Constitutional and
International Law: The
Iraq invasion
·
it
is now well known some of the biggest lies and misinformation
Mr. Bush and Mr. Cheney, et. al. used to sell the war;[lxv]
·
Abu Graib, which involves Bush to at least the
degree that he had his lawyer, Alberto Gonzales, send him a
brief showing a legal way around being prosecuted for crimes
violating the Geneva Convention regarding the torture of
prisoners.[lxvi]
Over and above this, however, news now comes out of
President Bush signing off on the torture plans,[lxvii]
and also sitting on videotapes of U.S. soldiers sodomizing young
Iraqi boys.[lxviii]
We have only seen the beginning of this massive scandal,
which, if connected to Mr. Bush, would make him a war criminal;
·
his deliberate ignoring of the civilian casualties
inflicted by U.S. forces;
·
his lies to Congress (an impeachable offense—why
is the media not screaming about this, like they did for
Clinton’s lie about his BJ?), including telling Congressional
leaders that Iraq was developing its nuclear capabilities and
that it was connected to 9/11, so Mr. Bush wanted the Congress
to act quickly, based on his promise that he would provide them
with more information. He
never did. In fact,
the hype that culminated in Colin Powell’s lie-filled speech
to the United Nations has been completely discredited by
numerous articles and authors.[lxix]
They knew full well that Iraq was not connected to 9/11,[lxx]
did not have nuclear weapons program, did not have WMD’s, did
not attempt to purchase uranium from Niger, did not have
significant connections with al Qaeda,[lxxi]
and did not meet with one of the 9/11 hijackers in Prague before
the attack, yet they stated it all anyway. Even the Senate
Intelligence committee, in its report on the intelligence
failures prior to the invasion, concluded that the White House
had “misrepresented” conflicting intelligence claims;
·
blatant disregard of the international community
in pushing for war;
·
ignoring the international laws of war;
·
ignoring the ethical need for a just cause (i.e.
imminent threat) in order to go to war;
·
giving contracts in Iraq to his corporate friends
and campaign contributors.
The list starts, of course, with Halliburton ($7 billion
in Iraq oil contracts), but also includes big donors to the
Republicans like Science Applications International Corporation
(gave approximately $3 million to the Republican Party, and
landed an Iraq contract for $82 million);[lxxii]
·
the administration is covering up the fact that
the U.S. is now also involved in what is called “extraordinary
rendering,” which means that a prisoner arrested in the U.S.
is secretly taken to another country, such as Syria or Jordan or
Pakistan, where torture is routinely done.
They are called “ghost prisoners” because no one
knows their whereabouts. That
the U.S. does this often under the Bush administration is now
becoming news;[lxxiii]
·
Mr. Bush has stated that the U.S. invasion of Iraq
was done “to defend…the credibility of the United
Nations,” when the U.S. rejected the U.N. involvement prior to
and after the invasion;[lxxiv]
·
keep in mind the reports from two well-respected
public servants, former Secretary of the Treasury Paul O’Neill
and former National Security Advisor Richard Clarke, both of
whom have claimed consistently that Mr. Bush planned to attack
Iraq right after 9/11/01.[lxxv]
In addition to these men, British Ambassador to the U.S.
Christopher Meyer said that Bush had made it clear at a dinner
with Prime Minister Tony Blair, on 9/18/01, that he wanted to
attack Iraq.[lxxvi]
The Washington Post has also confirmed this report.[lxxvii]
Also, Senator Bob Graham of Florida stated that a senior
military commander told him in February of 2002 that “we are
moving military and intelligence personnel and resources out of
Afghanistan to get ready for a future war in Iraq.”[lxxviii]
Also, U.N. weapons inspector Hans Blix has consistently
made the same claim; Bush’s order that no media be permitted
to show the flag-draped coffins returning with our dead soldiers
from Iraq;[lxxix]
·
The administration has engaged in economic bribery
of other nations to join “the coalition of the willing” to
send troops to assist in the U.S. invasion and occupation of
Iraq. For example,
Israel was “rewarded” $4-5 billion in military aid for
allying against Iraq; Jordan picked up about $1 billion; Egypt
$1.5 billion; Poland, Hungary, and 15 other countries who sent
troops split $308.1 million.[lxxx]
These are all very serious charges and very serious
issues (my original list of Bush misdeeds that I used to write
this article covers over sixteen pages!).
It would seem clear that when a President and/or his
administration engages in subterfuge and circumventions of
democratic processes on a regular basis, the citizens are left
with little choice but to replace that President.
The possible response to these accusations on the part of
supporters of Mr. Bush would be to attempt to change the subject
by attacking John Kerry or “liberals.”
During discussions of this issue from now to the
election, we cannot allow such failures to respond directly to
the undermining of democracy to be left unchallenged.
Bush supporters owe the American people an explanation as
to what it is that Mr.
Bush has done for the general good, for the majority of people,
that we should give him allowances for the acts he has performed
so far? It is
insufficient in reason to give simplistic or pietistic answers
or to be a single-issue voter (e.g. “He protects us from
terrorism,” or “he is a Christian,” or “he opposes
abortion and gay marriage”).
Such simple answers only bypass the charge we should be
making of Mr. Bush: that he has ignored the Constitution,
undermined democracy, acted immorally, and lost the standing
America has around the world as a moral leader. These issues far outweigh the stands Mr. Bush might have on
any given issue, or any small series of issues.
It is my position that unless America wakes up and gets
this man out of office this time around, it may be too late to
maintain democracy in the future.
Dr. Robert Abele is a professor of philosophy at Illinois Valley
Community College, located near Chicago. He has written articles
on political philosophy and also on ethics and warfare, and is
now in the process of completing a book on ethics and the
invasion of Iraq. He also has a new book entitled A User's Guide
to the USA PATRIOT Act, published by University Press of
America, due out in November.
[i] For
example, character, goals of global dominance, international
law violations, diplomatic arrogance, etc.
2
Detroit
Free Press, 2002.
3 Milbank, Dana. “White House
Puts Limits on Queries From Democrats,” The
Washington Post, November 9, 2003.
[vi] For
more, see John Dean, Worse Than Watergate, Chapter Two.
[vii] See
Elisabeth Bumiller, “Trying to Bypass the Good-News
Filter,” New York Times, October 20, 2003.
[ix] See
Seymour Hersh, “The Stovepipe,” New
Yorker, October 27, 2—3; also David Armstrong, “Dick
Cheney’s Song of America,” Harper’s,
October, 2002. See
also the Washington
Post, “Shadow Government is at Work in Secret,”
March 1, 2002.
[x] Robert
Scheer, “Thread of Abuse Runs to the Oval Office,” The
Los Angeles Times, May 11, 2004.
[xii] On
November 13, 2001, President Bush issued a military order
regarding the “Detention, Treatment, and Trial of Certain
Non-Citizens in the War Against Terrorism.”
Once this presidential determination is made
concerning an individual, the order directs that federal
agents detain that person “at an appropriate location
designated by the Secretary of Defense outside or within the
United States.” Note that the judicial process has been
completely circumvented.
[xiii]
John Podesta, “Need to
Know: Governing in Secret,” in Richard C. Leone, The
War on Our Freedoms, op. cit., Chapter 9.
[xv] Frederick
Clarkston, Eternal Hostility; see also Church
& State magazine for regular detailing of this
claim.
[xvi] See
Church & State,
June, 2004. The
entire issue is devoted to exposing the anti-gay marriage
movement, its roots in the right-wing churches and political
groups, and President Bush’s quiet involvement with them.
[xvii] Rick
Perlstein, “The Jesus Landing Pad,” Village
Voice, May 18, 2004.
most chilling is the comment made by the group’s
director, Pastor Upton, that they represent the
“theocratic” voice in Washington!
[xviii] Eric
Lichtblau, “Bush Plans to Let Religious Groups Get
Building Aid,” New
York Times, January 23, 2003.
[xix] Newsweek,
March 10, 2003.
[xx] Maggie
Fox, “Bush Administration ‘Distorts Science’
Report,” Reuters,
February 18, 2004.
[xxiii] Kennedy
did much more than this.
In a blistering column, he chronicles the horrendous
environmental record of the Bush administration, and accuses
Mr. Bush of being “America’s worst environmental
president…[having] initiated more than 200 major rollbacks
of America’s environmental laws, weakening the protection
of our country’s air, water, public land and wildlife.
Cloaked in meticulously crafted language designed to
deceive the public…,” Robert F. Kennedy, “Crimes
Against Nature,” Rolling
Stone, November 23, 2003.
[xxvi] Geoffrey
Lean, “Melting Ice ‘Will Swamp Capitals’,” Independent
U.K., December 7, 2003; see also Steve Connor,
“’U.S. Climate Policy Bigger Threat to World Than
Terrorism,” Independent
U.K., January 9, 2004.
[xxvii] Paul
Harris, “Bush Covers Up Climate Research,” The
Observer, September 21, 2003.
[xxviii] Geoffrey
Lean, “Melting Ice ‘Will Swamp Capitals’,” Independent
U.K., December 7, 2003.
[xxix] Steve
Connor, “’U.S. Climate Policy Bigger Threat to World
Than Terrorism,” Independent
U.K., January 9, 2004.
[xxx] Eliot
Spitzer, “Regulation Begins at Home,” New
York Times, November 17, 2003.
[xxxi] Richard
A. Oppel Jr. and Christopher Drew, “Senators and Attorneys
General Seek Investigation into EPA Rules Change,” New
York Times, November 7, 2003; see also Seth Borenstein,
“Fewer Polluters Punished Under Bush Administration,
Records Show,” Knight/Ridder/Tribune
News Service, December 9, 2003; see also Michael
McCarthy, “A Year of Extremes Provides Evidence of Global
Warming,” The
Independent U.K., December 3, 2003; see also “A
Pollutant by Any Other Name,” New
York Times, February 22, 2003.
[xxxii] See
“Bush Plan Excludes Public From Environmental Review,” Greenwatch
Today, July 28, 2004.
[xxxiii] Felicity
Barringer, “Bush Seeks Shift in Logging Rules,” New
York Times, July 13, 2004.
[xxxiv] Lisa
Leff, “Primate Expert Calls Bush’s Environmental Record
‘Terrifying’,” Newsday,
October 12, 2003.
[xxxv] The
Daily Mislead,
November 20, 2003.
[xxxvi] “EPA’s
Mercury Proposal: More Toxic Pollution for a Longer Time,”
The Natural Resources
Defense Council, December 5, 2003; see also The Daily Mislead, November 12, 2003.
[xxxvii] See,
for example, James Madison, “Report on Alien and Sedition
Acts,” and Thomas Jefferson’s comments on the Articles
of Confederation.
[xxxviii] Bob
Herbert, “Mugging the Needy,” New York Times, April 3, 2003.
[xxxix] Center
on Budget and Policy Priorities,
January 16 and January 26, 2004.
[xli] Bill
Moyers, “The Fight of Our Lives,” Keynote speech,
Inequality Matters Forum, New York University, June 3, 2004.
[xlii] “In
the New Economics: Fast-Food Factories?,” New
York Times,
February 20, 2004.
[xliii] The
Daily Mislead,
December 23, 2004.
[xliv] Chicago
Tribune, August 4,
2003.
[xlv] Community
College Week,
February 17, 2003.
[xlvi] The
Daily Mislead,
January 7, 2004.
[xlvii] Katherine
Stapp, “Overtime Pay for Millions of Americans in
Peril,” Inter Press
Service, January 15, 2004.
[l] David
Corn, “Beat the Press, The Nation, February 8, 2004.
[li] “Bush’s
Military Record Under Fire,” The
Washington Post, February 4, 2004.
[lii] “Pentagon
Says Bush Records of Service Were Destroyed,” New
York Times, July 9, 2004.
[liii] “c-f”
from David Corn in The Nation.
[liv] See
John Dean, Worse Than
Watergate, , Chapter Two, pages 44-50.
[lv] David
Corn, “The Latest Bush Gang Whoppers,” The
Nation, September 15, 2003.
[lvi] T.
Christian Miller and Peter Wallsten, “Grand Jury Steps Up
Inquiry into Possible Halliburton Ties to Iran,” Los Angeles Times, July 21, 2004.
[lvii] Amy
Goldstein, “Foster: White House Had Role in Withholding
Medicare Data,” Washington
Post, March 19, 2004; see also The
Daily Mislead, July 14, 2004.
[lix] For
more, see John Dean, Worse Than Watergate, Chapter Two.
[lxi] See
“Bush Protestors Arrested,” The Nuclear Register, November 4, 2002, for just one chronicle of
the many arrested for speaking out against Mr. Bush while in
his vicinity.
[lxii] For
one example, see the case of Jonathon C. Randel, who leaked
a nonclassified document to a British journalist.
Mr. Bush had the Attorney General prosecute him on
twenty-two counts of breaking various laws. See Dean, op. cit., Chapter Three.
[lxiii] See
USA Today, August 4, 2004.
[lxiv] Mike
Allen and Susan Schmidt, “Four Senators Criticize Leak
Probe,” Washington
Post, October 10, 2003.
[lxv] It
is very easily to compile an extensive list (I have my own
list), but for a good shorthand version, see John Dean,
ibid., pages 138-140. Dean’s
list includes these gems: 1) Lying about an International
Atomic Energy Committee report that Saddam Hussein was just
“six months away from developing [a nuclear] weapon,”
when no such report existed; 2) claiming that one of the
9/11 hijackers, Mohamed Atta, met with Iraqi intelligence
officials prior to their attack, when there was never a
shred of evidence indicating this; 3) Iraq trained al Qaeda
members, when no one in any intelligence community ever
brought forth this charge or evidence for it; 4) that Iraq
was rebuilding its nuclear weapons facilities, when there
was no evidence that this was true.
[lxvi] The
Washington Post
has covered this story regularly since May, but the latest
installment is on August 4, 2004.
[lxvii] “The
Roots of Torture,” Newsweek, May 24, 2004.
[lxviii] Seymour
Hersh, ACLU speech, quoted in The
Daily Mislead, July 15, 2004.
[lxix] See
David Sirota and Christy Harvey, “They Knew…” In
These Times, August 3, 2004.
For much more detail
on this issue, and a very solid case for impeachment, see
John Dean, ibid., pages 140-156.
[lxx] “CIA
Warned White House that Links Between Iraq and Qaeda Were
‘Murky’,” New
York Times, July 10, 2004.
[lxxi] There
are numerous reports about this lack of a connection, but a
telling story comes from a former CIA analyst who was head
of the “bin Laden unit” of the CIA, in his book entitled
Imperial Hubris: Why the West is Losing the War on Terror.
[lxxii] Cliff
Montgomery, “A Corporate Free-for-All Becomes a
Fee-for-All,” The
Washington Spectator, July 15, 2004.
[lxxiii] See,
for instance, Isabel Hilton, “The 800lb Gorilla in
American Foreign Policy,” The
Guardian U.K., July 28, 2004.
See also Andrew Buncombe and Kim Sengupta, “Secret
Jails Hold 10,000,” New
Zealand Herald, May 15, 2004.
[lxxiv] David
Corn, “Bush’s Latest U.S. Visit: More Misleading,” The
Nation, September 23, 2003.
[lxxv] The O’Neill book is
entitled The Price of
Loyalty; the Clarke book
[lxxvi] “Report
Details Bush-Blair Meeting on Iraq,” Associated Press,
April 4, 2004.
[lxxvii] “U.S.
Decision on Iraq Has Puzzling Past,” The
Washington Post, January 1, 2003.
[lxxviii] His
comments were made in a meeting with the Council on Foreign
Relations, and were quoted in The
Daily Mislead,
March 28, 2004.
[lxxix] Dana
Milbank, “Curtains Ordered for Media Coverage of Returning
Coffins,” New York
Times, October 21, 2003.

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