Gore Is Right
by
Paul Craig Roberts
by Paul Craig Roberts
Former vice
president Al Gore gave what I believe to be the most important political
speech in my lifetime, and the New York Times, "the
newspaper of record," did not report it. Not even excerpts.
For the New
York Times, it was a nonevent that a former vice president and
presidential candidate, denied the presidency by one vote of the
Supreme Court, challenged the Bush administration for its illegalities,
rending of the Constitution and disrespect for the separation of
powers.
So much for
"the liberal press" that right-wingers rant about. If
a "liberal press" exists, the New York Times is
certainly no longer a member.
The Washington
Post had a short report on Gore’s address at Constitution Hall,
but the newspaper, if that is what it is, managed to water down
the seriousness and urgency of the message that Gore brought to
the country with sneers.
Gore’s address
is the first sign of leadership from the Democratic party in six
years. This alone makes it a major news event. But not even his
own party took notice. According to reports, only one Democratic
senator, Dianne Feinstein (CA) was in the audience. One would have
thought the entire Democratic congressional delegation would have
turned out in support of Gore’s challenge to Bush’s extraordinary
claims of power.
The lack of
an opposition party makes the media vulnerable to intimidation by
a dictatorial-minded administration.
The New
York Times ownership suppressed for one year the leaked information
in the paper’s possession that the Bush administration was violating
the Surveillance Act and was spying on Americans without court warrants.
Had the New York Times not placed a gag in its reporter’s
mouth and suppressed the story, Bush may have gone down in defeat
as the new Richard M. Nixon. Clearly, the New York Times
is failing the obligations of a free press.
Bush is angry
at the New York Times and at the government officials who
leaked the story that Bush illegally spied on American citizens.
Both may be prosecuted for making Bush’s illegal behavior public.
By ignoring Gore’s speech, is the New York Times signaling to Bush
that the newspaper is willing to be a lap dog in exchange for not
being prosecuted?
With the US
media now highly concentrated in a few corporate hands, has the
Democratic Party reached the conclusion that opposition is no longer
possible?
Once Bush places
Sam Alito on the Supreme Court, he will have a high court majority
friendly to his claims that his executive powers are not constrained
by congressional statutes or judicial rulings. Once a president
is held to be above the law, whether for reasons of his role as
commander-in-chief or any other, he can no longer be held accountable.
Conservatives
should fear this more than anyone. The separation of powers and
our civil liberties are our most precious property rights.
They are our patrimony from the Founding Fathers. We are stewards
of these rights, which we hold in trust for our descendants. How
can any conservative fail to realize that Bush’s attack on these
rights is the ultimate attack on property? It is astonishing to
watch conservatives wave the flag while they are transformed into
subjects to be dealt with as presidential authority decides.
Gore
challenged the American people to step up to the task of defending
the Constitution, a task abandoned by the media, the law schools,
and the Democratic and Republican parties. If we fail, darkness
will close around us.
January
18, 2006
Dr.
Roberts [send him mail]
is
Chairman of the Institute for Political Economy and Research Fellow
at the Independent Institute.
He is a former associate editor of the Wall Street Journal,
former contributing editor for National Review, and a former
assistant secretary of the U.S. Treasury. He is the co-author of
The
Tyranny of Good Intentions.
Copyright
© 2006 Creators Syndicate
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