Bush Is No Conservative
by
Paul Craig Roberts
by Paul Craig Roberts
President
Bush passes himself off as a conservative Republican and a born-again
Christian. These are disguises behind which Bush hides. Would a
Christian invade another country on false pretenses, kill tens of
thousands of innocent civilians, and show no remorse or inclination
to cease the aggression?
Long-time Republican
policy-wonk Bruce Bartlett recently published a book, Impostor,
in which he proves that President Bush is no economic conservative,
having broken all records in spending taxpayers’ money and running
up public debt.
Were Bush merely
another big spender, his presidency wouldn’t differ from other pork
barrel administrations, but Bush’s radicalism goes far beyond spending.
Bush supports outsourcing American jobs, and he has taken an irreverent
approach to the U.S. Constitution.
Bush bears
no resemblance to a political conservative. A political conservative
does not confuse government with country. Patriotism means loyalty
to country. Bush, however, demands allegiance to his government:
"You are with us or against us!" Critics of the Bush administration
are branded "unpatriotic" and even "treasonous."
Loyalty to
country means allegiance to the Constitution, the Bill of Rights
and the separation of powers. It does not mean blind support for
a president, an administration, or a political party.
The separation
of powers and civil liberties that were bequeathed to us by the
Founding Fathers are the protectors of our liberty. Bush, who swore
on the Bible that he would defend and uphold the Constitution, has
made it clear that he will not let the Constitution get in the way
of expanding the powers of his office.
Bush has over-ridden
a number of protections in the Bill of Rights. The right to assemble
and to demonstrate has been infringed. The Secret Service now routinely
removes protesters from the scene of Bush political events. Many
unthinking Americans go along with this authoritarianism because
they don’t agree with the protesters, but once the right is lost,
everyone loses it.
Bush has ignored
habeas corpus and claims the unconstitutional power to arrest and
detain people indefinitely without a warrant and without presenting
charges to a judge. This is the most dangerous abuse of all, because
whoever is in office can use this power against political opponents.
Many unthinking Americans are not concerned, because they think
this power will be used only against terrorists. However, as the
Bush administration has admitted, many of its detainees are not
terrorists. Most are innocent people kidnapped by tribal leaders
and sold to the U.S. for the bounties paid for "terrorists."
Bush has refused
to obey statutory law, specifically the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance
Act (FISA). Bush claims that as commander-in-chief he has the right
to ignore the law and to spy on Americans without a warrant. Many
unthinking Americans are unconcerned, saying that as they are doing
nothing wrong they have nothing to fear. This attitude misses the
point in a large way. If a president can establish himself above
one law, he can establish himself above all laws. There is no line
drawn through the law that divides the laws between the ones the
president must obey and the ones he need not obey.
FISA does not
interfere with government spying for national security purposes.
Secrecy is protected, because the court of federal judges that issues
the warrants is secret. Moreover the law allows the government to
spy first and then come to the court for a warrant. The purpose
of the warrant is to be sure that the government is spying for legitimate
purposes and not abusing the power to spy on political opponents
for nefarious purposes.
When presidents
sign a bill passed by Congress that they think might be interpreted
in ways that could impinge on the powers of their office, they add
a "signing statement" to protect traditional presidential
powers. Under Bush this practice has exploded. Bush has used signing
statements considerably in excess of all previous presidents combined.
Moreover, Bush uses the statements not to protect president powers,
but to nullify acts of Congress, such as Republican Senator John
McCain’s law against torture. Bush is using signing statements to
turn the presidency into a dictatorship in which the executive is
not accountable to laws passed by Congress. The next step is simply
to announce that the executive is not accountable to elections either.
Bush’s
government is the first in our history in which there are no dissenting
voices and no debate. Uniformity of opinion is more characteristic
of a dictatorial government than a conservative one. Bush’s government
is all of one mind, because all important positions are held by
neoconservatives.
Neoconservative
is a deceptive term. It means "new conservatives," but
there is nothing conservative about neocons. Neoconservatives believe
in imposing their agenda on other countries the antithesis of American
conservatism.
In
short, real conservatives believe in conserving the Constitution,
government accountability, and civil liberties, and avoiding foreign
entanglements. Judging by its behavior and its statements, the Bush
administration stands completely outside the conservative tradition.
March
29, 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 was Assistant
Secretary of the Treasury in the Reagan administration. He is the
co-author of The
Tyranny of Good Intentions.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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