A Republic or an Empire?
by
Paul Craig Roberts
by Paul Craig Roberts
Gentle reader,
did you know that, in April, President Bush went to Stanford University
to speak to the Hoover Institution fellows at the invitation of
former Secretary of State George Shultz but was not allowed on campus?
The Stanford students got wind of it and blocked Bush’s access to
the campus. The Hoover fellows had to go to Shultz’s home to hear
Bush’s pitch for war and more war.
A person might
think that it would be national news that Stanford University students
would not allow the President of the U.S. on campus. It happened
to be a day when hundreds of prospective freshmen were on campus
with their parents, many of whom joined the demonstration against
Bush. I did not hear or read a word about it. Did you? I learned
of it from faculty friends in June when I attended Stanford’s graduation
to witness a relative receive her degree. The June 16 edition of
The Stanford Daily reprinted its April 24 report of the episode.
At the graduation,
I was struck by the preponderance of Asians, Africans, and Hispanics
in the student body. Stanford is truly an international university,
a noted difference from the days when I was a member of the university.
Looking at the list of graduates in human biology, which I understand
to be a pre-med degree, I count 24 white and Jewish males out of
a graduation class of 206. That means 88.35 percent of the graduating
class in human biology was Asian, African, Hispanic, and female.
If white males were a "preferred minority" protected by
quotas, they could certainly bring a discrimination suit against
Stanford.
My count could
be off a bit as a result of the modern practice of giving girls
boys’ names and giving boys girls’ names, but on the whole I was
able to resolve the gender issue by consulting middle names. One
thing is clear. At Stanford the days of white male hegemony are
over.
To my readers
I want to thank you for your emails and occasional old-fashioned
letters delivered by US mail. I have learned that I am loved by
some and hated by others. I continually hear interesting things
from readers. Recently I heard from a Russian that Bush’s slogan,
"you are with us or against us" comes from a communist
song dating from 1950, "The one who is not with us is against
us." The slogan was part of the propaganda used to suppress
dissent.
Now for the
main subject of the column. Martin Sieff is one of the few remaining
American reporters who actually report facts instead of covering
up for Bush. Sieff is elated at the US Supreme Court ruling blocking
the use of military tribunals to punish alleged "terrorists."
Sieff says the ruling means that "the United States is still
a republic, not an empire."
I hope Martin
Sieff is right. But why will Bush pay any more attention to a Supreme
Court ruling than he does to the US Constitution, US law, Congress,
and public opinion? Bush and his criminal government have decided
that they can use 9/11 and the fear and mindlessness it has brought
to the American people to elevate the executive branch into its
own world of unaccountable power. As Congress, the Democratic Party,
and the media have all collapsed in the face of Bush’s power grab,
why will Bush pay any attention to a court ruling?
The Supreme
Court, like the Pope, hasn’t any divisions or a police force with
which to arrest Bush. Moreover, as one reader pointed out, the majority
decision against Bush was written by an 86-year-old man. His decision
shredded the incompetent and utterly ignorant ruling of the lower
court written by John Roberts, the new Chief Justice of the Supreme
Court.
An
86-year-old man hasn’t a lot of time left to protect our rights
from executive power grabs. All Bush has to do is to appoint one
more Federalist Society tyrant to the Court, and he will have a
second rubber stamp of his dictatorial ways. He already has Congress,
which has made it clear that it is perfectly comfortable with Bush’s
high-handed behavior. Democrats are too intimidated by 9/11 and
the phony "war on terror" to offer any opposition.
With
the electronic voting machines supplied by Republican firms and
programmed by Republican operatives, Bush can control election results.
Don’t bet very heavily that Americans will regain the constitutional
protections and democratic accountability that they enjoyed in the
20th century.
July
10, 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
Paul
Craig Roberts Archives
|