Bush’s Willing Legislators: The Case for Impeachment, and Why It
Won’t Happen
by
Paul Craig Roberts
by Paul Craig Roberts
DIGG THIS
The case for
impeaching President George W. Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney
is far stronger than the case against President Bill Clinton or
the pending case that drove President Nixon to resign. With Republican
control of Congress, especially of the House where impeachment must
originate, it is hardly surprising that impeachment of the Republican
Bush administration is a dead letter.
What is surprising
is that conservatives with a long tradition of adulation for the
US Constitution and Bill of Rights have not been up in arms against
the Bush regime’s all out assault on the foundation of America’s
political system. Instead, the case for impeachment has come from
the left-wing. This weakens the case, because it can be portrayed
as a partisan political move instead of a last ditch attempt to
save the Constitution.
In Impeach
the President: The Case Against Bush and Cheney, edited
by Dennis Loo and Peter Phillips, left-wing professors, journalists,
and activists present a 300-page twelve-count indictment.
It is for the
most part a sound indictment. A conservative American constitutionalist
who loves his country can find little in the case for impeachment
to which to take exception.
Despite the
strength of the case for impeachment, I do not think it will happen,
because Bush has convinced Americans that his crimes against truth,
the US Constitution, and the Geneva Conventions are necessary measures
in the "war against terrorists." As long as Americans
understand 9/11 as an attack on America by "Islamo-Fascism,"
the executive branch will have wide latitude in usurping liberty.
Seymour Hersh
in his book, Chain
of Command, asks: "How did eight or nine neoconservatives
redirect the government and rearrange long-standing American priorities
and policies with so much ease? How did they overcome the bureaucracy,
intimidate the press, mislead the Congress, and dominate the military?
Is our democracy that fragile?"
"How indeed?"
ask the editors of Impeach the President. Their answer seems
to be that the Democrats have been intimidated and "truth and
facts have been barricaded off from reaching most of the American
people." The editors have faith in the American people to do
the right thing if only they can find out the truth.
It is refreshing
to see that the left-wing, unlike the neoconservatives, believes
in the American system. However, as Claes Ryn indicates in his book,
America
the Virtuous, it would appear that the American system has
been eroded over the decades by the rise of the new Jacobin ideology
known as neoconservatism.
Leon
Hadar and William
S. Lind point out that the Democrats are as neoconized as the
neoconized Republicans. There is no difference.
At a recent
conference hosted by the journal, The National Interest,
it was the Democrat, Will Marshall, president and founder of the
Progressive Policy Institute who sounded like Richard Perle and
William Kristol, not Republican Stefan Halper who served in the
Reagan administration. Halper presented a devastating critique of
Bush’s neocon foreign policy.
The problem
is not that the Democrats are intimidated. The problem is that the
Democrats are part of the problem. The editors of Impeach the
President indirectly acknowledge this fact when they report
that Congress "looked the other way" when Bush acknowledged
that he lied to cover up his felony of illegally spying on US citizens
and declared the real criminal to be the NSA official who blew the
whistle. Democrats, no less than Republicans, have permitted the
Bush regime to violate the separation of powers and the rule of
law. A branch of government that no longer defends its power, is
a branch of government that no longer believes in its power. Just
as the Reichstag faded away for Hitler, the US Congress has faded
away for the Bush administration.
Claes Ryn is
correct when he says a change of mind has occurred. The Constitution
and the political system based on it are on the ropes because the
players no longer believe in it. They believe in executive power
to act forcefully in behalf of "American exceptionalism."
Civil
libertarians rely on the judiciary to defend Constitutional rights,
but the Supreme Court has been compromised by Bush’s appointments
of Roberts and Alito, men who believe in "energy in the executive."
Without support from Congress, the judiciary cannot protect civil
liberty. With the passage of the recent detainee and spy bills,
Congress has allied itself with the Bush regime against civil liberty.
Beliefs
are more important than institutions. Michael Polanyi wrote that
if people believed in the principles of Stalinism, democracy would
uphold Stalinism. If people believe in American hegemony, they will
not complain when barriers to hegemonic actions are removed. If
people believe fighting terrorism is more important than civil liberty,
they will lose civil liberty.
What America
needs to refurbish is its beliefs. Without renewing our beliefs,
we cannot renew our civil liberties and hold government accountable.
October
13, 2006
Paul
Craig Roberts [send
him mail] wrote the Kemp-Roth bill and was Assistant Secretary
of the Treasury in the Reagan administration. He was Associate Editor
of the Wall
Street Journal
editorial page and Contributing Editor of National
Review. He
is author or coauthor of eight books, including The Supply-Side
Revolutin (Harvard University Press). He has held numerous academic
appointments, including the William E. Simon Chair in Political
Economy, Center for Strategic and International Studies, Georgetown
University and Senior Research Fellow, Hoover Institution, Stanford
University. He has contributed to numerous scholar journals and
testified before Congress on 30 occasions. He has been awarded the
U.S. Treasury's Meritorious Service Award and the French Legion
of Honor. He was a reviewer for the Journal
of Political Economy
under editor Robert Mundell. He
is the co-author of The
Tyranny of Good Intentions.
Copyright
© 2006 Creators Syndicate
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