Are We Experiencing the Last Days of Constitutional Rule?
by
Paul Craig Roberts
by Paul Craig Roberts
DIGG THIS
The Bush administration’s
greatest success is its ability to escape accountability for its
numerous impeachable offenses.
The administration’s
offenses against US law, the US Constitution, civil liberties, human
rights, and the Geneva Conventions, its lies to Congress and the
American people, its vote-rigging scandals, its sweetheart no-bid
contracts to favored firms, its political firing of Republican US
Attorneys, its practice of kidnapping and torturing people in foreign
hellholes, and its persecution of whistle blowers are altogether
so vast that it is a major undertaking just to list them all.
Bush admits
that he violated the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act and spied
on US citizens without warrants, a felony under the Act. Bush has
shown total disrespect for civil liberty and the Constitution and
has suffered rebukes from the Supreme Count. The evidence is overwhelming
that the Bush administration manufactured false "intelligence"
to justify military aggression against Iraq. The Halliburton contract
scandals are notorious, as is the use of electronic voting machines
programmed to miscount the actual vote.
The chief-of-staff
to Vice President Cheney has been convicted for obstructing justice
in the outing of a covert CIA officer. Proof of torture is overwhelming,
and the Bush administration has even had the temerity to have permissive
legislation passed after the fact that permits it to continue to
torture "detainees." The Sibel Edmonds and other whistle
blower cases are well known. The Senate Judiciary Committee has
just issued subpoenas to Justice (sic) Dept. officials involved
in the scandalous removal of US Attorneys who refused to be politicized.
Yet the Democrats
have taken impeachment "off the table." Many Democrats
and Republicans and a great many Christians can contemplate illegal
military aggression against Iran, but not the impeachment of the
greatest criminal administration in US history. Far from being scandalized
by what the entire world views as an unjust invasion and occupation
of Iraq by the US, leading Democratic and Republican candidates
for the 2008 presidential nomination rushed to inform the Israel
Lobby, AIPAC, that they, if elected, will keep US troops in Iraq.
The previous
occupant of the White House could not escape being impeached by
the House of Representatives for lying about a consensual Oval Office
sexual affair. President Nixon and his vice president, a saintly
pair compared to Bush-Cheney, were both driven from office for offenses
that are inconsequential by comparison. Liberals branded Ronald
Reagan the "Teflon President," but the neoconservatives’
Iran-Contra scandal was a mere dress rehearsal for their machinations
in the Bush regime.
What explains
Bush-Cheney invulnerability to accountability? Perhaps the answer
is that Bush has desensitized us. Like kids desensitized to violence
by violent video games and movies and pornography addicts desensitized
to sex, we have become desensitized by the avalanche of Bush-Cheney
crimes, lies, and disdain for Congress, courts, and public opinion.
Our elected
representatives, if not the American people, now regard as normal
such heinous actions as war crimes, the rape of the Constitution,
self-serving use of government office, and the constant stream of
lies and propaganda from the highest offices of the executive branch.
Perhaps that
is what disillusioned foreigners, who once looked with hope to America,
mean when they say that America does not exist anymore. If the notion
has departed that the highest political offices in the land are
supposed to be occupied by people who are honest and faithful to
their oath to the Constitution, then we are far advanced on the
road to tyranny.
In
future history books, will Bush-Cheney mark the transition of the
United States from constitutional rule to the unaccountable rule
of the unitary executive who cancels out Congress with signing statements
and silences critics with the police state means that are now part
of the US legal code?
March
20, 2007
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 Revolution
(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.
He is also coauthor with Karen Araujo of Chile: Dos Visiones
– La Era Allende-Pinochet (Santiago: Universidad Andres Bello,
2000).
Copyright
© 2007 Creators Syndicate
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