Why
do the Democrats, with control
of both the House and Senate
since last year’s elections,
continue to twiddle their
thumbs over the policies and
practices of a corrupt president?
Yes, they did spearhead a
bill through the House that
requires a withdrawal of troops
from Iraq by April, 2008,
a measure that media propagandists
dutifully offered as having
some significance. But those
who take the time to carefully
read legislation realize that
this was but another empty,
cynical gesture; the latest
expression of “bipartisan”
meaninglessness designed solely
to placate an increasingly
disgruntled booboisie. Even
in the unlikelihood of the
bill being signed by the president
– assuming a similar proposal
passes the Senate there
does not appear to be sufficient
Congressional support for
it to override his veto.
But
Mr. Bush’s signing or non-signing
of such legislation would
not restrain his continuing
the mayhem and slaughter visited
upon Iraqis who do not fully
appreciate their “liberation.”
The bill contains a number
of provisos, such as the keeping
of a sufficient number of
soldiers to help train Iraqi
troops, to protect U.S. government
properties, and to fight terrorists.
The judgment as to when such
conditions exist, and what
numbers of troops would be
necessary to deal with such
problems, would, of course,
remain in the hands of Mr.
Bush. In other words, this
bill would leave the president
in precisely the same position
he now enjoys, with this added
benefit: he could rationalize
his policies in terms of carrying
out the express will of Congress!
Serious
critics of both Mr. Bush and
the Democrats ask why the
latter do not undertake the
impeachment of the former.
Nancy Pelosi, whose every
word and gesture belie the
allegedly oppositional role
of the Democrats, announced,
immediately after the 2006
election results, that the
impeachment of Mr. Bush was
not a matter the Democrats
would pursue with their newly-gained
power. “Why not?”, many asked,
particularly since Congress
had been eager to impeach
Bill Clinton for his far-lesser
offenses. Should a man who
lied America into an unprovoked,
criminal attack that has thus
far produced a million deaths,
be more favorably treated
than a man who lied about
his sexual behavior in the
White House? The few intelligent
minds remaining in this intellectually
benumbed society continue
to ask this question.
If
one takes the trouble to examine
the matter from the perspective
of the machinations that dominate
all political behavior, the
answer becomes apparent. Though
Republicans and Democrats
have their personal and minor
policy differences, they are
in agreement on one basic
point: their “bipartisan”
support for the preservation
and aggrandizement of the
power of the state. They understand
– as do members of the mainstream
media – that their principal
obligation is to serve the
well-being of the political
power structure that long
ago laid uncontested claim
to the ownership of modern
society.
The
interests of Democratic and
Republican officials alike
are best served by the maximization
of political power. If “government”
is defined as an agency enjoying
a monopoly on the lawful use
of force within a given territory,
what politically ambitious
person would not want to enjoy
as much of that power as he
or she can muster? And since
such a purpose not only suits
the interests of the ruling
establishment, but defines
its existence, a symbiotic
relationship between these
two groups is easily fashioned.
Because
the state and its de facto
owners thrive on the exercise
of force, any circumstance
that enhances the power
of government will be embraced
and eagerly pursued. This
is the meaning behind Randolph
Bourne’s classic observation
that “war is the health of
the state.” It also explains
the well-orchestrated fervor
over global warming or any
other dire threat du jour.
Likewise, anything that diminishes
state power will be resisted
by all who have a vested interest
in the exercise of such authority.
At its base, this is what
accounts for the refusal of
the political establishment
and its news media to acknowledge
the existence of Ron Paul’s
candidacy. Paul is persona
non grata to these forces
for one reason alone: his
insistence upon drastically
reducing state power.
Because,
as Acton reminded us, power
is a corrupting influence
and, as such, its excesses
can dissipate the public sanction
upon which its continued exercise
depends, the state must occasionally
perform cosmetic surgery upon
itself in order to restore
its image. Thus, civil liberties
groups may be successful in
getting the courts to enjoin
some minor prohibition (e.g.,
a statute criminalizing flag-burning),
not out of any innate defense
of individual liberty, but
to create the appearance that
the state is a force that
can be tamed by a reasoned
dedication to principle. In
such ways does Boobus Americanus
get lulled into the passive
mindset that allows state
power to retain its popular
image as a latent but controllable
system.
But
what events or conditions
are appropriate for this cathartic
exercise? If there is a growing
popular disaffection for governmental
excesses, to what ritualistic
remedies might the establishment
resort without, in the process,
posing a threat to the power
base upon which it is is dependent?
The exercise of monopoly powers
can often prove embarrassing
to the state which must, for
the sake of not looking foolish
or unprincipled, resort to
superficial hygienic measures.
When
Bill Clinton’s social life
became an embarrassment to
the establishment, his impeachment
had the aforementioned cleansing
consequences without, in the
process, threatening the power
structure. Lying about one’s
sexual behavior – particularly
when conducted in the inner
sanctum of state power (i.e.,
the Oval Office) – is not
an activity that is either
essential to, or enhances,
the exercise of state power.
Thus, Clinton could be impeached,
and public respect for the
presidency restored without,
in the process, depleting
the coercive authority of
the state. For the same reason
can the likes of “Scooter”
Libby, Lynndie England, Jack
Abramoff, et al., be offered
up in sacrifice to the purgative
needs of the state.
The
Iraq war – both as to its
genesis and conduct – has
likewise proven an embarrassment
to the established order.
The lies, deception, forged
documents, and corporate-state
financial corruption that
have defined this undertaking,
have sent public respect for
President Bush as well as
Congress into free-fall. The
state cannot long endure such
humiliation. But what can
be done about it? Impeaching
Bill Clinton was relatively
easy, because state power
was not threatened in any
way. But in the case of George
W., his malefactions
go to the essence of power.
He has dismantled any semblance
of constitutional government,
with its “separation of powers,”
into a “unitary presidency”
which, in any other society,
would correctly be labeled
a “dictatorship.” Nor does
Mr. Bush make any pretense
to the contrary, referring
to himself as “the decider”
and having, on more than one
occasion, expressed his preference
for a dictatorship, “just
so long as I’m the dictator.”
President
Bush feels not the least bit
constrained by such niceties
as the Bill of Rights, nor
of the power of Congress to
legislate regarding matters
of which he disapproves. He
will sign legislation and
then state his intentions
to selectively enforce, or
to ignore altogether, statutory
provisions enacted by Congress.
He has also announced his
intentions to attack – with
nuclear weapons, should he
desire to use them – any nation
he has unilaterally selected
as “terrorist.” Should even
the slightest squeak of protest
be offered to his despotic
practices, he will play to
the peanut gallery by invoking
“the troops,” or “terrorism,”
or the phrase that his would-be
successor, Rudy Giuliani,
has made the entirety of his
campaign: “9/11.” He has elevated
himself, with little or no
objection from most Americans,
to the status Louis XIV once
declared of himself: “I am
the state.”
Don’t
think that any of this has
gone unnoticed or unappreciated
by either the owners of the
political apparatus, or the
politicians and government
officials who are allowed
to play on it. With only token
objection, Mr. Bush has greatly
expanded the exercise of arbitrary,
unrestrained executive power
and, in so doing, ended any
pretense of a system of constitutionally-defined
government. With the idea
of an imperial presidency
so readily accepted by most
Americans, the owners and
managers of the political
order are reluctant to advocate
any actions that might threaten
this newly-gained source of
power.
We
have already seen, in the
so-called Republican “debates,”
how eager so many of their
presidential hopefuls are
to emulate the war-making
practices of Mr. Bush. Nor
do most of the Democrats show
any dispositions for a restrained
American state. I can imagine
Al Gore drooling over the
prospects of becoming “the
decider” of matters related
to global warming, or Hillary
Clinton envisioning herself
as the “dictator” of health
care to the American people.
The
thought of impeaching Mr.
Bush thus poses a major dilemma
to all members of the political
establishment. If the deceit,
corruption, criminality, and
downright stupidity of his
administration have so embarrassed
the system as to endanger
its continued approval, is
it possible to rehabilitate
its image by any means short
of impeachment? But since
his impeachment would necessarily
implicate the over-grasping
for power that the rest of
the political order would
love to exercise on behalf
of their own ambitions, dare
any such hearings be undertaken?
Thomas
Jefferson got it right when,
in 1819, he observed: “Experience
has already shown that the
impeachment the Constitution
has provided is not even a
scarecrow.” Those who seek
or want to hold onto their
existing power are not about
to condemn the man who has
done so much to extend its
reach.
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