Vote USA 2004

28
Dez
2005

Shock, awe and Hobbes have backfired on America's neocons

By Richard Drayton

The American imperial strategists invested deeply in the belief that through spreading terror they could take power. Neoconservatives such as Paul Wolfowitz, Richard Perle and the recently indicted Lewis "Scooter" Libby, learned from Leo Strauss that a strong and wise minority of humans had to rule over the weak majority through deception and fear, rather than persuasion or compromise.

http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article11398.htm

Bush Calls Republicans "Goddamned Traitors"

GOP Disillusionment With Bush Grows
http://www.capitolhillblue.com/artman/publish/article_7913.shtml

December 28, 2005

While die-hard Republicans try to present a unified front in support of President George W. Bush's evasion of the law and Constitution in ordering nonstop spying on Americans, splits are showing in the GOP ranks.

"What's wrong with it is several-fold," former GOP Congressman Bob Barr says of the domestic spying. "One, it is bad policy for our government to be spying on American citizens through the National Security Agency. Secondly, it's bad to be spying on Americans without court oversight. And thirdly, it's bad to be spying on Americans apparently in violation of federal laws against doing it without a court order."

Barr, one of the most conservative members of Congress when he served in the House, leads an increasing group of disenchanted Republicans who have had enough of Bush's misuse of the law and encroachment of civil liberties that are supposed to be protected by the Constitution. He has joined with fellow conservative firebrand Phyllis Schlafly and the ultra-liberal American Civil Liberties Union to fight renewal of many of the rights-robbing provisions of the USA Patriot Act.

And he's not alone. Republican Senators Chuck Hagel of Nebraska, Larry Craig of Idaho and Olympia Snowe of Maine question Bush's actions along with Pennsylvania Republican Arlen Specter, chairman of the powerful Senate Judiciary Committee.

"I have grave doubts as to its applicability," says Specter. "The President's actions raise very fundamental questions about privacy and the Bill of Rights."

Republican strategists tell me House Speaker Dennis J. Hastert and Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist are fighting to hold GOP dissension over the President's policies in check but they may not be able to keep the anger from spilling over into public view.

Frist, hampered by questions over his insider stock sale of Hospital Corporation of America holdings, couldn't keep GOP anger from helping derail Bush's push to make the USA Patriot Act a permanent law of the land.

"The White House is particularly pissed at Frist," says one longtime GOP consultant. "They want him out as majority leader and a more hardball leader in the style of Tom DeLay in his place."

Bush is also angry with Craig, a conservative who joined with Democrats in a filibuster to defeat permanent renewal of the Patriot Act. As a meeting recently, Bush referred to Craig as "a goddamned traitor" and told the National Republican Senatorial Committee to start recruiting someone to run against the Idaho Senator in 2008.

Such anger against those who dare oppose him is typical for a President who all too often launches into obscene tirades when his policies are questioned. Bush, on many occasions, has called political opponents "traitors' and, in private, refers to Senate Judiciary Chairman Arlen Specter as a "lily-livered bastard."

Craig, however, is unfazed by all this and says the Patriot Act "doesn't do enough to protect the civil liberties of innocent Americans."

And while Criag, Hagel, Snowe and Specter are willing to speak out publicly about the illegal actions of a President who is a member of their own party, other Republicans stick to grumbling in private - not surprising given the President's reputation to waging wars on revenge against those who oppose him.

"Bush may be under siege but he is still the President," says political scientist George Harleigh, who served in the Nixon Administration. "He still has the power to reward those who back his policies and punish those who do not."

Another political scientist, the University of Virginia's Larry Sabato, says Bush has problems and knows it.

"Things are bad," Sabato says of Bush's situation. "Really bad." Sabato says you can tell that Bush knows this because it is "written all over" Bush's face when he appears in public.

So he has a message for the President.

"The lesson is obvious, Mr. President: You're a lot closer to Nixon than you are to Eisenhower, Reagan, and Clinton. And that's not where you want to be. Nixon's second term ended rather badly, as you will recall."


Informant: Bigraccoon

ACLU Calls For Special Counsel

[please forward widely]

The ACLU ran the following advertisement in the December 22, 2005 edition of The New York Times:

View Enlarged
http://www.aclu.org/images/bushnixonwiretappingnytad.jpg

View PDF
http://www.aclu.org/pdfs/bushnixonwiretappingadvertisementinnyt.pdf

LEARN MORE

ACLU Letter Calling for Special Counsel
http://www.aclu.org/safefree/general/23184leg20051221.html

ACLU Requests Agency Records
http://www.aclu.org/safefree/spying/23150prs20051220.html

FOIA Request to the National Security Agency
http://www.aclu.org/safefree/spying/23143lgl20051220.html

FOIA Request to the Department of Justice
http://www.aclu.org/safefree/spying/23148lgl20051220.html

FOIA Request to the Central Intelligence Agency
http://www.aclu.org/safefree/spying/23147lgl20051220.html

Learn More About Government Spying
http://www.aclu.org/spyfiles/

TAKE ACTION

ACLU Calls for Special Counsel: Add Your Voice
https://secure.aclu.org/site/Advocacy?pagename=homepage&id=347&page=UserAction


Informant: root

King George W. ?

Fox News
by Martin Frost

12/27/05

Recently I have been trying to figure out who President Bush reminded me of. Was it Richard Nixon with his willingness to break the law to hold onto the presidency? Was it FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover who bugged Martin Luther King Jr. and anyone he considered to be a political enemy? And then it struck me. President Bush most closely resembles King George III of England. You remember him -- he's the guy whose high-handed rule led to the American Revolution. I went back and re-read our Declaration of Independence. [and the Constitution and Bill of Rights] ... And there it is in black and white: the fourth amendment. Let's take a moment to look at the exact words of the fourth amendment to the Constitution adopted more than 200 years ago...

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,179777,00.html


Informant: Thomas L. Knapp

A shocking contempt for the law

New York Daily News
by Errol Lewis

12/27/05

Although he likes to talk about the God-given blessings of liberty, President Bush should be judged by his actions, not his words -- and his actions show a man who has violated the civil liberties of Americans and must be checked. The shocking revelation that Bush has personally ordered secret wiretaps for years without court approval are part of a White House policy of placing the President above the law. 'The President of the United States needs to have his constitutional powers unimpaired, if you will, in terms of the conduct of national security policy,' said Vice President Cheney last week. Bush's power grab runs counter to the Constitution's elaborate system of checks and balances, which requires most significant presidential actions to be approved by Congress or the courts -- even on crucial questions of war and peace under emergency conditions. All the more reason Congress, which is considering renewal of the USA Patriot Act, should let the law expire...

http://www.nydailynews.com/news/col/louis/story/377966p-321097c.html


Informant: Thomas L. Knapp

NSA sends out spyware

Security Pro News
by John Stith

12/27/05

Scandals continue runs [sic] rampant through the nation over recent admissions by the federal government of eavesdropping. The issue has tuned into an argument over presidential powers. One aspect to this argument focuses on the Internet world. The NSA uses spyware as part of their electronic eavesdropping network...

http://tinyurl.com/bxg35


Informant: Thomas L. Knapp

NSA spied on UN diplomats

AlterNet
by Norman Solomon

12/27/05

Despite all the news accounts and punditry since the New York Times published its Dec. 16 bombshell about the National Security Agency's domestic spying, the media coverage has made virtually no mention of the fact that the Bush administration used the NSA to spy on U.N. diplomats in New York before the invasion of Iraq. That spying had nothing to do with protecting the United States from a terrorist attack. The entire purpose of the NSA surveillance was to help the White House gain leverage, by whatever means possible, for a resolution in the U.N. Security Council to green light an invasion. When that surveillance was exposed nearly three years ago, the mainstream U.S. media winked at Bush's illegal use of the NSA for his Iraq invasion agenda. Back then, after news of the NSA's targeted spying at the United Nations broke in the British press, major U.S. media outlets gave it only perfunctory coverage -- or, in the case of the New York Times, no coverage at all. Now, while the NSA is in the news spotlight with plenty of retrospective facts, the NSA's spying at the U.N. goes unmentioned: buried in an Orwellian memory hole...

http://www.alternet.org/columnists/story/30143/


Informant: Thomas L. Knapp

Luttig blocks Bush's detainee dodge

Reason
by Jacob Sullum

12/28/05

On criminal justice and national security issues, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit is widely considered the most government-friendly federal appeals court. So when a 4th Circuit panel rebukes the Bush administration for its handling of an accused terrorist, in a decision written by a judge who was on the president's Supreme Court short list, even the president's most ardent supporters have to wonder what's going on. What's going on is that President Bush's broad view of his own powers and his disregard for the other branches of government have provoked a backlash that goes well beyond the carping of partisan Democrats. Even a court that was prepared to uphold the president's authority to detain suspected terrorists as 'enemy combatants' is not prepared to let him submit his actions to judicial review only when he feels like it...

http://www.reason.com/sullum/122805.shtml


Informant: Thomas L. Knapp

Pentagon snooping fits state's post-9/11 pattern

San Mateo County Times

12/27/05

President Bush's authorizing warrantless wiretaps within the United States grabbed headlines last week, but a pattern of domestic snooping stretches back to California and the weeks after 9/11. Almost daily, it seems, new revelations emerge about domestic surveillance programs. U.S. News & World Report reported Friday that the government has been secretly monitoring radiation levels at mosques and other private Muslim buildings in six U.S. cities outside California. The New York Times reported Thursday that undercover city police had infiltrated political protest groups in New York City. A week earlier NBC News reported that the Pentagon had assembled a 400-page database listing 'threats' from domestic protesters, including the Quakers. The document listed 1,500 'suspicious incidents' over 10 months in 2004 and 2005. An eight-page excerpt posted on the MSNBC Web site includes six entries in California, including protests at military recruiting offices at the University of California's Berkeley and Santa Cruz campuses...

http://www.insidebayarea.com/sanmateocountytimes/localnews/ci_3346887


Informant: Thomas L. Knapp

Censuring Bush Requires Citizens' Help

John Nichols writes that as President Bush and his aides scramble to explain new revelations regarding Bush's authorization of spying on the international telephone calls and e-mails of Americans, the ranking Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee has begun a process that could lead to the censure, and perhaps the impeachment, of the president and vice president.

http://www.truthout.org/docs_2005/122805K.shtml



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