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June 28, 2007 at 08:10:23

Thanks for Dick Cheney

by Joel S. Hirschhorn     Page 1 of 1 page(s)

http://www.opednews.com


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When someone in high elected office shows the nation how vulnerable our Constitution is, we should be thankful for the wakeup call.  Like many ruthless dictators, evil kings, and monster generals, Dick Cheney is the leading practitioner of the ends-justify-the-means mentality, where only his vision of the desired ends counts.  And if this means disregarding and disobeying the Constitution, torturing prisoners, killing thousands of American soldiers, disrespecting Congress, destroying our environment, embracing the invasion of illegal immigrants, increasing out national debt, and disregarding the will of the vast majority of Americans, so be it.  Serving corporate interests rather than serving the people is Cheney’s brand of patriotism.

 

Cheney’s self-righteous ego is bigger than George W. Bush’s, and what makes Cheney more striking is that he is enormously smarter and more competent than Bush, his token boss.  He is so dangerous and frightening that no impeachment of Bush effort ever stood a chance.  Not as long as “President Cheney” enters your consciousness.  Cheney became Bush’s shield.

 

When reality hits the fan we use the-lessons-learned approach to stay sane.  With his finger-in-the-eye disdain for what anybody else (or history) thinks of him, Cheney offers a far better lesson learned benefit than the stumbles and fumbles of Bush-the-smirker.  Bush is a joke.  Cheney is a monster.

 

Take Cheney’s current view that he is a part of the legislative branch, not the executive, so he does not have to comply with an Executive Order on reporting use of secret materials.  It is wildly inconsistent with his prior claims of executive privilege.  But Cheney has no use for logical consistency.  Only what Cheney wants matters.  (The only law that Cheney regularly obeys is gravity.)

 

When we witness the brazen acts of Cheney and Bush we should envision these types of constitutional amendments. 

 

An amendment could explicitly state that the Vice President is a member of the Executive Branch, and the Office of the Vice President must comply with Executive Orders.  And perhaps we should consider a statement of the criteria that the President can invoke for firing the Vice President with the consent of Congress.

 

And why not consider a different method of breaking ties in the Senate.  If someone from the Executive Branch can do it, then why not someone from the Judicial Branch?  Why not the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court?  Or, better yet, why not make the constitutional solution what is the House uses.  A tie vote means that the question fails.  We could eliminate the position of President of the Senate.

 

As another example, consider the frequent assertion of executive privilege by Cheney and Bush to withhold information that Congress believes it needs.  The Constitution does not provide for executive privilege.  Considering how strong the presidency has become and the predilection to invoke executive privilege, we need an amendment that explicitly says there is no such thing as automatic executive privilege.  Any assertion of it should be presented to the Supreme Court and only it should rule that it is appropriate in a particular case to protect the national interest.

 

As the final example, consider the clear need for an amendment that prohibits the President from using any kind of signing statement to announce and justify not obeying part of a newly signed law.

 

We can give thanks for Dick Cheney just like we give thanks eventually that a catastrophe or disaster makes us stronger in the future.  He has exposed constitutional weaknesses.  The principles that define the best of our nation must be protected through amendments that learn from history.  In particular, how the ingenuity and boldness of people has allowed them to disobey and dishonor those principles.  Dick Cheney sought and achieved power sufficient to make a mockery of our nation’s finest principles and he was enabled by George W. Bush who apparently sought more guidance from his God than from our Constitution.

 

One thing is clear.  History provides little confidence that Congress will propose constitutional amendments that deserve full public discussion.  Now is the time to use what our Constitution offers us: an Article V convention for proposing amendments.  If we are to make our federal government work for the good of we the people, then we require the nation’s first Article V convention – the goal of Friends of the Article V Convention at www.foavc.org.  Why is it now so appropriate?  Because Americans now have so little confidence in Congress, the President, and the Vice President, and because the corruption of politicians by money has reached unprecedented heights.

 

As much as politicians deserve our mistrust, we the people deserve to have an Article V convention.  Politicians fear it because they know the public will support amendments that make the government subservient to us – the sovereign American citizens.  Politicians are not supposed to rule us.  They are so supposed to justly represent us.  But they do not.  They represent the moneyed interests that control them.  As Thomas Jefferson said, “An elected tyranny is not what we fought for.”

 

Our Constitution should not allow the government to make us victims and our nation hated by so much of the world.  That’s what Cheney should teach us.  Now, it’s up to us. 

 

Pray that a petulant Bush does not learn from Cheney, exploit the Constitution by resigning, and create President Cheney.

 

[Joel S. Hirschhorn is the author of Delusional Democracy and a founder of Friends of the Article V Convention.]

 

www.delusionaldemocracy.com

Joel S. Hirschhorn is the author of Delusional Democracy - Fixing the Republic Without Overthrowing the Government (www.delusionaldemocracy.com). His current political writings have been greatly influenced by working as a senior staffer for the U.S. Congress and for the National Governors Association. He advocates a Second American Revolution, beginning with an Article V Convention to propose constitutional amendments.

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part time college professor, close to retirement, married 33 years, living in PA.
oran stewartpart time college professor, close to retirement, married 33 years, living in PA.

I say, "Why bother?"

Isn't it about time to admit that there is nothing we can do about the stiffs in the WH? I've bitched and moaned, now, for six years, and nothing has changed. I'm afraid no one is out there who will do anything; seriously afraid.  Maybe it's about time for me to stop bothering with my discontent; it only hurts me and those around me.

 

OS 

by oran stewart (0 articles, 0 quicklinks, 0 diaries, 12 comments) on Thursday, June 28, 2007 at 3:23:35 PM
 


Brett Paatsch is an Australian born secular humanist with degrees in management and science and an interest in politics. He is a former pro-American that wishes to be pro-American again and thinks the impeachment and repudiation of President George W Bush for the invasion of Iraq in March 2003 is necessary to reestablish trust in American signatures on international treaties and confidence in the global rule of law.
Brett PaatschBrett Paatsch is an Australian born secular humanist with degrees in management and science and an interest in politics. He is a former pro-American that wishes to be pro-American again and thinks the impeachment and repudiation of President George W Bush for the invasion of Iraq in March 2003 is necessary to reestablish trust in American signatures on international treaties and confidence in the global rule of law.

I can relate to this feeling Oran

I am Australian, I can't vote in US elections, don't have a representative and yet since 9-11 have had what might be considered an unhealthy for me interest in events that I have little influence over.

People who don't care about that which is not immediately impacting on them or theirs are probably happier but they are also likely to do next to nothing until community neglect comes to them along with everyone else.

One of the consequences of democracy and freedom is that it really does empower and it really does diffuse responsibility and many unfortunately are either unwilling or unable to take part responsibly in the affiairs of their nation or of the world.

The only people that can lawfully hold US Presidents and Vice Presidents to account are US citizens through the representatives, systems and processes.

Americans have through their legal processes excepted American nationals form prosecutions that most other nations could face in the international courts.

We non-Americans either have to make our appeals to you Americans to act on our behalf and interests as well as yours in upholding the right and preventing regression or lawless adventuring on the part of your leaders or we have to act outside the law.

Your politicians, just like the politicians of most countries that run for office on three or four year terms only have to satisfy the local voters that they are better than the alternative for the local voters. There is a systemic bias built into nation governments that acts against good long term governing on the part of the citizens of all countries.

American is probably not worst that other western countries but the harm it does is more serious because it is stronger.

I read recently that Obama (a person that seems to me to be an excellent individual) said that he would not pursue impeachment because impeachment was for "grave" offences. The only reason that Obama can dismiss what Bush and Cheney have done on the international stage as not grave offences is because he knows that American voters know that the international stage doesn't count. That Americans don't value Iraqi deaths like the value American deaths.

Obama knows the the invasion of Iraq was illegal. He knows that Bush broke his oath of office to defend the constitution of the US and its laws when he gave the order to invade against the constraints of resolution 1441 and the UN Charter which are part of US law because the Charter was ratified. Yes - its a bit of a long train of reasoning but its not beyond Obama to do it that chaining and to see that Bush has done great harm.

Obama like so many other politicians can't get too far ahead of the people he wants to lead, and yet the people are saddly for the most part so far behind themselves in terms of their understanding of the constitution and the UN Charter and the relationships of those things with their well being that they do not or cannot find the will to act in their own interests.

America and the world in which it sits is too big for the minds of average Americans that have the power as citizens to steer her wisely and as a consequence America is becoming a threat to the rest of the world.

Its tragic really, as the root failure of the best historical experiment to establish government of the people by the people for the people is looking likely to fail because of those people. Its looking like government of the people by the people for the people can only work internationally.

It worries me that if current trends continue good people in currently friendly countries will find themselves at war with other like in world war 2 or worse in the future. It seems like only pain teaches the voting public to pay enough attention to the rule of law (UN Charters etc) to stave off wars. Without pain people just don't get it and the burden of citizenship isn't something they can handle responsibly.

I hope your Senators Leahy, Warners and Conyers and the others do not flinch in their oaths and article 6 obligation to support the constitution. Cheney and Bush won't flinch - they can't, they'll know that accountability has no upside for them and plenty of downside. 

Americas trajectory in recent times (re-electing Bush after Iraq and no WMDs, Nancy impeachment off the table Pelosi weighing up the realpolitik as though only American voters factor even when unjust invasions have taken place) has been towards despotism and right now if I was betting with detachment from somewhere like Mars I'd be betting the America and Americans (very like the Germans of the 20s and 30s) are about to take the world to a third world war sometime in the next couple of decades if indeed the slide in that direction hasn't already irreversibly begun.  

So Oran, please, do what you can. Everyone that surrenders, surrenders their share of the responsibility to someone else and the rule of law is already something that most people think of only when they need it.  

by Brett Paatsch (0 articles, 2 quicklinks, 17 diaries, 784 comments) on Friday, June 29, 2007 at 5:27:38 AM
 

 

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