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Time for change's Journal
Posted by Time for change in General Discussion: Presidential
Mon Feb 18th 2008, 10:30 PM
Imagine going back to the days when women couldn’t get safe abortions. Imagine an America without a Bill of Rights, where environmental protection is unconstitutional, where affirmative action is unconstitutional, where there is no separation between
I am not very enthusiastic about either of the two remaining Democratic presidential contenders, as I believe they are both too conservative for what our country needs today. Nevertheless I find abundant reasons to vote for either of them in the general election against John McCain (or any other Republican candidate). I have described some of my reasons here. But perhaps the most important reason is the long standing damage to our Supreme Court (and therefore our country) that will result from a single additional “fundamentalist” justice added to the current block of four.

John McCain has gone to great lengths in recent months to assure the conservative base of the Republican Party that he is one of them. If he is elected president there will be no better way to drive home that point than to appoint another radical authoritarian conservative justice to the Supreme Court.

The current radical conservative block, consisting of Thomas, Scalia, Roberts and Alito, are only 59, 72, 54, and 58 years old, respectively. One more young addition to that block could result in a solid majority for the radical authoritarian conservatives, lasting a couple of decades, and perhaps much longer if they get two additions instead of one. John Paul Stevens, a moderate Republican, is 87 years old, and some question the health of 75 year old Ruth Bader Ginsberg. Who knows what another 4-8 years of Republican rule will bring?


The current radical conservative USSC block is worse than “fundamentalist” or “strict constructionist”

There are many who refer to the current radical conservative block on the USSC as “fundamentalist” or “strict constructionist”. That gives them credit that they don’t deserve. The term “fundamentalist” or “strict constructionist” implies a judicial philosophy, which none of them appear to have.

Consider, for example, their insistence that the right of corporations to donate unlimited amounts of money to political campaigns is protected by the free speech clause of our First Amendment. That is quite a stretch for so-called “strict constructionists”. Or consider their insistence that it is unconstitutional for Congress to create regulatory agencies, even though our Constitution clearly gave Congress the right to enact laws. Or consider the ridiculous “unitary executive” theory that many of them have recently promulgated, paving the way for executive tyranny. Nowhere does our Constitution give such powers to our president.

No, these people have no judicial philosophy. Rather, they act primarily as enablers of the extreme conservative wing of the Republican Party. Their only “philosophy” is to make whatever rulings are necessary to protect wealthy and powerful corporations and individuals at the expense of the American people, or to pander to the religious right. Constitutional lawyer Cass Sunstein explains:

Mr Sunstein shows that fundamentalists have been wildly inconsistent in applying constitutional history, referring to it only when it fits their policy goals. Too often, he says, their interpretation neatly fits only the agenda of the extreme edges of the Republican Party's right wing rather than any reasonable view of history.

And John Dean, in “Broken Government – How Republican Rule Destroyed the Legislative, Executive and Judicial Branches”, explains how Republican Presidents have used these hypocritical judges to advance their agenda:

Corrupting the independence and impartiality of the federal judiciary has been a priority of Republican presidents, who have devoted four decades to selecting primarily judges and justices with a radical conservative political philosophy. As a result these Republican-appointed jurists, who now constitute the prevailing majority, are no more objective and open-minded on countless issues that regularly come before the federal courts than the Republican National Committee.


Specific areas of Constitutional law likely to be overturned by the addition of one more “fundamentalist” justice to the USSC

John Dean, after consulting with other experts on Constitutional law, discusses the following areas of Constitutional law that are likely to be overturned by any further enlargement of the block of radical conservative justices to our USSC. Let’s consider some of these, along with what the current block of radical conservatives has to say about some of them:

The right of women to choose an abortion
Dean says that Roe v. Wade would either be overturned or so limited as to be meaningless. Here is what some of the four have had to say on the subject:

Scalia, speaking to academics at the University of Freiburg in Switzerland in 2006, said that he hopes Roe v. Wade will be overturned.

Thomas and Scalia dissent in Planned Parenthood v. Casey: “We believe that Roe was wrongly decided, and that it can and should be overruled”.

While working as a Justice Department lawyer in 1985, Alito wrote in a memo that the government "should make clear that we disagree with Roe v. Wade".

In 1990, as the principal deputy solicitor general in President George H.W. Bush's administration, Roberts wrote a legal brief for the Supreme Court in a case regarding federal funding for abortion providers. "We continue to believe that Roe v. Wade was wrongly decided and should be overruled," Roberts wrote. His brief added: "The Supreme Court's conclusion in Roe that there is a fundamental right to an abortion finds no support in the text, structure or history of the Constitution."

Affirmative action
Dean notes that “fundamentalists” are universally hostile to affirmative action, calling it “reverse discrimination”. He says that once they have a majority affirmative action laws will become extinct.

Scalia stated that he would never allow affirmative action under any circumstances, in his concurrences in both the Adarand and Croson cases.

Thomas called affirmative action "noxious" and labeled it "government-sponsored racial discrimination.

A report by the NAACP had this to say about Alito’s stand on affirmative action:

The overwhelming majority of African-American litigants whose claims judge Alito has adjudicated has lost his vote. We can predict with substantial certainty that Judge Alito will very likely vote in a manner that… will cause a substantial shift in the Court’s civil rights jurisprudence with devastating effects.

John Roberts criticized state efforts to battle sex discrimination, calling programs promoting affirmative action and comparable worth "highly objectionable" in his legal advice to President Reagan.

Liberties contained in our Bill of Rights
At one time in our history there was debate on whether or not our Bill of Rights provided protection only against the federal government, or also against state and local government. However, beginning in 1897 the USSC began making rulings that made it more and more clear that our Bill of Rights protects our liberties against not only the federal government, but state and local government as well – so that today that principle is solidly ingrained in Constitutional law.

But, as Martin Garbus explains in “The Next 25 Years” (page 68), “Thomas, Scalia, Roberts, and Alito are dead set against the application of many of the Bill of Rights amendments against the states”.

Consequently, the addition of one more “fundamentalist” to the USSC could very well mean that any state could pass laws abrogating many of the liberties we have taken for granted for over a century – for example, they could enact a law abrogating freedom of speech, or creating a state religion.

Civil Rights
Cass Sunstein notes in his book, “Radicals in Robes” (page 63), that fundamentalists believe that nothing in our Constitution prohibits the federal government from discriminating on the basis of race or sex.

An editorial in the Washington Post noted that Alito’s “most important civil rights decisions collectively show an inclination to protect businesses from marginal civil rights claims and to make it more difficult for those who say they were discriminated against to win redress in the courts.”

Another Washington Post article noted that Roberts was “part of the vanguard of a conservative political revolution in civil rights, advocating new legal theories and helping enforce the Reagan administration's effort to curtail the use of courts to remedy racial and sexual discrimination.”

Gay rights
Perhaps the best indication of the “fundamentalist” view towards gay rights is provided in the Lawrence v. Texas decision, in which the USSC overturned a Texas sodomy law that enabled the state to prosecute homosexuals for having consensual sex in the privacy of their own home. A minority dissent by Scalia, joined by Thomas, stated:

Most Americans do not want persons who are openly engaged in homosexual conduct as partners in their businesses, as scoutmasters for their children, as teachers in their children's schools, or as boarders in their home. They view this as protecting themselves and their families from a lifestyle that they believe to be immoral and destructive.

Environmental protection
Dean notes that “fundamentalists” believe that there is no constitutional basis for environmental protection by the federal government. They believe that government regulation of business in the name of environmental protection is akin to confiscating properties from the affected businesses.

People for the American Way sum up the views of Thomas and Scalia on this issue:

Justices Scalia and Thomas have already used their positions as part of narrow majorities on the Court to do very significant damage to federal, state and local efforts to protect the environment. They have also helped lead majority opinions that have undermined the ability of citizen groups to bring lawsuits in their efforts to enforce environmental protections.

Habeas Corpus
To quote Reddhedd on the tremendous importance of habeas corpus to our democracy, posting at Firedoglake:

A right to challenge being held by the government for improper reasons is at the heart of our democracy – where such right was established to secure our rights to liberty and freedom, and to stop imprisonment of opposition candidates for political reasons. The right of habeas corpus is our firewall against the tyranny of the majority – it dates back to the Magna Carta, which bound the king to the rule of law. To threaten habeas corpus protections tears at the very fabric of rights in this nation.

In Hamdi v. Rumsfeld, the USSC ruled in favor of habeas corpus, saying that “We therefore hold that a citizen-detainee seeking to challenge his classification as an enemy combatant must receive notice of the factual basis for his classification, and a fair opportunity to rebut the Government’s factual assertions before a neutral decision maker.”

Cass Sunstein explains the dissent of the Court’s “fundamentalists” on this ruling (page 197):

The federal habeas corpus statute does not apply, and the President can detain people free from judicial oversight. Thus Justice Scalia rejects the court’s decision that some kind of hearing is necessary to support detention. “For this Court to create such a monstrous scheme in time of war, and in frustration of our military commanders’ reliance upon clearly stated prior law, is judicial adventurism of the worst sort”. Justice Thomas joined Scalia on this point; and as we have seen, Justice Thomas also favors a broad rule that would permit the president to detain enemy combatants, even those who are American citizens, indefinitely.

Religion
“Fundamentalists” believe that there is nothing in the Constitution that mandates the separation of church and state. With respect to the part that states “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof”, they take that very literally – to them, it has nothing to do with the separation of church and state. Therefore, according to John Dean, if they become the majority we can expect to see school prayer in the classroom and in many other public places, and we can expect federal funding of religious organization to become the norm.

Voting rights
The “fundamentalist” judges on the current court have been consistently hostile to voting rights for the American people. They have no interest in the concept of one-person-one-vote, and they have consistently shown contempt for the landmark Voting Rights Act of 1965, which went a long way towards ensuring that minorities are enabled to vote. According to People for the American Way:

In 1994, Justices Thomas and Scalia advocated a radically activist position in a concurring opinion that, had it been the majority opinion, would have done great damage to the nation's progress toward ensuring all Americans an equal opportunity to participate and be heard in our democratic system. Not only would Thomas' and Scalia's position in Holder sharply diminish the protections provided by the Voting Rights Act of 1965, it would also overturn 30 years of Supreme Court precedent and at least three congressional reauthorizations of the Act.


The worst and most corrupt USSC decision in US history

The Supreme Court that stopped the counting of Florida ballots in December 2000, thereby handing the presidency to George W. Bush, contained three “fundamentalist” justices. How they got two other conservative justices on the Court to go along with them is something we’ll probably never know. But the decision in Bush v. Gore deserves strong consideration for the worst and most corrupt USSC decision ever made.

They used the Equal Protection clause of the 14th Amendment to rule the Florida Supreme Court’s order to continue counting the votes unconstitutional, based on different standards for counting ballots in different counties. By that reasoning, the whole election, in all 50 states would have to be ruled unconstitutional, since there were myriad different voting methods in all states. Furthermore, given the differences in methods and the quality of voting machines in Florida, and that the purpose of hand counting the ballots was to remedy the unfairness that resulted from this, how could anyone with half a brain come to the conclusion that hand counting the ballots provided less equal protection than accepting the machine counts without further investigation? This in itself is proof that the five Supreme Court Justices who came up with this ruling did so only because of their own personal preference.

Then there is that fact that the Justices took it upon themselves to decide what the deadline date for counting the ballots would be. There was no reason that they couldn't have allowed it to go at least until the 18th of December, as provided for in our Constitution. But that could have provided time for the counting to be completed, which was why the scumbuckets chose not to go that route.

Then, to pile hypocrisy upon hypocrisy, they said that they wanted to make it clear that this decision of theirs applied only to this one very specific case and should not be taken to set a precedent. No wonder they said that. The three “fundamentalists” on the court who drove this decision had previously shown nothing but contempt for the Equal Protection Clause, whenever it was used to prevent disenfranchisement of minority voters, which was its main purpose.

I think that Vincent Bugliosi, in “None Dare Call it Treason”, hit the nail on the head with respect to the infamous Bush v. Gore decision:

That an election for an American President can be stolen by the highest court in the land under the deliberate pretext of an inapplicable constitutional provision has got to be one of the most frightening and dangerous events ever to have occurred in this country. Until this act – which is treasonous, though again not technically, in its sweeping implications – is somehow rectified (and I do not know how this can be done), can we be serene about continuing to place the adjective "great" before the name of this country?


Final thoughts

What we’re dealing with now is the culmination of several decades of efforts by radical conservative Republican presidents (Nixon, Reagan, Bush, and Bush) to pack the Supreme Court (and the rest of the federal judiciary) with partisan political hacks with no judicial philosophy and no respect for their office or our country. That’s what gave us George W. Bush. And that’s what very well may result in a radical and regressive transformation of our Constitutional law in the next 4-8 years if a Republican is elected president in 2008.

I believe that Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama are substantially more conservative than what our country needs at this time. But they will NOT pick a Supreme Court nominee who will put the final nail in the coffin of our Constitutional law as we know it.

Imagine going back to the days when women were forced, through lack of an acceptable alternative, to getting dangerous back alley abortions. Imagine an America without a Bill of Rights to protect our liberties against infringement by state governments. Imagine an America where environmental protection is unconstitutional, where affirmative action is unconstitutional, where laws that proclaim consensual homosexual acts a felony are constitutional, where there is no separation between church and state, where the Constitutional principle of one-person-one-vote is just a quaint memory, and where the so-called unitary executive rules over our country as our dictator.

Anyone who is concerned about those things should be very worried about the possibility of having a Republican president for the next 4-8 years.

Discuss (35 comments) | Recommend (+40 votes)
U.S. Democracy in Crisis
Time for change


The Democratic Underground was born on one of the worst days in U.S history – The day that the worst President in U.S. history took office.

Now, here we are 8 years later, and we’ve managed to remove that cancer from our nation and replace it with something much better. Notwithstanding my many ambivalent feelings towards President Obama, I have no doubt that he will be infinitely better for our country than his predecessor.

Yet despite that, our country has been terribly scarred from the events of the past eight years, and it continues to suffer from all of the root problems that brought us the worst President in our history in 2000 and 2004. Therefore, it is worth taking a look at the root problems that brought us to this sorry state of affairs.


MAJOR IMPEDIMENTS TO DEMOCRACY IN THE UNITED STATES

One thing that we must keep in mind when considering our current problems is that they are not new. They were greatly exacerbated by eight years of Bush administration misrule, but they did not start with George W. Bush and Dick Cheney.


Money in politics

All but the most naïve of the American citizenry know that the wealthy and powerful in our country routinely influence our local and national elections through huge campaign contributions. And they also know that they are generally well rewarded for their “contributions”. And they also know that bribery is presumably against the law in our country. Yet, on the rare occasion that our politicians are actually accused of bribery, our news media makes a great big deal over it, as if bribery is actually a rare event in American politics.

The end result is that a great many of our politicians do everything they can to make their wealthiest constituents happy with them, at the expense of everyone else. They do that with the knowledge that the voters they lose in doing so will be more than compensated for by the disinformation that will be paid for by their wealthiest constituents. I discuss this situation in more detail here, here, and here.

There are a few dots to connect here, but any reasonable assessment of American politics tells us that bribery is routinely used to buy and sell elections in our country. So routine is it that it is actually built into our system and legalized. But that fact is never overtly spoken of. To do so would imply that our system of government is as much or more an aristocracy than it is a democracy.

Bill Moyers, in his book “Moyers on Democracy”, explains the situation bluntly:

We have lost the ability to call the most basic transaction by its right name. If a baseball player stepping up to home plate were to lean over and hand the umpire a wad of bills before he called the pitch, we’d call that a bribe. But when a real estate developer buys his way into the White House and gets a favorable government ruling that wouldn’t be available to you or me, what do we call that? A “campaign contribution”.

Let’s call it what it is: a bribe.

The legality of contributing money to political candidates, with the implicit (though not explicit) understanding that that money will buy political favoritism, has been defended by both our courts and our Congress by sanctimoniously pointing to the free speech provisions in the First Amendment to our Constitution and claiming that money is speech. But the absurdity of that contention should be obvious to anyone with some primary school education. Speech is of value from a political standpoint (or any other standpoint) only when it is heard. But if one billionaire has one thousand times as much opportunity to speak through a medium which reaches millions than several thousand other people added together, the speech of that one billionaire will drown out the speech of most other people, thereby interfering with their right to free speech.


Election fraud

Electronic vote switching with DRE (direct-recording electronic) machines poses a great danger to the integrity of our election system – by virtue of its ability to switch a voter’s vote without being noticed by the voter. In other words, someone tries to vote for John Kerry, and the machine registers a vote for George Bush instead. What makes matters worse is that many or most of these machines don’t even produce a piece of paper with the vote on it, which can then later be used for a recount. So, if fraud is suspected there is no recourse. And worse yet is the fact that most of these machines use proprietary (secret) code to determine who the voter voted for.

We know for a fact that vote-switching occurred in the 2004 election. One study, based on voter reports to the national Electronic Incident Reporting System (EIRS), showed that vote switching incidents favored Bush over Kerry by a ratio of 12 to 1 nationally. A similar study showed that these vote switching incidents that favored Bush were 9 times as common in the heavily contested “swing states” than in non-swing states. To make the point that the EIRS reports represent only a small fraction of actual Election Day problems, an investigation by the Washington Post identified about 25 electronic voting machines in Youngstown, Mahoning County, Ohio, that were said to have been switching votes all day long. Yet only eight incidents of this nature from Mahoning County (all in favor of Bush) were reported to EIRS that day.

Clint Curtis, a computer programmer working in Florida prior to the 2004 election, testified before the Democratic staff of the House Judiciary Committee that he was requested in 2000 by his boss (at the request of a high level Republican operative, Tom Feeney) to “develop a prototype of a voting program that could alter the vote tabulation in an election and be undetectable”. Curtis’ testimony was followed by the death of Raymond Lemme, who while investigating Curtis’ allegations was found dead in a Georgia hotel room, just a couple weeks after telling Curtis that he had traced the corruption “all the way to the top”,

Another type of election fraud is the illegal purging of registered voters from the voter rolls. Like vote switching, the increasing computerization of voter registration is no doubt making it much easier to perpetrate this type of fraud on a mass basis.

This article describes a great deal of evidence that voter registration fraud played a major role in the 2004 presidential election, and in fact was probably the deciding factor in Ohio, which gave George Bush his electoral victory. Similarly, although the 2000 presidential election was stolen by a variety of means, voter registration fraud was quantitatively the most important method used. In 2000, the Florida Governor’s office used a computer program to purge tens of thousands of mostly black and Democratic voters.

There are many other means of election fraud that have been used in our country to destabilize our democracy. I discuss this issue in more detail, along with means for preventing election fraud, in this post.


Our corporate news media

If cash donated to their political campaigns is not enough to carry them through to victory, and if election fraud doesn’t happen to play a significant role, the corporate news media serves as another valuable tool for those seeking to sabotage our democracy. This problem overlaps with the role of money in politics, since those who own and control the corporate media are uniformly wealthy, and since it was their money that led to the acts that enabled our corporate media to become what it is today – Ronald Reagan’s veto of Democratic legislation to enforce the Fairness Doctrine in 1987, and the Telecommunications Act of 1996. This legislation allowed the monopoly consolidation of our news media to the point where today it is controlled by a very small number of extremely wealthy individuals.

Several excellent books have been written about the extent to which wealthy corporate interests control our news media today. I would highly recommend “Lapdogs – How the Press rolled Over for Bush”, by Eric Boehlert, “What Liberal Media – The Truth About BIAS and the News”, by Eric Alterman, and “Into the Buzzsaw – The Myth of a Free Press”, edited by Kristina Borjesson. And I have ranted about pseudo-journalists such as Tim Russert, who have made a largely successful, but hypocritical effort to appear unbiased to their viewers.

The bottom line, as Bill Moyers points out, is that the protection offered us by our First Amendment is based on the assumption of a separation of our government and a free press, which is supposed to protect us from government abuses. Moyers wrote this during the Bush administration:

What would happen, however, if the contending giants of big government and big publishing and broadcasting ever joined hands, ever saw eye to eye in putting the public's need for news second to free-market economics? That's exactly what's happening now under the ideological banner of "deregulation". Giant media conglomerates that our founders could not possibly have envisioned are finding common cause with an imperial state in a betrothal certain to produce not the sons and daughters of liberty but the very kind of bastards that issued from the old arranged marriage of church and state.

Consider the situation. Never has there been an administration so disciplined in secrecy, so precisely in lockstep in keeping information from the people at large and -- in defiance of the Constitution -- from their representatives in Congress. Never has the powerful media oligopoly ... been so unabashed in reaching like Caesar for still more wealth and power. Never have hand and glove fitted together so comfortably to manipulate free political debate, sow contempt for the idea of government itself, and trivialize the peoples' need to know.


Secrecy in government

Democracy suffers terribly when a nation’s citizens are uninformed – especially when they are uninformed with respect to the actions and motivations of their own government. If we don’t know what our government is doing, then how can we be expected to vote them out when they do something that we would consider deeply immoral had we known about it?

Consider war for example. If Americans understood the real motivations for its nation’s wars, they would probably be much more likely to strenuously object to those wars. That would make war much less politically feasible, and our country would therefore be led into war much less frequently than it has been in the past.

That is why I so hate the “national security” excuse for withholding information from us, the American people – which has become so routine that it is willingly or passively accepted by the good majority of Americans. I very much doubt that the “national security” excuse for withholding information from the American people has anything to do with national security more than 5% of the time. Rather, the reason for withholding such information from us is almost always something totally different. It is to blind us to the real reasons for war or other nefarious acts, so that we will accept them and willingly support or even risk our lives in their cause.


Rampant U.S. nationalism and the GAME

Two months ago I wrote a DU post that I titled “The GAME”, which I began by discussing “Unmentionable things in U.S. politics” – including such things as the stealing of a U.S. presidential election, calling American military or covert actions immoral rather than merely “misguided”, and imputing bad intentions rather than mere incompetence to a U.S. president.

I find this to be terribly repressive, not because I personally can’t mention these things, but because our elected representatives are under tremendous pressure not to discuss them. We elect them to represent us and our nation, and except for some rare courageous exceptions such as Dennis Kucinich, Cynthia McKinney, and Robert Wexler, they refuse to even talk about some of our very most important issues.

It has occurred to me that this provides the backdrop for a huge GAME that has been foisted upon us. A prerequisite of the GAME is to create an alternate reality that must be believed by a critical mass of people in order for the GAME to proceed. Why is that necessary? I believe it’s necessary because the reality is so terrible that if enough people consciously recognized it they would rise up and simply refuse to play the GAME.

Although the GAME’s masters set the rules, there are two related character traits of many Americans that cause them to play along: Rampant nationalism and a propensity for denial. Rampant nationalism is the attitude that our country is inherently better than any other country – so much so that it can do no wrong. This attitude is drummed into the American people from the time that most of us learn how to talk. We are made to feel that to believe or speak otherwise demonstrates a dangerous lack of “patriotism”, which makes us deserving of being shunned – or worse.

The other character trait that persuades too many Americans to play the GAME is denial. Believing terrible things about one’s country can be very painful. Accepting reality as it is, rather than as one would like it to be, can be very painful. To make this point, in a recent post titled “12 Things that Never Happened in American History”, I discuss the following official stories that we have been told (or not told):

The U.S. is not an imperialist country; FDR’s New Deal was not instrumental in ending the Great Depression; the Cold War was just about fighting totalitarian Communism; JFK was assassinated by a lone gunman; bribery is infrequent in American politics; Iran-Contra was not a criminal abuse of presidential power; U.S. presidential elections cannot be stolen; Bush and Cheney did everything they could to protect us against the 9/11 attacks; the Bush administration’s crimes are not serious enough to warrant impeachment or prosecution; and, we’re barely told about our nation’s killing of more than a million Iraqi civilians, the October Surprise, or Operation Northwoods.


CONSEQUENCES

These impediments to democracy work together to surrender great amounts of power into the hands of a small number of elites, who use that power in the cause of increasing their wealth and power at the expense of everyone else. It is a vicious cycle that is very difficult to break. Here are some of the major tragic consequences.


Rampant militarism and illegal aggression against sovereign nations

We are so often told how good and pure our nation and its people are that only a minority of Americans are aware of the extent of our many illegal and immoral activities. Many or most who aren’t aware of these activities would be shocked to learn about them and quite resistant to accepting that information as the truth.

In myriad instances we have overthrown or assisted in the overthrow of sovereign nations. In the good majority of these instances we have substituted a repressive right wing government for one that was much more responsive to the needs and desires of the nation’s citizenry. Sometimes genocide was used to accomplish our goals. The purpose of these activities has most often been to create a government that is friendlier to the desires of American businesses or corporations – though we always have some sort of rationalization for our actions.

In “Excuses for War” I discuss many of the phony excuses that the United States government has used to lead us into war, including its Indian wars, the Mexican-American War, the Spanish-American War, and the Vietnam War.

In “The Roots and Consequences of U.S. Overseas Imperialism” I note or discuss our covert and overt illegal and immoral overthrowing of the sovereign nations of Hawaii (1893), Cuba (1898), Puerto Rico (1898), the Philippines (1899-1902), Nicaragua (1910), Honduras (1911-1912), Iran (1953), Guatemala (1954), South Vietnam (1963), Chile (1973), Grenada (1983), Panama (1989), Afghanistan (2001), and Iraq (2003).

In “The Meaning of U.S. Imperialism, Genocide and Militarism” I note U.S. perpetrated genocides, as described in “State of Darkness” by David Model, including our atomic bombing of Japan (1945), those perpetrated against Guatemala (1954), Vietnam (1954-73), Indonesia (1965), Cambodia (1970-75), Laos (1969-74), and East Timor (1975), and our two wars against Iraq.

Other atrocities include our invasion of Cuba in 1961; U.S. Marine invasion of the Dominican Republic in 1965 to put down a rebellion against their repressive right wing government; U.S. military support of Haitian tyrant and mass murderer, Francois Duvalier; and numerous brutal interventions in several Latin American and African nations.


Massive Income and wealth inequality

Inequality of wealth in the United States is truly astounding – and it is increasing at a fast rate. In the United States in 2001, 1% of the population controlled 38% of the wealth, whereas the bottom 40% owned just 1%. That means that, on average, individuals in the top 1% owned about 1,500 times more wealth than individuals in the bottom 40%.

The rising level of income inequality in our country recently exceeded the point where it stood just prior to the stock market crash of 1929, which led to the worst depression in U.S. history. There are many who see a connection between the income inequality preceding that depression and our current situation. This graph, which plots income inequality measured as the ratio between the average income of the top 0.01% of U.S. families compared to the bottom 90%, over time, makes that point.

I discuss the subject of income and wealth inequality here, here, and here.


The loss of the rule of law

During the Bush Presidency I often argued that he should be impeached for his many crimes. Now that he can no longer be impeached, I have argued that our Justice Department should prosecute him for those crimes, and if it fails to do so then the International Criminal Court (ICC) should step in.

While Bush was still President, President Obama weighed in against impeachment, saying that impeachment should be reserved for only the most serious crimes. Now that he is President he has thus far given little or no indication that he intends to have his Justice Department prosecute George Bush or any other high level Bush administration official for their crimes. But if widespread torture, an illegal war of aggression, spying on American citizens, suspending of the right of habeas corpus, and numerous other violations of our Constitution don’t constitute serious crimes, then what does?

What would people say if a prosecuting attorney failed to prosecute a rapist and murderer simply because he had high level political connections? Who would accept that? Then why when far more serious crimes are committed by a President of the United States are there so many people who seem to think that it is ok to sit passively by and make no attempt to hold the perpetrators accountable for their crimes?

I’ll tell you why. It’s like I said earlier in this post. Saying that a former U.S. President might be guilty of prosecutable crimes is simply against the rules of the GAME. Given that and the failure to hold the Reagan administration accountable for its Iran-Contra crimes, George Bush and Dick Cheney connected the dots and thought that they might be able to get away with just about anything. Testing that assumption by moving ahead with prosecutions might be politically risky for the Obama administration. The Republican Party would no doubt raise holy hell if there was an attempt to prosecute high level Bush administration officials.

Consequently, we live in country in which, protestations to the contrary notwithstanding, certain people are indeed above the law. That fact, taken together with all of the impediments to democracy discussed in the first part of this post, means that democracy and the rule of law in our country are in grave danger. Indeed, some believe that we narrowly averted a military coup perpetrated by the Bush administration.

The American people and their leaders need to reassess what our country stands for. Is our democracy important enough to take steps to remove the role of money in politics, reform our election system, break up the corporate monopoly on our news media, require government actions to be much more transparent than they now are, and dare to look more objectively at who we are and what we do? Can we give up imperialism and warfare for the sake a world in which nations live and work together to further the cause of peace and justice? Can we make our nation one in which all of its citizens truly have the opportunity for life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness? And do our laws apply to all people, not just to those who lack the political influence to avoid them?

If we think that these things are important we have a great deal of work to do, lest our country sinks into a tyranny from which it may never recover.
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Silver Spring, MD, US
Male
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I do not support this bill
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HOUSE PASSES HEALTH CARE BILL!!
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