Categories
Opinion The Last Word

The Rant

If anyone doubts that the

republic created by the U.S. Constitution

is dead, he or she only has to watch the Republican

presidential debates. Save for Ron Paul, all of the candidates believe a

president can take the country to war on his own, though most concede it might be a good idea to “consult” attorneys and even Congress.

The Constitution, written by men more intelligent and better educated than today’s crop of political duds, is quite clear. The president has no authority to take the country to war. The sole authority for declaring war rests 100 percent with Congress.

Naturally, if a shipload of pirates sailed up the Potomac and began shooting at the tourists, you wouldn’t need a declaration to authorize returning fire. American troops defending themselves while they are under attack is not the issue. The issue is that if a president wants to take the country to war against another country, he must, as Franklin Roosevelt did after Pearl Harbor, ask Congress to make that decision.

The founding fathers, having suffered under a monarch, deliberately created a weak president. His powers, as specified by the Constitution, are limited mainly to administering the laws passed by Congress, making appointments, negotiating treaties and being the official greeter when dealing with foreign powers. His role as commander in chief is limited to just what it says — the military. The president is not our commander in chief, as the current president seems to think.

Lest anyone be beguiled by the current politicians’ determination to create an emperor and an empire, even the president’s appointments and treaties have to be confirmed by the Senate. Congress has sole authority over taxation and spending. Appropriations for the military are limited by the Constitution to two years. Furthermore, Congress is elected independently of the president and is a separate branch of government. It is under no obligation whatsoever to do anything the president asks it to do, and the president has no authority whatsoever to do anything not authorized by Congress and the Constitution.

The Constitution, which apparently not many Americans have ever bothered to read, is the supreme law of the land. It does not make suggestions. It commands. It was written in clear English. It has provisions to amend it, but it should never be amended by interpretation. That is always a usurpation of power and should be grounds for impeachment.

There is only one way for the U.S. to be a real nation of laws. That way is for the people to demand that every single public official obey the laws as they are written and obey them to the letter. The current president seems to think he can alter laws with “signing statements” and legislate with executive orders. He should have been impeached a long time ago.

The kernel of the nut is this: In our constitutional republic, sovereignty rests in the people. If the people are too stupid or ignorant, too lazy or indifferent, to hold their public officials accountable for violating the laws and the Constitution, then of course they will deserve the tyranny they will surely get.

Self-government is tremendously more difficult and demanding than living under a dictatorship. In a dictatorship, all you have to do is obey. I fear that concept appeals to some Americans today. It’s understandable. Responsibility can be a heavy load to carry. It’s much easier to relegate all of that to the Great Leader and just do what we are told.

Anybody who’s ever been in the military or jail knows what I’m talking about. When you are deprived of the ability to make choices, you are simultaneously relieved of the responsibility for making them. Responsibility is the other side of the coin of freedom.

Charley Reese has been a journalist for 50 years.

Categories
Politics Politics Feature

VIEWPOINT: The Other Gore

Let me stipulate: Al Gore is the deserved winner of the
Nobel Prize, as his film documentary on the subject, An Inconvenient Truth,
had previously merited the Academy Award it got. Gore’s unstinting campaign to
alert the nation – nay, the world – about the perils of global warming has been
his finest hour.

Equally praiseworthy are the political points the former
Tennessee senator and vice president has publicly made since his Supreme
Court-assisted defeat for the presidency in 2000. An early critic of the Iraq
War, Gore accurately foresaw the extent of the debacle, and he has been eloquent
and on point concerning the ongoing erosion of Americans’ constitutional
liberties.

Having materialized as a veritable tribune of the people,
even an oracle, should Gore not, then, seek again the presidency which, so many
think, he was unfairly deprived of?

The answer is no. As Gore himself as noted, such a course
would prove divisive – and perhaps destructive — to his current cause. It would
also necessitate his moving away from a position of unquestioned moral authority
into the murky untruthiness of politics — a world which, despite his scaling
its heights, Gore may never have been ideally suited for.

A current myth has it that, in 2000, a wicked establishment
press made the perverse decision to waylay Gore, mischaracterizing as lies his
essentially accurate statements about his own past and otherwise finding fault
relentlessly.

So dedicated did the Establishment press become to the
downfall of Gore that its members embraced the patently undeserving George W.
Bush, who was regarded as an acceptably hail-fellow-well-met alternative to the
goody two-shoes Gore.

Or so goes the story.

The truth is not much prettier but is, well, different. In
fact, the media animosity to Gore (and that part was certainly real) was
probably born not in indulgence toward good-ole-frat-boy Bush but in solicitude
toward the honest if plodding Bill Bradley, the recently retired New Jersey
senator who was Gore’s Democratic primary opponent. The unfortunate Bradley was
gleefully being attacked by Gore as often and as gratuitously as Gore himself
later was by an unforgiving media.

When Bradley and Gore tangled in a debate at Dartmouth
College in New Hampshire in October 1999, ABC’s Jake Tapper, then with Salon,
was watching the affair via closed-circuit TV in a nearly media room. He
remembered it this way: “The reporters were hissing Gore, and that’s the only
time I’ve ever heard the press room boo or hiss any candidate of any party at
any event.” Time‘s Eric Pooley: “Whenever Gore came on too strong, the
room erupted in a collective jeer, like a gang of 15-year-old Heathers cutting
down some hapless nerd.”

Gore had been mauling the preternaturally docile Bradley
fore and aft, on everything from the New Jerseyan’s alleged indifference to
disaster aid for Iowa flood victims (The New YorkTimes: “Mr.
Gore’s accusation was false and unfair. Mr. Bradley supported the 1993
legislation that provided $4.8 billion in emergency flood relief for farmers…”)
to his racial positions (Campaign chroniclers James W. Caesar and Andrew Busch:
“Bradley landed few clean blows and even took some unfair blows from Gore, who
charged before [a] mostly black audience that ‘racial profiling’ of blacks by
the police ‘practically began’ in Bradley’s New Jersey.”).

The Daily Kos’s Markos
Moulitsas Zúniga recalled the Gore campaign’s “blatantly unfair” attacks
on Bradley, as did The Nation‘s David Corn, who found Bradley “more
progressive,.. less irritating [and] sincere in his desire for political
reform,” while Gore’s campaign “bends, manipulates, dodges or obliterates the
truth…..”

Said Newsday: “…Gore
effectively criticized former New Jersey Senator Bill Bradley for proposing an
expensive health care reform, for being too liberal, and being out of touch with
ordinary voters…[H]is aggressive tactics worked.”

And the Washington Post‘s
Dana Milbank reported Bradley’s responses to Gore in that Dartmouth debate: “‘Attack,
attack, attack, every day, the people are fed up with it…You’re the elephant of
negative advertising….Why should we believe you’ll tell the truth as president
if you won’t tell the truth as a candidate?'” And, to bring us full cycle,
Milbank segued into this: “In the WMUR press room, my colleagues laugh
derisively at Gore’s offensives….”

That feeling, fair or not, was the likely cause of the
media animosity, and not any imagined bonhomie of Bush’s. The gallant Gore has
at length found – nay, become — his better angel. He should, we should,
leave well enough alone.

Categories
Politics Politics Feature

MAD AS HELL: Ye Olde GOP Presidential Players

The hallmark of this president will undoubtably be the
Iraq war; however the influence of Karl Rove with his powerful Svengali job as
casting agent and director for the George W. Bush Show will loom large. Over
the last six years, America has been a willing participant in a reality show
created by Republicans called Let’s Pretend. Thematically, this is the
message: “I will pretend to tell you the truth, if you will pretend to believe
it.”

When it comes to acting, Dubya is a rookie, but you’ve
got to hand it to him —- the guy is one hell of a performer. After all, it
can’t be easy playing Goober Pyle, Howdy Doody, and Forrest Gump
simultaneously. Until now, the sunny performances by Ronald Reagan on the show
I’m Not a President but I Play One on TV
have ranked tops among
Republicans, but the acting skills of George the Forty-Third have put old
Ronnie to shame.

Cheney, Condi, and Rummy, the co-producers of this
mendacious melange, have a flair for the dramatic as well. Their formula has
been brilliant: Take Lost in Space, cross it with some Green Acres,
and lace it with just the right amounts of Combat and Rawhide
to create a new version of Groundhog Day. What a masterful stroke of genius it
was to make the media part of the cast. When it came to the thespian talents
of the working stiffs at the networks and 24 -hour cable channels, who knew?

Stage doors will soon be shutting for our Witless Wonder
but those amusement loving Republicans have nothing to fear – Fred Thompson is
waiting in the wings. Thompson, a bona fide B- lister in Hollywood rolled out
his candidacy this week by keeping all the razzle-dazzle so cherished by his
party. Not one to disappoint, Ready Freddy kicked off his campaign on The
Tonight Show
with Jay Leno.

The role of Candidate is a reprise of one of Thompson’s
earlier portrayals, but in case you missed it, this is the synopsis: Southern
Lawyer turned Washington Senator/actor/lobbyist drawls his way through America
using warmed-over Reagan anecdotes to tout Dixie-fried conservative values.
Folksy speeches that don’t really say anything but are punctuated with the
benefits of war, a devotion to God, and the love of freedom stir the crowds of
the saved and self-righteous. Winking and smiling, Thompson is assuring
nervous neo-cons that he’s their man and will continue on with the Bush
charade of pretending to tell us the truth, so we can continue to pretend to
believe it.

With rank hypocrisy, Republicans love to condemn the
mythical Hollywood life style and claim it to be the epitome of hedonism
represented only by Democrats. Yet Republicans are the ones with a penchant
for electing real actors — candidates whose multiple marriages, secret
lovers, and closeted sexcapades more accurately reflect Hollywood values. In
the days ahead, it will be interesting to see if Mr. Law-‘n-Order can cast his
actor’s spell over Republican voters.

On the other hand: Surely, the time has come for people
to consider electing a President who is genuinely more interested in winning
the Nobel Prize for Peace than the Academy Award for Acting.