She's willing to speak the unvarnished truth.
Bush
acting as imperial president
by Helen Thomas
WASHINGTON -- The imperial presidency has arrived.
On the domestic front President Bush has found
that in many ways he can govern by executive
order. In foreign affairs he has the nerve to tell other people
that they should get rid of their current leaders.
Amazingly, with Americans turning into a new silent
majority and Congress
into a bunch of obeisant lawmakers, he is getting
away with such acts.
The lawmakers are worried that Bush will play
the "patriot card" in the November elections to attack
dissenters and opponents. The Democratic leaders
have already rolled over. They have given him a
blank check by passing the USA Patriot Act, which
permits outrageous invasions of privacy, and by
seconding Bush's foreign policy with a weak "me
too."
Whatever happened to congressional oversight?
I remember all too well the senators who gave LBJ
a free hand to do whatever he believed was necessary
in Southeast Asia. They lived to regret it.
The result was the Vietnam War that ripped our
country apart.
The list of the president's self-empowerment moves
grows almost daily and will continue
unless the Supreme Court calls his hand.
Did I say Supreme Court? Forget it. Not with
this court. It handed him the 2000 election, and it would probably
cite some World War II decisions that allowed
the government to violate citizens' civil rights, especially those
of Japanese Americans, in the name of national
security.
Civil rights are now clearly being ignored by
government agents in the war on terrorism who want to make
the vulnerable detainees talk. The agents' methods
of extracting information are not disclosed. And the
imprisoned suspects and material witnesses cannot
get in touch with lawyers or their families.
I'm not talking about Russia's infamous gulags.
I am talking about us. The president made the arbitrary
decision to designate as a foreign "enemy combatant"
the Brooklyn-born Jose Padilla, who is suspected of being an
al-Qaida scout seeking to locate targets for
a "dirty bomb" attack. He is being held incommunicado in a military
brig without due process of law and without
being charged.
Where are the great constitutional law experts
who might protest such treatment? It appears they have bowed
to the exigencies of our time and are accepting
Bush's end-runs around the law involving some 2,400 detainees,
who are reportedly being held indefinitely by
U.S. authorities. Can Americans really tolerate the denial of rights
to these people?
Overseeing much of the chipping away at our privacy and other civil liberties is Attorney General John Ashcroft.
He is enthusiastically using the patriot law to
let federal agents wiretap and access the e-mail of untold numbers
of citizens and to listen in on conversations
between lawyers and clients. Now FBI agents are checking lists
of readers at libraries and book stores. Is book
burning in our future?
Ashcroft also sent a memo to federal agencies
promising that the Justice Department will back them up
anytime they want to deny freedom of information
requests from scholars and journalists.
Here, he is protecting Bush from criticism over
the administration's clamp-down on government information.
Rest assured he could not do this without the
imprimatur of the White House.
We should not forget that Bush, early in his
tenure, blocked the implementation of the release of
President Reagan's White House papers. Under
the Presidential Records Act of 1978, his official
documents were to be available to the public
12 years after he left office. So they were due for
release last year, but Bush simply overrode
that law.
Was he trying to protect Reagan from the probing
of historians and the media? Or was he really trying
to protect his father, George H. W. Bush, who
was Reagan's vice president and who succeeded him as
president? White House aides issued a flimsy
excuse-- that the order was designed to institute an orderly
release of the papers. But my guess is that No.
43, as W calls himself, was trying to protect No. 41.
Equally blatant examples of Bush's arrogance of
power are in his foreign policy. What right does he have
to tell Yasser Arafat that he has to go or to
tell the Palestinians they cannot vote for Arafat in coming elections?
Bush's speech could have been written by Israeli
Prime Minister Ariel Sharon. Although he speaks of his
compassion for the suffering Palestinians under
Israel's military occupation, Bush is tightening the screws
by making it clear he will deny them any aid
unless Arafat is deposed.
Plans to topple Iraq's Saddam Hussein have also been on the president's radar screen since he took office.
When did the United States get the right to tell other countries and people who should lead them?
The president has been flexing America's military
muscles and threatening pre-emptive first strikes
against nations suspected -- suspected!
--
of wanting to harm the United States. That also is a break
with our past traditions.
Bush is due for a reality check. We need allies
whenever we contemplate such drastic actions,
and our allies are worried about his constant
saber rattling. Some day he is going to try to give
a war and nobody is going to come.
Outrageous!!
This is
Field Marshall Ashcroft.
I need
some choppers at bartcop.com right away.
This old
woman needs a few hours of secret torture!
Speaking
her mind...what the hell does this think this is?
Some goddamn
free society? We need to maintain order!
Have her
sent to Cuba with the other Al Qaeda.
We'll shock
some patriotism into this troublemaker!