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The Triumph
of Anything Goes
Comment by Larry Ross, September 23, 2004
There are important
issues that the following brilliant article; "The Triumph of Anything
Goes" does not mention. These include Bush's neocon-inspired plans
for more wars, and his new nuclear war doctrines. These license the US
to use nuclear weapons pre-emptively, against both nuclear and non-nuclear
states, if the US decides that state to be a threat to the US or its allies.
As part of the Bush conspiracy, the US and UK declared Iraq was part of
the 9/11 terrorist attack, had various WMD including nuclear weapons,
and could attack the US and "UK in 45 minutes". All were found
to be lies. The US and UK , having created these huge lies to persuade
their governments and public's to accept and support the phoney war, then
attacked Iraq and murdered thousands of civilians.
Knowing they had created and were now acting out a giant fraud, they also
threatened that there were circumstances where they would use nuclear
weapons against Iraq. Now they are occupying Iraq, imprisoning, torturing,
bombing and murdering it's citizens. They are continuing to spin a web
of lies to justify their barbarism, adding to their war crimes and threatening
other countries in the middle east such as Iran.
If major nuclear nations are allowed to trample international law, lie,
cheat, make war, kill thousands and threaten to use nuclear weapons to
get their way, they are committing horrendous war crimes. Re-electing
the perpetrators would be a popular endorsement for more of the same criminal
behaviour.
The US, Israel, (and probably UK later) have indicated they may make war
on Iran to prevent it from making nuclear weapons. There are 8-9 nuclear
weapon states. "40 countries with peaceful nuclear programmes could
retool them to make weapons" said Mohammed El-Baradei, director-general
of the International Atomic Energy. (The Straits Times 21/9/04.
The US and Israel have thousands of nuclear weapons, some on hair-trigger
alert and ready to use anytime. They could destroy Iran in an hour.
Nevertheless, the US and Israel are claiming that Iran is a threat because
it might make a few such weapons. The docile US press can be relied on
to drum up fear of Iran and provide reams of arguments on why bombing
and invasion of Iran is essential for the security of the US and UK etc.
The media did it to justify the Iraq war - faithfully repeating all Bush
and Blair lies. They may soon repeat similar lies and threats, as a prelude
to more wars launched by the US, UK and allies such as Australia.
The US, UK, Australia and now Russia, have all declared they will strike
outside their borders anywhere, at those they claim are enemies threatening
them. Having become international war criminals, they are ready to dismiss
international law and the UN Charter.
That is a horrible prospect. Not mentioned by Green, is the possibility
that more such wars can result in serious military or "terrorist"
actions against the US. That, in turn, can lead to the US use of nuclear
weapons. The situation could spiral out of control, with rapid escalation
into a general nuclear war. That could wreck civilisation, and kill many
millions. It could make the world uninhabitable. With 8-9 nuclear weapon
states, there is more than enough nuclear weapons to kill the world's
population many times over. Most of the nuclear experts, like Helen Caldicott,
are saying the risk of a nuclear war is greater today than ever before.
Many say that Bush is the most dangerous man on the planet.
Think of your children and grandchildren, and their future. Our world
could quickly become a destroyed planet. There would be no future - ever.
Some people's actions, or inactions, are helping bring about such a catastrophe.
That prospect should motivate people to become politically active to help
educate
others so they: "DON'T VOTE FOR A WAR CRIMINAL"
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The
Triumph of Anything Goes
by David Greenberg,
We all know that George W. Bush's reelection
would probably bring about more illiberal policies regarding social justice,
education, the arts, economic fairness, environmental protection, consumer
rights, racial equality, foreign policy, civil liberties, and workers'
rights. Less obvious, but perhaps as consequential over the long term,
is how a Bush victory in November would change the fundamental practice
of democracy in Washington. If the public were to award Bush a vote of
confidence on the basis of his first-term record, it would amount to a
ratification of the ruthless style and philosophy that have underpinned
Bush's presidency--what Barack Obama at the Democratic Convention called
"the politics of anything goes."
An oft-quoted quip of Bush's--"If this were a dictatorship, it'd
be a heck of a lot easier, just so long as I'm the dictator"--certainly
doesn't reflect any plan of his to abolish democratic procedures or principles.
But it does reveal his impatience with those procedures and principles.
Bush and his team have shown contempt for many of the bedrock elements
of liberal democracy, including public access to information; a press
that interrogates its leaders; a give-and-take between parties that represent
different interests; a separation of powers among the executive, legislative,
and judicial branches; the preference for reason over the use of force;
and the support of legal safeguards to prevent the arbitrary exercise
of power by the executive. They have routinely violated the bounds of
acceptable political behavior in a democracy.
The instances of this misbehavior are so numerous as to fill a small
book; indeed, they've already filled many such books. Yet the anything-goes
attitude comprises more than the sum total of these instances. It's a
philosophy, a set of premises and prejudices, that scorns deliberation
and dissent, exalts brute power, drips with disrespect for the spirit
(if not the letter) of the law, stiff-arms compromise, and mocks the popular
will.
It's hard to find a better exemplar of this attitude than George W. Bush.
Nonetheless, Bush himself remains only, the reigning figurehead of this
philosophy. Since Newt Gingrich assumed the GOP leadership in the 1990s,
and since the party became nearly congruent with the conservative movement,
this strain of ruthlessness has come to permeate the Republican Party.
Republican behavior during three major national traumas of late--the impeachment
of Bill Clinton, the 2000 Florida election recount, and the invasion of
Iraq--was strikingly similar: In each case, their leaders rammed ahead,
using means fair and foul, to reach a preordained outcome. Each time,
they brushed aside not just the doubts of the American public or other
nations, not just inconvenient facts, but also concern about the law itself.
For these reasons, Bush has been eliciting comparisons to Richard Nixon,
the last president who showed such contempt for democratic procedures.
Because Nixon was foolish enough to record himself committing high crimes,
we now think of Watergate as an episode in which, as the cliché
goes, the system works. The flip side of that statement, however, is that
the system almost failed. Certainly, just after Election Day 1972, when
Nixon had routed George McGovern, many Americans were despairing that
his thuggery would go unpunished. Talk of "repression" and "gangsterism," which had just months before seemed like so much New Left sloganeering,
now approximated reality. And Nixon himself knew well that his 1972 victory
strengthened his hand to wreak revenge. Throughout that fall, he spoke
privately about the viciousness with which he would retaliate, once reelected,
against his political foes on the left and in the press.
Something similar could happen following a Bush win this November. For
the electorate to turn Bush out of office would be to proclaim that it
rejects this manner of politics. But to award Bush another four years--provided
he really wins this time--would signal that a majority of Americans not
only tolerates but endorses his anti-democratic style. And it could be
interpreted by Democrats as a lesson that resistance is futile.
Already, despite losing the popular vote, Bush has governed as if he'd
won in a landslide. "From the very day we walked in the building,
[there was] a notion of a sort of restrained presidency because it was
such a close election," Cheney has said, "that lasted maybe
30 seconds." And with a Republican-controlled Supreme Court and Congress,
Bush and Cheney faced few checks on their power.
Should Bush win a second term, the politics of anything-goes would only
intensify--because it would no longer be seen as controversial. It would
no longer be noteworthy that an administration declassifies documents
to embarrass opponents, as when John Ashcroft released a memo by former
Clinton administration official and 9/11 Commission member Jamie Gorelick.
It would become more or less acceptable to threaten the jobs of bureaucrats
who won't play ball in misleading Congress, as happened with chief actuary
Richard Foster, who wanted to answer congressional questions about the
price tag of the administration's Medicare plan. Or to toss aside legal
and constitutional rights of the accused, as at Guantanamo Bay and Abu
Ghraib. Or to interfere with the public's right to know, as the administration
did in ordering federal agencies to provide fewer records under the Freedom
of Information Act.
Fifteen years ago, conservatives put forth the "broken windows" theory of crime. If small street crimes are tolerated, the theory went,
neighborhoods begin to accept them as normal and the result is more lawlessness.
The same thing will happen if a democracy tolerates Bush's ruthless behavior
as business as usual. If voters validate this modus operandi, it won't
just accelerate; it will cease to draw even the modest level of scrutiny
and outrage that the administration's transgressions have attracted so
far. Failing to protest these breaches of the norms that govern political
conduct will encourage more such violations.
Historically, second-term presidents have gotten cocky and overreached:
Franklin D. Roosevelt with his court-packing plan, Nixon with Watergate
(which began in his first term), Ronald Reagan with Iran-Contra. But no
law of history decrees that the system always corrects itself. With no
independent counsel and no Democratic Congress to investigate, with a
press cowed into submission, with a court system loaded with Federalist
Society apparatchiks, who will restrain Bush's ruthless agenda? Only the
people. And the only time they can do it is on Nov. 2.
David Greenberg is a professor at Rutgers University,
a columnist for Slate, and the author of Nixon's Shadow: The History of
an Image.
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