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Tipping point

Glenn Greenwald, outdoing himself yet again, has a fantastic rundown on the “New York Times is a traitor” story currently raging across the airwaves. I certainly couldn’t do better.

The Bush Administration now has the power to monitor your bank records and phone calls. They can designate you an illegal combattant and imprison you indefinitely without charges, and without access to counsel. While in custody, you can be tortured for information you may or may not have. (And by “you” I don’t mean some abstract person. I mean YOU.) They can bypass the federal court system whenever they determine it’s necessary. Now, they are seriously flirting with imprisoning journalists who attempt to expose the adminstration’s power grabs.

The clear rationale underlying the arguments of Bush supporters needs to be highlighted. They believe that the Bush administration ought to be allowed to act in complete secrecy, with no oversight of any kind. George Bush is Good and the administration wants nothing other than to stop The Terrorists from killing us. There is no need for oversight over what they are doing because we can trust our political officials to do good on their own. We don’t need any courts or any Congress or any media serving as a “watchdog” over the Bush administration. There is no reason to distrust what they do. We should — and must — let them act in total secrecy for our own good, for our protection. And anyone who prevents them from acting in total secrecy is not merely an enemy of the Bush administration, but of the United States, i.e., is a traitor.

The defining ethos of our country is a distrust of government power — or at least it always used to be. The entirety of the Constitution is devoted to imposing safeguards against government abuses because our country was founded upon the principle that we do not place blind faith in political officials to act properly. But the argument being peddled now is that we can place blind trust in the Bush administration and we need not worry ourselves about anything. At the very least, such a dramatic reversal of how we think about our government ought to be the subject of debate.

I think it’s time to pick a side. And if you pick the administration’s side, I think you ought to be able to answer a simple question: what more are you willing to give up in the name of fighting terrorism? Where is the line? Because up to now, the President himself has been able to define that ever-shifting line for all of us.

Pick a side.

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Now there’s an idea

Don Goldwater, candidate for Arizona governor and nephew of Barry Goldwater, put forth his plan last week to put undocumented Mexicans into forced labor camps to build – wait for it – the giant wall between Mexico and the U.S.

Sure, John McCain objected. But I wonder what Peter King and Tom Tancredo think of this idea. I have a feeling I know what Michelle Malkin might think.

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Staring into the abyss

My friend John M. used to joke with me about the number of times I linked to Salon stories on my old site. Well today I read a beautifully-written review of Ron Suskind’s new book, “The One Percent Doctrine,” by Gary Kamiya. And I just have to link to it.

My honest assessment is that Bush, Cheney and Rumsfeld (at least) should be not only removed from office, but imprisoned. The damage they’ve done to American society, goverment and culture is nearly incalculable, and will take at least a generation to repair, if it can be done at all.

Meanwhile, we sleep.

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The hits just keep on comin’

A group of House Republicans today successfully blocked (for now) the renewal of the Voting Rights Act.

Seriously. The fucking Voting Rights Act.

Still think there’s no difference between Democrats and Republicans?

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Let’s get this thing over with

I’ve had a major change of heart recently. I now enthusiastically support every far-right-wing social program. I think it’s time we really gave these things a shot:

  • No abortions, ever. Both mother and doctor will be prosecuted for murder. If it’s murder, it’s murder.
  • A massive law enforcement ramp-up in order to forcibly eject every illegal alien currently on American soil. Build a giant death wall along every foot of the U.S.-Mexico border.
  • Death penalty for all murderers and sex offenders, after a single “trial.” No appeals. All executions public, and televised.
  • Gay people barred by Constitutional Amendment from marriage, adopting or raising children, teaching in schools, and military service of any kind. Sodomy laws re-introduced and zealously enforced. Further measures as needed.
  • Divorce and adultery both illegal, with harsh sentences in all cases, no exceptions.
  • Dismantle both the Department of Education and the entire U.S. public education system. All school taxes are abolished.
  • Unions outlawed. Every state to follow “at-will” labor practices in all industries.
  • No more White House press conferences. If the President wants to say something to us, he’ll go on TV and do it.
  • Homeland Security will be in charge of stopping speech in any form judged “anti-American.”
  • The Ten Commandments, in either sculptural or written form, posted in every courthouse and public building. (Obviously, religion in school is now a non-issue.)

I’m sure I’m forgetting some stuff – if I am, let me know in the comments and I’ll add it. But I think the time for this stuff has come. Let’s give it a whirl. It’s what we want, right?

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O’Reilly: Bring back Saddam

O’Reilly: Now to me, they’re not fighting it hard enough. See, if I’m president, I got probably another 50-60 thousand with orders to shoot on sight anybody violating curfews. Shoot them on sight. That’s me… President O’Reilly… Curfew in Ramadi, seven o’clock at night. You’re on the street? You’re dead. I shoot you right between the eyes. OK? That’s how I run that country. Just like Saddam ran it. [Emphasis mine. -TM] Saddam didn’t have explosions – he didn’t have bombers. Did he? Because if you got out of line, you’re dead.

-The Radio Factor, 6/19/06

Hey Bill, I’ve got the perfect guy for the job. I’m sure he’s looking for work, too – if he can beat the rap.

UPDATE: Thanks to Utopia commenter Anonymous’ favorite weblogger, the Rude Pundit, who reminded me that O’Reilly also said that the International Red Cross was to blame for the Guantanamo prisoners’ suicides.

Not. making. this. up.

Oh, and pre-emptively: the minute The Rude Pundit gets a high-profile nightly TV show, or is featured on the cover of Time, we might begin to discuss how he “compares” to O’Reilly, Coulter, or the rogue’s gallery of hate merchants infecting the right-wing airwaves these days. Until then, not so much.

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Angry? You bet I’m angry.

Firedoglake, on the tortured soldiers in Iraq:

The Democrats are united on the most important aspect of all: we all want to change course on Iraq.

Cut and run?

Republicans want to sit and watch.

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Feels good!

In the midst of the current “Great news from Iraq! Seriously!” period we’re currently having, I came upon a Salon piece from 2004 that succinctly lays out how Bush’s image was changed to make him into a “regular guy.” There’s a lot of good stuff there, and I encourage you to read the whole thing. This passage, though, stood out for me:

The most revealing moment came when he thought the cameras were off: Before he gave his national address announcing that the war had begun, a camera caught Bush pumping his fist, as though instead of initiating a war he had kicked a winning field goal or hit a home run. “Feels good,” he said.

If that doesn’t make you feel at least a little sick to your stomach, I fear for your soul.

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Never forget

Never.

And also remember the rhetoric being thrown around today, and whose side you (and they) were on.

They’re on the wrong side of history. Then and now. Too bad history takes so long.

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Al Gore is an American hero

Just got back from a screening of Al Gore’s movie, “An Inconvenient Truth.” And of all the compelling information presented, this one fact stood out: in 2004, Science Magazine did a study of 928 peer-reviewed articles on climate change published from 1993-2003. They also studied news articles on climate change from that same period.

Percent of peer-reviewed articles that concluded global warming was naturally occurring (not caused by human activity): 0 percent

Percent of news articles which presented global warming as disputed theory: 53 percent

Human beings have an extraordinary capacity to deny reality, if that reality conflicts with their deeply-held beliefs. (See: HIV denialists, who so desperately want to believe that AIDS is caused by drug use and icky gay sex, not a virus that anyone can get.) And the mass media has extraordinary power to shape reactions to that reality. Add to that the anti-intellectualism gripping American society today, and you have a recipe for disaster.

See this movie.