Booman Tribune

The Tyranny That Dares Us to Speak Its Name

by boadicea
Wed Jun 21st, 2006 at 09:28:17 AM EST

This review of How Would a Patriot Act by Glenn Greenwald was difficult to write.  As anyone who frequents Greenwald's blog, Unclaimed Territory knows, he has a clean and matter-of-fact writing style.  He writes like the constitutional lawyer he is.

It's not the writing that's the problem. It's the subject. 

The subtitle of the book says it all, "Defending American Values from a President Run Amok". It only takes one-hundred and twenty-eight pages to, as John W. Dean said on the back cover, "(assemble) a devastating bill of particulars against the Bush and Cheney's administration's insistence on operating outside the rule of law." 

Actually, it takes less than forty pages to scare me more thoroughly than any Stephen King novel I've ever read.  Because on page thirty-nine, the subject of John Yoo, memo writer extraordinaire and blight on the Constitution, is introduced.  (To be fair, "blight on the Constitution" is my phrase, not Greenwalds.  I tend less to lawyerly phraseology. But even if Greenwald sticks to facts and law, that's plenty terrifying.) 

The closing of Yoo's infamous memo:
In both the War Powers Resolution and the Joint Resolution, Congress has recognized the President's authority to use force in circumstances such as those created by the September 11 incidents.  Neither statute, however, can place any limits on the President's determinations as to any terrorist threat, the amount of military force to be used in response, or the method, timing, and nature of the response. These decisions, under our Constitution, are for the President alone to make. (Emphasis added.)
  Black is white. Up is down.  Get your ass in that cage so I can protect your freedoms. 

"No Limits" is just what this post-frat-boy President and his Nixonian Throwback Posse want to hear.  The thing is, they don't actually believe it.  The chapter about the NSA spying scandal, "What Can't He Do?" puts the lie to that once and for all. 
It defies credibility to think that the President, in October 2001, ordered eavesdropping in violation of FISA because he perceived that the law imposed too many barriers to necessary eavesdropping.  After all, he ordered this illegal eavesdropping at exactly the time, in October 2001, when Congress was amending FISA in accordance with the President's requests and the President was telling the nation that, as a result of  those amendments, he had all the tools he needed to monitor the communications of terrorists. 

The President plainly broke the law, which is why the only defense  available to him and his supporters is to claim that he has the right  to do so.
What has proceeded from that is an elaborate dance between Bush/Cheney and the Congress.  A dance in which both partners posture for the cameras.  Alberto Gonzales appears before the Senate Judiciary and performs with an arrogant flourish. He reaches  back to CIVIL WAR precedents- a time in our nation's history that we were literally torn in two- in an attempt to justify the limitless grab for power in this administration. 

Senator Arlen Specter in turn fluffs up his feathers to demonstrate he's still cock o' the walk and he'll convene hearings, by thunder-until his minder brings him back to earth and he backtracks to where the Bush/Cheney administration-wants him to be. 

This bill of particulars would indeed be damning, if the Senate were populated with Ervins, Bakers, and Weickers. (Hat tip to Ned Lamont in honor of Weicker's endorsement.) 

But we have only pale imitations of those great men who were dedicated political partisans until the Constitution was at stake.  Then they were patriots

If  Congress cannot rouse itself in defense of American liberty, it is up to us ordinary American patriots to do so.  Because Bush has appropriated powers greater than even Richard Nixon claimed for himself. He's cowed the Congress and packed the courts.  The only thing standing between this dry drunk and the collapse of the separation of powers and the Bill of Rights itself is us. 

This president and his syncophants think they are above the law.  They manifestly are not  if we rise to defend against the tyranny that dares us  to speak its name.  Impeachment can be initiated from the states. 

Read this book. Find out what's going on in your state to purge this corruption from the body politic, and stand in defense of liberty and justice for all. 

If you need a little additional inspiration, I suggest this:
We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure Tranquility,  provide for the general defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America.
  WE.

Crossposted at TexasKaos and Dailykos.



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I appreciate the chance to get some more eyes on this review, and hopefully, Glenn's book.

Before you win, you have to fight. Come fight along with us at TexasKaos.
by boadicea on Wed Jun 21st, 2006 at 11:35:37 AM EST
One question, though I admit it's kind of a brutal one to GG: How much of what he catalogues will be news to somebody who has been following this presidency closely, and reading left wing blogs? Does he present any points of analysis that made you sit up and think "I'd never thought about it that way before."

I like his writing, and he's done a great service to the country writing the book. I'd just like to assess whether it's worth my time to read it. Or would it be better spent trying to expose more of the crimes of Bush Co.?

Inconvenient News Doing my part to afflict the comfortable.

by smintheus on Wed Jun 21st, 2006 at 02:21:55 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Because although I was certainly aware of Glenn's blog, and read it fairly often, I wasn't a close reader by any means.

I see several reasons to buy it (or request your local library system do so).

  1. I don't know how much of the material is new, however, there is something about the flow of episode after episode of utter contempt for the governing principles of this nation that stands out more strongly than reading a series of blog entries contemporary with the individual events. (Rather like watching all the episodes of 24 in sequence from the DVD box set over a weekend rather than a television season. The story is the same, but the effect is magnified.)

  2. Give it to someone who doesn't follow the blogs. It will be an eye opener if they've been relying on traditional media. Particularly the uncanny parallels with Watergate, the seminal political scandal of my lifetime. I've in mind to buy a copy for both my Senators. Even if they are beyond being shamed, they should know we're aware and will hold them accountable. I think a Roots project was talked about surrounding that, but I haven't heard any more.

  3. We need to build a demonstrable market for progressive authors.  Conservatives have it, and it's a major contributor to their noise machine. If you can find a way to do it, I encourage buying it for that reason. (I understand that it's not always possible, but I'm making my case here.)


Before you win, you have to fight. Come fight along with us at TexasKaos.
by boadicea on Wed Jun 21st, 2006 at 02:53:06 PM EST
[ Parent ]
It's a great book.  Bought my copy at Borders about three weeks ago.

Obama is a Patriot
by Steven D on Wed Jun 21st, 2006 at 03:30:36 PM EST
I had a heck of a time figuring why it was so hard to start this review.

Then I realized, I'd had a very visceral reaction to reading this book.  It took me back directly to the Watergate hearings, which were my first real political memory. I was in middle school, and clearly that was a formative experience.

Before you win, you have to fight. Come fight along with us at TexasKaos.

by boadicea on Wed Jun 21st, 2006 at 03:37:24 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Yeah I remember those hearings too.  Before they started Nixon was still close to 50% approval, but by the time they were over, he'd dropped like a rock into the twenties.

Obama is a Patriot
by Steven D on Wed Jun 21st, 2006 at 04:19:56 PM EST
[ Parent ]
I didn't know about approval ratings at that time.

I just knew that the President had done something really, really bad that I couldn't understand all the edges of, and the talk of impeachment was very scary.

I was in jr high at the time, and just beginning to understand politics-inasmuch as I ever will.

Before you win, you have to fight. Come fight along with us at TexasKaos.

by boadicea on Wed Jun 21st, 2006 at 04:36:34 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Thanks for the recommend. It looks like a great book and I'll be hopping off to buy a copy at B&N  :)

OT but did anyone see the frontline last night? The Darkside I had wondered what others thought abouyt it since so much of what it conatined goes right to what we are discussing here at Booman

Hermaphrodite with attitude!

by Syniel (s y n i e l *dontspammeeeeeeDx*@gmail.com) on Wed Jun 21st, 2006 at 05:19:54 PM EST
I'm going to be looking for the rebroadcast.

I was just too tired to focus properly last night.

Before you win, you have to fight. Come fight along with us at TexasKaos.

by boadicea on Wed Jun 21st, 2006 at 05:28:04 PM EST
[ Parent ]
For what it's worth ,it's playing online in it's entirity startingf Thursday.

Of course, a lot of people don't have a good enough net/pc connection.. BUT just in case..!

Hermaphrodite with attitude!

by Syniel (s y n i e l *dontspammeeeeeeDx*@gmail.com) on Wed Jun 21st, 2006 at 05:31:13 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Wow! Them's strong words. Thursday... that's today!

Everybody Comes From Somewhere: Conversations and Activism
by CookTing (FEMA|at|yourhouse|dot|now) on Thu Jun 22nd, 2006 at 01:47:16 AM EST
[ Parent ]
They are strong words. But the situation really is dire.

Before you win, you have to fight. Come fight along with us at TexasKaos.
by boadicea on Thu Jun 22nd, 2006 at 07:44:50 AM EST
[ Parent ]


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