I Cogitate
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August 7, 2006
We have nothing to fear but David Addington himself The name David Addington draws a blank look from most people. Well, get familiar with it because he is a driving force behind the imperial presidency of George W. Bush. Addington is among those who feels the presidency was castrated back in the 1970s and that our nation has suffered as a result. Addington favors a monarchical presidency, one that applies no restrictions on the power and actions of the sitting president. Remember the fluff about the so-called harmonic convergence from 1987? The election of George Bush and the terrorism of 9/11 can be called the anti-harmonic convergence. This confluence provided the opening for people like Bush, Addington, Dick Cheney and the like to promote fear, insecurity and instability as our new national anthem, along with the destructive myth that only the president of the United States can protect us and unfettered he must be, or else. But this approach is not new--this is a political philosophy that's been in the making for decades, awaiting implementation. Cheney has been fighting the fight ever since President Richard Nixon self-immolated and Congress rightfully muscled back into the equation of our supposed governing troika of a presidency/courts/Congress coalition. It all the same slippery slope. Misanthropes such as these can alarmingly be found throughout history--hoarding information, secrecy is most holy, exclude--not include, we, and only we, are right, your input is not necessary, marginalize perceived opponents, whiners are enemies, compromise is disloyalty, existing law and precedent are documents best used for toiletpaper. Here are a few excerpts from Jane Mayer's June 26, 2006 superb article on Addington and the other Bush Administration constitution slayers in The New Yorker: On December 18th, Colin Powell, the former Secretary of State, joined other prominent Washington figures at FedEx Field, the Redskins’ stadium, in a skybox belonging to the team’s owner. During the game, between the Redskins and the Dallas Cowboys, Powell spoke of a recent report in the Times which revealed that President Bush, in his pursuit of terrorists, had secretly authorized the National Security Agency to eavesdrop on American citizens without first obtaining a warrant from the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, as required by federal law. This requirement, which was instituted by Congress in 1978, after the Watergate scandal, was designed to protect civil liberties and curb abuses of executive power, such as Nixon’s secret monitoring of political opponents and the F.B.I.’s eavesdropping on Martin Luther King, Jr. Nixon had claimed that as President he had the “inherent authority” to spy on people his Administration deemed enemies, such as the anti-Vietnam War activist Daniel Ellsberg. Both Nixon and the institution of the Presidency had paid a high price for this assumption. But, according to the Times, since 2002 the legal checks that Congress constructed to insure that no President would repeat Nixon’s actions had been secretly ignored.top |
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