Indiana’s four Republicans were among the 156 members of the United States House of Representatives who voted against the bipartisan children’s health insurance bill, thereby upholding George W. Bush’s veto. Thinking of all the garbage these guys have passed and the insane amounts of money these guys have wasted, and this is where they draw the line — health care for kids. It’s not overspending — look at how much money they’ve wasted in Iraq. It’s not government health care — look at the Republicans’ Medicare expansion. So, what principle is it these guys are supposedly upholding?
Questions for the Candidates
Balloon-Juice is developing questions for the candidates. Among them:
1.) “Would you have sex with a man to stop a terrorist attack?â€
2.) “If lowering taxes results in increased revenues then would lowering taxes to zero result in infinite revenues?â€
3.) “If you had a time machine, would you travel back in time and abort Bin Laden?â€
4.) “Would you torture and kill Jesus to ensure mankind’s salvation? And how does that work?â€
(For that last one, I’d follow up with “And would you wash your hands afterward?”).
Cheney’s Law
Last night I watched the Frontline story entitled Cheney’s Law. If half of that is true, any real patriot would be pissed off at the monstrous power grab Dick Cheney, David Addington, and John Yoo have tried to execute on behalf of the executive. I paraphrase, but essentially what these chowderheads are arguing is that the President gets to be a king and there’s not a damn thing Congress can do about it so long as the President mutters the terms “commander-in-chief” or “war” every so often. It’s been dressed up under the moniker “unitary executive theory” but I don’t see any practical limitations that distinguish it from monarchy.
Torturing prisoners even when American law says you can’t? It’s fine if the President says go ahead (alternately, you can go all Humpty-Dumpty and re-name torture as “enhanced interrogation”.) Tap Americans telephone calls? Sure. Throw Americans into prisons without charges? You bet. The Frontline segment pointed out that there really didn’t seem to be anything in the unitary executive theory that would stand in the way of the President deploying troops on American soil at any time for any reason he or she sees fit.
I should mention at this point that I seem to have misjudged former Attorney General John Ashcroft. I strongly disagree with him on any number of policy matters, but at some fundamental level I believe we agree on how this democratic republic ought to be governed. This was demonstrated by the hospital room interlude. The saga essentially went like this. Cheney and the White House created the NSA wiretap program which had to be re-certified periodically by the Attorney General, Ashcroft at the time. Apparently John “Dr. Yes” Yoo at the DOJ’s Office of Legal Counsel had been rubber stamping anything Cheney and Addington had sent his way, including the NSA program. At some point, the head of Office of Legal Counsel position came open. Ashcroft did not appoint Yoo to the position because he felt that he was too much under the sway of the Vice President and the White House. Instead, he appointed Jack Goldsmith. Goldsmith reviewed the wiretap program and determined that it was unconstitutional. He passed his concerns along to Ashcroft’s second in command, James Comey, who agreed. Ashcroft had determined not to re-certify the program. Waiting until he was in a weakened state at the hospital, Alberto Gonzales and Andy Card went to the hospital to get Ashcroft’s signature. Comey and Goldsmith apparently caught wind of this and dashed off to the hospital. Ashcroft, who was in a grave state of health, nevertheless gathered his strength, articulated what was wrong with the NSA wiretap program, and stated that, in any case, Comey was the acting AG.
At this point, I figure there are three types of players in these sagas — guys like Cheney, Addington, and Yoo, people who know what they’re doing and have a profoundly anti-democratic view of the power of the executive branch; guys like Gonzales and Rove who are probably indifferent about the larger constitutional issues and simply have a short term desire to obtain power and political gain for their team; and guys like Ashcroft, Comey, and Goldsmith who have very conservative policy views but believe in the liberal democratic principles upon which our country was founded.
My understanding from my history classes is that, at the founding of this Republic, there were two major lines of thought from which we could have chosen: the first was along the lines of Thomas Hobbes Leviathan: basically, the state of nature is so nasty that you authorize one super-predator (the king) to keep the rest of the predators at bay. The King can do anything he wants, but at least you have only one thing to worry about. The other line was reflected by John Locke’s Treatises on Government in which the power of the government arises from the consent of the governed and is designed to protect individual rights of life, liberty and property. Clearly, our Founders went with Locke. They created a government of limited power with checks and balances so that one branch of government would counteract the other. Madison, et al. understood that government would be made up of men, not angels. It was therefore necessary that the government be designed such that the individual ambitions of powerful men would play against each other, limiting the damage done to society. So, it’s laughable to think that they would enact a Constitution that gave the executive such unbridled power as to have no effective check if ever the executive scares the citizenry about threats, foreign or domestic. But Cheney and his men are working hard to undermine the government created by Madison, Hamilton, and the rest.
Cheney, in particular, seems to have been scarred by the battles of his youth. He was a young chief of staff, in over his head during the Ford administration. Ford had to deal with the aftermath of Nixon’s criminal activities and the Congressional backlash. Apparently Cheney didn’t like being on the business end of Congressional authority. Solution: neuter the Congress and empower the executive.
And, unfortunately, there are a hardcore group of Republicans who will support him, not necessarily because they agree with him philosophically, but because Republicans are their team — much like I would cheer if the Colts were the beneficiary of a phantom pass interference call against the Patriots. Only this is our society we’re talking about, not some sort of game.
I had this post in mind when I was reviewing the local blogosphere today. In this light, one post by the Hoosier Pundit was especially annoying. It was a hooray-Republicans, boo-Democrats, jeering kind of post wherein he seemed to endorse legislation that said this:
Nothing in this Act or the amendments made by this Act shall be construed to prohibit the intelligence community from conducting surveillance needed to prevent Osama Bin Laden, Al Qaeda, or any other foreign terrorist organization from attacking the United States or any United States person.
Refusing to adopt this language, he seems to assert, reflects ambivalence on the part of Democrats for opposing al Qaeda or Osama bin Laden. The old “you’re either with us or with the terrorists” line of bullshit. Now, reading his posts, Scott seems like a pretty smart guy with his primary fault (as I see it) being too much of a team player. (And, if he wanders by here, he should feel free to speak for himself). If we could somehow look at government and legislation in isolation without knowing who would benefit, Republicans or Democrats, I suspect he and I would come to a lot of the same conclusions about what is good or bad.
There simply has to be some accountability and limits on power exerted by any segment of government. Citizens can’t become so afraid that they’re willing to abdicate their liberties and the liberties of future generations simply in return for promises of security. Where are we going to draw the line? Tapping our phones without anything like probable cause? How about seizing our property if the President alleges that having the property might help fight al Qaeda? Seizing our guns because it might help keep weapons out of the hands of terrorists? Closing down houses of worship because terrorists have been known to seek sanctuary in mosques? Is there nothing we are unwilling to sacrifice because of the spectre of those who wish us harm?
Congress needs to rein in an overreaching executive and should not be cowed by self-serving “you’re helping the terrorist” rhetoric from the President and his cronies. And citizens need to recognize the basic liberties that are at stake and value their freedom more than their safety. (Citizens also need to maintain a little perspective on the threat — at the moment, they’re a lot more likely to get killed in a car crash or by any number of more mundane threats than by a terrorist act.)
News of Interest
I was just looking through some of my Site Meter reports and noted with some pleasure that folks seem to be getting some use out of my “News of Interest” links on the left sidebar based on the number of times folks seem to see something there and click through. (The Google ads on the right side, not so much.)
In case you wondered how it was done, the Google Reader is a news/rss aggregator/reader that allows you to “share” stories. They also provide you with a script you can plug into your blog that feeds those shared stories. I think it’s great for those kinds of things where I might otherwise throw up a link without much in the way of commentary.
Media Shield Law
(H/t Taking Down Words). The U.S. House has passed Mike Pence’s Media Shield Law.
I have mixed feelings on these sorts of laws. Being part of the legal system, I’m probably biased in favor of its prerogatives. When I judge tells someone to cough up information, generally I think the person ought to have to cough it up. However, I recognize that the First Amendment and the free flow of information it protects can benefit if sources feel like they can go to reporters and not get in trouble for doing so. And, I am inclined to protect the little guy fighting corruption that happens to have the full force of the government behind it. I want to protect Deep Throat and the types of folks who told Sy Hersch about Abu Ghraib. On the other hand, I don’t have any inclination at all to protect guys like Scooter Libby or the administration sources who leaked information to Judith Miller about the Iraq war. The other thing I am a little iffy about is the idea of giving journalists First Amendment rights that are not available to the rest of the citizenry.
These are not insurmountable objections, I don’t think, and such objections could be overcome with the right legislation. I don’t think Rep. Pence’s legislation, however, strikes the correct balance. The bill is H.R. 2102.
First of all, coverage is limited to those people who regularly gather and report news for dissemination to the public for a “substantial portion of the person’s livelihood” or for “substantial financial gain.” So, it makes protection contingent on how lucrative one’s reporting is.
Second, the protections seem to cover the likes of Scooter Libby far more comfortably than they cover the likes of Deep Throat. Among other things, disclosure can be compelled notwithstanding the law where such disclosure is purportedly necessary to prevent terrorism or threats to national security or identify people in connection with such threats or necessary to identify a person for prosecution for disclosing classified information that harms national security.
Records of a communication service provider for a “covered person” are also protected from disclosure.
Essentially, therefore, I have two main problems with this legislation – First it makes coverage contingent on a person receiving significant financial gain for one’s reporting. Second, it contains amorphous and potentially broad exceptions where national security concerns or disclosures of classified information are alleged.
In any event, my hope would be that providing specific protection in the articulated cases would not diminish protections to the extent they are already in place for those people or instances not singled out for protection. My fear is that courts would read this legislation and decide that if you’re not a “covered person,” you don’t even get the protections that were allowed before the legislation was passed.
Update I noticed that Kos put up a post expressing similar concerns. He would be protected under the “substantial financial gain” analysis but he points out that folks who post on his diaries and any number of credible bloggers would not.
More likely than not, the folks who drafted the language had their hearts in the right place. They didn’t want to limit protection to corporate journalists. But, they also didn’t want someone to be able to quickly throw up a sham blog to get some protection. Still, tying the protection to financial gain seems arbitrary and not well tailored to the intent.
Global Warming and Greenland’s Independence
Colin Woodard, writing for The Christian Science Monitor, has an interesting article entitled As a land thaws, so do Greenland’s aspirations for independence. Greenland is a mostly self-ruled colony of Denmark. (CIA World Factbook entry on Greenland). Negotiations are underway between Greenland and Denmark as to their relationship, but those have recently stalled on questions over ownership of the island’s oil and mineral wealth. Global warming is making these resources increasingly accessible and the world market for those resources is increasing. Denmark wants to maintain its current right to 50% of the royalties. Greenland wants a bigger share.
Apparently the United States’ voracious appetite for oil is making Greenland inclined to keep close ties of one sort or another with Denmark:
“As everyone else gets more and more desperate for this commodity, you don’t want to have it and be a very, very small, very, very independent country, very, very far from anything else,” he says. “My personal view is if Greenland finds oil, that is the end of the idea of independence.”
Aqqaluk Lynge, head of the Inuit Circumpolar Council’s Greenland chapter, agrees. “We are afraid that the United States will take over Greenland if the Danes get out,” he says. “If Americans can take Iraq, then why not Greenland?”
Indeed, sources say that even if Greenland becomes independent – an event supporters see as at least a decade away – it will keep very close ties to Denmark, in large part out of fears of US hegemony.
. . .
Svend Auken, a veteran Danish politician and former energy minister, says the Greenlanders are right to be concerned. “In the long run, the ideal would be for them to be recognized as an independent state in the United Nations, but in close contact with Denmark,” retaining the Danish queen, currency, and defense cooperation, he says. Otherwise, “they will be very dependent on the Americans and they know the welfare society and wages wouldn’t be on the same Scandinavian level.”
Krugman on Gore & Climate Change
Paul Krugman had a column in the New York Times entitled Gore Derangement Syndrome speculating on the reasons that Al Gore drives so many on the right to the brink of insanity:
Partly it’s a reaction to what happened in 2000, when the American people chose Mr. Gore but his opponent somehow ended up in the White House. Both the personality cult the right tried to build around President Bush and the often hysterical denigration of Mr. Gore were, I believe, largely motivated by the desire to expunge the stain of illegitimacy from the Bush administration.
And now that Mr. Bush has proved himself utterly the wrong man for the job — to be, in fact, the best president Al Qaeda’s recruiters could have hoped for — the symptoms of Gore derangement syndrome have grown even more extreme.
The worst thing about Mr. Gore, from the conservative point of view, is that he keeps being right. In 1992, George H. W. Bush mocked him as the “ozone man,†but three years later the scientists who discovered the threat to the ozone layer won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry. In 2002 he warned that if we invaded Iraq, “the resulting chaos could easily pose a far greater danger to the United States than we presently face from Saddam.†And so it has proved.
Krugman goes on to explain the detrimental effect that accepting certain basic facts about climate change would have on GOP dogma. It seems odd to me that, more and more over the past 10 or 15 years, on the national level, the choice between R & D is becoming basically a choice between faith-based policies and fact-based policies.
No recommendation from Senate Tax Committee
Niki Kelly, writing for the Fort Wayne Journal Courier, is reporting that the Senate Commission on State Tax and Financing Policy will not issue a final recommendation. The panel has been studying the property tax issue all summer. It is not unusual for summer study committees to not issue final recommendations, though perhaps in this case – given the high level of interest – one would be expected. The panel is formally made up of 3 Republicans and 2 Democrats. Even without a formal recommendation, the study still probably had value. A lot of good information came out over the course of the study and that will be useful in analyzing any plans that are proposed this coming session. I wonder if the Republicans may have been afraid of stepping on the toes of Governor Daniels by approving and publicizing their plan before he announced his own or afraid of providing an excuse for Eric Miller to get mad again when the legislators act responsibly and propose a tax plan that might actually work.
Getting an ID can be mired in red tape
Via a lot of places, but I’ll just pick Taking Down Words, the Times of Northwest Indiana tells the tale of Christina Pearson, age 20, who was made to undertake “four trips to two branches and calls to the Bureau of Motor Vehicles’ Indianapolis headquarters in two days before Christina was able to get her ID card.”
The problem was that Christina has Down Syndrome and, consequently, does not happen to have the items on the list of approved documents the Indiana Bureau of Motor Vehicles requires for a citizen to get a State ID. The communication for the Indiana Bureau of Motor Vehicles, Dennis Rosenbrough explained that BMV staff is under very strict orders to accept only the approved laundry list of documents before issuing a State ID. Says Rosenbrough, “It’s very important for all states to issue the IDs in a very careful way. This is not unusual to Indiana in any stretch of the imagination.” It is my understanding that the federal government has become involved in issuance of State identification, ostensibly for national security reasons; so, he’s probably right that strict control over issuance of identification is not unique to Indiana. What is unique to Indiana, however, is the requirement that a citizen have one of these strictly controlled pieces of identification as a prerequisite to exercising that citizen’s constitutional right to vote.
Steve Bonney Wins Environmental Award
Steve Bonney has been awarded the Environmentalist of the Year Award by the Hoosier Environmental Council. Bonney was the lead plaintiff in the law suit opposing the sale of the Toll Road. Obviously the suit was not successful, but I sure appreciate his efforts.
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