Is Karl Rove Right?

So Karl Rove says that Democrats have a "pre-9/11" view of the world. (WaPo article) He says that likes it's a bad thing. But there's something to recommend in a pre-9/11 mindset.

  • Pre-9/11, we hadn't invaded a country that didn't have WMD on the basis of inaccurate intelligence and hyped threats.
  • Pre-9/11, countries that represent real threats - Iran and N. Korea - were afraid of our military might.
  • Pre-9/11, we were the legitimate champions of human rights and the role model to the world on how to treat those detained in the course of war - we thought the Geneva Conventions mattered.
  • Pre-9/11, we had robust alliances with nations across the world, who cooperated with us on international issues that threatened us all.
  • Pre-9/11, we had an executive branch that seemed to believe it was subject to the law and not above it.
  • Pre-9/11, civil liberties mattered and fear wasn't sufficient reason to undermine the foundational principles of our country.
  • Pre-9/11, Americans trusted that the checks and balances built into our democratic system would protect them from on over-reaching executive branch.
  • Pre-9/11, we could criticize the government without being called treasonous or unpatriotic.
  • Pre-9/11, we could meet peacefully to discuss how to fight the policies of the government without being spied upon and labeled a credible threat to the security of the United States.

Before 9/11, we believed that a national tragedy like the 9/11 attacks would unite us and not divide us. We believed that we were a country with courage and conviction and not a country full of fear. We believed that we were a nation of principles that would guide us and unite us in times of threat. We believed in the power of the law to protect us and our way of life.

It's not 9/11 that destroyed those beliefs, that put replaced courage with fear, that made us a "might makes right" nation instead of a nation of laws. It's not 9/11 that made civil liberties expendable, that made disagreement with the government treason, that weakened our authority in the world, that exhausted our military and cost so many lives in a part of the world that had nothing to do with 9/11.

That wasn't 9/11. That was Bush. That was the Republicans. And if signing on to the Bush agenda is what it takes to qualify as having a "post-9/11 mindset", I'll stick to pre-9/11. I'll choose courage over fear, liberty over safety, law over force, and truth over  expediency.  I choose to continue to believe  in what makes this country different - and I'll fight for it. That's my pre-9/11 mindset.

In Search of Fighting Dems - and a Fisk of Sen. Coburn

The Alito hearings are an embarrassment. Republican Senators displaying their transparent ass-kissing skills. The Democrats illustrating how difficult they find it to actually confront something they don't support. I don't want to hear any more about Senators being troubled or concerned. I want to hear them fighting mad. Rahm Emanuel is out there recruiting "fighting Dems" - military vets to run for office. But we need a different kind of fighting Dem now. Not the kind who commends the dignity of Alito and then shares his concerns about the creeping expanse of presidential authority. But one who says outright that this isn't a hearing about dignity and class - it's a hearing about whether or not he will protect and defend the Constitution as a Supreme Court Justice. Whether he finds checks and balances to be a quaint notion, sort of like the view some have of the Geneva Conventions. Whether or not he is so enamored with the office of the President and so self-effacing as a judge, that he is unable to exercise the power of the judiciary to maintain a balance of power between the three equal branches of government. But no. We get sad shakes of the head, ruffling through papers, verbal sighs instead of verbal challenges.

I want a Fighting Dem who can match the extremism of Sen. Coburn (R-OK), but someone who is extreme in their defense of the Constitution instead of using it to attack those who support reproductive rights for women - yes, the scary A word, abortion. Coburn is offensive - in words, tone, and approach. He's not playing a defensive game and that's about the only positive thing I can say about this wingnut.

Here's what Coburn said - my responses are interjected throughout the transcript (video available on Crooks and Liars):

COBURN: And as I've listened today, we've talked about the unfortunate, the frail. The quotes have been "fair shake for those that are underprivileged." We've heard "values, strong, free and fair, progressive judiciary." We've heard "the vulnerable, the more unvulnerable (sic), the weak, those who suffer." We've heard of an Alito mold that has to be in the mold of somebody else.

And as a practicing physician, the one disheartening thing that I hear is this very common word, this "right to choose" and how we sterilize that to not talk about what it really is.

Did you catch that association of sterility with abortion? The right to choose with "how we sterilize"? Nice insidious implication, there.

COBURN: I've had the unfortunate privilege of carrying over 300 women who've had complications from this wonderful right to choose to kill their unborn babies.

I wonder how much larger that number would be in a world where abortions were only available in back alleys? And that's what it is: It's the right of convenience to take the life. It is NOT the right to take the life, to kill unborn babies. He may "know" that life begins at conception, but that's a religious/personal belief, not a scientific one. If it were the right to kill unborn babies, there would be no restrictions on abortions when the fetus is viable outside the womb. And oh, there are restrictions aplenty.

COBURN: And the question that arises as we use all these adjectives and adverbs to describe our physicians as we approach a Supreme Court nominee is where are we in America when we decide that it's legal to kill our unborn children?

Well, I'd say that an America that respects the rights of women, a nation that doesn't legislate on issues for which there is no moral consensus, a nation where 70% of the population supports abortion in at least some instances, is an America I'm glad to be in. It's an America that is governed by the people and not by the elite.

COBURN: I mean, it's a real question for us. I debate honestly with those who disagree with me on this. It is a real issue, a measurement of our society, when we say it's fine to destroy unborn life who has a heartbeat at 16 days post-conception. Thirty-nine days post- conception you can measure the brain waves and there's pain felt.

He debates honestly? His very premise is flawed - that abortion is killing babies. As for his "medical info", a heartbeat doesn't mean life. Brainwaves don't mean human life.If they did, there certainly wouldn't be any legitimate scientific debate about when life begins. What they do undoubtedly mean is that potential life is there and reasonable people disagree on when that potential becomes reality.

COBURN: The ripping and tearing of an unborn child from his mother's womb through the hands of another, and we say, "That's fine; you have a constitutional right to do that."

Oh, that's nice. Right up there with starving Terri Schiavo. For many, I daresay most, who have abortions, it isn't a child being torn apart - it's a fetus, tissue that can become a human life. And the right here isn't about that tissue, it's about me. A real, live human being with dominion over my own body. If he agrees that I can demand that anyone undergo an invasive surgical procedure to donate a kidney or bone marrow to another person to save their life, if I can require everyone to get tested as a potential donor and donate on demand, then maybe I'll listen to him tell me what I can and can't do with my own body.

COBURN: How is it that we have a right of privacy and due process to do that but you don't have the right, as rejected unanimously by the Supreme Court in 1997, to take your own life in assisted suicide?

Well, um, because suicide is the taking of a life and abortion isn't. 

COBURN: You know, how is it that we have sodomy protected under that due process but prostitution unprotected? It's schizophrenic. And the reason it's schizophrenic is there's no foundation for it whatsoever other than a falsely created foundation that is in error.

Ack! He's equated sodomy with prostitution? Let's see. Sodomy is anal sex, hetero or homo. It's generally occurs between consenting adults with no economic benefit or expense on either side. Prostitution? There's that economic issue. And really, if the equation he makes is accurate, perhaps it's time to legalize prostitution.

COBURN: I don't know if we'll ever change that. It's a measure of our society.

Yeah, we're obviously not the most logical bunch.

COBURN: But the fact is that you can't claim, in this Senate hearing, to care for those that are underprivileged, to those that are at risk, to those that are vulnerable, to those that are weak, to those that suffer and, at the same time, say I don't care about those who have been ripped from the wombs of women and the complications that have come about throughout that.

WRONG. When I see an equivalent effort on the part of the ranting masses, especially the ranting anti-abortion men, to fight aggressively for the vulnerable, weak, and suffering, then they may be able to make this kind of an argument (though it still wouldn't hold). But all you have to do is look at the state of our foster care system across the states, the increasing number of children going to bed hungry, the Katrina families that are still homeless, the rank poverty exposed by Katrina, the elderly and poor that are suffering from cold this winter because they can't afford oil and the Republicans fought even a tax credit to alleviate costs (a tax credit they'd get after winter ended) - just look at those and tell me that as someone who supports a woman's right to choose to carry to term or get an abortion, that someone like me really can't care for those people.

I think you'll find that those who are most active in the fight to retain our reproductive rights are the same people who are most determined to help those in need. We're not the ones proclaiming the beauty of an ownership society to those who own so little, who have no hope of owning much more. We're busy trying to find heat, shelter, clothing, food, and safety for those who need them. This kind of rank hypocrisy is one of the biggest reasons that no matter what my views on national security and terrorism and taxes, I will never be a Republican.  And one more thing. This kind of drivel from the  Senator might be slightly credible if he hadn't just voted to cut the  very programs that serve these populations. RANK HYPOCRISY!   

COBURN: So, the debate, for the American public -- and the real debate here is about Roe.

Maybe for Coburn, but for 70% of Americans, the debate is over. They don't want Roe overturned. Coburn is his own version of Don Quixote - I can only hope that he's tilting at windmills.

COBURN: We're going to go off in all sorts of directions, but the decisions that are going to be made on votes on the committee and the votes on the floor is going to be about Roe, whether or not we as a society have decided that this is an ethical process, that we have this convenient process that if we want to rationalize one moral choice with another, we just do it through abortion, this taking of the life, of life of an unborn child.

First, as I noted above, we've already decided that this is an ethical process. That's why 70% of Americans don't want Roe overturned. As for his "rationalize one moral choice over another", I'll confess that I don't know what the hell he's talking about. But the real point is that this isn't just about Roe. It's very much about the limits on presidential powers, particularly in war time. Because if the president is unconstrained by the laws of the land, we no longer live in a democracy.

COBURN: I asked Chief Justice Roberts about this definition of life -- you know, what is life? The Supreme Court can't figure it out or doesn't want us to figure it out; the fact that we know that there is no life if there's no heartbeat and brainwaves. We know that in every state and every territory. But when we have heartbeat and brain waves, we refuse to accept it as the presence of life -- this lack of logic of which we approach this issue because we like and we favor convenience over ethics. We favor convenience over the hard parts of life that actually make us grow.

That may be true for him, but it's simply not true that I find it illogical to view a fetal heartbeat and brainwaves as a potential life. It's basic logic - a heartbeat and brainwaves are necessary but not sufficient indicators of life. 

COBURN: Senator Brownback talked about those with disabilities that are destroyed in the womb because of a genetic test that is sometimes wrong. I would put forward that we all have disabilities.

Sure. He's suffering the inability to think clearly, to respect those with legitimate and moral opposing views. He's suffering from selective concern - it's so much easier, after all, to care about a fetus since women are the only ones who can care for them. It's so much messier to care about actual walking, talking people.

COBURN: Some of us, you just can't see it. But I can hear it. And yet, who makes the decisions as to whether we're qualified or not?

The voters. And I'd like to have a talk with a few who live in Oklahoma!

COBURN: We've gone down a road to which we don't have the answers for. That's why we have the schizophrenic decisions coming out of the Supreme Court that don't balance logically with one versus another decision.

Huh? Oh, yeah. The assisted suicide and abortion decisions. But as I noted earlier, they're only inconsistent if you aren't thinking clearly - if your assumptions block your ability to understand a different perspective.

COBURN: So my hope, is as we go through this process, let's not confuse it with the easy words and really be honest and straightforward about what this is about.

Okay. It's about me letting you determine what I can do with my body and the potential life I may carry in it. It's about me letting you decide that I have to get permission from my hypothetical husband in order to abort - even if he's a scary dude. Even if I've been cheating on him and it's not his. It's about me ceding to your desire to establish a legal system that conforms to your theocratic moral system instead of shared national values (like, um, keeping abortion legal). It's about you feeling morally superior, very male, and very paternal - and faceless women being the subject of your paternalism. It's about your inability to see that people like me actually care about more than reproductive rights. It's about your inability to understand that by ignoring the issue of presidential authority, you risk your own power and you risk the stability of this country. Honest and straightforward? Your a dope, a prime example of what keeps people like me away from your party, your church, and your views

COBURN: I firmly believe that the court should take another direction on many of these moral issues that face us.

Wouldn't that be an activist court? Isn't it Congress who is Constitutionally responsible for making laws? Oh, right. You don't have the majority's support to legislate your moral vision.

COBURN: If we're to honor the heritage of our country, whether it be in terms of religious freedom, whether it be in terms of truly protecting life, protecting not just the unborn but who comes next, the infirm, the elderly, the maimed, the disabled -- that's who comes next as we get into the budget crunch of taking care of those people in the years -- I believe we ought to have that debate honest and openly.

I hate to break it to you Tom, but we HAVE religious freedom and our heritage isn't one in which abortion was anathema. It was legal, the province of midwives for a very long time. The law got involved when the doctores wanted the midwives business, bringing about the first regulations on abortion that ultimately led to it's prohibition. (Thanks, Doc.) As for your allegation that we're unwilling to protect life, are you really suggesting that we're moving toward euthanizing the infirm, elderly, maimed and disabled? That it will happen because of budget crunches? Wow, you're cynical. And willing to make remarkable leaps of faith in your argument. But if you're right, then you better do something to reign in the deficit you dope. Talk about inconsistency.

COBURN: But the fact is, is we're going to cover it with everything except the real fact is we've made a mistake going down that road in terms of saying we can destroy our unborn children and there's no consequences to it.

But there is a consequence. We have to listen to you. And you get a red meat issue to use in your fundraising. You get to feel morally superior. You have an easy target to villify. As for the consequences for the women choosing abortion, only the smallest percentage of women who abort do so with out emotional consequences, because deciding to end a potential life, ending the process by which that potential becomes reality, is hard. It's personal, it's emotional, and it's not done lightly. Certainly, making abortion illegal won't end abortion and the consequences then will be quite dire.

The rest is all ending kiss-ass, pompous blather. Including the usual poke at activist courts. Same old same old. But I didn't need to hear more. If I were an Oklahoman, I'd be embarrassed.

We Should Have Seen it Coming

Tom DeLay is reclaiming his seat on the powerful appropriations committee. He's losing control over the money machine that gave him the muscle to force votes and serve as Majority Leader. So now he's going to control (at least try to control) where money gets spent - an equally potent weapon in the battle to force good Republicans to give him their allegiance, to vote as he dictates instead of how their constituents dictate. Really. We should have seen this coming.

It only adds insult to injury that the reason there's an open seat is that the Republican bribe-accepting Duke Cunningham left it open when he resigned in disgrace.

The Economy 101: Don't Believe Everything You Read

In his Jan 9 op ed column in the Washington Post, Sebastian Mallaby dismisses Democrats' claims that there is a huge problem with the economy (generally, the complaint is that economic gains have gone to corporations and not workers, that wages haven't improved as productivity has increased and as the stock market has gotten stronger, that job insecurity is increasing and the quality of new jobs is decreasing.). Mallaby writes:

It's true that wages have done badly. But in five of the past six years, average compensation -- that is, wages plus benefits -- has risen faster than inflation, according to the Labor Department's Employment Cost Index. The exception was last year, and that was mainly because high oil prices caused an unexpected inflationary spurt.

Just to be clear - he's saying that the fact that wages have done badly is misleading because wages plus benefits have done well. But here's the kicker. Benefits includes health care. And since at least 1999, health care costs have increased at two to three times the rate of inflation. With no increased value delivered. So it's a bit much to claim workers are doing better because the cost of their benefits has gone up so dramatically while their wages remain flat. The income generated by workers has not kept pace with inflation. That's the bottom line.

Later in the column, Mallaby dismisses claims that workers face more pressure by citing a paper on manufacturing firms. He then extrapolates out that what holds true for manufacturing firms holds true for every industry. If Mallaby can extrapolate to all companies based on the policies of manufacturing companies, I can surely extrapolate to all workers based on the ones I know. Right? Well then,  I'm here to tell you that there's pressure on workers - and lots of it.

In dismissing increased pressure at work as implausible and wrong, Mallaby disregards the role (or not) of unions, the pressure faced by salaried workers to put in whatever time necessary to get the job done, the pressure faced by hourly workers to get more done in less time - or else. Pressure comes from the constant need to do more with fewer people, faster and better. Pressure doesn't come only or even mostly from company policies (child care, vacation, et al) and pressure isn't equivalent to "treating workers badly", as he implies. Oft times, pressure is external to the company and felt by executives and mail room clerks alike.  And it's the inevitable result of the stock market's predictable upswing for companies that downsize - or "rightsize" as my my former employer liked to call it. When downsizing happens, the pressure is felt in the board room first, and then it doesn't just trickle down, it comes crashing down in a flash flood.

Mallaby moves on to prescriptions for our alleged economic challenges and implies that some Democratss support trade protectionism (when in reality we simply don't support free trade like that embodied in CAFTA). He goes on to say that we believe dampening competition will lead to gentler management (who said that?!?). Then he tells us not to worry about the middle class squeeze - that it's exaggerated. Huh. Tell that the the middle class in question. They might beg to differ.

Mallaby begins to redeem himself at the very end of his column - noting that the Bush tax cuts have "put the federal government on an unsustainable footing" and slamming the administration/Congress for running such a large budget deficit.

He then calls attention to the squeeze on the unskilled. And I have a question. First, I know that skill increases your opportunities, that you have a better chance at a better job at a better salary if you're "skilled". But I also know that our economy is shifting to a service economy and that one of the big complaints is that jobs requiring a skill are decreasing while service jobs are increasing, and that service jobs require less skill and therefore are compensated at a lower rate. So is there a squeeze on the unskilled in terms of the job market? Or is it the nature of a service-based economy that there will be more low-end unsatisfying jobs to be filled by the unskilled? On this point, I'm confused.

The bottom line is that the economy is improving for some people and not for others. It's improving for those with membership cards to the Ownership Society. It's not improving for those who don't have the assets to qualify for membership. There's a growing two-tier system in this country, a systematic division of have's and have not's. Those in the "have's" category are members of the Ownerhsip Society. Those "have not's" work to serve them. There isn't equal opportunity to join the ownership society - whether the asset owned is a good job, healthcare, stock, retirement accounts, private school, a college education, or basic economic opportunity, it's simply not available to everyone equally - it's not a level playing field. Not by a wide margin. Bush's tax cuts are just a part of the problem. But they should be the first to go. Then we'll move on the next challenge.

UK Torture Memos and a Blast at Yoo's "Hard Work" Defense

For a great fisking of Yoo's claim that there's no legal basis for defining torture, head over to Looking for Someone to Lie To's post, Yoo can't be serious.

For the latest torture memos, look to the UK. In defiance of a gag order, the former British ambassador to Uzbekistan, Craig Murray, has released memos that are being described as revealing US/UK collaboration to condone torture. I'll read and analyze these in the near future, but you can read them for yourself at this Craig Murray blog.

BlairWatch is calling on all bloggers to replicate the documents to prevent them from being pulled back behind the veil of secrecy. So here they are in PDF format:

Telegrams.pdf: A series of telegrams that Craig sent to the Foreign Office, outlining his growing concern and disgust at our use of intelligence passed to the UK by the Uzbek security services.

Legal Advice.jpg: A copy of legal advice the Foreign Office sought, to see if they were operating within the Law in accepting torture intelligence, and according to Michael Wood the FCO legal adviser; it is fine, as long as it is not used as evidence.

UPDATE: Check out this Crooks and Liars audio of John Yoo explaining just how far he believes the president can go - torturing children.

It's Time for Some Checks and Balances

Interesting. An article in today's New York Times, Padilla Lawyers Urge Supreme Court to Block Transfer, reminds us of the original claims made by the administration against Jose Padilla. They claimed, way back when, that Padilla was conspiring to release a radioactive bomb in the US. This claim has been used time and again by the administration to justify its conduct in the war, specifically in regard to the interrogation, treatment, and classification of detainees as enemy combatants.

Padilla even makes an appearance in the infamous August 2002 DOJ memo by attorney John Woo that makes torture possible - an analysis retracted two years later - and that also concludes that the President has virtually unlimited power as Commander in Chief. It is in the section on the powers of the Commander in Chief that this excerpt appears.

The case of Jose Padilla, a.k.a. Abdullah Al Muhahir, illustrates the importance of such information [ed - info obtained from interrogations]. Padilla allegedly had journeyed to Afghanistan and Pakistan, met with senior Al Qaeda leaders, and hatched a plot to construct and detonate a radioactive dispersal device in the United States. After allegedly receiving training in wiring explosives and with a substantial amount of currency in his position (sic), Padilla attempted in May, 2002, to enter the United States to further his scheme. Interrogation of captured al Qaeda operatives allegedly allowed US intelligence and law enforcement agencies to track Padilla and detain him upon his entry to the United States.

Huh. None of this is relevant anymore, it seems. Apparently, the administration is only interested in criminally prosecuting Padilla for fighting against US troops alongside members of al Qaeda (something which he should be prosecuted for, by the way). Seems that there's no penalty for conspiring with al Qaeda leaders to set off a radioactive bomb here.

So tell me. Why doesn't this matter anymore? Is it that presenting the evidence in open court will threaten national security? Or perhaps the evidence was gained in torture sessions? Certainly the reference to this case in a memo written for the sole purpose of providing a legal justification for, oh, let's say aggressive interrogation techniques makes one wonder.

Here's hoping the Supreme Court remembers that it is an equal branch of government and that they back the appeals panel decision to block the transfer of Padilla from military to civilian court - and that they rule on the president's authority to unilaterally declare an American citizen to be an enemy combatant, and then to detain that person without charges for an indeterminate period of time.

Those Black Hawk Helicopters Just Might be Coming

Did you know that in October 2001, the Dept. of Justice produced a memo for the Bush administration (for Gonzalez) with the subject line, "Authority for Use of Military Force to Combat Terrorist Activities within the United States?"

Given that the memo was written by John Yoo, the same attorney that determined that Bush had the authority to unilaterally approve spying on American citizens without warrants, I suspect the memo said Bush could deploy the military here at home anytime he wanted, as long as he had a credible "fighting the terrorists" reason.

Bush: Some are more equal than others

The Bush administration is enamored with the concept of broad executive powers. More than any social issue like abortion, it is this issue that drove their choice of nominees for the Supreme Court.

In 2001, John Yoo's memo justifying torture basically stated that the president had the right to break any law in the name of national security and could not be held liable for any actions taken as Commander in Chief. No-one stopped to mention that the stability and longevity of our democracy rests on the checks and balances that come from three equal branches of government. No, instead, this administration might take as it's motto "some branches are more equal than others".

Specifically, the Yoo memo states that "the President enjoys complete discretion in the exercise of his Commander in Chief authority" (emphasis mine). A full fourth of the memo defends this position, explaining that neither Congress nor the courts can tell the President what he can and can't do as Commander in Chief. No laws can restrain him in that constitutional role. And even if an argument can be made that the law applies, the memo offered two fully developed defenses.

Of course, this is the same memo that the administration retracted just before the Gonzales hearings, with a quiet footnote that the retraction didn't apply to the analysis on Commander in Chief authority. So that analysis stands. And Bush doesn't want it challenged in court (hence the efforts to move the Padilla prosecution to criminal court). He needs friends on the Supreme Court, friends that will agree with Yoo's views on presidential supremacy. He needs friends to codify his "some branches are more equal than others" view of our government. We can't let him have them.

Bush Has Forgotten His Oath of Office

"I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will faithfully execute the office of President of the United States, and will to the best of my ability, preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States."

This is the oath of office that every US president has been required by the Constitution to take upon entering office. President Bush has sworn to it twice. I publish it here to remind us all that it does NOT say "preserve, protect and defend the United States". That's what Bush seems to think he swore, and he uses that as a justification to ride roughshod over our Constitutional protections. He just leaves out the phrase "the Constitution of".

So what's lost when he forgets his primary responsibility?

  • His obligation to respect and protect the power of Congress to make "Rules concerning Captures on Land and Water" - like every enemy combatant in Gitmo, those held in secret prisons, and those held in the US.
  • His obligation to "take Care that the Laws be faithfully executed". That would include the law prohibiting the government from spying on citizen's without a warrant. The laws against torture.
  • His obligation to ensure that "no religious Test shall ever be required as a Qualification to any Office or public Trust under the United States". We can debate whether or not there's a religious qualification for judicial nominees, but I doubt anyone would debate that there's a requirement for those working in his Community and Faith-Based Programs offices.

And I haven't even gotten to the bill of rights. There, we find that he's neglected the public's right to "be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures." He's forgotten that "No person... shall be ... compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself, nor be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law." (By the way, that's No person not No citizen.) He's ignored Amendment VIII, which deals solely with the prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment.

Whenever I hear the president or his cohorts justify his actions because of his first priority to defend the United States, I think "no, that's not right." Because his first priority, as set out in the Constitution, is to protect the Constitution itself. That takes precedence over everything - even our lives. The founding fathers could have written an oath binding presidents to protect the United States. They didn't. As a conservative  nominating  "originalists"  to the  Supreme Court,  Bush might apply the same principles and commit himself to the original  intent of the  founders. And defend the Constitution above all.

Welcome

Welcome to the NEW Citizen's Rent. You'll find the previous posts at Citizen's Rent 2005 and the torture related posts at Torture Inc.

Why the change? I felt like starting 2006 with a clean slate. So welcome to my fresh start. I hope you'll come back.

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