yet another SQ test testing 1244.... |
Wed, 30 August 2006 14:13 |
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Kansas City Star
Bush keeps chipping away at what U.S. stands for
ìThe right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no warrants shall issue, but upon probable causeÖî
ó Amendment IV, U.S. Constitution
Recently, a federal judge in Detroit took the crown from the imperial presidency of George W. Bush.
ìThere are no hereditary kings in America, and no power not created by the Constitution,î U.S. District Judge Anna Diggs Taylor wrote.
The judge claimed the White House had violated individual rights of speech and privacy. Itís the second time a federal court thumped Bush on the head over the Constitution.
He didnít get it then; he doesnít get it now.
Judge Taylorís remarks came in a ruling that struck down as unconstitutional the administrationís warrantless wiretapping of people without probable cause.
President Bush had secretly conducted this domestic spying initiative using the National Security Agency. He claimed it was necessary to national security.
Judge Taylorís opinion matters more than most because it is a judicial rebuke. The very Constitution that Bush willfully violates makes such judicial input and oversight possible.
Given the legal pool available to the White House, one must assume the president is familiar with the Constitution that he and the vice president find obsolete. The legal experts for Bush and Dick Cheney further a political agenda and their own careers.
This White House relied on faulty legal advice and still does. But bad legal advice is not a good excuse for misconduct.
The current U.S. attorney general behaves more like a consigliere, aiding and abetting a criminal enterprise with legal finesse and redacted documents.
Alberto Gonzales, sworn to uphold the Constitution, acts as though he still is presidential counselor. Like former Attorney General John Ashcroft, Gonzales doesnít enforce the laws; he enforces an ideology. Itís not Republican; itís totalitarian.
This administration has used fear as a weapon to do whatever it wants, whenever it wants, to anyone it wants and preferably in secret. It seeks to muzzle the press and punish insiders who blow the whistle.
This presidency has acted without congressional oversight or input. It has intimidated librarians through dubious national security letters that kept them from testifying about privacy invasions under the USA Patriot Act.
It has made telephone companies complicit in domestic spying by having them turn over phone records without customer notification. Your e-mail, bank records and medical records no longer are private under the Bush regime.
This administration canít bring Osama bin Laden to justice, but it knows who text-mailed you, what periodicals you read and can open your mail. Civil liberties have irresponsibly become collateral damage in the war on terror.
The White House mission is not just paranoid, itís pathological.
This administration circumvented the secret court (FISA) that was a post-Watergate remedy to executive abuse. Gonzales and others explained that Bush used the NSA rather than waste time consulting FISA, which issues speedy warrants. The president has legal authority as commander in chief, he insisted. Itís noteworthy that he didnít say this under oath.
Thankfully, in her Aug. 17 ruling, Judge Taylor recognized a pattern of abuse of power.
Unfortunately, the administrationís appeal allows the White House to keep up the dirty work until perhaps the Supreme Court intervenes.
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