We're Really Sorry,
World
Some Americans are ticked
off
about the upcoming January 20th inauguration; this one is riled up
January 18
2005
Counterbias.com
by W. David Jenkins III
Winter finally came to this upstate New York conservative pothole I
call home, and the snows allowed me to experience a mix of pride and
pathos in my country. With the roads a complete mess of slush and
ice, I decided to stay home and watch C-SPAN as the January 6
line-up consisted of the Alberto Gonzales confirmation hearings and
the 2004 presidential electoral count in the House of
Representatives. So while the snow and ice built up outside my
house, I kicked back and watched - in utter disbelief – the lame
attempt at confrontation which took place in one room of the
Nation’s Capital that day and the brave, principled act in another.
And through it all, one thing kept going through my head: We owe the
Founding Fathers and the world one hell of an apology.
But first, the brighter side of that wintry day.
In what should have been a replay of four years ago, a member of the
Congressional Black Caucus stood in protest of the results of the
electoral tally of the state of Ohio. However this time, unlike four
years ago when it came to Florida, a congresswoman was able to state
that a senator had signed on to the formal protest – an action not
taken in Congress in this capacity for over one hundred years. And
for a damn good reason.
There were enough submitted complaints and reports of
“irregularities” in Ohio regarding what happened on November 2 to
warrant the protest – not necessarily to overturn the results, but
to ensure there would continue to be a dialogue of, if not a
solution to, the problem facing America’s election process. This
“problem” seems to have come to a head since George W. Bush entered
the field of presidential politics.
The brave and principled Democrats who challenged the results out of
Ohio wanted to make sure that the governing bodies in which they
serve continue to address the problem that plagues this country.
They wanted every vote to count. They wanted every voter to know
he/she has equal access in which to exercise that privilege and
responsibility. However, the Republicans decided to air their
arrogance rather than acknowledge the problem – basically because
they don’t see any problem. Their guy got in again and they don’t
particularly care how.
So the conservatives used the two-hour session after the protest to
try out their best Michael Moore jokes coupled with cutesy little
“Move On” references in a vain attempt to paint the opposition in an
unfavorable light. Instead they came across as petty and pompous –
like fat little kings chastising their perceived subordinates. When
these parasites finally fall, and someday they will, they’ll be
lucky to win the audience or support of a cockroach at a public
urinal. They have definitely set the tone.
I only wish that Barbara Boxer and Stephanie Tubbs Jones had had
more support when the vote to pursue the protest was held. Many
Democrats talked the talk for two hours but when it came time to
vote, they bailed out. And that’s not only a slap in the face to
Ohio voters, but it’s just a damn shame – plain and simple.
This brings me to what was happening in another room in the Capital
that same afternoon. When did you ever think you would hear members
of an American governing body and a presidential appointee debating
whether it was okay to torture somebody? I could not fathom the
reality taking place before me.
The future Attorney General, the nation’s “top cop”, was dodging and
weaving verbal punches like a boxer as he was asked over and over
whether he supported torture or understood the implications that he
would even explore the legality of torture. And it wasn’t just the
Democrats on the committee.
Republican Senator Lindsey Graham almost seemed to chastise the
nominee, Alberto Gonzales, when he warned against the peril of
taking this country down a road that puts us in danger of becoming
“like our enemies.” Gonzales replied that because we hadn’t chopped
off any heads that we were “nothing like our enemies.”
Hogwash.
America is supposed to be a leader which sets a standard for other
countries to aspire to and strive to achieve. We are the world
superpower that should be an example of what is good and what is
right. But there are those who feel that because there are some who
do not “play by the rules” that we should do like-wise and that we
are more than justified in doing so. What’s worse, these same people
insist on using 9/11 as an excuse to engage in deplorable behavior.
What else is new?
There were some strange and eerily revealing statements made during
this hearing that should’ve made even the most devout Bush kissers
wake from their stupor. One of the most overlooked remarks Gonzales
made was his acknowledgment that he understood he would, as Attorney
General, represent the people rather than be just counsel to the
president. But it has always seemed to me that the president is the
representative of the will of the people. That Gonzales would derive
that there was some kind of difference between counseling the
president as opposed to acting on behalf of the people of America
seemed odd at the least.
Most of the hearings consisted of a farcical back-and-forth between
Gonzales and the senators as one by one they tried to get him to
clarify his position on presidential power in terms of torture. This
was centered on the 2002 Bybee memo which was based upon information
in a Department of Justice report Gonzales himself had requested.
The memo stated that certain combatants captured in the war on
terror did not fall under the protections of the Geneva Convention.
We also learned of a recently released FBI document that suggests
Bush secretly signed off by Executive Order on the use of “extreme
coercive measures in interrogation.” The pictures from Abu Ghraib
and reports from other prison camps reveal, in gruesome detail, the
results of such a policy. ICRC (International Committee of the Red
Cross) reports out of Guantanamo also tell of cruel treatment of
prisoners, many of whom are still being held without charge.
So in the face of all of this and other documentation showing –
beyond the shadow of a doubt – that Americans have committed acts of
torture and that senior officials in this administration have gone
to great lengths to seek legal counsel in order to defend these
acts, the line of questioning went something like this:
Senator: ”Does the president have the right to ignore the law and
permit acts of torture?”
Gonzales: “This president would never condone torture.”
Senator: “But does the president have the right……”
Gonzales: “That’s hypothetical…besides, this
president thinks torture is bad, etc.”
That’s the way it went. Gonzales was evasive and seemed to have
moments of convenient memory loss when it came to questions of who
was responsible for pursuing the legalities of what constitutes
torture and who was responsible for its results. When Republican
Senator Graham asked him if he agreed with Department of Defense
legal experts when they said our policies on torture had made things
worse for the troops stuck in Iraq, his meager reply was, “I have to
get back to you on that.”
The only thing that angers me more than the behavior in that hearing
room is the deplorable fact that Gonzales will be confirmed despite
all that is known! Can’t somebody just find a mystery nanny in this
guy’s past?
The Democrats need to start standing and voting on principle. Sure,
they’re a minority and they haven’t a chance of getting anywhere in
the next four years. But if they think that kowtowing to the
Republicans will get them even a morsel from the political plate of
these fat little kings, then maybe they’re not as bright as we might
hope they are. It has never worked during the last four years – it
sure as hell isn’t going to work in the next four.
The opposition – if there really is one – needs to realize that they
are little more than geeky kids in the junior high gym class who
think that if they can get by with only a wet towel snap to their
bare asses then they’ll be doing all right.
The Democrats need to realize that the presidency of George W. Bush,
forever in question about its legitimacy, is not good enough in the
eyes of our allies and our people.
America is now a country which condones torture and is going to
appoint a new attorney general who will attest to that fact in the
eyes of the world and half of us here at home. America under Bush
has become a high-tech third-world rogue nation. Our elections prove
it, our foreign policies prove it and, if things keep going the way
they are, our economy will end up somewhere behind the folks in
Venezuela.
America owes the world and our soldiers an apology. We are not
fighting in Iraq for the right reasons. We are not “protecting our
way of life or our freedoms.” We are not the shining city on the
hill. We are not a place that embraces high moral values nor do we
embrace our freedoms, seeing as we’re passively allowing those who
have had a part in removing those freedoms to become the newest
leaders in Bush’s government.
We have become a nation that accepts no responsibility for its
actions or its mistakes. We have become an apathetic people led by
fat little kings who cater to a Boy King and the nasty little patri-idiots
he surrounds himself with to do his bidding. Well, actually, they’re
doing their bidding – it’s just that the Boy King really thinks he’s
in charge.
Listen, world. We are really sorry. You are right – 59,054,087
Americans are really dumb. So please don’t blame us for the next
four years – it isn't our fault. We hope our leadership in the
opposition will not only prove that to you, but we hope they’ll
prove it to us as well. On January 6 I saw both signs of hope and
signs to despair. But when January 20 gets here, please try to
remember that George W. doesn’t represent all of us! Only a spit
over 59 million, and the sad thing is we can’t even be sure of that
number.
It’s just part of being a high-tech third-world rogue nation. And
there’s a bunch of us pretty ticked off about it.