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Impeach the SOB
Damn the Republicans-Full Speed Ahead!
5/04
It's time to stop beating around this Bush and
start beating up on him--but good. There is no set of
humanitarian or democratic principles by which this
administration would not have been removed in any sane
society. The last election was questionable at best, and his
reckless, dangerous and criminal actions in the ensuing years
have shown the whole world he is unfit to govern. The only
democratic remedy, impeachment, was set aside early and
forcibly by an opposition still afraid of its own shadow. It
did make some sense, early on, to argue that, since the Greasy
Oil Plutocrats (GOP) controlled both houses, it was a waste of
time and energy.
Cynical political calculation is the currency
of a failed "democracy," and Washington is crawling
with sellouts and political weathervanes. In the Sausage
Factory that is the legislative process, anyone who wants to
get anything done had best be ready to hold her nose and roll
up her sleeves. Still, principle still counts for something.
To hear either of the Mega-Parties talk, you'd think they were
all about principle. Grandiose rhetoric covers the tiniest
focus-grouped nuances; minor tweaks to failed policies are
disguised as major ideological shifts, their proponents
bravely marching, Quixote-style, into the windmill of their
ever-so-slightly differing opponents.
So maybe it's time for a simple, radical
proposition: Truth is True. Of course Republicans will fight
impeachment like crazy--so what? Anyway, it's past time to put
to rest the right-wing myth that Nixon was "hounded out
of office" by the opposition. By the time Barry Goldwater
met with Nixon to tell him the jig was up, he reported that
the president could expect no more than ten votes in the
Senate. "And," he is reported to have added,
"I'm not one of them." Politicians don't always toe
the party line, especially when it is one drawn in the sand by
a crook.
The damage done to decades-long international
agreements, to the reputation of the US, and simply the
revulsion at all the atrocities committed in our name, is
almost beyond calculation, and quite likely beyond repair.
Cornered at every turn, the thieves and liars of this junta
respond to every new self-inflicted crisis with greater
abandon. There are dangerous and powerful forces trying to
keep this man in power, and there is no doubt that confronting
them head on will prove difficult. But there is no choice
left. The iceberg whose tip is now poking its way into the eye
of a weary world is gargantuan, and will not melt of its own
accord. These men intended all along to shred the Geneva
Convention, the US constitution and every safeguard in
between. The "Iraq Prison Abuse Scandal," a misnomer
if ever there was one, is not about a few hicks on a rampage.
Anyone with a brain could see that immediately, and once again
we were proven right. The attempt to end-run the CIA and
establish a fully secret system of torture and
"intelligence gathering" lays bare the core of these
men's "principles:" utter contempt for democracy and
due process.
It should be something of a clue to learn that
the CIA was too accountable for these guys. The CIA, as we
well know, is loath to bend any rules or skirt accountability
in pursuit of its own shadowy goals. Doug Feith, apparently,
knows better than the CIA, and he wouldn't trust them
for...well, let's say for all the assassination manuals in
Central America.
It has become the unspeakable, torturous mess
we knew it would, and they still won't come clean. That's why
they mustn't be let to leave of their own accord. Next January
is far too long, too many wars, atrocities and frayed
alliances too late. These guys, and yes, I mean all of them,
from Dubya and Lon Chaney on down--these guys have to go now.
And I don't mean back to cutting brush in Crawford. (What's
the deal there, by the way? Does this guy live on a billion
acres that he cuts himself, or what? Isn't he done yet?).
No, not back to Crawford or off to some slimy
lobbying firm--they need to go sit in a dock in the Hague and
await the judgment of the world. The world's responsibility is
to convene an ad hoc tribunal to prosecute the war crimes of
the Iraq war--just as they do with other rogue nations who
refuse to subject themselves to the conventions of
international law. Our responsibility in the US is to
facilitate the process by first removing the war criminals
from power, and then not stopping the international
peacekeeping force when they come to arrest them.
Shocked? Why? Of course, it is often shocking
to turn the looking glass around, but if we try to see what
the rest of the world sees, these are the logical next steps.
Instead, the internal "debate" grows more and more
deaf to the outside world. The Democrats have already picked
their pro-war candidate, and he is staying the course, while
rumors about a "unity ticket" with McCain swirl
above the wreckage of the international scene. What planet are
we on? I actually saw an article recently chiding the left
with the spectre of 1968, claiming that it was our fault (the
antiwar crowd) that Humphrey lost. Huh? I guess it couldn't
have been Humphrey's fault that he saddled himself with
Johnson's War. At least he was the sitting vice
president--what's Kerry's excuse?
And as long as we're playing the bogus
counterfactual history "whose fault was Nixon" game,
there are plenty of turns to go around. Assume that RFK had
not been killed in June of 1968. Having won the California
primary, he was poised to wrest the nomination from Humphrey,
relieving the Democrats of their war burden, and would
presumably have swept to victory over Tricky Dick.
Imagine...no Houston Plan, no destabilizing Chile--maybe a few
million still alive in Southeast Asia.... Well, maybe it's a
bit tongue-in-cheek, but the point is history is not an a la
carte menu. You can't pick and choose once the opportunities
are gone.
The only way the Democrats can lose this
election, as I see it, is to fail to embrace and stay ahead of
the exploding buyer's remorse now coming into focus over the
quagmire in Iraqnam. The RFK analogy is with us still, in the
person of Dennis Kucinich. Kucinich is RFK for 2004--the
late-surging candidate whose war stance-deemed opportunistic
by some, too establishment by others--represents the hope of
the party but whose candidacy, alas, is not to be: RFK's
because he was shot in the head, and DJK's because he was shot
in the image, budget, soul...take your pick. But it doesn't
graft well a generation later. No bullets were necessary to
doom Kucinich's candidacy, and no matter what changes between
now and July, it is exceedingly unlikely that Democrats in the
"disciplined," slick "modern" era would
abandon the walking disaster that is the Kerry
candidacy--although they should be thinking hard about it.
But of course, it's beside my point. Who cares
who's running in November? Impeach the bastards now. By the
time the dust settles and the indictments are all handed out,
we may well have come far enough down the chain of succession
to where a new government might mean something: Bernie
Sanders, or Kucinich, and Barbara Lee. Full speed ahead....
© 2004 Daniel Patrick Welch. Reprint permission granted with credit and link to
danielpwelch.com.
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Welch lives and writes in Salem,
Massachusetts, USA, with his wife, Julia Nambalirwa-Lugudde.
Together they run The
Greenhouse School. Past articles are available online:
index on request. He has appeared on radio [interview
available here] and his columns have been aired as well:
those interested in rebroadcasting the audio may contact the
author. Some columns are available in Spanish or French, and
other translations are pending (translation help for more
languages welcome). Welch speaks several languages and is
available for recordings in French, German, Russian and
Spanish, or, telephone interviews in the target language. See
danielpwelch.com.
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