Monday, October 26, 2009

If the Obama administration is determined to take ownership of Bush policies, it might as well take over the Bush cover-ups too

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Okay, we know where the Party of No stands. But is there
a Party of Yes? If so, any idea what it stands for?

by Ken

However dark some of our forebodings may become about the reach if not the goals of the Obama administration, there is always supposed to be the consolation that the president isn't, you know, that other guy, the one who squatted in the White House those eight horrible years. Intellectually, I know this is true, and every now and then we get a confirming proof that yes indeed, things have changed.

But so often we survey the landscape and damn if we don't see an alarming array of the same danged policies in place, often even being implemented by the same damned people, still on the job. We did have an election last year, didn't we?

In one way I envy the teabaggers and the architects of the Republican "Just Say No" Plan. They're all sure they know where the president stands, and they're by God against it. Of course they don't really know what the president believes. Heck, they barely know what they themselves believe, which is why they have to depend on "talking points" to get their beliefs right. But at least they're spared the agony of actually listening and probing, trying to figure it out. Me, I'm just about ready to throw in the towel. At this point I have less idea than I ever did what the guy actually believes in and what he actually wants to do as president.

I know a lot of people who are deep down as confused as I am keep throwing up at President Obama things that candidate Barack Obama said at some point or other during the long, long, long presidential campaign season. (Did I mention how long it was?) This is grasping at straws, really. Do you remember how I kept telling you during that long campaign season that I wasn't really keeping all that up on what the various candidates were saying? And trying to explain that I know from a lifetime of president-watching that only a tiny percentage of what a candidate says has anything to do with what that person will actually do, or even try to do, once installed in the White House. And I've never found any way of sifting out the nuggets from the dross. What was said in the campaign just because one of the consultants thought some voting block might enjoy hearing it? What might the candidate have actually meant, all the way up to the point where he finds out that, for whatever reason, it's undoable?

I've pretty well given up on the theory I developed in the early months of the administration, more out of my need for hope than anything, that the new president had been really serious about that "consensus" business, and the need for "bipartisanship"? I could still sustain this at the dimmest level of hope, because it was possible to imagine that he really wanted to change the kind of discourse and debate we have now in this country on seemingly ever subject: all shouting, all the time. And since you don't change the culture of shouting overnight, it's understandable that if you really believe in civilizing the discourse, you can't give in so easily, because that means the shouters win. That does kind of make sense, doesn't it?

Except look who he was planning to engage in civilized discourse with! Hadn't Digby already explained that Republicans' conception of "bipartisanship" is basically date rape?

That explanation just doesn't seem to hold, though. It doesn't explain, for example, why the president seems always to listen intently to people who wish him only harm, and dream of destroying his presidency, and appears always eager to find common ground with them, while paying barely more than lip service to all the people who gravitated to his campaign because of his promise of "change you can believe in." It often seems as if the administration goes out of its way to antagonize us on the left, on the theory that this will yield political gains in the muddle-headed middle.

Meanwhile, one by one, President Obama has taken ownership of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, of the butchered economy, of the need for high levels of extreme executive secrecy, on . . . well, you know the whole litany of issues, probably better than I do. What's creepy now is to find the administration taking ownership, not just of its hated predecessors' policies, but of its
massive network of cover-ups
. By the end, they amounted to most of what the Bush regime was engaged in, cover-ups.

It seems to me that the NYT hit this exactly right in this editorial this morning:

The New York Times

October 26, 2009
Editorial

The Cover-Up Continues

The Obama administration has clung for so long to the Bush administration’s expansive claims of national security and executive power that it is in danger of turning President George W. Bush’s cover-up of abuses committed in the name of fighting terrorism into President Barack Obama’s cover-up.

We have had recent reminders of this dismaying retreat from Mr. Obama’s passionate campaign promises to make a break with Mr. Bush’s abuses of power, a shift that denies justice to the victims of wayward government policies and shields officials from accountability.

In Britain earlier this month, a two-judge High Court panel rejected arguments made first by the Bush team and now by the Obama team and decided to make public seven redacted paragraphs in American intelligence documents relating to torture allegations by a former prisoner at Guantánamo Bay. The prisoner, Binyam Mohamed, an Ethiopian-born British national, says he was tortured in Pakistan, Morocco and at a C.I.A.-run prison outside Kabul before being transferred to Guantánamo. He was freed in February.

To block the release of those paragraphs, the Bush administration threatened to cut its intelligence-sharing with Britain, an inappropriate threat that Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton repeated. But the court concluded that the actual risk of harm to intelligence-sharing was minimal, given the close relationship between the two countries. The court also found a “compelling public interest” in disclosure, and said that nothing in the disputed seven paragraphs — a summary of evidence relating to the involvement of the British security services in Mr. Mohamed’s ordeal — had anything to do with “secret intelligence.”

The Obama administration has expressed unhappiness with the ruling, and the British government plans to appeal. But the court was clearly right in recognizing the importance of disclosure “for reasons of democratic accountability and the rule of law.”

In the United States, the Obama administration is in the process of appealing a sound federal appellate court ruling last April in a civil lawsuit by Mr. Mohamed and four others. All were victims of the government’s extraordinary rendition program, under which foreigners were kidnapped and flown to other countries for interrogation and torture.

In that case, the Obama administration has repeated a disreputable Bush-era argument that the executive branch is entitled to have lawsuits shut down whenever it makes a blanket claim of national security. The ruling rejected that argument and noted that the government’s theory would “effectively cordon off all secret actions from judicial scrutiny, immunizing the C.I.A. and its partners from the demands and limits of the law.”

The Obama administration has aggressively pursued such immunity in numerous other cases beyond the ones involving Mr. Mohamed. We do not take seriously the government’s claim that it is trying to protect intelligence or avoid harm to national security.

Victims of the Bush administration’s “enhanced interrogation techniques,” including Mr. Mohamed, have already spoken in harrowing detail about their mistreatment. The objective is to avoid official confirmation of wrongdoing that might be used in lawsuits against government officials and contractors, and might help create a public clamor for prosecuting those responsible. President Obama calls that a distracting exercise in “looking back.” What it really is justice.

In a similar vein, Mr. Obama did a flip-flop last May and decided to resist orders by two federal courts to release photographs of soldiers abusing prisoners in Afghanistan and Iraq. Last week, just in time to avoid possible Supreme Court review of the matter, Congress created an exception to the Freedom of Information Act that gave Secretary of Defense Robert Gates authority to withhold the photos.

We share concerns about inflaming anti-American feelings and jeopardizing soldiers, but the best way to truly avoid that is to demonstrate that this nation has turned the page on Mr. Bush’s shameful policies. Withholding the painful truth shows the opposite.

Like the insistence on overly broad claims of secrecy, it also avoids an important step toward accountability, which is the only way to ensure that the abuses of the Bush years are never repeated. We urge Mr. Gates to use his discretion under the new law to release the photos, sparing Americans more cover-up.

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Friday, April 24, 2009

Republicans Go All Out To Wreck Americans' Good Will Towards Obama With Another Smear Campaign

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An inflammatory screed by the extreme right Wall Street Journal editorial board warned yesterday that Obama killed "any chance of a new era of bipartisan respect in Washington" on April 21-- "mark down the date," they insist rather dramatically-- when he "injected a poison into our politics" by not stopping an investigation into war crimes and torture by the higher-ups of the Bush Regime. Dan Balz and Perry Bacon examined the problem more dispassionately in the Washington Post.

Obama injected poison? Where have these guys been-- with their heads up their asses? The entire obstructionist GOP has mounted a major coordinated campaign against Obama on every front. They have a putz like Paul Ryan (R-WI) out on TV whining that Obama isn't being bipartisan enough while Long Island Congressman Peter King threatening to shut down the Congress and "go to war" if the Justice Department finds any lawbreakers in the Bush Regime committed crimes that have to be prosecuted and the clownish Michael Steele is castigated by the radical right members of the RNC for not calling Obama inflammatory names often enough! And what about the Missouri's pathetic old Kit Bond dragging himself out in front of the TV cameras to let the whole country know that though he's retiring he has no intention of going out with an ounce of grace and he's certainly not done spreading his toxins. His reason for running to the media with the Limbaugh/Gingrich/Cheney talking points: "Our terror fighters need to know whether their president has their back or will stab them in the back." What a shitead! He claims Obama released the torture memos as a partisan stunt. Watch the video of the moribund and morally bankrupt Bond on MSNBC. This from the party that has decided its future rests with branding Obama and the Democrats as "socialists." An e-mail from one of the clowns to all 168 voting members of the RNC accused Obama of restructuring the country along socialist ideals:
“The proposed resolution acknowledges that and calls upon the Democrats to be truthful and honest with the American people by renaming themselves the Democrat Socialist Party,” wrote Bopp, the Republican committeeman from Indiana. “Just as President Reagan’s identification of the Soviet Union as the ‘evil empire’ galvanized opposition to communism, we hope that the accurate depiction of the Democrats as a Socialist Party will galvanize opposition to their march to socialism.”

They even had the gall to wheel out the disgraced old hack Porter Goss who Bush was forced to fire as CIA director after just a few months when he was implicated in a series of corruption scandals mixing bribery, prostitutes, domestic politics, lobbyists, sleazy Republican politicians like Duke Cunningham. Goss, who's been keeping on the down low and hoping everyone would forget what a failure he was, jumped oon board the Limbaugh-Cheney crazy train yesterday, insisting Obama was "crossing a red line." (Legitimate intelligence officials contradict Goss' and Cheney's partisan ravings and "the CIA inspector general in 2004 found that there was no conclusive proof that waterboarding or other harsh interrogation techniques helped the Bush administration thwart any 'specific imminent attacks,' according to recently declassified Justice Department memos." And then there's Philip Zelikow, the former State Department counselor whose efforts, in writing, to warn the Bush Regime that their torture activities could land them all in prison were met by attempts to have all his reports confiscated and destroyed.)

And you might not be surprise by Juan's rant on torture, but what about Meghan McCain's explosion yesterday? She was bemoaning the fact that Cheney and Rove are still trying to be seen as the face of the Republican Party. She's creeped out by their very unpatriotic and endlessly repeated attacks on Obama and said it is "very unprecedented for someone like Karl Rove or Dick Cheney to be criticizing the President." Her advice to them: "Go away."

The results of new polling from the very anti-Obama Associated Press and from Pew show the desperate political hacks who would rather see our country fail than watch Obama succeed have a long road ahead of them if they think they're going to bring the country over to the Dark Side with them. "When Americans are asked to assess television news coverage of Barack Obama, Fox News Channel stands out from other networks for being too critical of the president." Americans like and trust the president and they dislike the harsh, negative rhetoric from Fox and the Republicans.

Instead of paying any heed to the plotting and conniving sore losers and lockstep obstructionists, listen to what an actual distinguished ex-CIA agent has to say about this whole shit-storm the Republicans are raising:




ONE SMALL WORRIED FOOTNOTE FROM KEN

I say, hear, hear! Thank goodness somebody said it!

I just have this one small, or maybe not so small, lingering reservation, or maybe worry, carried over from the presidential campaign: When an entire political movement/party (whatever you want to call what's left of the hybrid of Modern Republicanism and Movement Conservatism) goes over to the dark side, rejecting any obligation to reality or truth and instead unleashing -- in massed chorus, at top hysterical volume, with endless repetition and without interruption -- a barrage of nothing but lies and insanity, to which, as I've tried to point out a couple of times, THERE IS NO POSSIBLE RATIONAL RESPONSE (you simply can't counter insanity with sanity, and webs of outright lies similarly take on a life of their own, beyond the reach of any possible correction), a certain portion of it sticks in the minds of the public.

I can't give you numbers for how large a portion of the public is affected, though again I worry that it's much larger than anyone has reckoned. And the practical result is that that portion of the public remains, at least for the time being, outside the reach of reason, not to mention facts. (Remember facts?) At the same time, while the Movement Goopers may finally be paying some price for their nihilistic-obstructionist tactics, it's still nowhere near enough, to the point where I might say they're still getting away almost scot-free.

Didn't somebody say that nobody ever lost by underestimating the intelligence of the American public? I just worry.
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