In the twilight of the nomination season, words are flying. So are recriminations, protestations, condescensions, entreaties, —and more. I do not intend here to trivialize the validity of most said. But I would like to urge dear readers and dearer political activists to look beyond them for just a few minutes.
Look beyond to the larger picture. Look to where we now sit in the governance, the representation, and most importantly, the reality of this country. We are manacled to a violent occupation across the world. We have tens of millions of citizens without health care. We have lost too many civil rights to count, crowned by the loss of habeas corpus. We have become the purveyors of torture around the world. Our name, our credibility, and our honor have been slimed. I could go on and on. But you all know the dark place to which we have come.
I believed, despite ominous evidence to the contrary, that we could get ourselves and our country back. But it wasn't by restoring a democrat to the White House. It wasn't through an amorphous belief in 'change' that reinvigorated the democratic process. It wasn't even by improbably persuading the fourth estate to once again do its job. We could have once again realized the good invested in 200 plus years of our country by doing one thing. Just one.
Following the rules.
We didn't.
And now we're enmeshed in all those words, like unity and party and healing and winning and support and on and on and on. Well, I don't accept the premise. I don't accept the arguments for and against unity or the necessity to heal or the requirement to support the party. All those are mini-issues burgeoning with the importance laid on them by people who believe they can break, ignore, or trample every rule to get the prize. They're the distractions. If we accept them, we sign on to a new way of doing business, governed entirely by the whim of the politicians who choose the issues about which we are to get all hot and bothered.
Please don't let them distract you. Don't sign on to their bill of goods. Because it's not about parties and persuasion, or demographics and delivering the vote on election day. It's about playing fair, doing right, living with integrity, building good lives for our children...
It's about following the rules.
Here are a few. And some of the antithetical new twists visited upon us.
There are three branches of our government, all equal. However debatable that reality may be, there is surely an arguable parity between them, with no one branch more equal than the rest.
For instance, the checks and balances built into the system should not allow hundreds of foreign individuals to be held without charges, without attorneys, without end.
The head of the executive branch is simply that. The head of the executive branch. He or she is not the leader of the other branches.
For instance, the executive branch cannot refuse to testify before the legislative branch.
The head of the executive branch is not the head of the party to which he or she belongs, to the extent that all members of that party must rubber-stamp his or her actions.
For instance, the legislative bodies are not to mindlessly vote in lock-step with the president simply because he or she has an R or a D after his or her name.
The president is the commander-in-chief of the military. He or she is not the commander-in-chief of the country or anything else.
For instance, when a president calls himself, 'the commander guy', he's full of it.
The Congress declares war. Only the Congress has the power to engage our country, and therefore our children, in mortal combat.
For instance, if the Congress foolishly and illegally hands that power over to another branch, it is incumbent upon them to retrieve that power by refusing to fund an illegal action. Immediately. And that decision should have nothing to do with worries over electability in future races.
The Senate confirms justices to the Supreme Court.
For instance, the president does not 'get' his or her appointee to the third branch of government because he or she wants that person. The nominee is vetted by 100 representatives elected to do just that. And the vetting is to include more than party affiliation and wedge issues.
The elected representatives of states decide whether revotes or recounts are necessary.
For instance, deferring entirely to the whims of the last two campaigns standing is certain to disenfranchise large chunks of voters.
When a president commits high crimes and misdemeanors, the House of Representatives must vote to impeach.
For instance, when a CIA agent is outed by the executive administration, and perhaps the executive himself, impeachment proceedings are not optional.
Dear reader, if someone commits a crime, say stealing a TV, for instance, and someone else accepts and uses the TV, knowing it is stolen, doesn't that make the second someone complicit in the crime? If we accept the premise—the rearrangement of our government, the omnipresence of our parties in governance, the corruption of our judicial system by that partisan omnipresence—then are we not thoroughly complicit in the future that now stares us belligerently in the face?
Let's go back and read the rules. Then let's live by them, until such time as we'd like to change them. Ignoring them leads to a lot of very unhappy people and a government we do not want.
5 comments:
Excellent post! Glad to see you've joined the blogosphere!
I reject your post as false. The USA has NEVER followed the rules--EVER. You're just becoming de-brainwashed. It's time to go back to "Public School" for you. Perhaps a rousing bit of celebrity gossip on CNN, MSNBC, or Fox will do you some good. Drink the punch. Don't wake up. The USA is a good people. Albeit, fearful, warlike, imperialist, hateful. Deep down inside, we know we're good. We just reject the mirror. When the US is attacked, it's ALWAYS unprovoked. We never ticked off anyone. The rule of the world is and always will be--kill those who don't think or believe the same as you. In the US, we're good at that. Communism was great for the USA, it gave us an enemy and provided us great impending fear that could be stoked at any time. Reagen didn't know the damage it would cause the country to level the Kremlin. Thank God for terrorism, we finally have another silent enemy we can drum up at any time. Free pass to attack anyone at any time. Yes, we'll make war in Iran--it's a given. It's not wrong. It's natural. The Arabs can dismantle their weapons, and surrender the resource rich land they're on--or we can kill them and take it. They're at fault, not we. Thanks for your post. God bless the USA.
First of all, I compliment your aplomb in allowing geoffs post on your blog...obviously one of the 30% that do not understand the 'spirit' which the founders embodied and conveyed through the Constitution and all attendant thinking/writing that lead to its creation.
Per your first post as a blogger, a meaty pov...your call for adhering to 'the rules' brings me pause for reflection and cause for response.
You outline via call and response the glaring travesties which folks like geoff seem to consider 'natural' and part of the course of human events. To him I must respond with the rhetorical question, 'are we, as the human race, not better in spirit and action than just a few hundred years ago and/or surely since Ur?'
You describe our present Hall of Mirrors well and yet do not call directly for a way we can exit it, except to follow the rules. I would submit that things have gone so far into the Dung Pits of Glive that only a thorough cloths change and scrubbing will suffice. And secondly, the rules have been so twisted and manipulated that even SCOTUS gets confused enough to believe it can ordain election winners!
The parties have been corrupted to the core and particularly with the neutralizing admonition 'practical politics' as their standard. We witness how that admonition keeps the entrenched feet out of the fire...maybe not the fire of exposure, but surely the fire of doing anything about...well, doing anything which will change the status quo. Both parties are culpable and conservative in that light.
Two avenues seem at hand...change the players slowly and surely over time through grass roots action and move through the glass ceiling and onto the national venue. Or, use the grass roots efforts to seed and nurture a third party effort and dominate the state level, of, by and for the people.
At issue, always, is financing and true vote counting. Money is problematic, but getting the votes of all citizens struck, accounted for and honestly tallied is a realistic endeavor. Remember, one of the first things bushco did was promote the implementation of HAVA which was no more than using federal dollars to embed manipulatable electronics deeply into every states voting process...another rhetorical question, 'why do the military, financial institutions and every major corporation spend TENS OF BILLIONS of dollars EVERY YEAR and have for at least the past 25 years on network security?' Every system can be hacked and these vote taking and tallying machines can NEVER be secure... NEVER!
So...let us resolve our initial frustrations with a sincere grass roots attempt at making every vote TRULY count. With that, we can hope to affect things at least to the state convention and state elections.
For the moment,
Doubt Nothing...Question Everything
Paulrevere
It's interesting when a post mirrors the problem it's trying to describe. This is just another stream of angry words and not a breath of solution. It's the world that has to unify. That is currently happening largely through the growth of huge multi-national corporations and the expansion of technology in general. Both are completely out of control. Unfortunately real global unity will occur in the wake of some cataclysm forcing a requirement for global authority. If you think rights are diminished now, just wait and you will pine for these days. Not much can be done about most of this. There is nowhere to hide. Technology can't be stopped, big business can't be stopped, and a cataclysm in the form of nuclear terrorism will occur. Don't you see that it's not about this country and all the petty this and that. A President who claims the intension of reaching out to the world on an unprecedented scale can't be a bad thing now. A President who will continue conflict is a bad thing. Party unity for this election is crucial. That doesn't mean that anyone has to set aside their convictions or stop fighting for their beliefs. It just means we have to be certain that another Republican does not become President now. If you are positive that battle is in the bag then, by all means, do your thing. I think it's still up for grabs partially due to angry Democrats who intend to toss their votes in the trash.
Loved your post. Looking forward to more ...
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