3 posts tagged “republicrats”
But first, my commentary...
Why/How is it that all you Obama-voters didn't anticipate his so-called flip-flops, all his (ridiculously rationalized as) "disappointments," his bad nominations for cabinet-level and deputy-level positions, the unnecessary compromises he made to the economic stimulus package, his back-pedaling on torture, and on and on...
... Now, there's all this hand-wringing over Obama's "confusing" refusal to even consider single-payer healthcare. You ask yourselves what's his strategy here, sandbagging universal healthcare, when he used to support it. After all, back in 2003, didn't Obama say, "... [I'm] a proponent of a single-payer universal healthcare program?"1 And then, in that same speech, didn't Obama declare that the only thing standing between Americans and universal healthcare was that "... first we have to take back the White House, we have to take back the Senate, and we have to take back the House."1 Last time I looked, Obama-- a Democrat -- was sitting in the White House, Harry Reid-- a Democrat -- was presiding over a filibuster-proof Senate majority, and Nancy Pelosi-- a Democrat --was Speaker of the House.
Hmmm. I think I might have mentioned something about this BEFORE the election last November.
Oh, yeh, and then there's that notorious chief of assassins and advocate administrator of torture whom President Obama has just placed in Command of all US and NATO Operations in Afghanistan: General Stanley McChrystal. In ousting former Commander, Gen. David McKiernan, and replacing him with McChrystal, Obama has-- in the words of Slate columnist, Fred Kaplan --"... [signaled] a dramatic shift in US strategy for the war in Afghanistan. And it means that the war is now, unequivocally, 'Obama's War.'" Besides referring back to the article I've linked-to above, do check out James Petras' article in AlterNet, "Cheney's Chief Assassin is Now Obama's Commander in Afghanistan."
And now, the cartoon...
How do the Republicans do it?
by Tom Tomorrow
1 Here's the full quote:
"I happen to be a proponent of a single payer universal health care program...I see no reason why the United States of America, the wealthiest country in the history of the world, spending 14 percent of its Gross National Product on health care cannot provide basic health insurance to everybody. And that's what Jim is talking about when he says everybody in, nobody out. A single payer health care plan, a universal health care plan. And that's what I'd like to see. But as all of you know, we may not get there immediately. Because first we have to take back the White House, we have to take back the Senate, and we have to take back the House."
Read David Sirota's hand-wringing piece at: http://www.alternet.org/healthwellness/139959/obama_for_single-payer_before_he_was_against_it./
Dear
Senator Nelson,
This is an
addendum to my previous email on your vote to amend the Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Act of 1978.
Allow me to
make it clear that I am quite familiar with the arguments that we are at war,
that combating terrorism requires some laxity vis-a-vis Constitutional
mandates. But I say that if we give up the very Rights our Constitution
guarantees us, then "the terrorists" have, indeed, won. After
all, we've been told all along that their aim is to destroy America. It seems to me that
our nation's Founders, in their great wisdom, foresaw the kinds of threats America
would face in times to come. They knew firsthand the face and deeds of an
enemy overseas (King George), as well as what terrorists can accomplish (the
patriots who staged the Boston Tea Party, who tarred and feathered and
pole-axed the King's tax collectors-- and worse --were seen as terrorists by
the English and their Tory allies in the colonies). But what frightened
our Founding Fathers the most was a President unchecked by Congress and unfettered
by law (and the courts), a so-called Imperial President.
So, these arguments hold no water for me. They are flimsy and emotional, rather than fact-based and logical. Logic and fact dictate a Constitution undiminished, and a Congress that uses its powers of oversight, budget, checks to the Executive and Judiciary, investigation, and subpoena. To have otherwise is not to have the America we say we are.
Sincerely,
Stan _______
Dear
Senator Nelson,
As a lawyer
(with a degree from the U of VA, no less), you must be familiar with the
Constitution-- the very same Constitution you swore to protect and uphold.
It seems
from your recent vote-- joining the Senate Republicans and President Bush --to
amend the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978, you have forsaken both
the Constitution and the American people, and given the President powers that
were illegal only the day before. Not
only that, but you have willfully abrogated your powers of oversight—ceding
them, instead, to an Attorney General who has perjured himself before Congress
--at a time when this Imperial President must have his power checked (that's
checked as in checks and balances-- another concept that seems to have escaped
your attention, or, at the very least, your conscience).
Senator, if
you think handing what little power you have over to the GOP is going to get
you re-elected, then you surely must be considering switching parties. A Republican in Democrats’ clothing gets you
nowhere in this state—apparently, based on previous elections featuring other
Republicrats (Jim Davis comes to mind), the voters of Florida prefer the real
thing.
If you EVER
want my vote again, sir, I suggest you vote traditional Democrat values and
never forsake the Constitution again.
Sincerely,
Stan --------- (a very disappointed constituent-voter)
See below
for what the papers have to say :
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[Note: Letter above included both the Houston Chronicle editorial (below), as well as the NY Times editorial (already published here in an earlier blog entry)
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The Houston Chronicle
Editorial
Tapped out:
Snooping law is bad legislation
http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/editorial/5045587.html
What's more frightening to congressional Democrats? The curtailment of American civil liberties and constitutional rights, or being thought soft on terrorism?
Clearly, the answer is fear of earning a soft-on-terrorism label. That explains the Democratically controlled Congress' passage of a sweeping wiretap reform that dramatically expands the government's ability to eavesdrop on Americans' calls and e-mails without court approval. Fifteen Senate Democrats joined 45 Republicans in voting for the bill; 41 House Democrats voted with 186 Republicans to assure its passage.
Lawmakers undertook this reform of the 1978 Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act because the administration said the National Security Agency needed authority to listen in without a warrant on communications between persons — and not necessarily terror suspects — "reasonably believed" to be located outside the United States. The original legislation required approval of the special court to tap communications between Americans here and terrorist suspects abroad. Nowadays, telephone calls and Internet communications routinely transit domestic data networks even though they might take place between individuals abroad. Anti-terrorism officials said they needed to be able to nimbly tap into this trove of potential terrorist intelligence without having to be sure at least one party was on foreign soil.
It makes sense that intelligence officials should not have to wait for a judge to approve this sort of wiretap, but the court already allowed wiretaps to go forward while investigators garnered authorization after the fact. Now, NSA officials won't even need to take that perfunctory step. And they now can easily sweep transmissions that originate or terminate within the United States into their dragnet.
Every time Congress weakens wiretap oversight, the government can engage in warrantless spying on ever greater numbers of Americans. Neither Congress nor the public should roll over for this whenever the White House warns that terrorists are on the doorstep.
More troubling is the faint oversight required under the recently loosened provisions. Under the law, Alberto Gonzales, the widely mistrusted and scandal-plagued U.S. attorney, must annually inform the special court how the government is using the new law. But the act gives the court almost no room to challenge whatever eaves-dropping parameters Gonzales might choose.
Twice a year, Gonzales will have to tell the House and Senate committees on intelligence and the judiciary about its surveillance activities. But the attorney general's report need say little more than whether, in his opinion, the intelligence gathering violated the secret protocols he and National Intelligence Director Mike McConnell set up. Given such scant information, Congress won't be able to provide adequate oversight.
When Congress returns from summer recess, it is expected to take up an administration request to indemnify companies that, in the immediate aftermath of the 9/11 attacks, let spy agencies snoop around on their networks.
The act will sunset after six months, a provision Democrats tout as a compromise that will allow them to fix the law's worst sins. Hope reigns eternal.
Copyright 2007 Houston Chronicle
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