Bush - Constitution
'Just A Goddamned
Piece Of Paper'
By Doug Thompson
Capitol Hill Blue
12-9-5
Last
month, Republican Congressional leaders filed into the Oval Office to meet with
President George W. Bush and talk about renewing the controversial USA Patriot
Act.
Several
provisions of the act, passed in the shell shocked period immediately following
the 9/11 terrorist attacks, caused enough anger that liberal groups like the
American Civil Liberties Union had joined forces with prominent conservatives
like Phyllis Schlafly and Bob Barr to oppose renewal.
GOP
leaders told Bush that his hardcore push to renew the more onerous provisions
of the act could further alienate conservatives still mad at the President from
his botched attempt to nominate White House Counsel Harriet Miers
to the Supreme Court.
"I
don't give a goddamn," Bush retorted. "I'm the President and the
Commander-in-Chief. Do it my way."
"Mr.
President," one aide in the meeting said. "There is a valid case that
the provisions in this law undermine the Constitution."
"Stop throwing
the Constitution in my face," Bush screamed back. "It's just a
goddamned piece of paper!"
I've
talked to three people present for the meeting that day and they all confirm
that the President of the United States called the Constitution "a
goddamned piece of paper."
And,
to the Bush Administration, the Constitution of the United States is little
more than toilet paper stained from all the shit that this group of power-mad
despots have dumped on the freedoms that "goddamned piece of paper"
used to guarantee.
Attorney
General Alberto Gonzales, while still White House counsel, wrote that the
"Constitution is an outdated document."
Put
aside, for a moment, political affiliation or personal beliefs. It doesn't
matter if you are a Democrat, Republican or Independent. It doesn't matter if
you support the invasion or Iraq or not. Despite our differences, the
Constitution has stood for two centuries as the defining document of our government,
the final source to determine in the end if something is legal or right.
Every
federal official including the President who takes an oath of office swears
to "uphold and defend the Constitution of the United States."
Supreme
Court Justice Antonin Scalia
says he cringes when someone calls the Constitution a "living
document."
""Oh,
how I hate the phrase we have-a 'living document,'" Scalia
says. "We now have a Constitution that means whatever we want it to mean.
The Constitution is not a living organism, for Pete's sake."
As a
judge, Scalia says, "I don't have to prove
that the Constitution is perfect; I just have to prove that it's
better than anything else."
President
Bush has proposed seven amendments to the Constitution over the last five
years, including a controversial amendment to define marriage as a "union
between a man and woman." Members of Congress have proposed some
11,000 amendments over the last decade, ranging from repeal of the right to
bear arms to a Constitutional ban on abortion.
Scalia says the danger of tinkering with the Constitution comes from a loss of
rights.
"We
can take away rights just as we can grant new ones," Scalia
warns. "Don't think that it's a one-way street."
And
don't buy the White House hype that the USA Patriot Act is a necessary tool to
fight terrorism. It is a dangerous law that infringes on the rights of every
American citizen and, as one brave aide told President Bush, something that
undermines the Constitution of the United States.
But
why should Bush care? After all, the Constitution is just "a goddamned
piece of paper."
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Copyright 2005 by Capitol Hill Blue
http://www.capitolhillblue.com/artman/publish/article_7779.shtml