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As nightfall does not come at once, neither does oppression. In both instances, there's a twilight where everything remains seemingly unchanged, and it is in such twilight that we all must be aware of change in the air, however slight, lest we become victims of the darkness." Justice William O. Douglas I feel the erie twilight of oppression descending on America because we are just one " Major incident " away from Martial law and Bush assuming legal dictatorial rule over our Republic. It is also seen in Dick Cheney's speech to the West Point graduating class on May 25th when Cheney said ~ " your first day of Army life, each of you raised your right hand and took and oath. And you will swear again today to defend the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic. That is your vow, that is the business you're in " However, Dick ' the natural state of man is war ' Cheney once again got it wrong ~ for the Military vow is the same as the presidential vow and reads as such ~ I will support and defend the constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic. A constitution that both Bush and Cheney have openly ridiculed as being irrelevant in their ongoing War on Terror which is, in reality, a War of Terror. And that is the important change in the air ~ which may well lead to the darkness of oppression. We have been systematically untethered from our Constitution by the Cheney/Bush administration and are in dire danger of falling into the abyss of Oppression. The similarities with germany in the late 1930's are freightening and ominous and we may be beyond the point of no return ~ particularly in light of Congress's recent blank check to Bush's illegal occupation of Iraq and recent surge. James Rothenberg and Otto Hinckelmann take this a step further and make the case " that the invasion of Iraq took place without UN authorization (illegally according to Kofi Annan) and therefore was an outright act of aggression, the “supreme international crime,” the crime for which the Nazi defendants were condemned." Excerpt: "The difference between the totalitarian ruler and the democratic ruler is that the totalitarian can dispense with legal pretense. The similarity is that both can always find legal experts who will inevitably determine that the law permits the Leader to do what he thinks he needs to do." Allen L Roland http://blogs.salon.com/0002255/2007/06/08.html Why Being “Worst President Ever” Is Not Enough 06/06/07 "ICH" -- -- Jimmy Carter recently said, as others have before him, that this is the worst presidential administration ever (then he softened it some). The White House, in typical form, questioned Carter’s “relevance”.Considering what Carter could have said, the White House got off easy . An unbiased look at certain, singular actions of this administration is far more damaging. Beside it, the seemingly larger, and unprovable, “worst” claim becomes very much beside the point. The real point is not the administration’s relative standing; it is the unique blatancy of its criminality. At the end of World War 2, German government leaders were tried at Nuremberg for some of their official activities between 1933 and 1945. These trials were deemed to have established precedents for defining as crimes certain official acts. Some of the acts committed by US government officials appear to fall under the Nuremberg precedents. At this point many readers will recoil at the suggestion that the United States can be compared in any way to Nazi Germany. This attitude cannot possibly be healthy for the United States. It suggests that as long as we stay beneath the threshold of the freight cars and the gas chambers then we can safely ignore all similarities. Only by continuing to compare and evaluate our actions against the Nazi’s can we insure that we do not degrade ourselves to their moral level. This very thought was on the mind of Supreme Court Justice Robert Jackson, chief prosecutor of the surviving Nazi leaders at Nuremberg, Germany. Jackson was sensitive that the trial not be seen as being purely vindictive. He knew that the larger purpose of the Nuremberg trials was to establish universal principles of morality applicable to individuals acting in their official capacity within a government. In the absence of this universality he and the other judges sitting in judgment of the defeated Nazis knew they would sink to the level of the Nazis before them. In Jackson’s view his own countrymen would be subject to the same standards as the Nazis in the dock. As he eloquently put it: “We must never forget that the record on which we judge these defendants today is the record on which history will judge us tomorrow. To pass these defendants a poisoned chalice is to put it to our own lips as well.” Then president Harry Truman gave his ringing endorsement: “I have no hesitancy in declaring that the historic precedent set at Nuremberg abundantly justifies the expenditure of effort, prodigious though it was. The [Nuremberg] precedent becomes basic in the international law of the future. The principles established and the results achieved place international law on the side of peace as against aggressive warfare.” Bush administration officials responsible for Iraq (incidentally all surviving) repeatedly and dramatically represented Iraq as an imminent threat to the United States. This was a great lie. Ample proof exists of this, most famously (though not here in the States) the Downing Street Memos. The invasion took place without UN authorization (illegally according to Kofi Annan) and therefore was an outright act of aggression, the “supreme international crime,” the crime for which the Nazi defendants were condemned. We have a modern version of the Nuremberg Tribunal, called the International Criminal Court. It was conceived as a way to bring war criminals to justice because crimes like these inevitably reach beyond borders, making it the world’s problem. Even though the United States played a strong role in elaborating the Statute of the ICC, there were elements in it which were considered disturbing. Namely, that it would apply to the US. So President Clinton signed the treaty but asserted he would not submit it to the ratification process. State Secretary Colin Powell announced the withdrawal of Clinton's signature on the grounds that making US officials and military personnel subject to the ICC could subject them to "frivolous lawsuits." We are outside its jurisdiction. This certainly answers the question of why no member of the Bush administration will be considered a war criminal by the ICC, but it is hardly because of the popularly accepted notion of innocence.
Take action -- click here to contact your local newspaper or congress people: Click here to see the most recent messages sent to congressional reps and local newspapers www.allenroland.com Allen L Roland is a practicing psychotherapist, author and lecturer who also shares a daily political and social commentary on his weblog and website allenroland.com He also guest hosts a monthly national radio show TRUTHTALK on Conscious talk radio www.conscioustalk.net
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