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Politics : The Donkey's Inn -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Mephisto who wrote (3440)3/26/2002 4:22:38 PM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 15516
 
A less democratic nation
San Francisco Chronicle
By: Ruth Rosen

sfgate.com. Monday, March 18, 2002

The following is an except from Rosen's article:

"Consider what has happened during
these past six months. President Bush

has repeatedly invoked executive
privilege and refused congressional
requests for information. He created a
shadow government without informing
congressional leaders. He overturned
the Presidential Records Act of 1978
and gave himself the right to seal past
presidential papers since 1980. He
deposited his own gubernatorial papers
in his father's presidential library
where they are inaccessible to the
public.

On the defense front, the Bush
administration appointed John M.
Poindexter - - who, along with Ollie
North, masterminded the Iran-Contra
arms- for-hostages scam -- to head the
Pentagon's new Office of Information
Awareness.


The president has
extended the war on terrorism to
Yemen, Georgia and the Philippines
without a declaration of war or
congressional approval. He even
declared a new unilateralist Bush
Doctrine: The United States reserves
the right to enter any nation to pursue
terrorists or destroy weapons of mass
destruction, whether or not it is invited
by a head of state and without seeking
approval from the U.N. Security
Council.


Members of Congress are finally
resisting this assault on the system of
checks and balances that our nation's
founders created to protect our
democratic government. The General
Accounting Office, the investigative arm
of Congress, is suing Vice President
Dick Cheney for refusing to hand over
records from secretly held energy
meetings. Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt.,
has asked the GAO to investigate the
impact of Attorney General John
Ashcroft's Oct. 12 memo to all federal
agencies, in which he urged them to
resist Freedom of Information Act
requests.

But Congress must do more to restore
its check on an increasingly imperious
presidency. The Bush administration is
using the threat of terrorism to curtail
civil liberties, bully legislators, scatter
troops across the world and intimidate
Russia, China, Iran, Iraq, North Korea,
Libya and Syria with the threat of
pre-emptive tactical nuclear strikes.

George. W. Bush should remember
that he lost the popular vote and never
received a mandate from the American
people for these policies. His current
approval ratings, according to many
political analysts, rest more on fear
than on a national consensus.

He should tread carefully. Americans
recognize that patriotism is not only
the willingness to fight fascism or
terrorism, but also the passion to
protect our democratic freedoms right
here, at home.

Ruth Rosen is a Chronicle editorial
writer.