Tag impeachment

Live Free Or Die!

Betty Hall is a state representative for Hillsborough, District 5, in the New Hampshire state legislature.

She’s 87 years old and has been a state rep for 14 years.  She recently introduced a bill to the legislature calling for the impeachment of George Bush and Dick Cheney.  The bill will have its first public hearing next Tuesday.

To that end, she has also announced that she is joining a hunger strike being organized by a women’s political action group called Code Pink.  She says that she will fast until Congressman John Conyers begins impeachment proceedings in the U.S. House Judiciary Committee, and is ready to die for the cause.  “I’ve had a good life. I can’t think of any better way to end it,” she told a blogger from the group AfterDowningStreet.org.

According to this blogger, the pressure on Conyers from the public is at an all-time high.  His office’s phone lines are swamped, the fax machines are all but unreachable, and he’s receiving so much e-mail that his official Congressional e-mail address is bouncing all incoming mail.

Conyers has agreed to meet with a representative of the fasters, and has indicated that he’s willing to begin inquiriess into impeachment, which is a very small first step, but at least it’s more ground than he’s been willing to give to date.  Resultingly, it appears that Dennis Kucinich reached a deal with Conyers not to reintroduce his impeachment bill to the floor of the House in exchange for the official inquiry.

Representative Hall has apparently decided that her state’s motto is more than just a tag line on a license plate.

EmailStumbleUponRedditFacebookTwitterGoogle+Share

Related Posts:

Oh, Yeah,THEM

Impeach Now

All the excitement of primary season has given George and Dick a bit of a breather in the news, but I’m glad to see that someone is still paying attention…in case you missed it, former Senator and Democratic Presidential candidate George McGovern wrote this op-ed which appeared in the Washington Post last Friday calling for the impeachment and removal from office of both George W. Bush and Dick Cheney. McGovern says that Nixon looked like an amateur compared to these shitweasels (okay, he didn’t actually use the word shitweasels, but you know he would have if he could have).

Just because these guys are only a year away from the ash-heap of history, there’s no reason not to press on with holding them accountable for their high crimes and misdemeanors. After the debacle of the House deliberately nuking Dennis Kucinich’s impeachment resolution, now Representative Robert Wexler has picked up the standard. He’s gotten over 183,000 signatures on his web petition to re-introduce impeachment in the House (including mine, naturally). Kucinich’s bill was sent back to the House Judiciary Committee, where it was expected to die, but Wexler is on the HJC, and he’s not letting it go gently into that good night.

Sign the petition. Tell your congressional representatives that nothing short of full impeachment proceedings will be satisfactory. Don’t let the excitement of the possibility of a better President in 2009 overwhelm the need to call to accountability the Worst President Ever.

EmailStumbleUponRedditFacebookTwitterGoogle+Share

Related Posts:

High Crimes

IMPEACH THEM NOW!

Today’s New York Times spells it out in no uncertain terms: George W. Bush personally authorized the use of torture in a secret executive order he signed in July of this year, even after the Supreme Court ruled that the rules of the Geneva Convention apply to prisoners who were members of Al Quaeda. The use of “extreme interrogation measures” had been in place since 2001, but some activities had been suspended after the efforts by Congress and the Surpreme Court to curtail them. But they are back, justified by the vague guidelines from Alberto Gonzales’ Justice Department.

The Democratic leadership in Congress cannot continue to cast a blind eye on the misdeeds of the Executive Branch, particularly as they have intensified their drumbeat for another war. Their actions with regard to justifying torture will inevitably be used against Americans in combat, as a war with Iran will not be the cakewalk that the invasion of Iraq was. These criminals must be stopped before they are directly responsible for the loss of any number of lives in another illegal war.

EmailStumbleUponRedditFacebookTwitterGoogle+Share

Related Posts:

One Down, Two To Go

Alberto Gonzales

It’s a step in the right direction, but it’s not enough. His resignation should not be accepted as an appeasement. Senate Judiciary Committe Chairman Patrick Leahy absolutely should continue with his investigations into the misdeeds of the Justice Department up to and including ex officio impeachment of Gonzales. Unchecked and unpunished, they cause irreparable harm to the balance of power institutionalized by the Constitution.

The same continues to hold true for the high crimes and misdeamenors of the President and Vice President. There can be no more willful disregard by the Democratic leadership. Last week in Slate, Constitutional lawyer Bruce Fein wrote that Speaker Pelosi should be removed from her office if she continues to leave impeachment “off the table” (he also recently made the case for impeachment in this op-ed in the San Francisco Chronicle).

Allowing this administration to run out the clock, letting its most nefarious actors scuttle away without sufficient investigation into their crimes against the Constitution, failing to follow through on Iraq, wiretapping, or any of the other issues that they should be fighting tooth-and-nail on indicts Pelosi and Reid nearly as thoroughly as the growing list of complaints against Bush and Cheney.

EmailStumbleUponRedditFacebookTwitterGoogle+Share

Related Posts:

Too Little, Too Late

Impeach NOW!

The Raw Story reports that censure motions against Bush, Cheney and Gonzales have been introduced in the House (by Rep. Maurice Hinchley) and Senate (by Sen. Russ Feingold). Nineteen other representatives co-sponsor the House resolution, and so far only Senator Tom Harkin of Iowa has co-sponsored the Senate resolution.

It is simply not enough. A House resolution calling for the impeachment of Dick Cheney, introduced by Dennis Kucinich, already has 13 co-sponsors, and House Judiciary Committee Chairman John Conyers has stated publicly that if three more Representatives would join the resolution, he would introduce it to his committee.

“Off the table” is no longer an acceptable response to the calls for impeachment. When pressed, many members of Congress take the easy way out and say “it’s too late at this point to drag the nation through the messy business of impeachment”, which is cowardly at best and a total abrogation of their responsibilities to uphold the Constitution at worst. Censure is a half-measure, and, given the acquiescence of a large number of Democrats on the recent FISA bill, speaks only to the impotence of the Democratic leadership to fight back against the systematic gutting of the Constitution by the Bush Administration.

Nothing, and I mean NOTHING short of a full impeachment and trial of the President, Vice President, and Attorney General on the floor of the Senate, in front of all the American people and the world, will suffice to restore the checks and balances of our system of government and to make clear once and for all the high crimes and misdemeanors of these men.

EmailStumbleUponRedditFacebookTwitterGoogle+Share

Related Posts:

Independence Day 2007

declaration_image-lg.jpg

Our mandate for freedom was written by men who knew firsthand the peril of allowing a single man to accrete to himself unchecked and unlimited power. As Jefferson and his small committee drafted these legendary words, they did so with the full intent that no man would ever be allowed to exert his seigneur and that all men would be afforded an equal measure of justice and an equal measure of representation in the governance of their daily lives.

Many of these men would reconvene five years later to draft a second document that would put into practice these ideals and intentions by creating a framework for a system of governance that depended on a careful balance of authority in the institutions they stipulated, and, when that seemed to be insufficient to safeguard the liberty and equality of the populace from the excesses of government, they took the additional step of drafting amendments that specifically guaranteed those civil liberties to one and all.

At different times and under a variety of circumstances, it has sometimes been necessary to further amend this framework, it has been necessary to re-interpret ideas written by men who could not conceive of the future that would unfold before them, it has been necessary even to engage in civil war to reassert the primacy of our national structure over specialized interests.

But rarely has it been necessary to call the nation’s leaders to account for their overreach of their justly-derived power. Rarer still has it been necessary to invoke the spirit and the intent of the Declaration itself to make it plain that this nation should not and will not be in the hands of tyrants who disrespect those basic ideas.

Now that time has come. The actions of the President and Vice President of the United States have crossed a threshold far beyond any reasonable expectation of “executive privilege”. They have exceeded their authority by their direct disregard for the laws of the United States, by their deliberate deceptions which have led the nation into an illegal war, and by their systematic erosion of the fundamental liberties enshrined by the Continental Congress on this very day two hundred and thirty-one years ago.

The public cry for impeachment of these men falls on deaf ears in the Congress. Now the call has begun to sound for the resignation of the President and the Vice President, and that is equally likely to go unheeded. And thus I say to you that the only alert that can be sounded is to the people of this country themselves. Like Paul Revere riding his horse through the night to warn the people of Concord, we are charged with, indeed obliged to shout throughout the land and to prepare to battle for our freedom.

“These are the times that try men’s souls. The summer soldier and the sunshine patriot will, in this crisis, shrink from the service of their country; but he that stands it now, deserves the love and thanks of man and woman. Tyranny, like hell, is not easily conquered; yet we have this consolation with us, that the harder the conflict, the more glorious the triumph.”

– Thomas Paine, “Common Sense”, 1776

Comments:
Chet Scoville (thevanitypress.blogspot.com) also highlighted some very pertinant bits. Informative, innit? How quickly the past is forgotten.

Posted by flerdle [URL] on 07/04/07

I’ve posted the text of the Declaration in its entirety in the past myself. Also, if you haven’t seen this recent “Tom The Dancing Bug” cartoon, it is very apt: http://www.salon.com/comics/boll/2007/06/28/boll/index.html

Posted by Brian [URL] on 07/ 5/07

EmailStumbleUponRedditFacebookTwitterGoogle+Share

Related Posts:

A Law Unto Himself?

cheney.jpg

Apparently Uncle Dick has decided that the Office of the Vice President is a whole separate branch of government.

Except, of course, when he needs to invoke executive privilege to hide something he doesn’t want the public to know about.

Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi’s blog has some of the particulars in this recent kerfuffle, including Congressman Henry Waxman’s demands (in his role as chairman of the Oversight Committee) that Cheney cough up a variety of pieces of information regarding the Scooter Libby case.

And, as always, Our Hero Keith Olbermann has the requisite blast of righteous indignation.

I know this is being covered wall-to-wall on every newsy blog and mainstream news outlet, but I have come to the conclusion that every time shit like this is made public that it is the duty of every single American to shout from the rooftops about the unabashed abuse of power that has been the hallmark of these evil people. My friend Tony has recently discovered the following quote:

“It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena.” – Theodore Roosevelt

And while I appreciate that he is using this to chide me for getting my rant on (and I do take his point), it really is nothing short of an obligation to muster some degree of outrage about all this. There is little practical redress to the situation — it is a foregone conclusion that there will be no impeachment proceedings despite more than ample grounds for prosecuting Cheney, and we are compelled to wait out the remaining days until January 20, 2009. One can only hope that the hue and cry is loud and prolonged enough to reach the ears of the several dozen individuals presently hoping to succeed him and convince them that this is the wrong path.

Or, perhaps the time really has come to take up arms and, as the Declaration of Independence says, “…institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness.”

EmailStumbleUponRedditFacebookTwitterGoogle+Share

Related Posts:

All Original Content Copyright © BrianKaneOnline
All Other Content Copyright © Its Original Authors

Built on Notes Blog Core
Powered by WordPress

Switch to our mobile site