Home  
0
0

Contact Us

Feedback Form

About Us

Web Links

Visit this group

A Worker's Vignette – Suspended for Being Sick

Liner Notes to Das Kapital: Marx and Engels Comment

The People vs. the Insurance Monopoly: Fixing the Health System in 2009

Three Questions for Socialists

Barack Obama and the Contours of African American Social Protest Movements

“From Something Evil Good May Come”: Sojourner Truth and the Civil War

Greed as an Explanation of Crisis

Materialism and Feelings: Bringing Marx and Freud to the Same Table

Nine Point Five Theses: Discussion Points for a New Progressive Decade

Towards Peace, Democracy and National Reconciliation in Iraq

Building Bridges with Cuba

Communist Party Statement on Honduras Crisis

Book Review: The Voice of Hope

Book Review: Studs Terkel's Working: A Graphic Adaptation

DVD REVIEW: Fidel: Saul Landau's 1969 Film Reissued as a DVD

Tres preguntas para los socialistas

Story: Tim’s Journal, Part 1

Poetry July 2009

/Archives - Dates and Topics /2008 – online /Jan. – Feb. 2008 /Feb. 11 – Feb. 17 Print | Send to friend

Bush Fear Card Ignored by Congress, Blasted by MSNBC's Olbermann



click here for related stories: democracy matters
2-16-08, 9:10 am

Additional coverage:
Podcast #57 - What Happened to the Economy? What Can Be Done?



| | | | | Save Page to del.icio.us

In perhaps the most blatant example of George W Bush's hypocrisy and misplaced priorities, Bush chooses to protect the phone companies for their illegal actions by playing the fear card – which Congress ignores and Keith Olbermann rightfully blasts.

Lying has become a way of life for George W Bush and like the little boy who called wolf too often – the American public, the U.S. Congress and finally the media are calling his fear based bluffs and letting Bush hang – twisting in his own hypocrisy.

In late 2005, President Bush acknowledged that his administration had authorized a secret warrantless domestic surveillance program – a program which operated in violation of the Constitution's Fourth Amendment restriction against "unreasonable searches" without a warrant.

As the Center for American progress reported (Feb. 14),

In early Aug. 2007, Congress unwisely passed a temporary expansion of FISA, called the Protect America Act (PAA), which provided virtually unchecked power to the administration to spy on American communications without warrants. Tomorrow, the unnecessary and dangerous powers given to the administration by Congress six months ago are set to expire.

The biggest sticking point in negotiations between Congress and the President over surveillance is whether to grant retroactive amnesty to telecommunications companies that broke the law and cooperated with the administration's illegal requests. Bush has declared he will veto any bill that does not include retroactive immunity.


Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-MA) pointed out that "the president has said that American lives will be sacrificed if Congress does not change FISA. But he has also said that he will veto any FISA bill that does not grant retroactive immunity. ... So if we take the president at his word, he's willing to let Americans die to protect the phone companies."

Feb. 15, Congress allowed the extension to expire – ignoring Bush's bluff as well as phone company immunity.

Keith Olbermann, MSNBC, leaped on Bush's blatant hypocrisy calling Bush not only a liar but a Fascist – "You said that the lives of countless Americans depend on you getting your way. This is CRAP. And you sling it with an audacity and speed unrivaled by even the greatest political felons of our history."

Watch Olbermann's electrifying nine minute video – click here.

From Allen L. Roland.


» Home » Online Edition January Print Edition » Subscribe





blog comments powered by Disqus
Take a Stand
( 10/01/2003 18:49 )


newcatcher@cpusa.org