Congressman Dennis Kucinich is at the School of the Americas
this week-end for protests at which brave Americans will probably risk
arrest to end torture. Activist Ted Glick is on the 77th day of a fast
to end global warming and global warring. Eve Tetaz, age 76, just spent
a week in jail for speaking against war. Next week a man will begin
walking from Faneuil Hall in Boston to Nancy Pelosi’s office in
Washington, DC. Dozens of American service men and women have concluded
that obeying illegal orders only serves Halliburton and Blackwater, and
they have refused. Many more have concluded that George W. Bush did one
right thing in his life, and they’ve gone AWOL. Our friend, activist
Lori Perdue, is facing a possible year in jail for attending a
congressional hearing. The planned construction of a massive new US
military base in Italy has run up against Italian families willing to
lie in front of bulldozers. Activism is alive, even if not televised.
We must take our inspiration from it and build on it, waiting for an
invitation from no one We must indeed be the change we want to see in
the world.
I recently heard what I hope you will tell me is another false
rumor as untrue as Pelosi’s request for activism. I heard that next
year the people of Colorado will have the opportunity to vote for the
institution of constitutional rights for fertilized eggs. What bothers
me about this is the discrimination against those of us who are no
longer fertilized eggs. When do we get our constitutional rights?
Unless we’re going to surgically install intrauterine free speech
zones, I take it that unlike sentient humans, fertilized eggs will have
complete freedom to speak, assemble, and print teeny newspapers.
Perhaps women will be able to attend congressional hearings and hold up
peace signs if they are from Colorado and carrying fertilized eggs.
Presumably the Protect America Act will no longer apply to fertilized
Coloradan eggs, and the Fourth Amendment will be restored in some small
measure. But what I’m not clear on is how the police will obtain a
warrant based on probable cause to spy on a fertilized egg without
having first spied on the egg long enough to know it was fertilized. Is
it just me, or does this all seem like a plot to permit spying on the
act of fertilization?
Let’s look at the sane and courageous side of Colorado for a moment. It
can be summed up in the word Telluride. In July, Telluride became the
first city in Colorado to pass a resolution in support of impeachment.
Some billionaires for Bush and other ski tourists threatened to boycott
the town if it refused to boycott the Constitution. Others promised to
come to Telluride if it voted for the rule of law. In the end, the city
council members decided that they would break with Washington, DC, and
not allow money to determine every action. Of approximately 100 cities
that have done the same around the country, I think the two most
interesting are San Francisco, where an impeachment initiative was
passed by the voters – the same voters who next year get a chance to
choose between Nancy Pelosi and Cindy Sheehan. And the other most
interesting city is Detroit where the resolution passed in the city
council unanimously after being introduced by the wife of Congressman
John Conyers.
So here’s your assignment. Go online to a bookstore and put in the
delivery address Monica Conyers, c/o Detroit City Council. Buy her two
books: The Constitution in Crisis by John Conyers and an old Greek play
called Lysistrata. Your other assignment is to not leave Telluride
hanging out there on its own in Colorado, but make sure every town and
city and church and labor union and veteran’s group and bridge club
passes a resolution for impeachment.
After all, this is a democracy and we are a majority.
In July the American Research Group found that 54% of Americans said
Yes and 40% No to the question of whether Cheney should be impeached.
Among Democrats, 76% said Yes. Among Independents, 51%. For Bush, the
numbers were a little lower: 46% Yes, 44% No. These are huge numbers
for a topic that’s shut out of the media. In Vermont, where it’s gotten
more attention, the numbers are significantly higher: 64% want Cheney
impeached. This is where Democrats always fall apart. They look at the
40% who are not yet for impeachment and ask, How can we avoid offending
these people? They never ask, how can we educate these people?
Last week, the American Research Group did another poll. This time,
they changed the question from impeaching Cheney to impeaching him and
removing him from office. That change has tended over the past two
years of sporadic polling on Bush to lower the positive response by 10
percentage points. But American Research Group went further and offered
people the choice of saying that Cheney had committed impeachable
offenses but should not be impeached. That option would drain away
those people who agreed with the various excuses that Pelosi and gang
have used to keep impeachment off the table. And this poll went further
still, offering the option of saying Cheney had abused his power
without committing impeachable offenses. This option would catch those
unwilling to say impeachable offenses shouldn’t be impeached as well as
those unclear on what an impeachable offense is, including that such an
offense can be committed with your pants on. Then there was a fourth
option for Fox viewers: Cheney ain’t done nothing wrong.
Now to opt for impeachment people had to bypass three other choices and
go for the fourth extreme. Those who would do so would be only the
hardcore advocates concerned for the future of the Constitution and not
scared off by the fear of a President Giuliani or the trauma of a
lengthy investigation. Guess how many hardcore impeachment nuts we have
in this country? 43% of us. Even among Republicans, 21% want Cheney
removed from office. Among all Americans, 52% think he’s committed
impeachable offenses and 70% think he’s abused power.
When Congressman Kucinich introduced impeachment on the floor last
week, most of the Democrats of the House Judiciary Committee voted
against tabling it. Six had cosponsored it. A seventh, Robert Wexler,
emailed his constituents announcing his support for hearings. He was
amazed by the outpouring of support that resulted. Wexler then emailed
his constituents the same questions that American Research Group had
asked, and he got a result of 60% for removing Cheney from office.
Congressman Jim Moran took up the idea and emailed his constituents the
same questions. I would encourage every member of Congress to do the
same. That includes Colorado congress members. In the mind of Nancy
Pelosi, genocide in Iraq is not the tragedy that bringing up a bill but
not passing it would be. If conservative Democrats start speaking up
for impeachment hearings, it will take away her fear of trying to
impeach and failing.
So, here are two more assignments for you (and these are on flyers and can be found at
www.ImpeachCheney.org ):
1.Call the Democrats on the House Judiciary Committee and urge them to publicly call for hearings.
2.Lobby your Congress members by going to their offices and talking, by
standing out front with a “Honk to Impeach” poster, and by sitting in
their office and reading the Constitution aloud until you are taken to
jail. And when you do this, use the media and be the media and you will
inspire others to be the change.
If you try hard enough you may become as good a
human being as George W. Bush. We know he’s good because he goes to
church. But by now most of you have probably heard what happened when
Bush attended church in a certain town where some of his overzealous
supporters had urged the minister to suggest in his sermon that Bush
might be a saint. Well, of course, the good reverend gave his sermon
and said at the end, “While I respect the office of the presidency, its
current occupant is a treasonous criminal with the blood of millions on
his hands, but compared to Dick Cheney, he’s a saint.”
Let’s talk about Dick Cheney’s qualifications for sainthood for a
moment. Dick Cheney is a man of principle. He has sought to transfer
all power from Congress to the White House no matter which institution
was employing him at the time. He led the efforts to create
unconstitutional spying programs. He sent Gonzales to Ashcroft’s
hospital bed to try to gain approval for a program so far worse than
the blatantly criminal programs we know about that Ashcroft turned him
down. Asked if he did this, Cheney said he does not recall.
Prior to this session of Congress, Cheney said that if he were ever
subpoenaed by Congress he would probably refuse to comply. Well,
Congress has subpoenaed him and he has refused. That may seem a minor
point on the list of Cheney’s crimes, but it is one that blocks
investigations of the others, and it is a non-partisan,
non-policy-based quintessentially impeachable offense. The House
Judiciary Committee passed an article of impeachment against Nixon for
refusing to comply with a subpoena
But this is the tip of the iceberg in Cheney’s ongoing multi-faceted
obstruction of justice. Cheney initiated and directed his Chief of
Staff Scooter Libby’s obstruction of an investigation into the ousting
of a CIA agent. Cheney, in fact, coordinated that outing. And more
importantly, Cheney led the propaganda campaign that Joe Wilson
challenged, sparking the campaign of retribution against his wife.
Cheney has quietly and openly led the way to institutionalizing the use of torture.
In an unprecedented move, Cheney made visits to the CIA during the
buildup to the invasion of Iraq. His purpose was to pressure the CIA to
get the facts wrong.
According to Senator Rockefeller, the reason Senator Roberts never did
the investigation of White House war lies was constant pressure on
Roberts from Cheney. (Of course, nobody can explain why – after 11
months – Rockefeller himself hasn’t lifted a finger to conduct the
investigation he lobbied for for three years even to the extent of
shutting down the US Senate.)
Cheney, lest we forget, created the secret energy task force that
operated outside the laws on disclosure and allowed oil barons to set
not just our energy policy but our military policy as well.
Cheney directed massive no-bid contracts to Halliburton and profited
from them as vice president. Cheney helped create the California energy
crisis and suppressed related evidence. Perhaps most significantly,
Cheney has given us policies on climate change that accelerate global
warming.
Cheney’s criminality and corruption are open and public. His lawyer
David Addington has advanced the unitary executive theory, which is
similar to the intelligent design theory, only more pretentious.
Addington’s signing statements, written for Bush, announce Bush’s
intention to violate laws. The House Judiciary Committee held hearing
on these early this year, and a Justice Dept. official testified that
the statements were as meaningless as press releases. Then the
Government Accounting Office studied a sample of the signing statements
and found that in 30% of the cases, the Bush-Cheney administration had
already begun violating the laws it claimed the right to violate.
Since then, Congress hasn’t touched the topic. It’s one of the many
impeachment investigations where no investigation is needed. To bring
up the topic is to impeach, so Pelosi, Hoyer, and Emmanuel run from it
like frightened rabbits. Meanwhile Cheney is only emboldened. He
exempts his office from the requirement to protect classified
information. He destroys the visitors’ logs at the Vice President’s
house. He disturbs the neighbors blasting an underground bunker into
the ground, and disturbs the rest of us by occasionally emerging from
it.
And do you know what I haven’t even mentioned yet? The charges against
Cheney contained in Kucinich’s resolution Two of the three charges
involve lying to Congress and the public about weapons of mass
destruction and ties to Al Qaeda. The third involves the crime of
threatening an aggressive war on Iran.
On Thursday, Senator Joe Biden said something that Congressman John
Conyers essentially said back in January, in an interview with John
Nichols, something that Dennis Kucinich was saying at that time as
well. Biden now favors impeachment after an attack on Iran. That’s a
step in the right direction. But it’s a bit like shutting the barn door
after it’s empty. An attack on Iran could lead to a global war, a
nuclear war, martial law. We may no longer have the option of
impeachment, and if we do, it will not save all the people we have
slaughtered.
And I’m not asking Biden to indict Bush and Cheney before they commit a
crime. I’m asking him to recognize that the attack on Iraq was exactly
as criminal as an attack on Iran would be. We can leave preemptive
punishment to Michael Mukasey. Impeaching Bush and Cheney should be
based on past crimes, but it is needed to avoid future ones.
What are the chances that, if we do not impeach, Cheney will launch an
attack on Iran or create another catastrophe or allow global warming to
go unaddressed for another 14 months? If the chance is even 1%, then
Cheney himself would argue for impeachment. He has maintained that any
1% danger must be addressed as if it were 100% certain. For that piece
of insanity alone he should be banned from public office.
So let me close with some thoughts on how we can do it.
We must lobby intensely the members of the House Judiciary Committee.
That includes the Republicans, but the Democrats are most likely to
come on first. We should also recruit the most respected people and
organizations we can to join the lobbying. A week ago the National
Lawyers’ Guild passed resolutions demanding the impeachment of Bush and
Cheney. The Center for Constitutional Rights supports impeachment. The
Southern California chapter of the ACLU a few days ago came out for
impeachment. Where is the Colorado ACLU? Where is the national ACLU?
Where is Amnesty International? Where is the National Organization for
Women which flipped and opposed impeachment a year ago. United for
Peace and Justice after two years of lobbying finally urged its members
to lobby for impeachment – last week. UFPJ could do more. Everyone
could do more.
We need you to lobby these group.
Now, I get paid to this, and a lot of people work very long hours. I’ve
been told it’s elitist to ask people to take a day off work to lobby
their Congress members. But surely it would be more elitist to advise a
policy of wait and see and then point out what we should have done
after we’re all in camps. And if you’ve slept a lot or eaten leisurely
meals lately, then with all due respect, Mr. or Ms. Anti-Elitist, don’t
talk to me. Sleep is a luxury. Democracy is a necessity. And if we act,
we can quite easily save it. Let’s save our pessimism for better times.
Let’s save our democracy. No sleep till impeachment.