On 6/24/2007 8:16:26 AM, Charlie Bell ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> Now,
> I'm sure many of the finer points of the US political system are
> beyond me... but isn't
> this, like, basic?
>
You would almost think BushCo is *trying* to push us into a 
constitutional crisis.
********************************
frex:
http://www.adamkotsko.com/weblog/2007/06/real-problem-with-bush.html
The real problem with the Bush presidency is that it is conceptually 
unclear what kind of king he thinks he is -- the absolute monarch of 
the Ancien Régime, or the Hegelian constitutional monarch who just 
"says yes and dots the i's."

In the initial campaign (2000), it's clear they were going for the 
latter: yes, George W. is a dumbass, but he's going to be surrounded 
by all these seasoned advisors. This image of Bush persists in the 
idea that Cheney, Rove, etc., are the ones really running the show --  
or in the alternative narrative that what really matters is the 
conflict between the Department of State and the Vice-President's 
office. In both cases, George W. Bush personally is a non-factor --  
just the "public face," chosen simply for name recognition (some 
voters are even rumored to have been convinced that they were really 
voting for George Sr. again), i.e. the "biological descent" that 
provides the element of randomness in Hegel's theory of the monarch.

On the other hand, you have the theory of the "unitary executive," the 
assertion of unheard-of "war powers," and a bunch of other indicators 
pointing toward an idea of an absolute monarch who can say, "L’État, c’est 
moi." What is missing is precisely such an "official" pronouncement --  
all of the outlandish doctrines are "officially" disavowed, and 
situations are contrived in order to avoid a judgment from the courts 
(in the few situations in which the courts have issued a judgment, it 
has been to reject the "unitary executive"). In order for this 
absolute power to remain operative, it has to remain "unofficial" --  
even though it is all "publicly known," no official judgment has come 
down upon Bush.

Maybe what is so frightening, however, is the way that these things go 
together -- the way that a series of "mere formalities" allow the 
quasi-absolute authority to continue uninhibited. And perhaps what 
keeps these "empty formalities" going is the fear that if the 
quasi-absolute authority entered the realm of "officiality," the 
formalities, rather than the authority, would dissolve.

This is just an over-formalized way of saying what I've been saying 
for years: what allows the Bush administration to continue is the fact 
that everyone else is afraid of triggering an "official" 
constitutional crisis, that is, of bringing out into the open the 
actual constitutional crisis under which we live. So: vote to 
authorize the war because you don't want to find out what happens when 
the president goes ahead and starts a war that Congress rejected. And 
so on, and so on. The Democrats are now the party of continuing to 
have a constitution -- paradoxically, they think that the only way to 
do this is by refusing to face down Bush's gravest violations of the 
constitution. Hence no impeachment, no real investigation into 
intelligence manipulation, just this endless dithering with marginal 
scandals like the US Attorney thing. No one wants to "officially" 
expose the fact that the executive branch has been effectively 
treating the constitution as suspended for all this time, even though 
the information pointing to this conclusion is publicly available and 
overwhelming.
***************************************************

Quite troublesome.


xponent
Bow To The Throne Maru
rob 


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