No right is more precious in a free country than that of having a voice in the election of those who make the laws under which, as good citizens, we must live. Other rights, even the most basic, are illusory if the right to vote is undermined.
- US Supreme Court

Thursday, July 10, 2008

betrayal

Those who voted for this need to be made aware that this blow to our Constitution will not be forgotten, will not be forgiven, and will not be excused.
WASHINGTON (AP) — Bowing to President Bush's demands, the Senate sent the White House a bill Wednesday overhauling bitterly disputed rules on secret government eavesdropping and shielding telecommunications companies from lawsuits complaining they helped the U.S. spy on Americans.
We must find a way to preserve our Constitution. But what I think will be more important in the long run is we must (and we will) stop tolerating and excusing and even justifying the betrayal of our trust.

These politicians are supposed to uphold our Constitution - but instead they attack it. And they think they will just get away with it - after all, aren't past tyrants remembered as "great" men?

But I don't think that is going to work. I think people are waking up to the idea that we can - and we need to - make our elected officials fear the promise that an ill deed will be repaid.

Part of the problem is that elected officials have shown themselves perfectly willing and able to comfort themselves - hide from the truth - by building a bubble, consoling themselves with delusional thoughts about how what they have done really is not bad.

These are people who feed on respect, power, status - but their actions are earning them scorn, shame, ridicule, contempt. It is going to be interesting to see how they try to hide from that.

It is the man in the bubble who is most afraid of what is outside of the bubble. There is an upper limit on how much one can refuse to see or hear. There is no way to hide from the revulsion of a nation, if the nation decides to pursue it.

It's already starting. Check this out:
The percentage of voters who give Congress good or excellent ratings has fallen to single digits for the first time in Rasmussen Reports tracking history. This month, just 9% say Congress is doing a good or excellent job.
If Bush is like Nero*, today's Congress are like the drunken whores and hangers-on who bent over on command whenever Nero had an urge.

How's that for a legacy, guys? Is that really who you want to be?
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* actually I think Nero may have been more popular than Bush is. (Terrifying, isn't it?)

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