Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Congress Must Repeal Executive Usurpations

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Congress Must Repeal Executive Usurpations

    CONGRESS MUST REPEAL EXECUTIVE USURPATIONS

    Oakland Tribune, CA
    http://www.insidebayarea.com/oaklandtribune/ci_ 7256588
    Oct 23 2007

    IN recent days much has been made of Congress' proposed resolution
    condemning the Armenian genocide in Turkey.

    It seems, however, that Speaker Nancy Pelosi does not have the votes
    to pass the perennial resolution.

    Over the years, the Armenian genocide resolution has taken different
    forms with similar results.

    It has been particularly noteworthy this time around because Turkey
    is one of our few allies in the region.

    Turkish officials dispute the genocide claims.

    The 2007 version of the resolution states: "the Armenian genocide
    was conceived and carried out by the Ottoman Empire from 1915 to 1923."

    An estimated 1.5 million Armenians died, the resolution states,
    while 500,000 were expelled, resulting in "the elimination of the
    over 2,500-year presence of Armenians in their historic homeland."

    Like its predecessors, the Bush administration, opposes the measure,
    calling it an insult to a key ally.

    Moreover, strategic reasons also play into the president's thinking,
    as an estimated 70 percent of U.S. military cargo bound for Iraq goes
    through Incirlik Air Base in Turkey.

    "Congress has more important work to do than antagonizing a democratic
    ally in the Muslim world, especially one that is providing vital
    support for our military every day," the president opined at a press
    conference last week.

    The president is absolutely right! And since there clearly are not
    enough votes for the resolution to pass, Congress should indeed get
    on with more important work.

    For starters, they could begin the process of returning our government
    to the pre-9/11 days where there were three equal branches of
    government in its actual implementation, which would augment what we
    currently have today - the mere premise of such.

    Under the leadership of the vice president, the Bush Administration has
    made good on its efforts to expand the powers of the executive branch.

    Since taking office, the Bush Administration has made it their mission
    to reclaim the power, usurped by Congress, as a result of Vietnam
    and Watergate.

    Using the 9/11 attacks and fear in the most Machiavellian sense,
    the administration enacted legislation, passed by Congress, to
    become more powerful, more secretive, and worse, more dismissive of
    Congressional oversight.

    They created what historian Arthur Schlesinger coined, "The Imperial
    Presidency."

    The process began when Vice President Dick Cheney was allowed to
    create energy policy behind closed doors.

    But that was merely the tip of the iceberg. Subsequently, the
    Geneva Conventions, habeas corpus and the Constitution itself have
    been demoted to ideals better suited when one is not engaging in a
    perpetual war on terror.

    The U.S.A. Patriot Act, which is anything but, justified the type of
    domestic spying unimaginable even to Orwell.

    Last month, a U.S. District Court judge struck down two provisions
    of the Patriot Act, ruling the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act
    (FISA), as amended by the Patriot Act, was unconstitutional because
    they allow search warrants to be issued without showing probable cause,
    thereby violating the Fourth Amendment.

    The judge's ruling has restored some equilibrium to our checks and
    balances system; but Congress must go further.

    It is dangerous to the republic if Congress fails to roll back the
    power the president amassed immediately following 9/11.

    And this must be done before the next president takes the oath of
    office in 2009.

    The human condition, whatever station in life, has demonstrated
    throughout history difficulty in placing limits on its own power.

    No president, regardless of party, will volunteer to relinquish
    authority. Power is prone to bipartisan corruption.

    I can't help but speculate if whether Democrats, who now control
    Congress, are feeling a Democrat will also reclaim the White House.

    This is the amoral aspect of politics that is beyond the ability of
    elected officials to self-regulate.

    It is equally difficult for those aligned with a particular party to
    demand such change.

    Republicans could not do it and there is no reason to suspect that
    Democrats will fair any better if they are temporarily given the
    reigns of controlling Congress and the White House.

    However important it may be to publicly acknowledge Armenian genocide,
    it is more important that we put our own house in order now.

    Byron Willilams is an Oakland pastor and syndicated columnist. E-mail
    him at [email protected] or lea ve a message at (510) 208-6417.

    --Boundary_(ID_oAd2ZJ7zNdEyBcSSJZlHBA)
    Content-type: message/rfc822; CHARSET=US-ASCII
    Content-description:

    From: "Katia M. Peltekian" <[email protected]>
    Subject: Congress must repeal executive usurpations
    MIME-version: 1.0
    Content-type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1
    Content-transfer-encoding: 8BIT

    Oakland Tribune, CA
    Oct 23 2007


    Congress must repeal executive usurpations
    Article Last Updated: 10/23/2007 08:04:38 AM PDT


    IN recent days much has been made of Congress' proposed resolution
    condemning the Armenian genocide in Turkey.
    It seems, however, that Speaker Nancy Pelosi does not have the votes
    to pass the perennial resolution.

    Over the years, the Armenian genocide resolution has taken different
    forms with similar results.

    It has been particularly noteworthy this time around because Turkey
    is one of our few allies in the region.

    Turkish officials dispute the genocide claims.

    The 2007 version of the resolution states: "the Armenian genocide was
    conceived and carried out by the Ottoman Empire from 1915 to 1923."
    An estimated 1.5 million Armenians died, the resolution states, while
    500,000 were expelled, resulting in "the elimination of the over
    2,500-year presence of Armenians in their historic homeland."

    Like its predecessors, the Bush administration, opposes the measure,
    calling it an insult to a key ally.

    Moreover, strategic reasons also play into the president's thinking,
    as an estimated 70 percent of U.S. military cargo bound for Iraq goes
    through Incirlik Air Base in Turkey.

    "Congress has more important work to do than antagonizing a
    democratic ally in the Muslim world, especially one that is providing
    vital support for our military every day," the president opined at a
    press conference last week.

    The president is absolutely right! And since there clearly are not
    enough votes for the resolution to pass, Congress should indeed get
    on with more important work.

    For starters, they could begin the process of returning our
    government to the pre-9/11 days where there were three equal branches
    of government in its actual implementation, which would augment what
    we currently have today ? the mere premise of such.

    Under the leadership of the vice president, the Bush Administration
    has made good on its efforts to expand the powers of the executive
    branch.

    Since taking office, the Bush Administration has made it their
    mission to reclaim the power, usurped by Congress, as a result of
    Vietnam and Watergate.

    Using the 9/11 attacks and fear in the most Machiavellian sense, the
    administration enacted legislation, passed by Congress, to become
    more powerful, more secretive, and worse, more dismissive of
    Congressional oversight.

    They created what historian Arthur Schlesinger coined, "The Imperial
    Presidency."

    The process began when Vice President Dick Cheney was allowed to
    create energy policy behind closed doors.

    But that was merely the tip of the iceberg. Subsequently, the Geneva
    Conventions, habeas corpus and the Constitution itself have been
    demoted to ideals better suited when one is not engaging in a
    perpetual war on terror.

    The U.S.A. Patriot Act, which is anything but, justified the type of
    domestic spying unimaginable even to Orwell.

    Last month, a U.S. District Court judge struck down two provisions of
    the Patriot Act, ruling the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act
    (FISA), as amended by the Patriot Act, was unconstitutional because
    they allow search warrants to be issued without showing probable
    cause, thereby violating the Fourth Amendment.

    The judge's ruling has restored some equilibrium to our checks and
    balances system; but Congress must go further.

    It is dangerous to the republic if Congress fails to roll back the
    power the president amassed immediately following 9/11.

    And this must be done before the next president takes the oath of
    office in 2009.

    The human condition, whatever station in life, has demonstrated
    throughout history difficulty in placing limits on its own power.

    No president, regardless of party, will volunteer to relinquish
    authority. Power is prone to bipartisan corruption.

    I can't help but speculate if whether Democrats, who now control
    Congress, are feeling a Democrat will also reclaim the White House.

    This is the amoral aspect of politics that is beyond the ability of
    elected officials to self-regulate.

    It is equally difficult for those aligned with a particular party to
    demand such change.

    Republicans could not do it and there is no reason to suspect that
    Democrats will fair any better if they are temporarily given the
    reigns of controlling Congress and the White House.

    However important it may be to publicly acknowledge Armenian
    genocide, it is more important that we put our own house in order
    now.


    Byron Willilams is an Oakland pastor and syndicated columnist. E-mail
    him at [email protected] or lea ve a message at (510) 208-6417.

    http://www.insidebayarea.com/oaklandtribune/ci_7 256588

    __________________________________________ ________
    Do You Yahoo!?
    Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around
    http://mail.yahoo.com

    --Boundary_(ID_oAd2ZJ7zNdEyBcSSJZlHBA)--
Working...
X