February 16, 2006
Conservatives Ignore Bob Barr At Their Peril
By Paul Craig Roberts
Last week’s annual
Conservative Political Action Conference signaled
the
transformation of American conservatism into
brownshirtism. A former Justice Department official
named
Viet Dinh got a standing ovation when he told the
CPAC audience that the rule of law mustn’t get in the
way of President Bush protecting Americans from Osama
bin Laden.
Former Republican congressman Bob Barr, who led the
House impeachment of President
Bill Clinton, reminded
the CPAC audience that our first loyalty is to the
US Constitution, not to a leader. The question, Barr
said, is not one of disloyalty to Bush, but whether
America "will remain a nation subject to, and
governed by, the rule of law or the whim of men."
The CPAC audience answered that they preferred to be
governed by Bush. According to Dana Milbank, a member of
the CPAC audience named Richard Sorcinelli loudly booed
Barr, declaring: "I can’t believe I’m in a
conservative hall listening to him say Bush is off
course trying to defend the United States."
A woman in the audience told Barr that the Constitution
placed Bush above the law and above non-elected federal
judges. [Bob
Barr, Bane of the Right? by Dana Milbank,
Washington Post, February 11, 2006]
These statements gallop beyond the merely partisan. They
express the sentiments of
brownshirtism. Our leader uber alles.
Only a few years ago this same group saw Barr as a
conservative hero for obtaining Clinton’s impeachment in
the House. Obviously, CPAC’s praise for Barr did not
derive from Barr’s stand on conservative principle that
a president must be held accountable if he violates the
law. In Clinton’s case Barr’s principles did not
conflict with the blind emotions of the politically
partisan conservatives demanding Clinton’s impeachment.
In opposing Bush’s illegal behavior, Barr is simply
being consistent. But this time Barr’s principles are at
odds with the emotions of the politically partisan CPAC
audience. Rushing to the defense of Bush, the CPAC
audience endorsed Viet Dinh’s Fuhrer Principle over the
rule of law.
Why do the media and the public allow partisan political
hacks, like Viet Dinh, to define Bush’s illegal actions
as a national security issue?
The purpose of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act
is to protect national security. FISA creates a secret
court to which the president can apply for a warrant
even after he has initiated spying. Complying with the
law in no way handicaps spying for national security
purposes. The only spying handicapped by the warrant
requirement is spying for illegitimate purposes, such as
spying on political opponents.
There are only two reasons for Bush to refuse to obey
the law. One is that he is guilty of illegitimate spying
for which no warrant would be issued by the FISA court.
The other is that he is using "national security"
to create unconstitutional powers for the executive.
Civil libertarian
Harvey Silverglate writing in the Boston Phoenix
(Feb. 10-16) says that Bush’s grab for "sweeping,
unchecked power in direct violation of a statute would
open a Pandora’s box of imperial possibilities." [Bush's
Real Motive] In short, it makes the
president a dictator.
For years the Republican Federalist Society has been
agitating for concentrating more power in the executive.
The members will say that they do not favor a dictator,
just a check on the "imperial Congress" and
"imperial judiciary." But they have not spelled out
how the president can be higher than law and still be
accountable, or, if he is only to be higher than some
laws, but not other laws, and only in some
circumstances, but not all circumstances, who draws the
line through the law and defines the circumstances.
On February 13 the American Bar Association
passed a resolution belatedly asking President Bush
to stop violating the law.
"We cannot allow the US Constitution and our rights
to become a victim of terrorism," said bar
association president Michael Grecco.
The siren call of "national security" is all the
cover Bush needs to have the FISA law repealed, thus
legally gaining the power to spy however he chooses, the
protection of political opponents be damned. However,
Bush and his Federalist Society Justice Department are
not interested in having the law repealed. Their purpose
has nothing to do with national security.
The point on which the regime is insisting is that there
are circumstances (undefined) in which the president
does not have to obey laws. What those circumstances and
laws are is for the regime to decide.
The Bush regime is asserting the Fuhrer Principle, and
Americans are buying it, even as Bush declares that
America is at war in order to bring democracy to the
Middle East.
COPYRIGHT
CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.
Paul Craig Roberts [email
him] is the author with Lawrence M.
Stratton of
The Tyranny of Good Intentions : How Prosecutors and
Bureaucrats Are Trampling the Constitution in the Name
of Justice.
Click
here
for Peter Brimelow’s
Forbes Magazine interview with Roberts about the
recent epidemic of prosecutorial misconduct.