DEMOCRACY OR AUTOCRACY?
12/26/01
Woodrow Wilson noted that some people who get into high office in
Washington grow with the job, while others simply swell. John Ashcroft,
the right-wing ideologue who was named by George W. Bush to be America's
attorney general, has swollen up like roadkill on a blistering hot
day.
Using terrorism as his excuse, the arrogant and inept Ashcroft
has defiled our Constitution, engaged in massive racial profiling, jailed
thousands of innocent people in a political ploy to look like he's "doing
something," arbitrarily set up secret star chambers that subvert our
judicial system, and made such a mockery of good American police work that
his autocratic tactics have been rejected by some of his own FBI
officials, some local police departments, and some of our European allies.
Meanwhile, he has not nailed a single terrorist.
But the new
attorney general has managed to come down hard on one group: U.S. citizens
who dare to criticize him! Indeed, like a tinhorn tyrant, Ashcroft
recently went before a senate committee where he stamped his tiny feet and
proclaimed that anyone who even raises questions about the
administration's antiterrorism blundering is using tactics that "aid
terrorists" and provide "ammunition to America's enemies."
Well
isn't this a special development! Now the Bushites have become so
imperious that they've declared it to be treasonous for us Americans to
object to their usurpation of our Constitutional rights, including our
right to criticize their idiocy. Sen. Jeff Sessions, added to this
anti-democratic crack down on our basic rights by puffing himself up and
asserting that critics "erode unity in our country and undermine respect
for our leadership."
This is Jim Hightower saying...Hey John, Jeff,
George––let's review Americanism 101. What undermines respect in a
democracy is not when the public criticizes leaders, but when the leaders
try to muzzle the public. You can't unify people by labeling anyone who
disagrees with you a traitor. That's dictatorship, not democracy
"Ashcroft Defends Antiterror Plan; Say Criticism May Aid U.S. Foes" New
York Times 12/7/2001 "Confessions of a Traitor" New York Times
12/8/2001
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