Why the Final Nine Weeks Still Matter

No Associated Press content was harmed in the writing of this post

In an interview several weeks ago Seymour Hersh said "you cannot believe how many people have told me to call them on 20 January." Clearly many are eager to tell what they know of the current administration but want to wait until it officially ends before doing so. The reactions I saw to his statement were largely along the lines of salivating anticipation, but the implications behind it bothered rather than cheered me. In response I wrote last week about the immediate reasons for taking action, but there are longer term ones as well.

First, a caveat: I understand we are now into single digit weeks left in office for our forty third president, that any substantive action would involve a great deal of stress, and such action would be at least somewhat hurried (but note those obstacles do not appear insurmountable for Son of Bailout). Further, the president can only do so much damage in the time he has left (he seems determined to make the most of it, though). I am completely sympathetic to the sense of weariness and resignation that the very mention of the man's name seems to inspire. We all want him gone, and want to never think about him again. Roger that.

That said, as things stand now some of his most damaging actions will be formalized as precedent for future presidents. Consider, for example, his hostile and shabby treatment of the judicial branch. In June the Supreme Court's Boumediene v. Bush decision established habeas corpus rights for Guantánamo detainees. What exactly has happened since? Last week there were finally hearings for six - six - of them, and it was not in a recognizably American judicial proceeding. After opening statements the courtroom was closed because the evidence was classified. (Keep in mind that even if all six detainees were hardened terrorists their entire store of actionable intelligence has been obsolete for years now. That, however, has more to do with judge Richard Leon than the president.) Government lawyers have submitted some kind of "in case of emergency break glass" envelope to the judge if it looks like their presentation is not persuasive, and the contents of it do not have to be shared with counsel for the accused.

In other words, it is a transparent sham. We are now five months past Boumediene and essentially nothing has been done. As it turns out the president signaled just that intention (via) on the day of the ruling when he said "we'll abide by the Court's decision. That doesn't mean I have to agree with it. It's a deeply divided Court, and I strongly agree with those who dissented". What he really meant is, he would not abide by the decision and he intended to treat the dissent as the majority opinion. But instead of flouting the ruling he chose a passive aggressive churlishness, slowing activity to a crawl and grudgingly allowing pseudo-judicial proceedings. And behind it is the taunt of a defiant schoolchild: Make me.

The reason his actions are so corrosive is that they strike at a fundamental necessity not just for our government but for any society: Confidence. Currency has no value except for that which we are confident it has (and for all you gold bugs - neither does any precious metal). Our institutions only function to the extent that we are confident they work they way we understand they will. No rules, enforcement mechanisms or tripwires can preserve their integrity if citizens see them dismissed with impunity. Similarly, a Supreme Court ruling only has the authority that we all agree it has, and only is meaningful to the extent we abide by it. There is no Judicial Police to force a proper, expedited disposition for those in Guantánamo. The expectation - the social contract, the covenant between the governors and the governed - is that we all, even at the highest level, abide even (especially) when we strongly disagree.

That is the real long term risk. Future presidents will note that this one ignored Supreme Court rulings. Opportunities to build on it may not come immediately, but it will still be there. This time the president felt compelled to offer some lip service to obeying the law, but if our highest court is ignored once with no consequence what reason is there for even that fig leaf to be offered going forward? After January 20th the stakes for those responsible will quickly diminish (as will the hazards for those on the inside who want to talk), but for the rest of us the echoes will not just fade away. They can only amplify.

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I once felt that way, Danps

But have I come to realize it's time to put away all that bickering partisanship. A great nation now demands it!

A lame duck with fangs

Barney's been dropped on his head

once too often, it seems. You'd be skittish, too.

no shit, pie.

barney has gone off the reservation and has officially become in my book "one of them." i cannot fucking believe some of the bullshit i've read that's come out of his mouth re: the bailout and why the current version is "good." i'm so sorry to say this, but i don't trust him anymore. he's a whore for his wall st. masters, and that's painfully clear at this point. time to move on, barney. you're old and out of touch, gaiiness aside.

Wrong Barney, CD

They're talking about Bush's dog, who is nasty-tempered and snappish just like his master.

Our Barney, poster boi for all that is wrong with politics as usual, hasn't so far as I know bitten anyone - yet. You keep poking him, though....

my bad. thanks BIO

it's so hard to keep track, yanno.

Too damn many Barneys

I think that's the nut of our problem. Should write a post about it, right up there with dog bites man.

It certainly looks that way

Greenwald has written about "establishment" politics, where DC pols act together for inside the Beltway reasons, and how that frequently has led to the calls for getting past it, not politicizing diggerences, etc. We just have to keep agitating.

Somehow the Republicans

never get the memo. I'm astounded at the calls for bipartisanship now because of all the political fighing that's gone on. I must have missed something because I've seen less of that in the last eight years. Dems have said very little in comparison to the number of outrageous polices and behavior that have occurred. If it's partisan to criticize the goings-on at the Justice Dept, for example, TOO BAD!

No to Unity '08, which does noting but screw the country.

And this:

Walker said she did not get any injections because she is confident that Barney is well taken care of.

Probably has better healthcare than many Americans.

Are you calling Barney

"Un-American"!? Don't you support our pooches!?

gotta disagree, Danps

with this:

We all want him gone, and want to never think about him again. Roger that.

i don't want him "gone" and i don't want to never think about him again.

i want him "jailed" and i want to think, a great deal and with utter happiness, about his many, many convictions in the ICC for war crimes.

i'd be 1000% happy with nothing but Bush/Cheney warcrimes trials, newscasts, articles, and sundry other media product, if it meant they'd be held responsible for ruining this country and tried for it, for all to see. that, i could live with. it could even pre-empt a lot of the Hopey Changey crap that's currently around, when media bobblehaids bother to speak of the New Order.

what cd said--

it's absolutely necessary, in fact--or else the next GOP administration will go even further--and this one made Nixon and Reagan look like absolute beginners.

well, my point was

that I don't think he'll be tried either for lawbreaking or war crimes. Either could probably be successfully done, but it's been taken off the table. "Want him gone" was shorthand for how a lot of people, and almost all of Washington, regard the situation. I'd prefer he be held to account, too.

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