John Cusack: 'Is Obama Just Another Ivy League
A--hole?'
"Is the President just another Ivy League A--hole
shredding civil liberties and due process and sending people to die in
some s--thole for purely political reasons?"
So
asked perilously liberal actor John Cusack Saturday in an article published by Truthout:
Mr. Obama, the Christian president with the Muslim-sounding
name, would heed the admonitions of neither religion's prophets about
making war and do what no empire or leader, including Alexander the
Great, could do: he would, he assured us "get the job done in
Afghanistan." And so we have our democratic president receiving the
Nobel Peace Prize as he sends 30,000 more troops to a ten-year-old
conflict in a country that's been war-torn for 5,000 years.
Why? We'll never fully know. Instead, we got a
speech that was stone bullshit and an insult to the very idea of peace.
We can't have it both ways. Hope means endless war?
Obama has metaphorically pushed all in with the usual international and
institutional killers; and in the case of war and peace, literally.
To sum it up: more war. So thousands die or are
maimed; generations of families and veterans are damaged beyond
imagination; sons and daughters come home in rubber bags. But he and his
satellites get their four more years.
Powerful
stuff. Cusack even called out the media for their complicity:
Under Obama do we continue to call the thousands of
mercenaries in Afghanistan "general contractors" now that Bush
is gone? No, we don't talk about them... not a story anymore.
Nope,
because such things under a Democratic president loved by the media are
now ignored:
There will be a historical record. "Change we
can believe in" is not using the other guys' mob to clean up your
own tracks while continuing to feed at the trough. Human nature is human
nature, and when people find out they're being hustled, they will seek
revenge, sooner or later, and it will be ugly and savage.
In a country with desperation growing everywhere,
everyday — despite the "Oh, things are getting better" press
releases — how could one think otherwise?
Of
course, despite any of his concerns, one can rest assured Cusack will
still be voting for Obama in November.
As
such, this entire exercise is to ease his conscience as he aids and abets
the man doing these evil deeds.
Funny
how that works, isn't it?
John Cusack Interviews
Law Professor Jonathan Turley About Obama Administration’s War On the
Constitution
By John Cusack, Truthout
| Interview, Saturday, 01
September 2012 08:28
I
wrote this a while back after Romney got the nom. In light of the blizzard
of bullshit coming at us in the next few months I thought I would put it
out now.
______________
Now
that the Republican primary circus is over, I started to think about what
it would mean to vote for Obama...
Since
mostly we hear from the daily hypocrisies of Mitt and friends, I thought
we should examine "our guy" on a few issues with a bit more
scrutiny than we hear from the "progressive left", which seems
to be little or none at all.
Instead
of scrutiny, the usual arguments in favor of another Obama presidency are
made: We must stop fanatics; it would be better than the fanatics—he's
the last line of defense from the corporate barbarians—and of course the
Supreme Court. It all makes a terrible kind of sense and I agree
completely with Garry Wills who described the Republican primaries as
" a revolting combination of con men & fanatics— "the
current primary race has become a demonstration that the Republican party
does not deserve serious consideration for public office."
True
enough.
But
yet...
...
there are certain Rubicon lines, as constitutional law professor Jonathan
Turley calls them, that Obama has crossed.
All
political questions are not equal no matter how much you pivot. When
people die or lose their physical freedom to feed certain economic
sectors or ideologies, it becomes a zero sum game for me.
This
is not an exercise in bemoaning regrettable policy choices or cheering
favorable ones but to ask fundamentally: Who are we? What are we voting
for? And what does it mean?
Three
markers — the Nobel Prize acceptance speech, the escalation speech at
West Point, and the recent speech by Eric Holder — crossed that Rubicon
line for me...
Mr.
Obama, the Christian president with the Muslim-sounding name, would heed
the admonitions of neither religion's prophets about making war and do
what no empire or leader, including Alexander the Great, could do: he
would, he assured us "get the job done in Afghanistan." And so
we have our democratic president receiving the Nobel Peace Prize as he
sends 30,000 more troops to a ten-year-old conflict in a country that's
been war-torn for 5,000 years.
Why?
We'll never fully know. Instead, we got a speech that was stone bullshit
and an insult to the very idea of peace.
We
can't have it both ways. Hope means endless war? Obama has metaphorically
pushed all in with the usual international and institutional killers; and
in the case of war and peace, literally.
To sum
it up: more war. So thousands die or are maimed; generations of families
and veterans are damaged beyond imagination; sons and daughters come home
in rubber bags. But he and his satellites get their four more years.
The
AfPak War is more H. G. Wells than Orwell, with people blindly letting
each other get fed to the barons of Wall Street and the Pentagon,
themselves playing the part of the Pashtuns. The paradox is simple: he
got elected on his anti-war stance during a perfect storm of the economic
meltdown and McCain saying the worst thing at the worst time as we stared
into the abyss. Obama beat Clinton on "I'm against the war and she
is for it." It was simple then, when he needed it to be.
Under
Obama do we continue to call the thousands of mercenaries in Afghanistan
"general contractors" now that Bush is gone? No, we don't talk
about them... not a story anymore.
Do we
prosecute felonies like torture or spying on Americans? No, time to
"move on"...
Now
chaos is the norm and though the chaos is complicated, the answer is
still simple. We can't afford this morally, financially, or physically.
Or in a language the financial community can digest: the wars are
ideologically and spiritually bankrupt. No need to get a score from the
CBO.
Drones
bomb Pakistani villages across the border at an unprecedented rate. Is it
legal? Does anyone care? "It begs the question," as Daniel
Berrigan asks us, "is this one a "good war" or a
"dumb war"? But the question betrays the bias: it is all the
same. It's all madness."
One is
forced to asked the question: Is the President just another Ivy League
Asshole shredding civil liberties and due process and sending people to
die in some shithole for purely political reasons?
There
will be a historical record. "Change we can believe in" is not
using the other guys' mob to clean up your own tracks while continuing to
feed at the trough. Human nature is human nature, and when people find
out they're being hustled, they will seek revenge, sooner or later, and
it will be ugly and savage.
In a
country with desperation growing everywhere, everyday — despite the
"Oh, things are getting better" press releases — how could one
think otherwise?
Just
think about the economic crisis we are in as a country. It could never
happen, they said. The American middle class was rock solid. The American
dream, home ownership, education, the opportunity to get a good job if
you applied yourself... and on and on. Yeah, what happened to that? It's
gone.
The
next question must be: "What happened to our civil liberties, to our
due process, which are the foundation of any notion of real
democracy?" The chickens haven't come home to roost for the majority
but the foundation has been set and the Constitution gutted.
Brian McFadden's cartoon says it all.
Here's
the transcript of the telephone interview I conducted with Turley.
JONATHAN
TURLEY: Hi John.
CUSACK:
Hello. Okay, hey I was just thinking about all this stuff and thought
maybe we'd see what we can do to bring civil liberties and these issues
back into the debate for the next couple of months ...
TURLEY:
I think that's great.
CUSACK:
So, I don't know how you can believe in the Constitution and violate it
that much.
TURLEY:
Yeah.
CUSACK:
I would just love to know your take as an expert on these things. And
then maybe we can speak to whatever you think his motivations would be,
and not speak to them in the way that we want to armchair-quarterback
like the pundits do about "the game inside the game," but only
do it because it would speak to the arguments that are being used by the
left to excuse it. For example, maybe their argument that there are
things you can't know, and it's a dangerous world out there, or why do
you think a constitutional law professor would throw out due process?
TURLEY:
Well, there's a misconception about Barack Obama as a former
constitutional law professor. First of all, there are plenty of
professors who are "legal relativists." They tend to view legal
principles as relative to whatever they're trying to achieve. I would
certainly put President Obama in the relativist category. Ironically, he
shares that distinction with George W. Bush. They both tended to view the
law as a means to a particular end — as opposed to the end itself. That's
the fundamental distinction among law professors. Law professors like
Obama tend to view the law as one means to an end, and others, like
myself, tend to view it as the end itself.
Truth
be known President Obama has never been particularly driven by principle.
Right after his election, I wrote a column in a few days warning people
that even though I voted for Obama, he was not what people were
describing him to be. I saw him in the Senate. I saw him in Chicago.
CUSACK:
Yeah, so did I.
TURLEY:
He was never motivated that much by principle. What he's motivated by are
programs. And to that extent, I like his programs more than Bush's
programs, but Bush and Obama are very much alike when it comes to
principles. They simply do not fight for the abstract principles and view
them as something quite relative to what they're trying to accomplish.
Thus privacy yields to immunity for telecommunications companies and due
process yields to tribunals for terrorism suspects.
CUSACK:
Churchill said, "The power of the Executive to cast a man into
prison without formulating any charge known to the law, and particularly
to deny him the judgment of his peers, is in the highest degree odious
and is the foundation of all totalitarian government whether Nazi or
Communist." That wasn't Eugene Debs speaking — that was Winston
Churchill.
And if
he takes an oath before God to uphold the Constitution, and yet he
decides it's not politically expedient for him to deal with due process
or spying on citizens and has his Attorney General justify murdering US
citizens — and then adds a signing statement saying, "Well, I'm not
going to do anything with this stuff because I'm a good guy."– one
would think we would have to define this as a much graver threat than
good or bad policy choices- correct?
TURLEY:
Well, first of all, there's a great desire of many people to relieve
themselves of the obligation to vote on principle. It's a classic
rationalization that liberals have been known to use recently, but not
just liberals. The Republican and Democratic parties have accomplished an
amazing feat with the red state/blue state paradigm. They've convinced
everyone that regardless of how bad they are, the other guy is worse. So
even with 11 percent of the public supporting Congress most incumbents
will be returned to Congress. They have so structured and defined the
question that people no longer look at the actual principles and instead
vote on this false dichotomy.
Now,
belief in human rights law and civil liberties leads one to the
uncomfortable conclusion that President Obama has violated his oath to
uphold the Constitution. But that's not the primary question for voters.
It is less about him than it is them. They have an obligation to cast
their vote in a principled fashion. It is, in my opinion, no excuse to
vote for someone who has violated core constitutional rights and civil
liberties simply because you believe the other side is no better. You
cannot pretend that your vote does not constitute at least a tacit
approval of the policies of the candidate.
This
is nothing new, of course for civil libertarians who have always been
left behind at the altar in elections. We've always been the bridesmaid,
never the bride. We're used to politicians lying to us. And President
Obama lied to us. There's no way around that. He promised various things
and promptly abandoned those principles.
So the
argument that Romney is no better or worse does not excuse the obligation
of a voter. With President Obama they have a president who went to the
CIA soon after he was elected and promised CIA employees that they would
not be investigated or prosecuted for torture, even though he admitted
that waterboarding was torture.
CUSACK:
I remember when we were working with Arianna at The Huffington Post and
we thought, well, has anyone asked whether waterboarding is torture? Has
anyone asked Eric Holder that? And so Arianna had Sam Seder ask him that
at a press conference, and then he had to admit that it was. And then the
next question, of course, was, well, if it is a crime, are you going to prosecute
the law? But, of course, it wasn't politically expedient to do so, right?
That's inherent in their non-answer and inaction?
TURLEY:
That's right.
CUSACK:
Have you ever heard a more specious argument than "It's time for us
all to move on?" When did the Attorney General or the President have
the option to enforce the law?
TURLEY:
Well, that's the key question that nobody wants to ask. We have a treaty,
actually a number of treaties, that obligate us to investigate and
prosecute torture. We pushed through those treaties because we wanted to
make clear that no matter what the expediency of the moment, no matter
whether it was convenient or inconvenient, all nations had to agree to
investigate and prosecute torture and other war crimes.
And
the whole reason for putting this in the treaties was to do precisely the
opposite of what the Obama administration has done. That is, in these
treaties they say that it is not a defense that prosecution would be
inconvenient or unpopular. But that's exactly what President Obama said
when he announced, "I won't allow the prosecution of torture because
I want us to look to the future and not the past." That is simply a
rhetorical flourish to hide the obvious point: "I don't want the
inconvenience and the unpopularity that would come with enforcing this
treaty."
CUSACK:
Right. So, in that sense, the Bush administration had set the precedent
that the state can do anything it likes in the name of terror, and not
only has Obama let that cement harden, but he's actually expanded the
power of the executive branch to do whatever it wants, or he's lowered
the bar — he's lowered the law — to meet his convenience. He's lowered
the law to meet his personal political convenience rather than leaving it
as something that, as Mario Cuomo said, the law is supposed to be better
than us.
TURLEY:
That's exactly right. In fact, President Obama has not only maintained
the position of George W. Bush in the area of national securities and in
civil liberties, he's actually expanded on those positions. He is
actually worse than George Bush in some areas.
CUSACK:
Can you speak to which ones?
TURLEY:
Well, a good example of it is that President Bush ordered the killing of
an American citizen when he approved a drone strike on a car in Yemen
that he knew contained an American citizen as a passenger. Many of us at
the time said, "You just effectively ordered the death of an
American citizen in order to kill someone else, and where exactly do you
have that authority?" But they made an argument that because the
citizen wasn't the primary target, he was just collateral damage. And
there are many that believe that that is a plausible argument.
CUSACK:
By the way, we're forgetting to kill even a foreign citizen is against
the law. I hate to be so quaint...
TURLEY:
Well, President Obama outdid President Bush. He ordered the killing of
two US citizens as the primary targets and has then gone forward and put
out a policy that allows him to kill any American citizen when he
unilaterally determines them to be a terrorist threat. Where President
Bush had a citizen killed as collateral damage, President Obama has
actually a formal policy allowing him to kill any US citizen.
CUSACK:
But yet the speech that Eric Holder gave was greeted generally, by those
others than civil libertarians and a few people on the left with some
intellectual honesty, with polite applause and a stunning silence and
then more cocktail parties and state dinners and dignitaries, back the
Republican Hypocrisy Hour on the evening feed — and he basically gave a
speech saying that the executive can assassinate US citizens.
TURLEY:
That was the truly other-worldly moment of the speech. He went to,
Northwestern Law School (my alma mater), and stood there and articulated
the most authoritarian policy that a government can have: the right to
unilaterally kill its citizens without any court order or review. The
response from the audience was applause. Citizens applauding an Attorney
General who just described how the President was claiming the right to
kill any of them on his sole inherent authority.
CUSACK:
Does that order have to come directly from Obama, or can his underlings
carry that out on his behalf as part of a generalized understanding? Or
does he have to personally say, "You can get that guy and that
guy?"
TURLEY:
Well, he has delegated the authority to the so-called death panel, which
is, of course, hilarious, since the Republicans keep talking about a
nonexistent death panel in national healthcare. We actually do have a
death panel, and it's killing people who are healthy.
CUSACK:
I think you just gave me the idea for my next film. And the tone will be,
of course, Kafkaesque.
TURLEY:
It really is.
CUSACK:
You're at the bottom of the barrel when the Attorney General is saying
that not only can you hold people in prison for no charge without due
process, but we can kill the citizens that "we" deem
terrorists. But "we" won't do it cause we're the good guys
remember?
TURLEY:
Well, the way that this works is you have this unseen panel. Of course,
their proceedings are completely secret. The people who are put on the
hit list are not informed, obviously.
CUSACK:
That's just not polite, is it?
TURLEY:
No, it's not. The first time you're informed that you're on this list is
when your car explodes, and that doesn't allow much time for due process.
But the thing about the Obama administration is that it is far more
premeditated and sophisticated in claiming authoritarian powers. Bush
tended to shoot from the hip — he tended to do these things largely on
the edges. In contrast, Obama has openly embraced these powers and
created formal measures, an actual process for killing US citizens. He
has used the terminology of the law to seek to legitimate an
extrajudicial killing.
CUSACK:
Yeah, bringing the law down to meet his political realism, his
constitutional realism, which is that the Constitution is just a means to
an end politically for him, so if it's inconvenient for him to deal with
due process or if it's inconvenient for him to deal with torture, well,
then why should he do that? He's a busy man. The Constitution is just
another document to be used in a political fashion, right?
TURLEY:
Indeed. I heard from people in the administration after I wrote a column
a couple weeks ago about the assassination policy. And they basically
said, "Look, you're not giving us our due. Holder said in the speech
that we are following a constitutional analysis. And we have standards
that we apply." It is an incredibly seductive argument, but there is
an incredible intellectual disconnect. Whatever they are doing, it can't
be called a constitutional process.
Obama
has asserted the right to kill any citizen that he believes is a
terrorist. He is not bound by this panel that only exists as an extension
of his claimed inherent absolute authority. He can ignore them. He can
circumvent them. In the end, with or without a panel, a president is
unilaterally killing a US citizen. This is exactly what the framers of
the Constitution told us not to do.
CUSACK:
The framers didn't say, "In special cases, do what you like. When
there are things the public cannot know for their own good, when it's
extra-specially a dangerous world... do whatever you want." The
framers of the Constitution always knew there would be extraordinary
circumstances, and they were accounted for in the Constitution. The
Constitution does not allow for the executive to redefine the
Constitution when it will be politically easier for him to get things
done.
TURLEY:
No. And it's preposterous to argue that.
CUSACK:
When does it become — criminal?
TURLEY:
Well, the framers knew what it was like to have sovereigns kill citizens
without due process. They did it all the time back in the 18th century.
They wrote a constitution specifically to bar unilateral authority.
James
Madison is often quoted for his observation that if all men were angels,
no government would be necessary. And what he was saying is that you have
to create a system of law that has checks and balances so that even
imperfect human beings are restrained from doing much harm. Madison and
other framers did not want to rely on the promises of good motivations or
good intents from the government. They created a system where no branch
had enough authority to govern alone — a system of shared and balanced
powers.
So
what Obama's doing is to rewrite the most fundamental principle of the US
Constitution. The whole point of the Holder speech was that we're really
good guys who take this seriously, and you can trust us. That's exactly the
argument the framers rejected, the "trust me" principle of
government. You'll notice when Romney was asked about this, he said,
"I would've signed the same law, because I trust Obama to do the
right thing." They're both using the very argument that the framers
warned citizens never to accept from their government.
CUSACK:
So basically, it comes down to, again, just political expediency and
aesthetics. So as long as we have friendly aesthetics and likable people,
we can do whatever we want. Who cares what the policy is or the
implications for the future.
TURLEY:
The greatest problem is what it has done to us and what our relative
silence signifies. Liberals and civil libertarians have lost their own
credibility, their own moral standing, with the support of President
Obama. For many civil libertarians it is impossible to vote for someone
who has blocked the prosecution of war crimes. That's where you cross the
Rubicon for most civil libertarians. That was a turning point for many
who simply cannot to vote for someone who is accused of that type of
violation.
Under
international law, shielding people from war-crime prosecutions is itself
a form of war crime. They're both violations of international law.
Notably, when the Spanish moved to investigate our torture program, we
now know that the Obama administration threatened the Spanish courts and
the Spanish government that they better not enforce the treaty against
the US This was a real threat to the Administration because these
treaties allow other nations to step forward when another nation refuses
to uphold the treaty. If a government does not investigate and prosecute
its own accused war criminals, then other countries have the right to do
so. That rule was, again, of our own creation. With other leading national
we have long asserted the right to prosecute people in other countries
who are shielded or protected by their own countries.
CUSACK:
Didn't Spain pull somebody out of Chile under that?
TURLEY:
Yeah, Pinochet.
CUSACK:
Yeah, also our guy...
TURLEY:
The great irony of all this is that we're the architect of that
international process. We're the one that always pushed for the position
that no government could block war crimes prosecution.
But
that's not all. The Obama administration has also outdone the Bush
administration in other areas. For example, one of the most important
international principles to come out of World War II was the rejection of
the "just following orders" defense. We were the country that
led the world in saying that defendants brought before Nuremberg could
not base their defense on the fact that they were just following orders.
After Nuremberg, there were decades of development of this principle.
It's a very important point, because that defense, if it is allowed,
would shield most people accused of torture and war crime. So when the
Obama administration –
CUSACK:
That also parallels into the idea that the National Defense Authorization
Act is using its powers not only to put a chilling effect on
whistleblowers, but to also make it illegal for whistleblowers to bring
the truth out. Am I right on that, or is that an overstatement?
TURLEY:
Well, the biggest problem is that when the administration was fishing
around for some way to justify not doing the right thing and not
prosecuting torture, they finally released a document that said that CIA
personnel and even some DOJ lawyers were "just following
orders," but particularly CIA personnel.
The
reason Obama promised them that none of them would be prosecuted is he
said that they were just following the orders of higher authority in the
government. That position gutted Nuremberg. Many lawyers around the world
are upset because the US under the Obama administration has torn the
heart out of Nuremberg. Just think of the implications: other countries
that are accused of torture can shield their people and say, "Yeah,
this guy was a torturer. This guy ordered a war crime. But they were all
just following orders. And the guy that gave them the order, he's
dead." It is the classic defense of war criminals. Now it is a
viable defense again because of the Obama administration.
CUSACK:
Yeah.
TURLEY:
Certainly part of the problem is how the news media –
CUSACK:
Oscar Wilde said most journalists would fall under the category of those
who couldn't tell the difference between a bicycle accident and the end
of civilization. But why is it that all the journalists that you see
mostly on MSNBC or most of the progressives, or so-called progressives,
who believe that under Bush and Cheney and Ashcroft and Alberto Gonzalez
these were great and grave constitutional crises, the wars were an
ongoing moral fiasco — but now, since we have a friendly face in the
White House, someone with kind of pleasing aesthetics and some new
policies we like, now all of a sudden these aren't crimes, there's no
crisis. Because he's our guy? Go, team, go?
TURLEY:
Some in the media have certainly fallen into this cult of personality.
CUSACK:
What would you say to those people? I always thought the duty of a
citizen, and even more so as a journalist, had greatly to do with the
idea that intellectual honesty was much more important than political
loyalty. How would you compare Alberto Gonzalez to Eric Holder?
TURLEY:
Oh, Eric Holder is smarter than Gonzalez, but I see no other difference
in terms of how they've conducted themselves. Both of these men are
highly political. Holder was accused of being improperly political during
his time in the Clinton administration. When he was up for Attorney
General, he had to promise the Senate that he would not repeat some of
the mistakes he made in the Clinton administration over things like the
pardon scandal, where he was accused of being more politically than
legally motivated.
In
this town, Holder is viewed as much more of a political than a legal figure,
and the same thing with Gonzalez. Bush and Obama both selected Attorney
Generals who would do what they wanted them to do, who would enable them
by saying that no principles stood in the way of what they wanted to do.
More importantly, that there were no principles requiring them to do
something they didn't want to do, like investigate torture.
CUSACK:
So would you say this assassination issue, or the speech and the clause
in the NDAA and this signing statement that was attached, was equivalent
to John Yoo's torture document?
TURLEY:
Oh, I think it's amazing. It is astonishing the dishonesty that preceded
and followed its passage. Before passage, the administration told the
public that the president was upset about the lack of an exception for
citizens and that he was ready to veto the bill if there was a lack of
such an exception. Then, in an unguarded moment, Senator Levin was
speaking to another Democratic senator who was objecting to the fact that
citizens could be assassinated under this provision, and Levin said,
"I don't know if my colleague is aware that the exception language
was removed at the request of the White House." Many of us just fell
out of our chairs. It was a relatively rare moment on the Senate floor,
unguarded and unscripted.
CUSACK:
And finally simple.
TURLEY:
Yes. So we were basically lied to. I think that the administration was
really caught unprepared by that rare moment of honesty, and that led
ultimately to his pledge not to use the power to assassinate against
citizens. But that pledge is meaningless. Having a president say, "I
won't use a power given to me" is the most dangerous of assurances,
because a promise is not worth anything.
CUSACK:
Yeah, I would say it's the coldest comfort there is.
TURLEY:
Yes. This brings us back to the media and the failure to strip away the
rhetoric around these policies. It was certainly easier in the Bush
administration, because you had more clown-like figures like Alberto
Gonzalez. The problem is that the media has tended to get thinner and
thinner in terms of analysis. The best example is that about the use of
the term "coerced or enhanced interrogation." I often stop
reporters when they use these terms in questions. I say, "I'm not
too sure what you mean, because waterboarding is not enhanced
interrogation." That was a myth put out by the Bush administration.
Virtually no one in the field used that term, because courts in the
United States and around the world consistently said that waterboarding's
torture. Holder admitted that waterboarding's torture. Obama admitted
that waterboarding is torture. Even members of the Bush administration
ultimately admitted that waterboarding's torture. The Bush Administration
pushed this term to get reporters to drop the word torture and it worked.
They are still using the term.
Look
at the articles and the coverage. They uniformly say "enhanced
interrogation." Why? Because it's easier. They want to avoid the
controversy. Because if they say "torture," it makes the story
much more difficult. If you say, "Today the Senate was looking into
a program to torture detainees," there's a requirement that you get
a little more into the fact that we're not supposed to be torturing
people.
CUSACK:
So, from a civil liberties perspective, ravens are circling the White
House, even though there's a friendly man in it.
TURLEY:
Yeah.
CUSACK:
I hate to speak too much to motivation, but why do you think MSNBC and
other so-called centrist or left outlets won't bring up any of these
things? These issues were broadcast and reported on nightly when John
Ashcroft and Alberto Gonzalez and Bush were in office.
TURLEY:
Well, there is no question that some at MSNBC have backed away from these
issues, although occasionally you'll see people talk about –
CUSACK:
I think that's being kind, don't you? More like "abandoned."
TURLEY:
Yeah. The civil liberties perspective is rarely given more than a passing
reference while national security concerns are explored in depth. Fox is
viewed as protective of Bush while MSNBC is viewed as protective of
Obama. But both presidents are guilty of the same violations. There are
relatively few journalists willing to pursue these questions aggressively
and objectively, particularly on television. And so the result is that
the public is hearing a script written by the government that downplays
these principles. They don't hear the word "torture."
They
hear "enhanced interrogation." They don't hear much about the
treaties. They don't hear about the international condemnation of the United
States. Most Americans are unaware of how far we have moved away from
Nuremberg and core principles of international law.
CUSACK:
So the surreal Holder speech — how could it be that no one would be
reporting on that? How could it be that has gone by with not a bang but a
whimper?
TURLEY:
Well, you know, part of it, John, I think, is that this administration is
very clever. First of all, they clearly made the decision right after the
election to tack heavily to the right on national security issues. We know
that by the people they put on the National Security Council. They went
and got very hardcore folks — people who are quite unpopular with civil
libertarians. Not surprisingly we almost immediately started to hear
things like the pledge not to prosecute CIA officials and other Bush
policies being continued.
Many
reporters buy into these escape clauses that the administration gives
them, this is where I think the administration is quite clever. From a
legal perspective, the Holder speech should have been exposed as perfect
nonsense. If you're a constitutional scholar, what he was talking about
is facially ridiculous, because he was saying that we do have a
constitutional process–it's just self-imposed, and we're the only ones
who can review it. They created a process of their own and then pledged
to remain faithful to it.
While
that should be a transparent and absurd position, it gave an out for
journalists to say, "Well, you know, the administration's promising
that there is a process, it's just not the court process." That's
what is so clever, and why the Obama administration has been far more
successful than the Bush administration in rolling back core rights. The
Bush administration would basically say, "We just vaporized a
citizen in a car with a terrorist, and we're not sorry for it."
CUSACK:
Well, yeah, the Bush administration basically said, "We may have
committed a crime, but we're the government, so what the fuck are you
going to do about it?" Right? —and the Obama administration is
saying, "We're going to set this all in cement, expand the power of
the executive, and pass the buck to the next guy." Is that it?
TURLEY:
It's the same type of argument when people used to say when they caught a
criminal and hung him from a tree after a perfunctory five-minute trial.
In those days, there was an attempt to pretend that they are really not a
lynch mob, they were following a legal process of their making and their
satisfaction. It's just... it's expedited. Well, in some ways, the
administration is arguing the same thing. They're saying, "Yes, we
do believe that we can kill any US citizen, but we're going to talk
amongst ourselves about this, and we're not going to do it until we're
satisfied that this guy is guilty."
CUSACK:
Me and the nameless death panel.
TURLEY:
Again, the death panel is ludicrous. The power that they've defined
derives from the president's role as Commander in Chief. So this panel –
CUSACK:
They're falling back on executive privilege, the same as Nixon and Bush.
TURLEY:
Right, it's an extension of the president. He could just ignore it. It's
not like they have any power that exceeds his own.
CUSACK:
So the death panel serves at the pleasure of the king, is what you're
saying.
TURLEY:
Yes, and it gives him cover so that they can claim that they're doing
something legal when they're doing something extra-legal.
CUSACK:
Well, illegal, right?
TURLEY:
Right. Outside the law.
CUSACK:
So when does it get to a point where if you abdicate duty, it is in and
of itself a crime? Obama is essentially creating a constitutional crisis
not by committing crimes but by abdicating his oath that he swore before
God — is that not a crime?
TURLEY:
Well, he is violating international law over things like his promise to
protect CIA officials from any prosecution for torture. That's a direct
violation, which makes our country as a whole doubly guilty for alleged
war crimes. I know many of the people in the administration. Some of us
were quite close. And they're very smart people. I think that they also
realize how far outside the lines they are. That's the reason they are
trying to draft up these policies to give the appearance of the law. It's
like a Potemkin village constructed as a façade for people to pass
through –
CUSACK:
They want to have a legal patina.
TURLEY:
Right, and so they create this Potemkin village using names. You
certainly can put the name "due process" on a drone missile,
but it's not delivering due process.
CUSACK:
Yeah. And what about — well, we haven't even gotten into the expansion of
the privatization movement of the military "contractors" under
George Bush or the escalation of drone strikes. I mean, who are they
killing? Is it legal? Does anyone care — have we just given up as a
country, saying that the Congress can declare war?
TURLEY:
We appear to be in a sort of a free-fall. We have what used to be called
an "imperial presidency."
CUSACK:
Obama is far more of an imperial president than Bush in many ways,
wouldn't you say?
TURLEY:
Oh, President Obama has created an imperial presidency that would have
made Richard Nixon blush. It is unbelievable.
CUSACK:
And to say these things, most of the liberal community or the progressive
community would say, "Turley and Cusack have lost their minds. What
do they want? They want Mitt Romney to come in?"
TURLEY:
The question is, "What has all of your relativistic voting and
support done for you?" That is, certainly there are many people who
believe –
CUSACK:
Well, some of the people will say the bread-and-butter issues, "I
got healthcare coverage, I got expanded healthcare coverage."
TURLEY:
See, that's what I find really interesting. When I talk to people who
support the administration, they usually agree with me that torture is a
war crime and that the administration has blocked the investigation of
alleged war crimes.
Then I
ask them, "Then, morally, are you comfortable with saying, 'I know
the administration is concealing war crimes, but they're really good on
healthcare?'" That is what it comes down to.
The
question for people to struggle with is how we ever hope to regain our
moral standing and our high ground unless citizens are prepared to say,
"Enough." And this is really the election where that might
actually carry some weight — if people said, "Enough. We're not
going to blindly support the president and be played anymore according to
this blue state/red state paradigm. We're going to reconstruct instead of
replicate. It might not even be a reinvented Democratic Party in the end
that is a viable option. Civil libertarians are going to stand apart so
that people like Nancy Pelosi and Barack Obama and others know that there
are certain Rubicon issues that you cannot cross, and one of them happens
to be civil liberty.
CUSACK:
Yeah, because most people reading this will sort of say, "Okay, this
is all fine and good, but I've got to get to work and I've got stuff to
do and I don't know what these fucking guys are talking about. I don't
really care."
So
let's paint a scenario. My nephew, Miles, decides that he wants to grow
dreadlocks, and he also decides he's falling in love with the religion of
Islam. And he changes his name. Instead of his name being Miles, he
changes his name to a Muslim-sounding name.
He
goes to Washington, and he goes to the wrong organization or meeting,
let's say, and he goes to an Occupy Washington protest. He's out there
next to someone with a speaker, and a car bomb explodes. He didn't set it
off, and he didn't do anything. The government can throw him in prison
and never try him, right?
TURLEY:
Well, first of all, that's a very good question.
CUSACK:
How do we illustrate the danger to normal people of these massive
overreaches and radical changes to the Constitution that started under
bush and have expanded under Obama?
TURLEY:
I mean, first of all, I know Miles, and –
CUSACK:
Yes.
TURLEY:
–and he is a little dangerous.
CUSACK:
Yes.
TURLEY:
I played basketball with him and you and I would describe him as a clear
and present danger.
CUSACK:
I mean, and I know Eric Holder and Obama won't throw him in prison
because they're nice guys, but let's say that they're out of office.
TURLEY:
Right, and the problem is that there is no guarantee. It has become
almost Fellini-esque. Holder made the announcement a couple of years ago
that they would try some defendants in a federal court while reserving
military tribunals for others. The speech started out on the high ground,
saying, "We have to believe in our federal courts and our
Constitution. We've tried terrorists before, and therefore we're
transferring these individuals to federal court."
Then
he said, "But we're going to transfer these other individuals to
Guantanamo Bay." What was missing was any type of principle. You
have Obama doing the same thing that George Bush did — sitting there like
Caesar and saying, "You get a real trial and you get a fake
trial." He sent Zacarias Moussaoui to a federal court and then he
threw Jose Padilla, who happened to be a US citizen, into the Navy brig
and held him without trial.
Yet,
Obama and Holder publicly assert that they're somehow making a civil
liberties point, and say, "We're very proud of the fact that we have
the courage to hold these people for a real trial, except for those
people. Those people are going to get a tribunal." And what happened
after that was remarkable. If you read the press accounts, the press
actually credits the administration with doing the right thing. Most of
them pushed into the last paragraph the fact that all they did was split
the people on the table, and half got a real trial and half got a fake
trial.
CUSACK:
In the same way, the demonization, whether rightful demonization, of
Osama Bin Laden was so intense that people were thrilled that he was
assassinated instead of brought to trial and tried. And I thought, if the
Nuremberg principles were right, the idea would be that you'd want to
take this guy and put him on trial in front of the entire world, and,
actually, if you were going to put him to death, you'd put him to death
by lethal injection.
TURLEY:
You'll recall reports came out that the Seals were told to kill Osama,
and then reports came out to say that Osama might not have been armed
when the Seals came in. The strong indication was that this was a hit.
CUSACK:
Yeah.
TURLEY:
The accounts suggest that this was an assassination from the beginning to
the end, and that was largely brushed over in the media. There was never
really any discussion of whether it was appropriate or even a good idea
not to capture this guy and to bring him to justice.
The
other thing that was not discussed in most newspapers and programs was
the fact that we violated international law. Pakistan insisted that they
never approved our going into Pakistan. Think about it — if the
government of Mexico sent in Mexican special forces into San Diego and
captured a Mexican national, or maybe even an American citizen, and then
killed him, could you imagine what the outcry would be?
CUSACK:
Or somebody from a Middle Eastern country who had their kids blown up by
Mr. Cheney's and Bush's wars came in and decided they were going to take
out Cheney–not take him back to try him, but actually just come in and
assassinate him.
TURLEY:
Yet we didn't even have that debate. And I think that goes to your point,
John, about where's the media?
CUSACK:
But, see, that's a very tough principle to take, because everybody feels
so rightfully loathsome about Bin Laden, right? But principles are not
meant to be convenient, right? The Constitution is not meant to be
convenient. If they can catch Adolf Eichmann and put him on trial, why
not bin Laden? The principles are what separate us from the beasts.
I
think the best answer I ever heard about this stuff, besides sitting
around a kitchen table with you and your father and my father, was I
heard somebody, they asked Mario Cuomo, "You don't support the death
penalty...? Would you for someone who raped your wife?" And Cuomo
blinked, and he looked at him, and he said, "What would I do? Well,
I'd take a baseball bat and I'd bash his skull in... But I don't matter.
The law is better than me. The law is supposed to be better than me.
That's the whole point."
TURLEY:
Right. It is one thing if the president argued that there was no
opportunity to capture bin Laden because he was in a moving car, for
example. And then some people could say, "Well, they took him out
because there was no way they could use anything but a missile."
What's missing in the debate is that it was quickly brushed over whether
we had the ability to capture bin Laden.
CUSACK:
Well, it gets to [the late] Raiders owner Al Davis' justice, which is
basically, "Just win, baby." And that's where we are. The
Constitution was framed by Al Davis. I never knew that.
And
the sad part for me is that all the conversations and these
interpretations and these conveniences, if they had followed the
Constitution, and if they had been strict in terms of their
interpretations, it wouldn't matter one bit in effectively handling the
war on terror or protecting Americans, because there wasn't anything
extra accomplished materially in taking these extra leaps, other than to
make it easier for them to play cowboy and not cede national security to
the Republicans politically. Bin Laden was basically ineffective. And our
overseas intel people were already all over these guys.
It
doesn't really matter. The only thing that's been hurt here has been us
and the Constitution and any moral high ground we used to have. Because
Obama and Holder are good guys, it's okay. But what happens when the
not-so-good guys come in, does MSNBC really want to cede and grandfather
these powers to Gingrich or Romney or Ryan or Santorum or whomever — and
then we're sitting around looking at each other, like how did this
happen? — the same way we look around now and say, "How the hell did
the middle of America lose the American dream? How is all of this stuff
happening at the same time?" And it gets back to lack of principle.
TURLEY:
I think that's right. Remember the articles during the torture debate? I
kept on getting calls from reporters saying, "Well, you know, the
administration has come out with an interesting statement. They said that
it appears that they might've gotten something positive from torturing
these people." Yet you've had other officials say that they got
garbage, which is what you often get from torture...
CUSACK:
So the argument being that if we can get good information, we should
torture?
TURLEY:
Exactly. Yeah, that's what I ask them. I say, "So, first of all,
let's remember, torture is a war crime. So what you're saying is — "
CUSACK:
Well, war crimes... war crimes are effective.
TURLEY:
The thing that amazes me is that you have smart people like reporters who
buy so readily into this. I truly believe that they're earnest when they
say this.
Of
course you ask them "Well, does that mean that the Nuremberg
principles don't apply as long as you can show some productive use?"
We have treaty provisions that expressly rule out justifying torture on
the basis that it was used to gain useful information.
CUSACK:
Look, I mean, enforced slave labor has some productive use. You get great
productivity, you get great output from that shit. You're not measuring
the principle against the potential outcome; that's a bad business model.
"Just win, baby" — we're supposed to be above that.
TURLEY:
But, you know, I'll give you an example. I had one of the leading
investigative journalists email me after one of my columns blasting the
administration on the assassin list, and this is someone I deeply
respect. He's one of the true great investigative reporters. He objected
to the fact that my column said that under the Obama policy he could kill
US citizens not just abroad, but could kill them in the United States.
And he said, "You know, I agree with everything in your column
except that." He said, "You know, they've never said that they could
kill someone in the United States. I think that you are
exaggerating."
Yet,
if you look at how they define the power, it is based on the mere
perceived practicality and necessity of legal process by the president.
They say the President has unilateral power to assassinate a citizen that
he believes is a terrorist. Now, is the limiting principle? They argue
that they do this "constitutional analysis," and they only kill
a citizen when it's not practical to arrest the person.
CUSACK:
Is that with the death panel?
TURLEY:
Well, yeah, he's talking about the death panel. Yet, he can ignore the
death panel. But, more importantly, what does practicality mean? It all
comes down to an unchecked presidential power.
CUSACK:
By the way, the death panel — that room can't be a fun room to go into,
just make the decision on your own. You know, it's probably a gloomy
place, the death panel room, so the argument from the reporter was,
"Look, they can... if they kill people in England or Paris that's
okay, but they — "
TURLEY:
I also don't understand, why would it make sense that you could kill a US
citizen on the streets of London but you might not be able to kill them
on the streets of Las Vegas? The question is where the limiting principle
comes from or is that just simply one more of these self-imposed rules?
And that's what they really are saying: we have these self-imposed rules
that we're only going to do this when we think we have to.
CUSACK:
So, if somebody can use the contra-Nuremberg argument — that principle's now
been flipped, that they were only following orders — does that mean that
the person that issued the order through Obama, or the President himself,
is responsible and can be brought up on a war crime charge?
TURLEY:
Well, under international law, Obama is subject to international law in
terms of ordering any defined war crime.
CUSACK:
Would he have to give his Nobel Peace Prize back?
TURLEY:
I don't think that thing's going back. I've got to tell you... and given
the amount of authority he's claimed, I don't know if anyone would have
the guts to ask for it back.
CUSACK:
And the argument people are going to use is,"Look, Obama and Holder
are good guys. They're not going to use this power." But the point
is, what about after them? What about the apparatchiks? You've unleashed
the beast. And precedent is everything constitutionally, isn't it?
TURLEY:
I think that's right. Basically what they're arguing is, "We're
angels," and that's exactly what Madison warned against. As we
discussed, he said if all men were angels you wouldn't need government.
And what the administration is saying is, "We're angels, so trust
us."
I
think that what is really telling is the disconnect between what people
say about our country and what our country has become. What we've lost under
Bush and Obama is clarity. In the "war on terror" what we've
lost is what we need the most in fighting terrorism: clarity. We need the
clarity of being better than the people that we are fighting against.
Instead, we've given propagandists in Al Qaeda or the Taliban an endless
supply of material — allowing them to denounce us as hypocrites.
Soon
after 9/11 we started government officials talk about how the US
Constitution is making us weaker, how we can't function by giving people
due process. And it was perfectly ridiculous.
CUSACK:
Feels more grotesque than ridiculous.
TURLEY:
Yeah, all the reports that came out after 9/11 showed that 9/11 could've
been avoided. For years people argued that we should have locked
reinforced cockpit doors. For years people talked about the gaps in
security at airports. We had the intelligence services that had the
intelligence that they needed to move against this ring, and they didn't
share the information. So we have this long list of failures by US
agencies, and the result was that we increased their budget and gave them
more unchecked authority.
In the
end, we have to be as good as we claim. We can't just talk a good game.
If you look at this country in terms of what we've done, we have violated
the Nuremberg principles, we have violated international treaties, we
have refused to accept–
CUSACK:
And you're not just talking about in the Bush administration. You're
talking about –
TURLEY:
The Obama administration.
CUSACK:
You're talking about right now.
TURLEY:
We have refused to accept the jurisdictional authority of sovereign
countries. We now routinely kill in other countries. It is American
exceptionalism – the rules apply to other countries.
CUSACK:
Well, these drone attacks in Pakistan, are they legal? Does anyone care?
Who are we killing? Do they deserve due process?
TURLEY:
When we cross the border, Americans disregard the fact that Pakistan is a
sovereign nation, let alone an ally, and they insist that they have not
agreed to these operations. They have accused us of repeatedly killing
people in their country by violating their sovereign airspace. And we
just disregard it. Again, its American exceptionalism, that we –
CUSACK:
Get out of our way or we'll pulverize you.
TURLEY:
The rules apply to everyone else. So the treaties against torture and war
crimes, sovereign integrity –
CUSACK:
And this also speaks to the question that nobody even bothers to ask:
what exactly are we doing in Afghanistan now? Why are we there?
TURLEY:
Oh, yeah, that's the real tragedy.
CUSACK:
It has the highest recorded suicide rate among veterans in history and no
one even bothers to state a pretense of a definable mission or goal. It
appears we're there because it's not convenient for him to really get out
before the election. So in that sense he's another guy who's letting
people die in some shithole for purely political reasons. I mean, it is
what it is.
TURLEY:
I'm afraid, it is a political calculation. What I find amazing is that
we're supporting an unbelievably corrupt government in the Karzai
administration.
Karzai
himself, just two days ago, called Americans "demons." He
previously said that he wished he had gone with the Taliban rather than
the Americans. And, more importantly, his government recently announced
that women are worth less than men, and he has started to implement these
religious edicts that are subjugating women. So he has American women who
are protecting his life while he's on television telling people that
women are worth less than men, and we're funding –
CUSACK:
What are they, about three-fifths?
TURLEY:
Yeah, he wasn't very specific on that point. So we're spending hundreds
of billions of dollars. More importantly, we're losing all these lives
because it was simply politically inconvenient to be able to pull out of
Afghanistan and Iraq.
CUSACK:
Yeah. And, I mean, we haven't even touched on the whole privatization of
the military and what that means. What does it mean for the state to be
funding at-cost-plus private mercenary armies and private mercenary
security forces like Blackwater, or now their names are Xe, or whatever
they've been rebranded as?
TURLEY:
Well, the United States has barred various international rules because
they would allow for the prosecution of war crimes by both military and
private forces. The US barred those new rules because we didn't want the
ability of other countries to prosecute our people for war crimes. One of
the things I teach in my constitutional class is that there is a need for
what's called a bright-line rule. That is, the value for bright-line
rules is that they structure relations between the branches, between the
government and citizens. Bright-line rules protect freedom and liberty.
Those people that try to eliminate bright-line rules quickly find
themselves on a slippery slope. The Obama administration, with the Bush
administration, began by denying rights to people at Guantanamo Bay.
And
then they started to deny rights of foreigners who they accused of being
terrorists. And eventually, just recently, they started denying rights to
citizens and saying that they could kill citizens without any court order
or review. It is the fulfillment of what is the nightmare of civil
liberties. They crossed that bright line. Now they're bringing these same
abuses to US citizens and changing how we relate to our government. In
the end, we have this huge apparatus of the legal system, this huge court
system, and all of it has become discretionary because the president can
go ahead and kill US citizens if he feels that it's simply inconvenient
or impractical to bring them to justice.
CUSACK:
Or if the great O, decides that he wants to be lenient and just throw
them in jail for the rest of their life without trial, he can do that,
right?
TURLEY:
Well, you've got Guantanamo Bay if you're accused of being an enemy
combatant. There is the concept in law that the lesser is included in the
greater.
So if
the president can kill me when I'm in London, then the lesser of that
greater is that he could also hold me, presumably, without having any
court involvement. It'd be a little bizarre that he could kill me but if
he held me he'd have to turn me over to the court system.
CUSACK:
Yeah. We're getting into kind of Kafka territory. You know, with Bush I
always felt like you were at one of those rides in an amusement park
where the floor kept dropping and you kept kind of falling. But I think
what Obama's done is we've really hit the bottom as far as civil
liberties go.
TURLEY:
Yet people have greeted this erosion of civil liberties with this
collective yawn.
CUSACK:
Yeah, yeah. And so then it gets down to the question, "Well, are you
going to vote for Obama?" And I say, "Well, I don't really
know. I couldn't really vote for Hillary Clinton because of her Iraq War
vote." Because I felt like that was a line, a Rubicon line –
TURLEY:
Right.
CUSACK:
— a Rubicon line that I couldn't cross, right? I don't know how to bring
myself to vote for a constitutional law professor, or even a
constitutional realist, who throws away due process and claims the
authority that the executive branch can assassinate American citizens. I
just don't know if I can bring myself to do it.
If you
want to make a protest vote against Romney, go ahead, but I would think
we'd be better putting our energies into local and state politics —
occupy Wall Street and organizations and movements outside the system,
not national politics, not personalities. Not stadium rock politics. Not
brands. That's the only thing I can think of. What would you say?
TURLEY:
Well, the question, I think, that people have got to ask themselves when
they get into that booth is not what Obama has become, but what have we
become? That is, what's left of our values if we vote for a person that
we believe has shielded war crimes or violated due process or implemented
authoritarian powers. It's not enough to say, "Yeah, he did all
those things, but I really like what he did with the National Park
System."
CUSACK:
Yeah, or that he did a good job with the auto bailout.
TURLEY:
Right. I think that people have to accept that they own this decision,
that they can walk away. I realize that this is a tough decision for
people but maybe, if enough people walked away, we could finally
galvanize people into action to make serious changes. We have to
recognize that our political system is fundamentally broken, it's
unresponsive. Only 11 percent of the public supports Congress, and yet
nothing is changing — and so the question becomes, how do you jumpstart
that system? How do you create an alternative? What we have learned from
past elections is that you don't create an alternative by yielding to
this false dichotomy that only reinforces their monopoly on power.
CUSACK:
I think that even Howard Zinn/Chomsky progressives, would admit that there
will be a difference in domestic policy between Obama and a Romney
presidency.
But
DUE PROCESS....I think about how we own it. We own it. Everybody's sort
of let it slip. There's no immediacy in the day-to-day on and it's just
one of those things that unless they... when they start pulling kids off
the street, like they did in Argentina a few years ago and other places,
all of a sudden, it's like, "How the hell did that happen?" I
say, "Look, you're not helping Obama by enabling him. If you want to
help him, hold his feet to the fire."
TURLEY:
Exactly.
CUSACK:
The problem is, as I see it, is that regardless of goodwill and intent
and people being tired of the status quo and everything else, the
information outlets and the powers that be reconstruct or construct the
government narrative only as an election game of 'us versus them,' Obama
versus Romney, and if you do anything that will compromise that equation,
you are picking one side versus the other. Because don't you realize
that's going to hurt Obama? Don't you know that's going to help Obama?
Don't you know... and they're not thinking through their own sort of
self-interest or the community's interest in just changing the way that
this whole thing works to the benefit of the majority. We used to have some
lines we wouldn't cross–some people who said this is not what this
country does ...we don't do this shit, you had to do the right thing. So
it's going to be a tough process getting our rights back, but you know
Frankie's Law? Whoever stops fighting first – loses.
TURLEY:
Right.
This
interview first appeared on Alaska journalist Shannyn Moore's blog.
Also
see Jason Leopold's December 2011 report: Obama's "Twisted Version of American
Exceptionalism" Laid Bare
http://truth-out.org/opinion/item/11264-john-cusack-and-jonathan-turley-on-obamas-constitution
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1 comment:
why put up these pages longgg articles here.. how about a link so those interested can go to the site to read it? Those of us who are not into politics and know that it's all rigged don't want to spend a lot of time to read the BS or taking all the time it takes just to scroll through it to the next topic.. ugh! Not into reading books on sites like this.. sheesh who has the time for all of that? Those interested in these long articles could just go read at the original link right?
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