A Gleeful Shallow Throat Reveals
"Rehnquist's Defeat-Bush Memo" (Fantasy)
By Bernard Weiner
OpEdNews.com
I hadn't heard from Shallow Throat in nearly three
months. The high-ranking mole in the Bush Administration contacted
me last week, at the height of Rove's Smear Boat attacks, agitated
because of the Kerry Campaign's belated, and at first, ineffectual
response.
But when we finally met, a few days ago, in an
out-of-the-way tavern near the old C&O Canal outside Washington,
D.C., ST was almost giddy. What accounted for the change?
"Well, first of all, despite Kerry's latest
goof-ups, most follow-up polls indicate that Bush hasn't gained all
that much ground; the election is still Kerry's to lose. Bush, since
he hasn't much positive to brag about, is running on fear, trust-me
and a bag of phony promises left over from his 2002 campaign. The
American public knows not to trust this guy in the slightest.
"Second, the GOP Convention was -- from the
lame routine of the twins to Zell Miller's Nuremburg Rally speech --
so embarrassing that one almost believed the Dems had rented
the time on TV for the Republicans to perform.
"Third, it seems that Kerry is finally getting
his act together -- hitting back strongly when attacked, bringing in
some old Clinton hands to shore up the spine and strategy, and
learning how to perform early-response himself rather than relying
on weak surrogates. But he's still way too East Coast Gentleman in
his approach, refusing to recognize that, for the GOP, this is a
street-brawl, where anything goes, including knees to the groin.
"And, finally," ST said, with a giant
grin, "I have here in my hand a rather intriguing document from
a yet-to-be-named famous rightist to his fellow elitist
conservatives."
HOW KERRY CAN WIN
"I know you're dying to tell me who it is and
what it says," I replied, "but I'm not taking the bait. At
least not right away. I want to know how you think Kerry can turn
this thing around in the less than 60 days left before November
2."
ST looked at me staring at the papers he held in
his hand, then said: "I certainly admire your capacity for
delayed gratification, but OK, here goes:
"If you and your liberal friends really want
to ensure victory, and I mean a big victory -- a landslide kind of
momentum that will discourage Rove from even thinking of diddling
with the computer-voting machines or 'postponing' the election --
here's what I think Kerry has to do.
"First, he's got to get out of the trap set
for him by Bush and which he entered into so blithely. That is, he's
got to start attacking Bush frontally and fiercely for how he took
the U.S. into Iraq through lies and deception, and how Bush has
bungled the occupation ever since."
"But Kerry voted to give the president the
authority to go to war," I said. "I don't see how he can
now say he was wrong in voting for it without commiting a SuperSize
Flip-Flop.
"It ain't gonna be easy," ST replied,
"but Kerry could say -- and he laid the foundation for this
approach the other night, when he accused Bush of 'misleading the
nation into war' -- that the Bush Administration provided the Senate
with false and phony intelligence. He believes that a president
always has, and should have, the authority to take the nation to war
if an emergency requires instant action, but Bush lied to the nation
about an imminent threat to the U.S., Saddam's alleged WMD, nuclear
threat, ties to 9/11, tight relationship to Al Qaida, and so on. In
short, the senators were supplied with downright lies and deceptions
by Bush and his key advisers, and nearly everyone in the Senate went
along as a result of the con job -- or should I say neo-con job?
"If Kerry can climb out from under his
ill-advised vote to authorize war in Iraq, thus getting rid of that
giant albatross around his neck, he'll be a free man, politically
speaking, able to go at Bush's jugular for his ill-advised rush to
war, and for how incompetently Bush has been waging that war, the
result of which is getting more and more American soldiers killed
each day.
SERVICE AND SERVICE-AVOIDANCE
"Then he needs to pound the difference between
his volunteering to fight in Vietnam, and Bush's checking off the
box that he didn't want to go to Vietnam, and Cheney's taking five
deferments to avoid service (because he had "more important
priorities") -- plus Bush going missing in action for more than
a year when he was in the Air National Guard.
"In sum, Kerry's gotta take off the gloves and
start landing some good uppercuts and hooks. Enough with the jabbing
already. Get in there and mix it up, on these topics and more
contemporary ones as well -- the Medicare fee-raise and
drug-discount scam, proper funding for education, improving the
health-care delivery system, tax breaks for the middle-class,
enforcing environmental laws, and so on."
"OK," I said, "for that analysis, it
was worth waiting to hear what you've got in your sweaty little
hand. Hand it over."
"What I have here is a memo from the Chief
Justice of the United States Supreme Court to a lot of his
conservative friends in high places, urging them to help ensure that
Bush goes down, big time, in November."
"You've got to be joking," I said.
"Not that Rehnquist wouldn't think that privately, but I can't
believe he'd be courageous, or stupid, enough to write it down.
You're sure this is authentic?"
"I can't
guarantee anything in this town," said ST. "Conceivably,
it could be a plant -- a total scam. But the source who supplied it
-- a fellow traditional Republican -- assured me that Rehnquist
wrote it. Whether this is an early draft, or the final copy, I don't
know. Nor do I know to whom this memo went. But even if it's
fiction, it's what a lot of elite conservatives are saying these
days, some openly, some more covertly. In short, the old conservative power
structure wants these arrogant, bumbling Texas fruitcakes out of
power. Who knows? By writing it down, the Chief Justice, knowing how
things leak in this town, almost is saying that he wants it to be
made public. Here it is, read it yourself."
*****
"REHNQUIST MEMORANDUM" ON BUSH
From: W.R.
Absolutely CONFIDENTIAL
I'll bet you never thought you'd hear this from me,
but G.W. Bush has got to be defeated in November.
Yes, I know, I'm a diehard conservative and was
part of the majority that greased his way into the White House. But
we had no idea the damage this guy and his friends would do in just
four years, and how far they are willing to go in amassing total
power and control into their hands.
Most pertinent to us on the court is what he has
done to the judiciary. In effect, he has told us we're irrelevant.
Whenever he wants something badly enough, he bends the Constitution,
ignores the Separation-of-Powers established so brilliantly by the
Founding Fathers, and simply finds a way for the President to do
whatever he and his friends decide they want to do. (For example,
GOP extremists in the House have introduced bills that would set the
precedent of totally abolishing judicial review.)
Take the torture scandal, which is connected to the
post-9/11 Patriot Act. Bush and Ashcroft had lawyers at the White
House, Justice and Pentagon draft memoranda that, they claimed,
permitted the President to do anything whatsoever under his role as
commander-in-chief during wartime. Since Bush has declared that we
are in a state of war and that he's a "war president," it
then follows that whatever action the President takes, under this
claim of acting as "commander-in-chief" in
"wartime," must be permitted to stand as legal orders of
the Executive.
Under this claim, the President can authorize
"harsh interrogation methods" -- a euphemism for torture
-- and the "disappearing" of various citizens and
foreigners into secret jails, out of the reach of juridical
oversight. Bush officials, apparently adopting these legal
strategems as policy, have done both, and they really thought they
would get away with it.
They are sorely mistaken. I and most of my
colleagues on the bench do not appreciate it when the concept of
judicial review, first established two hundred years ago with John
Marshall and Marbury v. Madison, is dismissed by the Executive
Branch as an outdated constitutional frill. Terrorism or no
terrorism, this is still a society where no man, not even the
President, is above the law -- not even if he wraps his grab for
power in the name of "anti-terrorism."
We tried to get the message to him recently in the
Hamdi and Guantanamo cases, where we said, in no uncertain terms,
that while the President assumes, and should have, wide latitude
during wartime, this special consideration was not a blanket right
to unfettered behavior. Justice O'Connor wrote that the court has ''made
clear that a state of war is not a blank check for the president
when it comes to the rights of the nation's citizens." And
Justice Scalia wrote: "The very core of our liberty has been
freedom from indefinite imprisonment at the will of the
executive."
In short, we sent Bush a very
strong message. Which he and his advisers seemed to agree to, only
to try to go around the import of the Court's rulings, by testing
the limits of what they could get away with -- the way they're
delaying our orders on the Guantanamo detainees, for example, and
the way military tribunals are organized that makes them little more
than show trials.
PRESIDENTS ARE NOT
KINGS/DICTATORS
Richard Nixon tried to hide his crimes by claiming
that any action taken by a President cannot, by the very fact that
he is Chief Executive, be illegal -- but he learned quickly enough,
when the Court rejected this extreme claim, that the Executive and
Legislative Branches are always and forever subject to the
Constitution, as interpreted by the Judicial Branch.
Now we learn that Bush's White House lawyers are
asserting even more outrageous claims to power. Even though the
Constitution grants the States power in determining and running
their own election rules -- well, OK, we violated our own
principles, but without setting precedent, in Bush v. Gore -- the
Bush Administration claims that is has the power to cancel or
postpone a general election (presumably when it appears it would
lose) in the face of perceived "terrorist" threats. And,
worse still, that it could partially cancel or postpone an election
in certain states (presumably in states it would have lost) and be
declared the winner based on a partial vote (presumably from states
it would have won).
There is no way we could, or would, let that
happen. If Bush and his cronies persist in creating a constitutional
crisis, they will get one -- and not one they will find agreeable.
Even the military may refuse to follow Bush's dictatorial orders.
In short, I'm writing this memo and circulating it
(on a CONFIDENTIAL basis) to you and other key Republican business
and governmental leaders because it's plain now, as it wasn't in
2000, that Bush and his crowd are inimicable to our best financial
and political interests -- and the interest of the American people
in general -- and must be stopped here and now before they can do
even more damage.
This crew appears to be so power-hungry, and so
incompetent in carrying out their radical programs, that only
disaster will result if they gain a second term. If you agree with
my prognosis, I urge you to move quickly to do whatever you can, and
use whatever influence and funds you must, to ensure that Bush goes
down to defeat on November 2.
KERRY IS NO DANGER TO US
Kerry ordinarily would not be our choice, but, if
elected, he will be pretty much a toothless tiger, struggling so
hard to undo the worst damage done by his predecessor, that he'll
have little time or energy to devote to liberal mischief.
In the four years of a Kerry administration, we can
regather our forces and select someone less obvious and more
competent to run against him in 2008, re-asserting true conservative
dominance in the years to come.
But unless we get rid of this crass, arrogant,
reckless Bush crowd -- by a landslide defeat, so as to obviate any
late "surprises" Karl Rove may have up his sleeve -- we,
and the country, are in for a hellacious administration run amok
with its ruthless power. Please let me know your thoughts, by
courier delivery only. Thank you.
*****
I finished reading and looked up at Shallow Throat,
whose grin was as wide as the Mississippi. And then I realized that
my smile was equally as broad.
We high-fived each other, and, giggling, ordered
two more pitchers. Help was on the way, from the strangest of
places.#
Bernard Weiner -- who has created numerous other
"conversations" with Shallow Throat (available at http://crisispapers.org/weinerpubs.htm)
-- is a playwright/poet, formerly a writer/editor with the San
Francisco Chronicle; currently, he co-edits The Crisis Papers (www.crisispapers.org).
He is a contributing author to the recently released "Big Bush
Lies" book.
originally published in www.crisispapers.org