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Grounds for impeachment.


George W. Bush and his Administration have been so brazen in violating the law and asserting monarchical powers that we, as American citizens, must use the tool that the Constitution provides to reassert our rights, to reset the system of checks and balances, and to reestablish our democracy. That tool is impeachment impeachment, formal accusation issued by a legislature against a public official charged with crime or other serious misconduct. In a looser sense the term is sometimes applied also to the trial by the legislature that may follow. .

Article II, Section 4, states: "The President, Vice President, and all civil Officers of the United States shall be removed from Office on Impeachment for, and Conviction of, Treason, Bribery, or other high Crimes and Misdemeanors The offenses for which presidents, vice presidents, and all civil officers, including federal judges, can be removed from office through a process called Impeachment.

The phrase high crimes and misdemeanors is found in the U.S. Constitution.
."

Notice that the Vice President is specifically mentioned. So while we're advocating the impeachment of George W. Bush, let's not stop there. Impeach To accuse; to charge a liability upon; to sue. To dispute, disparage, deny, or contradict; as in to impeach a judgment or decree, or impeach a witness; or as used in the rule that a jury cannot impeach its verdict.  Dick Cheney, too. For Cheney has been in on every illegal act that Bush has committed.

And notice the phrase "other high crimes and misdemeanors." At the Constitutional Convention, the drafters had originally restricted impeachment to "treason" and "bribery:" But George Mason, one of the influential delegates, found those terms insufficient, according to Articles of Impeachment Formal written allegations of the causes that warrant the criminal trial of a public official before a quasi-political court.

In cases of Impeachment, involving the president, vice president, or other federal officers, the House of Representatives prepares the articles of
 Against George W. Bush, a new and highly informative book by the Center for Constitutional Rights. Those terms "will not reach many great and dangerous offenses," Mason said, including "attempts to subvert the Constitution." After some wrangling over wording, the founders agreed to James Madison's phrase "high crimes and misdemeanors."

George W. Bush has been subverting our Constitution, and he has repeatedly violated his oath of office An oath of office is an oath or affirmation a person takes before undertaking the duties of an office, usually a position in government or within a religious body, although such oaths are sometimes required of officers of other organizations.  to "faithfully execute" his duties and to "pre serve, protect, and defend the Constitution of the United States Constitution of the United States, document embodying the fundamental principles upon which the American republic is conducted. Drawn up at the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia in 1787, the Constitution was signed on Sept. ."

He has done so in four key areas: in the Iraq War, in detentions here at home and abroad, in the torture scandal, and in the NSA NSA
abbr.
National Security Agency

Noun 1. NSA - the United States cryptologic organization that coordinates and directs highly specialized activities to protect United States information systems and to produce foreign
 warrantless spying program.

First, Iraq. Bush's invasion was a war of aggression Waging a war of aggression is a crime under customary international law and refers to any war not out of self-defense or sanctioned by Article 51 of the UN Charter. , prohibited by the U.N. Charter, as Kofi Annan himself has acknowledged.

And by violating the U.N. Charter, Bush was violating Article VI of the Constitution, which says that treaties are "the supreme law of the land."

But even beyond this, the way that Bush bamboozled the country into war is itself an impeachable im·peach·a·ble  
adj.
1. Capable of being impeached: venal, impeachable public servants.

2. Being such as to warrant impeachment: an impeachable offense.
 offense. There can hardly be a more grave act imaginable than to dupe a democracy into going to war, but that is what Bush has done, as the Downing Street Memo The "Downing Street memo" (occasionally DSM, or the "Downing Street Minutes"), sometimes described by critics of the Iraq War as the "smoking gun memo", [1]  clearly indicates.

On July 20, 2002, eight months before Bush launched the war, Richard Dearlove, head of British Intelligence, met with George Tenet, director of the CIA CIA: see Central Intelligence Agency.


(1) (Confidentiality Integrity Authentication) The three important concerns with regards to information security. Encryption is used to provide confidentiality (privacy, secrecy).
. After that meeting, Dearlove reported back that Bush was intent on war.

His findings were reflected in the July 23, 2002, memo to Prime Minister Tony Blair, which said: "Military action was now seen as inevitable. Bush wanted to remove Saddam, through military action, justified by the conjunction of terrorism and WMD WMD

white muscle disease.
. But the intelligence and facts were being fixed around the policy."

To fix the intelligence and the facts is to engage in a fraud against the U.S. government and the American public, and that's exactly what the top officials of the Bush Administration proceeded to do. Bush, Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, Condoleezza Rice, and Colin Powell issued 237 statements that were "misleading at the time they were made," according to "Iraq on the Record," a report by Representative Henry Waxman of California and the Democratic staff of the House Committee on Government Reform.

Bush and Cheney were engaging in "a conspiracy to commit fraud," as Lewis Lapham points out in his pathbreaking path·break·ing  
adj.
Characterized by originality and innovation; pioneering.
 essay, "The Case for Impeachment," in the March issue of Harper's Magazine. Lapham notes that the Supreme Court in Hammerschmidt v. United States said someone engages in a conspiracy to commit fraud against the government when that person obstructs lawful government functions "by deceit, craft, or trickery, or at least by means that are dishonest" and when its "legitimate official action and purpose shall be defeated by misrepresentation misrepresentation

In law, any false or misleading expression of fact, usually with the intent to deceive or defraud. It most commonly occurs in insurance and real-estate contracts. False advertising may also constitute misrepresentation.
, chicane, or other overreaching Exploiting a situation through Fraud or Unconscionable conduct.  of those charged with carrying out the government intention."

That fits Bush and Cheney to a T.

The second ground for impeachment is Bush's illegal detentions, in the United States and abroad. After 9/11, during the Ashcroft Raids, the Bush Administration rounded up 1,200 Arabs and Muslims and held them for months without charge. Many were kept in solitary confinement; some were beaten and abused.

As the Center for Constitutional Rights notes, "any person detained by the government must be brought before a magistrate judge within forty-eight hours so that the appropriateness of their detention may be reviewed. The Administration violated the law, failing to bring detainees before a judge for weeks and months."

This not only violated the rights of the detainees. It also "grossly violated basic separation of powers separation of powers: see Constitution of the United States.
separation of powers

Division of the legislative, executive, and judicial functions of government among separate and independent bodies.
 principles by denying the judiciary any opportunity to review thousands of detentions," the center writes in its book on impeachment.

Then there's Yaser Hamdi and Jose Padilla, the two U.S. citizens seized by the Bush Administration, denied their due process rights, denied access to their attorneys, and kept in military brigs for more than two years, mostly in solitary confinement. In a disgusting rationale, the Bush Administration told the Supreme Court that it was holding them for "humanitarian" purposes.

Or take the mass detentions at Guantanamo, Iraq, and Afghanistan, and the secret prisons the CIA is running around the world. The Bush Administration has rounded up thousands of people and is holding them indefinitely, and without charges, and without access to any court anywhere. For some of them, indefinitely may mean forever. This is a blatant violation of international law.

The third major ground for impeachment is the torture scandal. George W. Bush, Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, and Alberto Gonzales have repeatedly violated international treaties, U.S. statutes against torture and war crimes, and the Eighth Amendment by countenancing torture at Guantanamo, in Iraq, at Bagram air base Bagram Air Base (ICAO: OAIX) is a military controlled airport and housing complex that is located next to the ancient city of Bagram, southeast of Charikar in Parvan province of Afghanistan.  in Afghanistan, in CIA prisons, and by other governments at the behest of the CIA.

At Guantanamo, prisoners have been beaten, they've had lit cigarettes put out in their ears, they've had to endure false executions and sensory deprivation.

In Iraq, we all saw the photos at Abu Ghraib. But the hooding, the shackling shackling

see shackle.
, the dangling of prisoners by their arms, and the sexual humiliations occurred not only at Abu Ghraib but in many other places in Iraq This is a list of places in Iraq. Governorates of Iraq lists the regional administrative provinces, and Districts of Iraq lists the subdivisions of those provinces. Modern cities and towns
. That was standard operating procedure standard operating procedure Medtalk A technique, method or therapy performed 'by the book,' using a standard protocol meeting internally or externally defined criteria; a formal, written procedure that describes how specific lab operations are to be performed. . So, for a time, was the use of unmuzzled dogs.

In Afghanistan, on top of all of these brutalities, detainees were kept naked and doused with freezing water. U.S. personnel killed at least two detainees at Bagram, according to the Pentagon's own investigation.

And those two were not the only victims. This torture scandal is also a homicide scandal.

The Pentagon itself acknowledges there have been thirty-four cases of suspected or confirmed homicides of detainees by U.S. personnel. The lawyers' group Human Rights First has identified another eleven where "the facts suggest death as a result of physical abuse or harsh conditions of detention."

That's forty-five suspected or confirmed homicides of prisoners in U.S. custody at the hands of U.S. personnel.

If that doesn't appall you, I don't know what will.

Maybe the export of detainees for torture? Because the CIA's been doing that, too. Nabbing people and flying them out to countries that are notorious for torture.

So what's Bush's responsibility for this?

He conveyed, byword by·word also by-word  
n.
1.
a. A proverbial expression; a proverb.

b. An often-used word or phrase.

2.
 and by deed, that the laws and treaties against torture need not be followed.

On the evening of September 11, Bush told his counterterrorism coun·ter·ter·ror  
adj.
Intended to prevent or counteract terrorism: counterterror measures; counterterror weapons.

n.
Action or strategy intended to counteract or suppress terrorism.
 staff, according to Richard Clarke: "I don't care what the international lawyers say, we are going to kick some ass." He also authorized the CIA to send detainees to third countries for torture. And he let George Tenet and the CIA know that the gloves are off, in the words of Cofer Black, who was head of the CIA's counterterrorism center on 9/11.

Bush also notoriously exempted the Taliban and Al Qaeda from protections under the Geneva Conventions, and it's not up to the President to decide who is and who is not covered by those conventions. Article 75, "Fundamental Guarantees," of the 1977 protocol to the Geneva Conventions, states: "Persons who are in the power of a Party to the conflict and who do not benefit from more favorable treatment under the Conventions or under this Protocol shall be treated humanely in all circumstances." It prohibits, among other things, "torture of all kinds, whether physical or mental," and "outrages upon personal dignity, in particular humiliating and degrading treatment."

This torture scandal has done much to tarnish tarnish,
n 1. surface discoloration or loss of luster by metals. Under oral conditions, it often results from hard and soft deposits.
2. a chemical process by which a metal surface is discolored or its luster destroyed.
 the reputation of the United States abroad. But it also gets at the central question of whether here at home the President is above the law.

This question rises to its greatest heights in the NSA warrantless spying program. Here the law could not be clearer. The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA Noun 1. FISA - an act passed by Congress in 1978 to establish procedures for requesting judicial authorization for foreign intelligence surveillance and to create the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court; intended to increase United States counterintelligence; ) explicitly states that the "exclusive means" for spying on U.S. citizens is by getting a warrant from the FISA court.

As a result, Bush has violated the rights of thousands of U.S. citizens.

To this day, Bush claims he doesn't need to go to the FISA court to get warrants on U.S. citizens, and he insists that he'll continue to bypass the law. As John Dean of Watergate fame said, Bush is "the first President to admit to an impeachable offense."

Now a lot of people think even taking about impeachment is silly. They say it s not going to happen. But few people thought Nixon would be impeached after he won reelection re·e·lect also re-e·lect  
tr.v. re·e·lect·ed, re·e·lect·ing, re·e·lects
To elect again.



re
 by a landslide in 1972.

And even though the mainstream media isn't paying attention, people at the grassroots are in favor of impeachment. According to a Zogby poll, 53 percent of Americans would favor impeachment if it could be shown that Bush lied about the reasons for going to war. And 52 percent favor impeachment if it can be shown that Bush illegally spied on American citizens.

Both can readily be shown.

John Conyers, the Democratic Congressman from Detroit, has introduced a bill to explore grounds for impeachment. It now has twenty-seven co-sponsors.

If the Democrats gain control of the House in November, Conyers will become chair of the Judiciary Committee, whose job it is to draft bills of impeachment.

Some, especially on the right, may object that given the war on terrorism Terrorist acts and the threat of Terrorism have occupied the various law enforcement agencies in the U.S. government for many years. The Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996, as amended by the usa patriot act , this is no time to entertain the idea of impeachment. Leaving aside the fact that Bush has waged an illegal and reckless war, our founders were clear that war should be no obstacle. As noted by the Center for Constitutional Rights, Edmund Randolph, governor of Virginia The Governor of Virginia serves as the chief executive of the Commonwealth of Virginia for a four-year term. The position is currently held by Democrat Tim Kaine. Qualifications  and delegate to the Constitutional Convention, said: "The Executive will have great opportunities of abusing his power; particularly in times of war when the military force, and in some respects the public money, will be in his hands."

Others, on the Democratic side, may prefer to settle scores at the ballot box this November or in 2008.

But this isn't about partisanship. It's about whether we respect the Constitution or not. It's about what kind of system of government we're going to have. If we let Bush get away unimpeached for all the offenses he has committed, then we send the signal that what he has done is OK. And his encroachments and aggrandizements will linger in the Oval Office for some subsequent President to enjoy--at the peril of our democracy.

Bush acts like a despot.

We can't let him get away with it.

We can't let him continue to disgrace the office of the Presidency, violate his oath of office, and trample on our Constitution.

We must demand impeachment.
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Title Annotation:Comment
Author:Rothschild, Matthew
Publication:The Progressive
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Apr 1, 2006
Words:1935
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