redneckgaijin: (Default)
[personal profile] redneckgaijin
Over the past couple weeks, I've been getting steadily hotter under the collar about Obama's apparent trend towards upholding the worst abuses of the Bush administration.

The Obama administration, although it has ordered the closure of Guantanamo Bay's prisons, has blocked efforts of prisoners at Bagram, Afghanistan to secure their liberty. Justice Department lawyers in the past month have filed briefs to block lawsuits over illegal wiretapping, torture at Guantanamo and at other bases, and most recently the release of Bush-era emails. Obama has repeatedly expressed reluctance to prosecute Bush and his cronies, and new Attorney General Eric Holder essentially bought his Cabinet post by promising not to investigate.

Put all of this together, and the early picture coming out is that Obama sees nothing wrong with most of what Dubya did in office.

However, one commenter on a news article I read today put things into perspective: namely, that the Obama administration has not yet replaced much of anyone at Justice, or elsewhere in the executive-run bureaucracy, below cabinet-level posts. The Bush appointees are, by and large, still in office... and still trying to drive forward their erstwhile boss's dictatorial agenda.

In Charlie Savage's excellent book Takeover: the Return of the Imperial Presidency and the Subversion of American Democracy, Savage incidentally describes how George W. Bush needed almost a full year to get all the offices filled in the Department of Justice. The infamous John Yoo didn't get his job until July 2001, and he didn't get a permanent boss until after 9/11. In the interim, Clinton-era lawyers kept on about their jobs, until they were replaced or driven out.

Right now, Obama and his advisors are focused to the exclusion of all else on the economy. He's handed healthcare, Guantanamo and Afghanistan off to committees, producing the illusion of action while he puts his main effort on things like the national jobs stimulus and the upcoming efforts on entitlement reforms and homeowner assistance. It is possible- just possible- that many of the pro-Bush rulings, legal filings, and other actions coming out from Obama's White House are doing so without his knowledge or agreement.

So, despite my deep and growing misgivings, I'm going to wait a bit longer.

But if Obama continues to block investigation of Bush- if he continues to uphold Presidential secrecy, unlimited power to spy on Americans, renditions to nations that use torture, and indefinite imprisonment without the writ of habeas corpus...

... if he continues down that road, with no change, then Obama should be impeached and removed from office.

Of course it won't happen. The Democrats won't take out one of their own (just as the Republicans wouldn't), and the Republicans won't go after him for any of these things because they'd have to admit that what Bush did before Obama was impeachable.

For now... before I can believe in change, I need to SEE SOME ACTUAL CHANGE.

Get on the ball, Obama.

Date: 2009-02-24 10:44 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] theemperialpomm.livejournal.com
You're local to Houston aren't you?

Date: 2009-02-24 11:37 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] redneckgaijin.livejournal.com
For very, very broad values of "local", yes. It's roughly two hours' drive from my house to downtown Houstonopolis.

Try this URL and see if it works for you:

http://www.mapquest.com/maps?1c=Houston&1s=TX&1a=800+Bagby+St.&1z=77002&2c=Livingston&2s=TX&2a=16286+FM+943&2z=77351

Why do you ask?

Date: 2009-02-25 02:26 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] theemperialpomm.livejournal.com
Ah. Trying to get people out to my house this weekend for a big shindig. But I forgot if you were a Houston-ite or a Dallas-ite. never-you-mind. Not unless you want to drive five hours for some home-made Brisket (as in local cow and everything) only for me to put you to work in my backyard helping us build the dread gazebo.

Date: 2009-02-25 02:08 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] solipherus.livejournal.com
Wow, I didn't know it took so long to replace some of those guys. I thought it had been done already.

You may have heard this, but I heard someone on the news the other week put it rather succinctly: Obama and his guys can't go after Bush and the republicans just yet, because if they did it would piss off all the republicans in the house and senate, who would then seek to really make it impossible for Obama to move anything foreward. So it's a totally political move for now, 'cause he wanted support from them on getting the economy rolling.

Of course, a lot of them are being bitches about moving forward anyway....

Date: 2009-02-25 02:14 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] redneckgaijin.livejournal.com
At this point I find it extremely difficult to believe that the Congressional Republicans COULD be any more intransigent than they currently are.

After all, not only is there the business with the stimulus package, but both the House and Senate Republican campaign funds are dumping money on former Senator Coleman's effort to keep Al Franken's election tied up in Minnesota courts until the seat's term expires...

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