Yes, I bear grudges. Deal with it. She could have been a great senator. Every now and again she says or does something really wonderful. Then she lets her inner Republican take over and upholds the Bush agenda. Repeatedly. She's a great example of what that touted bipartisanship gets us. Fucked over. Dry and without condoms. Leaving us raped, pregnant, diseased, and left to deal with the misery we owe to our rapists, who never gave a shit about us. We weren't even objects of desire--just something to be dominated and degraded and tossed aside. Rape, after all, is about power not sex. Yep, that's bipartisanship these days.
You see, while abuse continues it's pointless to discuss bipartisanship. Making nice with your abuser does not stop abuse, no matter how many times you tell yourself the abuse is your fault and it will stop if you can just be the woman, man, partner, parent, colleague, etc. your abuser wants you to be--which is presumed to be the correct ideal, of course, no matter how arbitrary, twisted, and sick it may be.
The Dems in Congress have been behaving as abused persons for far too long. They buy into the abusers' framework, they try to placate their abusers, they internalize all the lies they are told, and they take it, over and over and over again. Then they despise themselves, which plays further into the hands of their abusers. They tell themselves there are no alternatives to either making nice or getting slapped down. They cannot imagine any other way of being. That is exactly what the abuser has wanted to establish, a situation where the victims cannot even imagine things being other than as they are, or to imagine that they don't deserve what happens to them.
So here we are, making nicey nice with AG Michael Mukasey while he conveys, with less obvious contempt than Abu Gonzales, that the White House does not give a shit what Congress thinks, what laws it passes or does not pass, what oversight it thinks it is going to exercise, what subpoenas it issues. It is a law unto itself with plenipotentiary powers not subject to any restraints from Congress or the Courts.
Mukasey, a very borderline nominee for his position, was considered "the best we can get"--and isn't that the despairing perspective of the severely abused? Thanks to DiFi and Chuck turning, he got confirmed. Those hopes that he would be better than Bush's old BFF Fredo? Pfft!
Glenn Greenwald writes:
All day long, in response to Mukasey's insistence that patent illegalities were legal, that Congress was basically powerless, and that the administration has no obligation to disclose anything to Congress (and will not), Senators would respond with impotent comments such as: "Well, I'd like to note my disagreement and ask you to re-consider" or "I'm disappointed with your answer and was hoping you would say something different" or "If that's your position, we'll be discussing this again at another point." They were supplicants pleading for some consideration, almost out of a sense of mercy, and both they and Mukasey knew it.
Mukasey can go and casually tell them to their faces that the President has the right to violate their laws and that Congress has no power to do anything about it. And nothing is going to happen. And everyone -- the Senators, Bush officials, the country -- knows that nothing is going to happen. There is nothing too extreme that Mukasey could say to those Senators that would prompt any consequences greater than some sighing and sorrowful expressions of disapproval. We now live in a country where the President -- and those acting at his behest (see Lewis Libby, AT&T, and Verizon)-- have the power to break the law and ignore Congress and every other aspect of government, and can do so with impunity.
...
It ought to be newsworthy, to put it mildly, when the President announces that he has the power to violate the law at will. But in another sense, it's not really newsworthy any longer. It's been going on for years and we've chosen to do nothing about it. We have a Government where the President is not bound by the law, and it is just as simple as that.
That, my friends, is where we are today. We effing let it happen. Our representatives in both houses of Congress have let it happen. Makes you wonder whether we might not be better off today if the earth had opened and swallowed the Capitol and all in it during the SOTU speech, doesn't it?
So, how do we appropriately thank these people?
--the BB
[Note: I recognize that not all are spineless compromising slime-buckets. Alas, too many are, so the collective judgment stands in spite of some sterling exceptions.]
UPDATE:
Here is Greenwald's description of bipartisanship, only slightly less unsavory than mine:
1 comment:
I am from NY- no second chance for Chuck. It is that simple.
That is all I can eke out right now- too angry.
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