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Alan Keyes on Farah's WorldNetDaily Radioactive ("Reagan would have had the stones to save Terri")
Renew America ^ | March 30 05 | Keyes/Farah

Posted on 03/30/2005 11:20:36 AM PST by churchillbuff

JOSEPH FARAH, HOST: We've got with us a special guest. Alan Keyes is back with us--diplomat, author, talk show host, brilliant orator, statesman, constitutional scholar. And his organization the Declaration Foundation can be accessed on the web at Declaration.net. Welcome to the program, Alan.

KEYES: Thank you. Glad to be with you.

FARAH: Well, you've got another great essay in WorldNetDaily today on this Terri Schiavo case. And in it you say that Florida Governor Jeb Bush is courting dereliction of duty. Tell us what you mean.

KEYES: Well, he has two responsibilities. One, to the Constitutional rights of Terri Schiavo, as clear and specific in the Florida Constitution, which states that she has the inalienable right--every natural person in Florida has the inalienable right--to enjoy and defend their life. And that, of course, is being violated.

Now, inalienable is very important in that phrase, because it has an undisputed meaning throughout our history. It means it can't be given away, and it can't be transferred to another by law. Now, Judge Greer has, in fact, transferred Terri Schiavo's right to life to her husband, Michael Schiavo, and in doing so has violated the clear and explicit language of the Florida constitution.

Jeb Bush, therefore, by his oath to protect, support, and defend the Florida constitution, is obliged to act to stop this damage to the constitution, this violation of rights. He's also now giving the impression that, some how or another, the governor of the state must submit to a county sheriff, if that county sheriff is ordered by a judge to do x, y, and z. That is a lie.

The constitution of Florida vests supreme executive power--that is, the highest executive authority--in the governor. No judge, no law, can create a higher executive authority than the governor, so nobody can say, "No," to him. The county sheriff cannot, if he goes to help Terri Schiavo, say, "No," because he is a lower authority--not by order of a judge or by order of any statute or law, but by order of the supreme law of Florida, which is the constitution.

If he does not do his duty and he pleads the judge's order, he has actually damaged the executive power in Florida, which has been entrusted to his hands. And by damaging it, he damages the constitution--and, therefore, derogates from his own authority and fails to do his duty.

So, on two counts, he is guilty of dereliction of duty if he does not act, and it is actually impeachable. When a governor does not do what the constitution and his oath require him to do, and as a result, the rights of an individual are damaged beyond repair, because she'll be dead, and his own authority as governor is damaged--not to mention that fact that the legislative authority has been impaired--then I think it's clear that he has failed to do his duty.

FARAH: You know, the interesting thing, Alan, is that Jeb Bush, Governor Jeb Bush in Florida, has shown really from the beginning in this case that he understands what's the right thing to do. He fought for Terri's Law. He told us just days before that hearing with Judge Greer late last week that his office had the power and the authority and the responsibility to rescue Terri Schiavo. He hinted that he was going to do it, and if we're to believe the press reports on what happened, he sent a few state law enforcement officers down there, and at the first sign of resistance by the county sheriffs, he told them to back off.

KEYES: Well, you see, that, I think, is even more damaging than anything, because if he leaves the impression that the governor has kowtowed to some county sheriff, he does immeasurable harm to the Florida constitution, to the authority of the governor, to peace and order, because, at the end of the day, the guarantee against civil disorder in Florida--where some sheriff or other authority would abuse his power--is that the governor will stop him.

And if he doesn't obey the governor, and takes arms, and the governor does nothing, he gives the impression that the government of Florida can no longer defend itself. And that, obviously, is a very dangerous impression to be giving at any time about any level of our government in this country, especially at the state and national level.

So, I think he is courting disaster here. He is the governor of Florida, one of the most important states in the union. He is setting a precedent that would be powerfully damaging to the public perception of gubernatorial authority throughout the country.

And I think that in addition to the fact that he has a moral obligation to protect the rights of Terri Schiavo and not to permit her judicial murder--the same one we would all recognize if a lynching was taking place across the street from the state house. Nobody would argue that he should sit there and watch somebody hang, even if by order of a racist judge, as happened in the past in this country, as we know.

Nobody would say that he should sit on his hands and let an innocent person be killed because he is afraid to do his duty. And that is what it amounts to here: the impression that is being given. And I think he needs to act decisively, in order to correct this impression--for Terri's sake, but also for the sake of constitutional self-government in America.

FARAH: Alan Keyes, you felt so strongly about this that you traveled down to Florida in an attempt to meet face to face with Governor Bush. What happened? Did you make any headway in meetings with his top officials?

KEYES: I tried my best. I met with his deputy chief-of-staff, eventually. I was not able to see his legal counsel. Though, Larry Klayman did see him, and Bill Greene did see him--or her, rather. It's a her in this case--Raquel Rodriquez. [They] did see her.

But Florida's constitution is actually very clear, both about the fact that the governor is the supreme executive authority. And, in Article 2, Section 3, it's very clear about the fact that the branches cannot exercise the authority of another branch.

So, the judge can have his opinion, but he cannot command executive force to put that opinion into force. That's the exclusively prerogative of the executive. If the judge, then, against the governor, tries to employ force, he's actually in insurrection. It's a judicial insurrection, and it's a very dangerous moment.

FARAH: We've all seen interviews with Jeb Bush on television and heard them on radio. He sounds like a genuinely conflicted man. He seems like a man who wants to do something and feels that he's being held back. What would have happened, in your humble opinion, if Jeb Bush didn't just dispatch some law enforcement officers from the state down to Pinellas County to rescue Terri, but actually went with them, in person, to meet face to face with the Pinellas County sheriff and explain the situation?

KEYES: I think that there would have been no doubt--the Pinellas County sheriff knows good and well that his authority does not trump the governor's authority, and that if he resists the governor's authority or tries to stop the governor, lay hands on his person or anything else, he can be arrested, he even be shot dead on the spot, because to move against the governor is to move against the government of Florida. It is basically an insurrectionary act, because in his person the governor represents the executive power of government. He is the only government authority, who, in his person, represents the power of a whole branch of government.

So, in that sense of the word, there is no doubt about what would have happened. The sheriff would have stepped aside, and would step aside right now. That's the whole point. And, if somebody is telling Jeb Bush something else, then it is because they are ignorant. They do not understand the constitutional situation, and they are giving him incompetent advice.

But I will say this, I went down to Florida precisely because I thought he needed to have the best possible arguments, the best possible advice, and even though I tried at several occasions, he apparently didn't want to hear this advice. So, I'm kinda sad about that, because if he wants to do the right thing, I have provided chapter and verse with extreme clarity, an argument that cannot, I think, be refuted in terms of his clear constitutional obligation and authority in this situation.

And not only did I do it in a brief article, so that everybody who had a few minutes could see the outline of it--in depth, as you know, on WorldNetDaily, I have published a background that goes chapter and verse into the constitutional arguments both in principle and in fact that buttress this case, and I think it's very clear.

It is also true, by the way, that from a point of view of politics, somebody suggested, "Well, they might impeach him." The legislature is the court that judges the governor, not the judiciary. His court where he is tried for misconduct and charged with misconduct is not the judges, not the supreme court of Florida. It's the legislature. And he is carrying out the legislature's will as, expressed in Terri's Law.

Now, some people say, "Well, the courts struck that down." No, they didn't strike it down. They refused to apply it.

But if the governor looks at it, and says, "No. This is constitutional, and I MUST apply it," then he is carrying out the will of the legislature--and together, the governor and the legislature trump the judiciary. The judiciary is not the supreme branch of government. It is an equal branch of government. It has a say, but it cannot have the ultimate say, or we would have a government that was no longer constitutional.

FARAH: You would think, with all the time that this case has occupied with the Florida State Legislature, the Supreme Court, the Governor, the U.S. Congress, the whole 11th Circuit Court of Appeals, the U.S. Supreme Court, that Jeb Bush would have taken a little bit of time to head that posse that went down to Pinellas County, just so that there would be no confusion. And for the life of me, I can't understand why he didn't do it. That would have been an act of leadership by the governor of Florida.

KEYES: I must say, and I say it in my little piece, Ronald Reagan would have done that. You and I both know it.

FARAH: Yep.

KEYES: Reagan would have seen this situation, he would have understood it, and he would have gone in person to make sure that it was done according to the Constitution, according to his gubernatorial authority, according to constitutional right and justice. And I think that is, I guess, the measure of the man, because these kinds of situations are the test. They show an individual in terms of that ultimate character that is needed to really stand with courage and conviction and strength in a way that will preserve our constitutional integrity.

FARAH: Alan Keyes, thanks so much for being with us. We'll be back with more after this.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Editorial; Government
KEYWORDS: 2kooks; braintransplantasap; carpetbagger; chamberlainbuff; copkillers; cultofdeathwhining; farah; huckster; hysteria; idiocy; keyes; keyesisnutz; keyesonthebandwagon; kooks; loonietoons; neville; phony; schiavo; showmethemoney; speculation; terrimania; tripe
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To: churchillbuff

Janet Reno had more guts than the whole gaggle of pimps of the election industry, all parties and branches included!


161 posted on 03/30/2005 3:28:54 PM PST by leprechaun9
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To: PhiKapMom

This is only one small step in the continuing process of incrementalism. Remember that the original NO SMOKING effort was to get a couple of seats set aside on airline flights!


162 posted on 03/30/2005 3:32:18 PM PST by leprechaun9
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To: kellynch
Not that I approve of what's happening to Terri, but Keyes is just not helping matters.

OK, just who do you think would arrest the Governor? Who according to the Constitution of Florida can arrest him? Who is ultimately responsible for enforcing the law?

Who is currently refusing to enforce immigration laws? Who is attempting to arrest him, along with 50 governors?

163 posted on 03/30/2005 3:34:04 PM PST by itsahoot (There are some things more painful than the truth, but I can't think of them.)
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To: PhiKapMom
Does that means he is willing for Jeb to order the Florida Highway Patrol to gun down an innocent man who is doing his job as the Chief Law Enforcement Officer of Pinellas County upholding a legal Court Order?

Thats what it sounds like to me. Many people have lost their mind over this case, Dr. Keyes being one. I wouldn't vote for him to be dogcatcher after this much less President or another high office!

164 posted on 03/30/2005 3:36:28 PM PST by Walkin Man
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To: RayBob
Alan Keyes (and a bunch of FReepers) would suggest that the proper thing to do would be break the law, violate the constitution, get impeached and get booted out of office.

Even if impeached, do you think the Florida legislature would convict? Even if they did, it would be the correct thing to do, unless of course you are worried about your political future, which he claims he isn't.

Save a life. lose a job. A really hard choice for some people, I guess.

165 posted on 03/30/2005 3:45:32 PM PST by itsahoot (There are some things more painful than the truth, but I can't think of them.)
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To: FR_addict
Eisenhower sent the federal troops into the South to protect the civil rights of people.

Actually, I think he Federalized the Arkansas National Guard, to prevent the Governor from using them to resist the integration of the schools in Little Rock.

166 posted on 03/30/2005 3:50:08 PM PST by itsahoot (There are some things more painful than the truth, but I can't think of them.)
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To: Walkin Man

"Legal court order" is debatable.
Many legal scholars argue that Greer's orders to LEO was outside his jurisdiction,therefore not legal.
If it was clear cut one way or the other there would be no debate.
This is a very gray area,and it will have to be dealt with, whatever you say because this is not only one case as many have said there are thousands in these end of life scenarios.
In other matters,for example a federal judge wants detainees in Gitmo to get a hearing, there is argument about whether they are entitled to all protections under US law.
Are you saying some liitle judge is going to tell GWB to charter amilitary plane and order MPs to produce them.
And if GWB says no then what?


167 posted on 03/30/2005 3:53:39 PM PST by northernlightsII
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To: kellynch
You're kidding, right?

Keyes' explanation on the judicial, legislative, and executive authorities according to the Florida State Constitution is about the most rational, well reasoned, and articulate explanation I have heard on this entire matter. And his forecast of where this could lead in terms of executive authority in the other 49 states is so likely and reasonable that it is chilling.

If you have constitutional or legal evidence to the contrary of what Keyes has written and spoken, please share it with the rest of us who have an interest in the balance of powers under a constitutional republic.
168 posted on 03/30/2005 3:56:37 PM PST by Ghost of Philip Marlowe (Liberals are blind. They are the dupes of Leftists who know exactly what they're doing.)
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To: churchillbuff
I think the most charitable explanation for the Bush brothers' behavior is that they do not believe that Terri Schiavo is being killed illegitimately.

If they do believe that, their behavior is disgraceful.

169 posted on 03/30/2005 3:58:59 PM PST by Jim Noble (Resistance to tyrants is obedience to God)
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To: PhiKapMom

The Holocaust began with the "mercy" killings of the mentally disabled. Once the people became desensitized to the murder of this particular group of "undesirables", the list of "undesirables" continued to expand to eventually include Gypsies, homosexuals, Jews, and Christians.

Every epidemic begins with one ground zero patient.

Every Holocaust begins with one innocent victim.

We do not demean the memory of the Holocaust victims by taking what's happening in the Terri Schiavo case very seriously. In fact, it's because we do remember and because we do heed the lessons we've learned from that horrific and tragic era of history, that we do take this so seriously.

Apparently, the Jews do not agree with you, PhiKapMom. A number of them are very concerned about this and are saying that this is exactly how the Holocaust began.

Perhaps you should read this article by Rabbi Shmuley Boteach:

http://www.orthodoxnet.com/articles/guests_01/Barbarity_in_American_Heartland_2005-03-18.php


170 posted on 03/30/2005 4:01:01 PM PST by schmelvin
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To: Madeleine Ward
Gee, what do you all have to say about the Goddess Anne Couter?

Oh, oh, you have done it now. Even misspelled Anne's last name. Besides they really don't want to know the truth of what the Governor has done, by letting the court reign supreme.

171 posted on 03/30/2005 4:02:35 PM PST by itsahoot (There are some things more painful than the truth, but I can't think of them.)
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To: RayBob
The executive branch is empowered to enforce the laws as approved by the legislature and interpreted by the courts.

How many laws do you think the Governor refuse to enforce, and no one gives a damn?

172 posted on 03/30/2005 4:13:29 PM PST by itsahoot (There are some things more painful than the truth, but I can't think of them.)
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To: Walkin Man

You and me both! I just heard on CNN that the Sheriff of Pinellas County is getting death threats and people threatening to have a WACO style shootout. This is sick and people like Keyes are making the situation worse IMHO.


173 posted on 03/30/2005 4:21:07 PM PST by PhiKapMom (AOII Mom -- Increase Republicans in Congress in 2006!)
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To: RedBloodedAmerican

ever hear of the Florida constitution?


174 posted on 03/30/2005 4:22:31 PM PST by mikeus_maximus
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To: PhiKapMom
And semblance of sanity has long since vanished from some posters.

They have become everything they accused the democrats of being.

175 posted on 03/30/2005 4:32:43 PM PST by OldFriend (JUST SAW MAJ. TAMMY DUCKWORTH ON CSPAN........AWESOME)
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To: PhiKapMom
I just heard on CNN that the Sheriff of Pinellas County is getting death threats and people threatening to have a WACO style shootout.

I don't doubt that at all!

The whack-jobs have taken over this issue long ago.

176 posted on 03/30/2005 4:36:52 PM PST by Walkin Man
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To: OldFriend

Sanity has disappeared. Just heard on CNN that the Sheriff is getting death threats and also a threat of a Waco style killing. These people are sick to be sending death threats and Alan Keyes with his rhetoric is stirring the pot even more.

I just about went through the roof on this thread -- so disgusted with some of the comments I am seeing.


177 posted on 03/30/2005 4:41:08 PM PST by PhiKapMom (AOII Mom -- Increase Republicans in Congress in 2006!)
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To: Edgerunner
I doubt that...PROVE IT!

You can start with this article.

178 posted on 03/30/2005 4:46:23 PM PST by Carry_Okie (The fourth estate is the fifth column.)
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To: Carry_Okie; Edgerunner
I doubt that...PROVE IT!

Ever hear of Robin Hood and the Sheriff of Nottengham?

179 posted on 03/30/2005 4:52:53 PM PST by itsahoot (There are some things more painful than the truth, but I can't think of them.)
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To: Walkin Man

Just finished reading the ruling by the 11th Circuit with one of the judges writing up his own concurrence. I am so impressed with this Justice and how he states the case of why the 11th Circuit did not hear this case. He was furious at the thought they were activist judges and took that argument apart.

This is the type of Judge I want on the Appeals Court -- rules on the law instead of emotions. IMHO all Conservatives should be wanting the same thing no matter the case.


180 posted on 03/30/2005 5:01:24 PM PST by PhiKapMom (AOII Mom -- Increase Republicans in Congress in 2006!)
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