Posted on 05/31/2006 8:51:09 AM PDT by MNJohnnie
Redefining Hypocrisy
It would be laughable if it werent so deadly serious. The halls of Congress reverberated recently with those righteous constitutional words separation of powers. This cornerstone of our liberty pre-dates even the Constitution, and is enshrined in it. It says, simply, in the words of our Supreme Court, that one co-equal branch of government (the executive branch, i.e., the president, the Congress, or the judiciary) may not constitutionally act to impair the ability of another branch to carry out responsibilities assigned to it. As legendary Chief Justice John Marshall taught nearly 200 years ago, any attempt to do so is void, and, as a legal matter, is literally nonexistent.
Redefining Hypocrisy 05/31
http://article.nationalreview.com/?q=YzU2NDdiNDk3NzQzYTc2NGQ4OTA3N2VkNGI0MGZiZjY=
One unschooled in the ways of Washington might hope in vain that Congresss 11th-hour embrace of this fundamental concept involved a serious constitutional question, say, Congresss attempts, through the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), to impair the presidents ability to prevent terrorist attacks on our country. Indeed, 72 members of Congress, including House Judiciary Committee Ranking Member John Conyers, have weighed in on that question, which truly is a life-and-death one. Regrettably, their position, in a court filing in an ACLU case in Michigan attempting to shut down foreign- intelligence collection against terrorists, amounts to little more than an assertion that the presidents constitutional authority is legally tenuous. (Full disclosure: I co-authored a brief in that case (available at www.morgancunningham.net/), filed on behalf of the Washington Legal Foundation, that argues if FISA, as applied to the facts and circumstances of the NSA Terrorist Surveillance Program, impairs the presidents ability to carry out his unique constitutional responsibility to protect us from attack, FISA itself is unconstitutional and not binding on the president.) Recall that senators and congressmen on both sides of the aisle very recently have openly scorned the separation-of-powers notion that any president could possess constitutional authority which Congress cannot, by statute, extinguish, with some even calling the president a criminal for using his constitutional authority to protect us.
But, of course, Capitol Hills late-coming constitutional outrage does not involve our national security. Instead, the matter of grave constitutional moment on which Congressman Conyers and others on both sides of the aisle made their stand, with Conyers angrily asserting that the executive crossed a constitutional line, iswait for itthe FBIs execution of a search warrant, approved by our courts, against a member of Congress, according to press reports, in whose freezer the FBI already had found nearly $100,000 in foil-wrapped cash, and who was videotaped accepting a bribe for a similar amount. Thisnot protecting our country from attackis where Conyers, and others on both sides of the aisle, have chosen to make their constitutional stand.
As has often been said about Washington, where you stand depends on where you sit. Fence sitting, or worse, on vital national-security programs to save another 3,000, or 300,000 of our people from death, while standing tall to protect apparently corrupt congressmen from court-approved search warrants, redefines hypocrisy. Its breathtaking. It would be hilarious if our lives werent at stake.
Dont get me wrong. Im profoundly glad Congress has taken this courageous stand, for two reasons. First, it lays bare that the fight over the Terrorist Surveillance Program is not about which side of the aisle youre on, but about the end of Pennsylvania Avenue on which you are. The so-called bipartisan outrage about the NSA program comes down, essentially, to petulance at the notion that any president could ever decline to execute each jot and tittle of any law Congress passes, even if, as has been amply demonstrated, that law is hopelessly behind the technology and threats we face today, and very likely unconstitutional. Second, maybe, just maybe, a few of the righteous members of Congress now frantically screaming separation of powers will apply it in a context that isnt at all laughable, and support the constitutional authority of the President to protect us all from another 9/11. Our lives and, given that one likely target for United 93 was the U.S. Capitol, their own, may depend upon it.
Bryan Cunningham, a principal in the Denver law firm of Morgan & Cunningham LLC, served for six years in the Clinton administration, as assistant general counsel to the CIA, and as a federal prosecutor, and, from 2002-2004, was deputy legal adviser to the National Security Council.
http://www.jasoncann.org/radio.htm
http://radio.findanisp.com/radio-shows-on-air.php
No broken bones just need a skin graft. I live. :-)
Off I go......
No broken bones just need a skin graft. I live. :-)
Off I go......
Thank you for the ping sir.
Alphalt and stones will skin my bones, but bikinis will never hurt me.
Thanks for what you do.
gracias MNJonnie.. I am here and ready to rumble
Yhello!
Thank me. LOL
Godfather why do you leave us?
I'm welcome!
bttt
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1641144/posts
Will you guys please post reports on what Rush says? I am non-radio cube isolated. THX.
Sure
That story is so sad.
Rush has his horns twisted today, so he says.
Rush says he's in a foul temper today!
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