Welcome to the second installment of Hit and Miss, a column that takes a look at the positives and negatives in society.
So here’s an obvious hit: Independence Day! Yes, the Fourth of July represents a lot of things to us today. Many of us enjoy a day off work, getting together with family and friends, watching parades or fireworks, and, yes, even those ubiquitous holiday sales that mark our consumer society.
Independence Day should be celebrated. We should rejoice in the freedoms that we have in this country. We should be happy about the wisdom and courage shown by those (primarily Virginian Thomas Jefferson) who penned the Declaration of Independence.
While our Founding Fathers set up a great democracy that grew strong over the course of a couple centuries, George W. Bush and his cronies have made an active effort for seven years to take away our freedoms, our rights, and our democracy. And for that, the Bush administration is a major miss!
First, let me give credit where credit is due. The Bush administration has done a masterful job during the past seven years. Of course, Hitler was masterful, too, at certain things. And the Bush administration has been masterful at wrecking the economy, sucking up to corporations, fear mongering, harming our environment, starting illegal wars, and, for the purpose of this column, eliminating individual rights.
Let’s go all the way back to the beginning of this slippery slope—the USA PATRIOT Act. Bush wanted this thing passed and Congress was stupid enough to allow it. First, do you even know what the official term USA PATRIOT act stands for? Don’t worry, most of us don’t. It stands for Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism. Even though Bush doesn’t read, or perhaps he can’t, I’m not sure, apparently Cheney, Rove, Rumsfeld, et al. could at least read George Orwell.
Bush Corp. proposed that we eliminate our rights and allow secret governmental intrusion in our lives and Congress passed it. Easily! The USA PATRIOT Act, according to our friend Wikipedia, “increases the ability of law enforcement agencies to search telephone, e-mail communications, medical, financial and other records; eases restrictions on foreign intelligence gathering within the United States; expands the Secretary of Treasury’s authority to regulate financial transactions, particularly those involving foreign individuals and entities; and enhances the discretion of law enforcement and immigration authorities in detaining and deporting immigrants suspected of terrorism-related acts. The act also expands the definition of terrorism to include domestic terrorism, thus enlarging the number of activities to which the USA Patriot Act’s expanded law enforcement powers can be applied.”
Wow, that should be making us rise up in a revolution, but we sat back and took it quietly. And in fact, Bush and Congress reauthorized the Act in 2006, again, with little fight from we the people.
Then there was the elimination of habeas corpus. And how about that illegal wiretapping, with the help of the big telecom companies? (You can count on Bush and major corporations to always do a little “you-scratch-my-back” politics.) And don’t forget holding “enemy combatants” indefinitely and without telling them of the charges against them or allowing them access to legal counsel.
The list of offenses against our rights goes on and on with this administration. And while we celebrate our freedom, I mourn our loss of freedom—or loss of inalienable rights taken away by a dictatorial theocracy while the American public and the Congress elected to represent us stood idly by, at best, or at worst was complicit in stripping our rights.
Our Founding Fathers understood the importance of these rights. Our brave and valiant military men and women have given their lives in protecting these rights that our own president, not some terrorist or foreign invader, has taken from us.
And perhaps that’s the biggest miss of all.

3 responses so far ↓
1 Steven // Jul 6, 2008 at 1:52 am
If the election was tomorrow, and George Bush was running, I would not be voting for him. The miss isn’t on the part of just the administration though - it’s also on Congress. They had every opportunity to vote it down, and they didn’t. We can’t just blame Bush.
2 Voiceover: You Say You Want a Revolution … // Jul 9, 2008 at 7:12 pm
[…] timj on Now Playing: WALL-E NRV Admin on Postcards From Floyd: Pink Floyd is Turning BlueSteven on Hit and Miss: Independence Day vs. the Bush AdministrationRU Getting Greener on Guest Editorial: Recycling in Radford - Better, But Not […]
3 Phyllis T. Albritton // Jul 10, 2008 at 2:37 am
In keeping with the icon’s “100% pure evil,” thought you might like to read an article by a Harvard professor of psychology who refers to Bush, Cheney and Rumsfeld as “evil” and of “villainy.”
Here is article:
http://www.tikkun.org/magazine/tik0709/frontpage/vets
Quote from the article:
“A psychologist who is asked to assess a person who compulsively lies, whose lies repeatedly lead to devastation and death, and who appears to feel no remorse about the lying or its consequences will readily diagnose that person as a psychopath. It should be obvious that George W. Bush, Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, and their cronies fit that description, that that is where the true psychopathology lies, although the scale of their misconduct actually leaves psychopathology in the dust and leaps to the realm of evil. The same goes for the psychologist who is asked to assess a person who repeatedly claims that X is true, when it is patently obvious that X is false (e.g., “We’re bringing democracy to the Middle East,” or “They love us over there”). The psychologist would likely conclude that the person is out of touch with reality to the point of psychosis. When arrogance or greed impel the distortion of reality, rather than cognitive or emotional factors beyond the person’s control, it makes more sense to call it not mental illness but villainy.”
Leave a Comment