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[Washington Post] George Will: "No Checks, Many Imbalances"

Discussion in 'BBS Hangout: Debate & Discussion' started by tigermission1, Feb 17, 2006.

  1. tigermission1

    tigermission1 Member

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    From the reputed conservative columnist George Will...

    http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dy...15/AR2006021502003.html?referrer=emailarticle

    No Checks, Many Imbalances

    By George F. Will
    Thursday, February 16, 2006; Page A27


    The next time a president asks Congress to pass something akin to what Congress passed on Sept. 14, 2001 -- the Authorization for Use of Military Force (AUMF) -- the resulting legislation might be longer than Proust's "Remembrance of Things Past." Congress, remembering what is happening today, might stipulate all the statutes and constitutional understandings that it does not intend the act to repeal or supersede.

    But, then, perhaps no future president will ask for such congressional involvement in the gravest decision government makes -- going to war. Why would future presidents ask, if the present administration successfully asserts its current doctrine? It is that whenever the nation is at war, the other two branches of government have a radically diminished pertinence to governance, and the president determines what that pertinence shall be. This monarchical doctrine emerges from the administration's stance that warrantless surveillance by the National Security Agency targeting American citizens on American soil is a legal exercise of the president's inherent powers as commander in chief, even though it violates the clear language of the 1978 Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, which was written to regulate wartime surveillance.

    Administration supporters incoherently argue that the AUMF also authorized the NSA surveillance -- and that if the administration had asked, Congress would have refused to authorize it. The first assertion is implausible: None of the 518 legislators who voted for the AUMF has said that he or she then thought it contained the permissiveness the administration discerns in it. Did the administration, until the program became known two months ago? Or was the AUMF then seized upon as a justification? Equally implausible is the idea that in the months after Sept. 11, Congress would have refused to revise the 1978 law in ways that would authorize, with some supervision, NSA surveillance that, even in today's more contentious climate, most serious people consider conducive to national security.

    Anyway, the argument that the AUMF contained a completely unexpressed congressional intent to empower the president to disregard the FISA regime is risible coming from this administration. It famously opposes those who discover unstated meanings in the Constitution's text and do not strictly construe the language of statutes.

    The administration's argument about the legality of the NSA program also has been discordant with its argument about the urgency of extending the USA Patriot Act. Many provisions of that act are superfluous if a president's wartime powers are as far-reaching as today's president says they are.

    And if, as some administration supporters say, amending the 1978 act to meet today's exigencies would have given America's enemies dangerous information about our capabilities and intentions, surely FISA and the Patriot Act were both informative. Intelligence professionals reportedly say that the behavior of suspected terrorists has changed since Dec. 15, when the New York Times revealed the NSA surveillance. But surely America's enemies have assumed that our technologically sophisticated nation has been trying, in ways known and unknown, to eavesdrop on them.

    Besides, terrorism is not the only new danger of this era. Another is the administration's argument that because the president is commander in chief, he is the "sole organ for the nation in foreign affairs." That non sequitur is refuted by the Constitution's plain language, which empowers Congress to ratify treaties, declare war, fund and regulate military forces, and make laws "necessary and proper" for the execution of all presidential powers . Those powers do not include deciding that a law -- FISA, for example -- is somehow exempted from the presidential duty to "take care that the laws be faithfully executed."

    The administration, in which mere obduracy sometimes serves as political philosophy, pushes the limits of assertion while disdaining collaboration. This faux toughness is folly, given that the Supreme Court, when rejecting President Harry S Truman's claim that his inherent powers as commander in chief allowed him to seize steel mills during the Korean War, held that presidential authority is weakest when it clashes with Congress.

    Immediately after Sept. 11, the president rightly did what he thought the emergency required, and rightly thought that the 1978 law was inadequate to new threats posed by a new kind of enemy using new technologies of communication. Arguably he should have begun surveillance of domestic-to-domestic calls -- the kind the Sept. 11 terrorists made.

    But 53 months later, Congress should make all necessary actions lawful by authorizing the president to take those actions, with suitable supervision. It should do so with language that does not stigmatize what he has been doing, but that implicitly refutes the doctrine that the authorization is superfluous.
     
  2. Major Malcontent

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    In the beginning there was 9/11 and the Great W saw that the people were afraid and so He railroadeth through legislation in the that he might smite Osama with his great wrath.

    And so he smiteth Saddam, who is not Osama, but haileth from the same part of the world and thus is goodeth enough.

    Then he maintaineth that he needs not the laws of the cowardly congress or the judgements of the Supreme Court (at leasteth until he is doneth packing it) in order to smite Saddam, and whoeverth dare to disagree with Him. (theres still some guy running around, name starts with an O...nevermindeth that)

    Now the people art less afraid and so the Great W must relyeth on the fact that most people would rather watcheth Sabrina The Teenage Witch reruns than pay attention to the political process.
     
  3. SamFisher

    SamFisher Member

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    Where are all of our newly minted constitutional scholars like ROXRAN and Trader_Jumanji? This George F. Will libpig character needs to be combatted.
     
  4. RocketMan Tex

    RocketMan Tex Member

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    Send George Will to Gitmo. Get Lyndee England to strip him down and rape his no good ass. How dare he question King George II? Off with his head!
     

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