Is Keith Olbermann ready to ask some real questions?
He called George Bush a fascist today.
He also said that two years ago to merely suggest that the government
was using terror on it's own people was dangerous territory.
Here is the whole special comment; you be the judge and if
you think he might be ready than start sending him evidence
and questions he should be asking.
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Keith Olbermann’s Special Comment on today’s Countdown
was a scathing rebuke of President Bush for continuing to play
the fear card, trying to scare the hell out of the American
people and vowing to veto any FISA legislation that does not
contain telecom amnesty.
You are a liar, Mr. Bush, and after showing some skill at it,
you have ceased to even be a very good liar.
And your minions like John Boehner — your Republican
congressional crash dummies who just happen to decide to walk
out of Congress when a podium-full of microphones await them
— they should just keep walking, out of Congress and if
possible, out of the country.
For they — and you, sir — have no place in a government
of the people, by the people, for the people.
The lot of you, are the symbolic descendants of the despotic
middle managers of some banana republic, to whom “Freedom”
is an ironic brand name, a word you reach for, when you want
to get away with its opposite.
Thus, Mr. Bush, your panoramic invasion of privacy is dressed
up as “protecting America.”
(Article continues below)
Full transcripts below the fold:
Democrats in the House of Representatives are closing the shop
down tonight, until a week from Monday… leaving President
Bush twisting slowly in a wind of his own creation.
Our third story on the Countdown: the FISA bill — and
the retroactive immunity for the telecom giants that helped
Mr. Bush illegally eavesdrop on Americans — will thus
just sit there, unacted upon, not even a temporary extension
which the Republicans and Mr. Bush refused, despite the President’s
threats that if the bill isn’t passed by Saturday, there’d
be a breakdown in counter-terrorism surveillance and plagues
of locusts and stuff.
A Special Comment, in a moment.
First the details.
House Democrats, in essence, calling the Republicans’
bluff.
They staged a walkout at mid-day… led by John Boehner,
who in one act managed the cheesy political theater, and managed
to get out just as Representatives were to vote on Contempt
of Congress citations against Harriet Miers and Joshua Bolten.
That the Republicans just happened to walk to a stand-full
of microphones… pure coincidence.
The President had started all this, with his now-daily message
of fear, with what he apparently sees as a threat, to postpone
his scheduled trip to Africa.
The House should not leave Washington without passing the Senate
bill. I am scheduled to leave tomorrow for a long-planned trip
to five African nations. Moments ago, my staff informed the
House leadership that I’m prepared to delay my departure,
and stay in Washington with them, if it will help them complete
their work on this critical bill. The lives of countless Americans
depend on our ability to monitor terrorist communications.
Having lost, he now says he’s going to Africa —
another threat, or promise, unfulfilled.
Now, as promised, a Special Comment.
A part of what I will say, was said here on January 31st.
Unfortunately it is both sadder and truer now, than it was,
then.
“Who’s to blame?” Mr. Bush also said this
afternoon, “Look, these folks in Congress passed a good
bill late last summer… The problem is, they let the bill
expire. My attitude is: if the bill was good enough then, why
not pass the bill again?”
You know, like The Gulf of Tonkin Resolution.
Or Executive Order 90-66.
Or The Alien and Sedition Acts.
Or Slavery.
Mr. Bush, you say that our ability to track terrorist threats
will be weakened and our citizens will be in greater danger.
Yet you have weakened that ability!
You have subjected us, your citizens, to that greater danger!
This, Mr. Bush, is simple enough even for you to understand.
For the moment, at least, thanks to some true patriots in the
House, and your own stubbornness, you have tabled telecom immunity,
and the FISA act.
You.
By your own terms and your definitions — you have just
sided with the terrorists.
You got to have this law or we’re all going to die.
But practically speaking, you vetoed this law.
It is bad enough, sir, that you were demanding an Ex Post Facto
law, which could still clear the AT&Ts and the Verizons
from responsibility for their systematic, aggressive, and blatant
collaboration with your illegal and unjustified spying on Americans
under this flimsy guise of looking for any terrorists who are
stupid enough to make a collect call or send a mass e-mail.
But when you demanded it again during the State of the Union
address, you wouldn’t even confirm that they actually
did anything for which they deserved to be cleared.
“The Congress must pass liability protection for companies
believed to have assisted in the efforts to defend America.”
Believed?
Don’t you know?
Don’t you even have the guts Dick Cheney showed in admitting
they did collaborate with you?
Does this endless presidency of loopholes and fine print extend
even here?
If you believe in the seamless mutuality of government and
big business — come out and say it!
There is a dictionary definition, one word that describes that
toxic blend.
You’re a fascist — get them to print you a t-shirt
with “fascist” on it!
What else is this but fascism?
Did you see Mark Klein on this newscast last November?
Mark Klein was the AT&T Whistleblower, the one who explained
in the placid, dull terms of your local neighborhood I-T desk,
how he personally attached all AT&T circuits — everything
— carrying every one of your phone calls, every one of
your e-mails, every bit of your web browsing into a secure room,
room number 641-A at the Folsom Street facility in San Francisco,
where it was all copied so the government could look at it.
Not some of it, not just the international part of it, certainly
not just the stuff some spy — a spy both patriotic and
telepathic — might able to divine had been sent or spoken
by — or to — a terrorist.
Everything!
Every time you looked at a naked picture.
Every time you bid on eBay.
Every time you phoned in a donation to a Democrat.
“My thought was,” Mr. Klein told us last November,
“George Orwell’s 1984. And here I am, forced to
connect the big brother machine.”
And if there’s one thing we know about Big Brother, Mr.
Bush, is that he is — you are — a liar.
“This Saturday at midnight,” you said today, “legislation
authorizing intelligence professionals to quickly and effectively
monitor terrorist communications will expire. If Congress does
not act by that time, our ability to find out who the terrorists
are talking to, what they are saying, and what they are planning,
will be compromised…You said that “the lives of
countless Americans depend” on you getting your way.
This is crap.
And you sling it, with an audacity and a speed unrivaled even
by the greatest political felons of our history.
Richard Clarke — you might remember him, sir, he was
one of the counter-terror pro’s you inherited from President
Clinton, before you ran the professionals out of government
in favor of your unreality-based reality — Richard Clarke
wrote in the Philadelphia Inquirer:
“Let me be clear: Our ability to track and monitor terrorists
overseas would not cease should the Protect America Act expire.
If this were true, the president would not threaten to terminate
any temporary extension with his veto pen. All surveillance
currently occurring would continue even after legislative provisions
lapsed because authorizations issued under the act are in effect
up to a full year.”
You are a liar, Mr. Bush, and after showing some skill at it,
you have ceased to even be a very good liar.
And your minions like John Boehner — your Republican
congressional crash dummies who just happen to decide to walk
out of Congress when a podium-full of microphones await them
— they should just keep walking, out of Congress and if
possible, out of the country.
For they — and you, sir — have no place in a government
of the people, by the people, for the people.
The lot of you, are the symbolic descendants of the despotic
middle managers of some banana republic, to whom “Freedom”
is an ironic brand name, a word you reach for, when you want
to get away with its opposite.
Thus, Mr. Bush, your panoramic invasion of privacy is dressed
up as “protecting America.”
Thus, Mr. Bush, your indiscriminate domestic spying becomes
the focused monitoring, only of “terrorist communications.”
Thus, Mr. Bush, what you and the telecom giants have done,
isn’t unlawful, it’s just the kind of perfectly
legal, passionately patriotic thing for which you happen to
need immunity!
Richard Clarke is on the money, as usual.
That the President was willing to veto this eavesdropping,
means there is no threat to the legitimate counter-terror efforts
underway.
As Senator Kennedy reminded us in December:
“The President has said that American lives will be sacrificed
if Congress does not change FISA. But he has also said that
he will veto any FISA bill that does not grant retroactive immunity.
No immunity, no FISA bill. So if we take the President at his
word, he’s willing to let Americans die to protect the
phone companies.”
And that literally cannot be.
Even Mr. Bush could not overtly take a step that actually aids
the terrorists.
I am not talking about ethics here.
I am talking about blame.
If the President seems to be throwing the baby out with the
bathwater, it means we can safely conclude… there is no
baby.
Because if there were, sir, now that you have vetoed an extension
of this eavesdropping, if some terrorist attack were to follow…
You would not merely be guilty of siding with the terrorists…
You would not merely be guilty of prioritizing the telecoms
over the people…
You would not merely be guilty of stupidity…
You would not merely be guilty of treason, sir…
You would be personally, and eternally, responsible.
And if there is one thing we know about you, Mr. Bush, one
thing that you have proved time and time again… it is
that you are never responsible.
As recently ago as 2006, we spoke words like these with trepidation.
The idea that even the most cynical and untrustworthy of politicians
in our history — George W. Bush — would use the
literal form of terrorism against his own people — was
dangerous territory. It seemed to tempt fate, to heighten fear.
We will not fear any longer.
We will not fear the international terrorists — we will
thwart them.
We will not fear the recognition of the manipulation of our
yearning for safety — we will call it what it is: terrorism.
We will not fear identifying the vulgar hypocrites in our government
— we will name them.
And we will not fear George W. Bush.
Nor will we fear because George W. Bush wants us to fear.