Guardian | This past week has been a strangely clarifying political moment. It was caused by two related events: the leak of the Justice Department's "white paper" justifying Obama's claimed power to execute Americans without charges, followed by John Brennan's alarming confirmation hearing
(as Charles Pierce wrote: "the man whom the administration has put up
to head the CIA would not say whether or not the president of the United
States has the power to order the extrajudicial killing of a United
States citizen within the borders of the United States").
I describe last week's process as "strange" because, for some reason,
those events caused large numbers of people for the first time to
recognize, accept and begin to confront truths that have long been
readily apparent.
Illustrating this odd phenomenon was a much-discussed New York Times article on Sunday
by Peter Baker which explained that these events "underscored the
degree to which Mr. Obama has embraced some of Mr. Bush's approach to
counterterrorism, right down to a secret legal memo authorizing
presidential action unfettered by outside forces." It began this way:
"If President Obama tuned in to the past week's bracing debate on Capitol Hill about terrorism, executive power, secrecy and due process, he might have recognized the arguments his critics were making: He once made some of them himself.
"Four years into his tenure, the onetime critic of President George W. Bush finds himself cast as a present-day Mr. Bush, justifying the muscular application of force in the defense of the nation while detractors complain that he has sacrificed the country's core values in the name of security."
Baker also noticed this: "Some
liberals acknowledged in recent days that they were willing to accept
policies they once would have deplored as long as they were in Mr.
Obama's hands, not Mr. Bush's." As but one example, the article
quoted Jennifer Granholm, the former Michigan governor and fervent
Obama supporter, as admitting without any apparent shame that "if this was Bush, I think that we would all be more up in arms" because, she said "we trust the president". Thus did we have - while some media liberals objected
- scores of progressives and conservatives uniting to overtly embrace
the once-controversial Bush/Cheney premises of the War on Terror (it's
a global war! the whole world is a battlefield! the president has
authority to do whatever he wants to The Terrorists without interference
from courts!) in order to defend the war's most radical power yet
(the president's power to assassinate even his own citizens in secret,
without charges, and without checks).
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