A Model for Congress
by Karen Kwiatkowski
The unpopular Mr. Bush may take some satisfaction in the fact
that he is more popular among Americans than Dick Cheney and the
current U.S. Congress.
Bush is unpopular because of his war in Afghanistan, Iraq, and
his teasing proxy war progressing on schedule in Iran and Syria.
Bush is unpopular because we correctly associate him with
tyrannous government.
While our country is misled, bankrupted and friendless, we also
note that the state and the executive presidency has never been
more healthy and robust.
The current Congress is hated not for what we knew it would do –
we certainly expected increased spending, and continued
stupidity, corruption and politicking. But this Congress was
expressly sent to end the war in Iraq and to rein in the
Bush-Cheney-Condi-Rumsfeld neocons.
After the elections, Rumsfeld instantly disappeared. But Bush
and Cheney did that. Congress, holding the pursestrings of war
and nervously checking its collective zipper, has done nothing.
There is a similar assembly of bought-and-paid-for peoples’
representatives that is actually worth admiring. Amazingly, our
good example comes from Afghanistan!
The artificially fabricated and weak parliament of Afghanistan,
that broken country led by U.S. puppet Hamid Karzai, has shown
more brass and more character than our own "constitutionally
sanctioned" supreme soviet. It’s not often that law-biding
citizens get to hear good news from Afghanistan, but we had some
last week.
Apparently, the Afghani parliament is trying to impeach their
foreign minister. Karzai appointed his friend, Rangeen Dadfar
Spanta, to this post a few years ago. Minister Spanta is accused
of not working for the good of Afghans abroad – basically of not
doing his job of putting Afghans first.
One Afghan member of parliament who voted to impeach said this,
The foreign minister's job is to look out for Afghans who live
abroad. He did not do that. He didn't even know how many Afghans
were in Iranian prisons," Qarimatullah says. "Nor did he know
about an international agreement allowing the deportation. All
of this led us to impeach him.
Not knowing what is happening to a country’s citizens abroad, or
not caring, is worthy of public reprimand, replacement or
impeachment.
This new, troubled, tribalized parliament in Kabul has done what
our well-dressed, civilized, internetted, and wealthy Congress
cannot find the moral strength to do – and that is to sanction,
impeach and defund those in the government who do not look out
after the interests of American citizens.
The Lou Dobbs crowd adores autarky, and imagines a better
America through domestic self-sufficiency and mercantilism
abroad – and while I disagree – this group has done a fine job
in getting Congress’ attention publicly focused on American
workers and American trade. Dobbs and company is on message
"Look out for the average American at home!" and Congress hears
and obeys.
Why is it the anti-immigration and pro-life message works on
Congress, while advocates for preserving the life and limbs of
home grown American soldiers are termed "protesters" and
"un-American"? Is the war business so profitable, and the moral
vacancy so great that we would save an unborn baby, seat-belt
him safely for 18 years, only to send him forward to die for, as
Greenspan believes, a war for oil?
Those that remain – the mothers and fathers, wives and husbands,
siblings and children of Americans killed and maimed in Iraq
have no mainstream establishment agency to speak up for them, no
majority political leader to act on their behalf.
We will elect Ron Paul – and by redrawing the executive branch
in its native constitutional image, we will do much for our
soldiers, all Americans abroad, and those at home. Intuitively,
both the establishment and the soldiers already know this.
Soldiers support Ron Paul, and the establishment cowers.
The Afghan parliament – incompetent as it may be – has taken a
stand that the people associated with an executive presidency
are accountable for their decisions and actions. That parliament
believes that the elected executive must always put the
country’s interest first and foremost. When the executive fails
to put the country first, the Afghan parliament acts swiftly and
boldly.
How long will we have to wait before our Congress does the same?
September 19, 2007
LRC columnist Karen Kwiatkowski, Ph.D. [send her mail], a
retired USAF lieutenant colonel, has written on defense issues
with a libertarian perspective for MilitaryWeek.com, hosted the
call-in radio show American Forum, and blogs occasionally for
Huffingtonpost.com and Liberty and Power. To receive automatic
announcements of new articles, click here.
Copyright © 2007 Karen Kwiatkowski
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