« Home | The only kick in life is pumping that steel » | Truckin' » | This is not a joke so please stop smiling » | See what I mean? » | It's sweetness that I'm thinking of » | Genius of love » | Losing my head » | Dreaming of gold and cocaine » | Epic panegyrics » | Good weekend » 

Saturday, July 07, 2007 

Sadly predictable

Still on the road, but the fact that Libby's had his sentence commuted* just can't pass without comment. Remember all of us mocking Bush's claim that whoever leaked Plame's name and CIA position would be dealt with harshly? I think we were being too generous. In my calmer moments, this is the sort of account I'd give to answer why this is important. But really, as per usual John Rogers channels my rage most eloquently:

Our representatives -- and to a great degree we as a culture -- are completely buffaloed by shamelessness. You reveal a man's corrupt, or lying, or incompetent, and what does he do? He resigns. He attempts to escape attention, often to aid in his escape of legal pursuit. Public shame has up to now been the silver bullet of American political life. But people who are willing to just do the wrong thing and wait you out, to be publicly guilty ... dammmnnnn.

We are faced with utterly shameless men. Cheney and the rest are looking our representatives right in the eye and saying "You don't have the balls to take down a government. You don't have the sheer testicular fortitude to call us lying sonuvabitches when we lie, to stop us from kicking the rule of law and the Constitution in the ass. You just don't. What's beyond that abyss -- what that would do to our government and our identity as a nation -- terrifies you too much. So get the fuck out of our way."

And to a great degree, the White House is right. You peel this back, and you reveal that the greatest country in the world has been run, for the last six and a half years, by men who do not give a shit about the Constitution, or fair play, or honesty. No, not just run by corrupt men, or bribe-takers, or adulterers or whatever, we could handle that --no we'd be admitting It Went Wrong.

There is a sizeable population in America that just does not, cannot wrap their head around the fact that the President may be a Bad Man who does Bad Things. He's President of America. We're Americans. We're the good guys. Remember, the Nixon mythos in America is that the system worked. "See, in America, even the President is not above the law."

These Suited Bastards know the fragile shell of American exceptionalism is all that's keeping a whole lot of people from processing that they're working too many hours for not enough money, and they either believe real reeaaaalll hard that they're living in the Shining City on the Hill or admit their lives are shit and they've been chumped.


*In my rage and lack of sleep I originally wrote "pardoned," even though I know damn well that that wasn't the case; in any event, as both linked pages note, commutation is worse, not better. Thanks to a friend for pointing out my error.



Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial Share Alike 2.5 Canada License.

About me

Ian Mathers is a freelance writer whose work has appeared in Stylus, the Village Voice, Resident Advisor, PopMatters, and elsewhere. He does stuff and it magically appears here.

Contact Me:
imathers at gmail dot com

My profile
Powered by Blogger
and Blogger Templates