Without Bush Era Investigations,
Political Heirs Will Repeat Abuses
(which is secondary to the primary requisite: PriceCore Justice/Accountability


nytimes.com   |  Paul Krugman   |   Jan 16, 2009

Last Sunday President-elect Barack Obama was asked whether he would seek an
investigation of possible crimes by the Bush administration. "I don't
believe that anybody is above the law," he responded, but "we need to look
forward as opposed to looking backwards."


Fred R. Conrad/The New York Times
Paul Krugman

Go to Columnist Page ยป Blog: The Conscience of a Liberal
I'm sorry, but if we don't have an inquest into what happened during the
Bush years - and nearly everyone has taken Mr. Obama's remarks to mean that
we won't - this means that those who hold power are indeed above the law
because they don't face any consequences if they abuse their power.

Let's be clear what we're talking about here. It's not just torture and
illegal wiretapping, whose perpetrators claim, however implausibly, that
they were patriots acting to defend the nation's security. The fact is that
the Bush administration's abuses extended from environmental policy to
voting rights. And most of the abuses involved using the power of government
to reward political friends and punish political enemies.

At the Justice Department, for example, political appointees illegally
reserved nonpolitical positions for "right-thinking Americans" - their term,
not mine - and there's strong evidence that officials used their positions
both to undermine the protection of minority voting rights and to persecute
Democratic politicians.

The hiring process at Justice echoed the hiring process during the
occupation of Iraq - an occupation whose success was supposedly essential to
national security - in which applicants were judged by their politics, their
personal loyalty to President Bush and, according to some reports, by their
views on Roe v. Wade, rather than by their ability to do the job.

Speaking of Iraq, let's also not forget that country's failed
reconstruction: the Bush administration handed billions of dollars in no-bid
contracts to politically connected companies, companies that then failed to
deliver. And why should they have bothered to do their jobs? Any government
official who tried to enforce accountability on, say, Halliburton quickly
found his or her career derailed.

There's much, much more. By my count, at least six important government
agencies experienced major scandals over the past eight years - in most
cases, scandals that were never properly investigated. And then there was
the biggest scandal of all: Does anyone seriously doubt that the Bush
administration deliberately misled the nation into invading Iraq?

Why, then, shouldn't we have an official inquiry into abuses during the Bush
years?

One answer you hear is that pursuing the truth would be divisive, that it
would exacerbate partisanship. But if partisanship is so terrible, shouldn't
there be some penalty for the Bush administration's politicization of every
aspect of government?

Alternatively, we're told that we don't have to dwell on past abuses,
because we won't repeat them. But no important figure in the Bush
administration, or among that administration's political allies, has
expressed remorse for breaking the law. What makes anyone think that they or
their political heirs won't do it all over again, given the chance?

In fact, we've already seen this movie. During the Reagan years, the
Iran-contra conspirators violated the Constitution in the name of national
security. But the first President Bush pardoned the major malefactors, and
when the White House finally changed hands the political and media
establishment gave Bill Clinton the same advice it's giving Mr. Obama: let
sleeping scandals lie. Sure enough, the second Bush administration picked up
right where the Iran-contra conspirators left off - which isn't too
surprising when you bear in mind that Mr. Bush actually hired some of those
conspirators.

Now, it's true that a serious investigation of Bush-era abuses would make
Washington an uncomfortable place, both for those who abused power and those
who acted as their enablers or apologists. And these people have a lot of
friends. But the price of protecting their comfort would be high: If we
whitewash the abuses of the past eight years, we'll guarantee that they will
happen again.

Meanwhile, about Mr. Obama: while it's probably in his short-term political
interests to forgive and forget, next week he's going to swear to "preserve,
protect, and defend the Constitution of the United States." That's not a
conditional oath to be honored only when it's convenient.

And to protect and defend the Constitution, a president must do more than
obey the Constitution himself; he must hold those who violate the
Constitution accountable. So Mr. Obama should reconsider his apparent
decision to let the previous administration get away with crime.
Consequences aside, that's not a decision he has the right to make.


http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/16/opinion/16krugman.html?partner=permalink&exprod=permalink

http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/

######
Krugman: Not Ready to Make Nice
Susie Madrak | Jan 16, 2009 
http://crooksandliars.com/taxonomy/term/181

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IHH8bfPhusM



 
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