Op-Ed Columnist
How Character Corrodes 
By MAUREEN DOWD
Published: May 2, 2009 
WASHINGTON

 
Fred R. Conrad/The New York Times
Maureen Dowd 

How quaint. 
The Republicans are concerned about checks and balances. 

The specter of Specter helping the president have his way with Congress has 
actually made conservatives remember why they respected the Constitution in the 
first place. Senator Mitch McConnell, the leader of the shrinking Republican 
minority, fretted that there was a "threat to the country" and wondered if 
people would want the majority to rule "without a check or a balance." 

Senator John Thune worried that Democrats would run "roughshod" and argued that 
Americans wanted checks and balances. Senator Judd Gregg mourned that "there's 
no checks and balances on this massive expansion on the size of government."

Bill Kristol, the editor of The Weekly Standard, tried to put the best face on 
it, noting, "This will make it easier for G.O.P. candidates in 2010 to ask to 
be elected to help restore some checks and balances in Washington."

This is quite touching, given that the start of the 21st century will be 
remembered as the harrowing era when an arrogant Republican administration did 
its best to undermine checks and balances. (Maybe when your reign begins with 
Bush v. Gore, a Supreme heist that kissed off checks and balances, you feel no 
need to follow the founding fathers' lead.)

After so many years of watching a White House upend laws, I now listen raptly 
when President Obama plays the constitutional law professor. He was asked at 
his news conference Wednesday night about the Republican fear that he will 
"ride roughshod over any opposition" and establish one-party rule.

"I've got Democrats who don't agree with me on everything," he said. "And 
that's how it should be. Congress is a coequal branch of government." You 
almost thought the professor in chief was going to ask the assembled students 
to please turn to page 317 in their Con Law book.

He went on to reassure Republicans that his vision of the presidency is very 
different from the imperial view held by the Boy Emperor and his regents. 

"I do think that, to my Republican friends, I want them to realize that me 
reaching out to them has been genuine," the president said, adding, "The 
majority will probably be determinative when it comes to resolving just 
hard-core differences that we can't resolve, but there is a whole host of other 
areas where we can work together" and "make progress."

The officials who actually represented a threat to the country while they were 
running the country are continuing to defend themselves. But they just end up 
further implicating themselves.

Condi Rice, who plans to go back to being a professor of political science at 
Stanford, got grilled by a student at a reception at a dorm there on Monday.

I've often wondered why students haven't been more vocal in questioning the 
architects of the Iraq war and "legal" torture who landed plum spots at 
prestigious universities. Probably because it would have taken the draft, like 
the guillotine, to concentrate the mind. But finally, the young man at Stanford 
spoke up. Saying he had read that Ms. Rice authorized waterboarding, he asked 
her, "Is waterboarding torture?"

She replied: "The president instructed us that nothing we would do would be 
outside of our obligations, legal obligations, under the Convention Against 
Torture. So that's - and by the way, I didn't authorize anything. I conveyed 
the authorization of the administration to the agency."

This was precisely Condi's problem. She simply relayed. She never stood up 
against Cheney and Rummy for either what was morally right or what was smart in 
terms of our national security. 

The student pressed again about whether waterboarding was torture.

"By definition, if it was authorized by the president, it did not violate our 
obligations under the Conventions Against Torture," Ms. Rice said, almost 
quoting Nixon's logic: "When the president does it, that means that it is not 
illegal."

She also stressed that, "Unless you were there in a position of responsibility 
after Sept. 11, you cannot possibly imagine the dilemmas that you faced in 
trying to protect Americans."

Reyna Garcia, a Stanford sophomore who videotaped the exchange, said of Condi's 
aria, "I wasn't completely satisfied with her answers, to be honest," adding 
that "President Obama went ahead and called it torture and she did everything 
she could not to do that." 

As Mr. Obama said in his news conference, it is in moments of crisis that a 
country must cleave to its principles. Asserting that "waterboarding violates 
our ideals," he said he had been struck by an article describing how Churchill 
would not torture prisoners even when "London was being bombed to smithereens."

"And the reason was that Churchill understood, you start taking shortcuts and 
over time, that corrodes what's best in a people," he said. "It corrodes the 
character of a country."

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/03/opinion/03dowd.html?th&emc=th

--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"WebTV Dawgs/Dittos" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected]
For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/WebTV-Pals
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

<<inline: dowd-ts-190.jpg>>

Reply via email to