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The best democracy money can buy.

Discussion in 'Fred's House of Pancakes' started by jared2, Apr 4, 2006.

  1. jared2

    jared2 New Member

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    "The resignation of Tom DeLay is the crashing conclusion of his garish career but hardly the end of his legal troubles or the demise of the partisan political machine he constructed. The former majority leader of the House of Representatives has been the Republican strongman in the Congress, known as "The Hammer." As the party whip, he hung a bullwhip on his wall as a symbol of intimidation. The style of the former exterminator from Sugar Land, Texas was bullying and crude. He called the Environmental Protection Agency "the Gestapo," ran a smear operation out of his office that would have won the admiration of Senator Joseph McCarthy, and grabbed whatever he wanted as his right of lordship. When a meek restaurateur in a Capitol Hill steakhouse politely asked DeLay to put out his large cigar because of the city's no smoking law, DeLay bellowed, "I am the government!" And he was not wrong.

    DeLay enforced harsh discipline on the Republicans, bondage they savoured as the essence of power. In return, anything a loyal House member wanted, he would provide. "The Hammer" was also known as "The Concierge." Rules, including the House's own, meant nothing to him, irritating hindrances to be broken at his will. In order to gain passage of a bill favouring the big drug companies - preventing the Medicare elderly prescription drug program from negotiating lower rates - he extended debate long past the deadline and was accused of offering the bribe of a campaign contribution to a wavering Republican. DeLay stomped on the Ethics committee, stopping it from meeting to investigate this episode until public outcry forced him to back off. He greeted slaps on his wrist as badges of honour.

    DeLay walked over bodies in his own party to reach his pinnacle. He led coups against the Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich, tribune of the right, yet too amenable to negotiation with President Clinton as far as DeLay was concerned.

    DeLay most notable achievement was coercing the impeachment of President Clinton. Without his arm-twisting, impeachment would have certainly failed. There was a sizeable group of relatively moderate Republicans opposed. They saw no merits in the ridiculous charges and understood impeachment was being pressed out of crude partisanship. But DeLay threatened their financial supporters (whose business interests would be blackballed from receiving congressional relief), and threatened to bankroll rightwing candidates against the moderates in Republican primaries to bleed them white. So one by one, they caved in. A moderate Republican was a moderate when Tom DeLay told them they could be moderate. Under DeLay's thumb, the House Judiciary committee voted for impeachment after refusing to establish any constitutional standards for their action. The constitution was swept away in his exercise of power. President Clinton was acquitted by the Senate, but DeLay was unblemished by his abuse. Fear of him was never higher.

    Over more than a decade, DeLay forged a political machine that he called the "K Street project," after the downtown avenue in Washington DC of steel and glass building housing the large law and lobbying firms. DeLay kept a black book in which he noted who gave money to and hired Republicans. When a trade association tried to employ a Democrat, it was issued a warning that it would be punished. From the "K Street project" to the Republicans flowed tens of millions of dollars in campaign contributions. Meanwhile, the contracts from corporations for lobbying and legal work went to these Republican firms. It was a perfectly designed system of legal graft.

    When President George W. Bush assumed office, one-party rule commenced. DeLay served as Bush's "Hammer." Back in Texas, between the political operations of both of them, the Democrats had been shattered as a party. Now DeLay and Bush worked together nationally to accomplish the same goal. Karl Rove, Bush's chief political adviser, who had been instrumental in the Texas takeover, was the go-between in the relationship. And the go-between in the Rove-DeLay relationship was a lobbyist named Jack Abramoff.

    While exercising absolute power in the House, DeLay was determined to augment it further by thoroughly rigging the outcome of congressional elections in Texas. He created a political action committee, raised millions from his K Street allies, and poured the money into the Texas legislature, which in turn redrew the lines of congressional districts to wipe out the existing Democrats. DeLay's scheme succeeded in giving him an even bigger Republican margin. But the district attorney of Travis County, Texas investigated and indicted two of his aides and finally DeLay himself for illegally using corporate campaign funds.

    As this scandal unfolded, the many-sided corruption of Jack Abramoff came under scrutiny by federal prosecutors. The ring tightened around DeLay, whose dealings with Abramoff were extensive and who called him one of his "closest friends". DeLay's former press secretary turned state's evidence. And his former communications director, an Abramoff business partner, pleaded guilty in a deal with the prosecutors. Last week, DeLay's former deputy chief of staff, another lobbyist, pled, too, his sentence to be decided on the basis of his cooperation. Thus surrounded, DeLay quit. His worst days lie ahead.

    The Republican machine and its "K Street project" hum without its conductor. But the Republicans face the most difficult election cycle since they took control of the Congress in 1994. DeLay's further tribulations will illustrate the corruption endemic to the operation he built. The Republicans must hang on the hope that the campaign funds they raise through the DeLay devised system will enable them to overcome his corrupt taint."
     
  2. jared2

    jared2 New Member

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    No one has any comment on this? I thought it was an insightful article into the way Washington operates.
     
  3. daniel

    daniel Cat Lovers Against the Bomb

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(jared2 @ Apr 5 2006, 06:28 AM) [snapback]235230[/snapback]</div>
    What's there to comment? Not quite a "nutshell," but an articulate statement about how politics works. Check out LBJ's history to see that both parties are cast from the same mold. Texas may be worse, though. Fuel for my argument that we ought to give Texas back to Mexico.
     
  4. jared2

    jared2 New Member

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    "An article on why, precisely, a character like DeLay can prosper within a certain political scene, can appeal to voters, and, perhaps most importantly, can exist at all within a supposedly healthy culture would be much more revealing, much more interesting, and much more courageous on Salon's part. The last sane remnants of the American political consciousness will go down drowning in the rancid milk of this numbed-cow, profoundly self-indulgent and decadent fascism that we're so privileged to enjoy, whining and crying at what potential America has lost" ---

    "the magnitude of this kind of disgrace raises nary a protest from vast swaths of the American public, either because of ignorance or obstinence. Neither deserves any pity, and if that makes me a disdainful liberal, so be it. The situation demands the profoundest disdain."

    -- Chase Richards
     
  5. daniel

    daniel Cat Lovers Against the Bomb

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(jared2 @ Apr 5 2006, 08:38 AM) [snapback]235308[/snapback]</div>
    Hey, this is how American politics has always worked, from the very beginning. There has never been a shred of anything sane or honest in American government.

    "We hold these truths to be self-evident that all men are created equal," etc., etc., etc., blah, blah, blah, and then they institutionalize and legalize slavery, even allowing slave-owners to kill their own slaves if they see fit.

    Give me a break! Common decency does not permit me to use language that would adequately describe the people that have governed this country from 1492 to 2006.
     
  6. Marlin

    Marlin New Member

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    Has anyone heard on the news when they play sound bite after sound bite of democrats using the catch phrase "Culture of Corruption"?

    Doesn't it make you cringe? They sound like wind-up toys.
     
  7. imntacrook

    imntacrook New Member

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(daniel @ Apr 6 2006, 10:23 AM) [snapback]235794[/snapback]</div>
    Whoa baby! You never mentioned the 3 or 4 hundred thousand that died to free the slaves. One quick question - How is it that we live in the greatest, free est, richest country that ever existed on the face of this planet - ever?

    Do you hate your parents? Did they do this to you?
     
  8. Mystery Squid

    Mystery Squid Junior Member

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(daniel @ Apr 6 2006, 10:23 AM) [snapback]235794[/snapback]</div>
    It's because of those people you get to live the way you live.
     
  9. jared2

    jared2 New Member

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    Listen up everyone in the 191 countries of the world:

    Follow these instructions:

    We know the [insert country name] is the greatest country that has every existed on the face of the planet. Our religion, the [insert religion] is the truest and best religion. Our race, the [insert race] race is the smartest there has every been, much smarter than the [insert race] race, and a lot better looking than the [insert race] race.