2/27/2006

"Known to be armed and shown to be dangerous"

The King of Zembla brings tidings of Harper's editor Lewis Lapham's essay, The Case for Impeachment. Canny Harper's posted only a portion of the print version, but what a portion it is. Lapham reviews the Conyers report:

Before reading the report, I wouldn't have expected to find myself thinking that such a course of action was either likely or possible; after reading the report, I don't know why we would run the risk of not impeaching the man. We have before us in the White House a thief who steals the country's good name and reputation for his private interest and personal use; a liar who seeks to instill in the American people a state of fear; a televangelist who engages the United States in a never-ending crusade against all the world's evil, a wastrel who squanders a vast sum of the nation's wealth on what turns out to be a recruiting drive certain to multiply the host of our enemies. In a word, a criminal—known to be armed and shown to be dangerous. Under the three-strike rule available to the courts in California, judges sentence people to life in jail for having stolen from Wal-Mart a set of golf clubs or a child's tricycle. Who then calls strikes on President Bush, and how many more does he get before being sent down on waivers to one of the Texas Prison Leagues?

Who, indeed? The putative owners of the "ownership society." Bush works for us, whether he realizes it or not.

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