Winstonm, on 2011-March-22, 18:25, said:
I had hoped a less partisan view from you, Richard.
I doubt anyone holds Bush/Cheney in more contempt than I do, but at the same time to whitewash Obama's upholding of the Bush/Cheney legacy simply because he is a Democrat is not much of a response.
Isn't it time to hold all in power accountable, regardless of party?
I don't know where you ever got the idea that I'm not partisan.
I am a proud liberal / progressive. I despise conservative evangelicals and have nothing but contempt for most libertarians.
I refuse to shop at companies that donate significant amount of money to Republicans or conservative causes (Domino's, Walmart, Home Depot, anyone associated with the Chamber of Commerce).
With this said and done, what you are labeling as "partisan" I'd describe as pragmatic.
Bush is grossly incompetent. He failed his way right up to the top.
I don't think that it is unreasonable to factor this type of consideration into policy decisions.
Last week I posted the following comment:
Quote
I'm really torn about this one and really have no idea what the right thing to do is...
I've had a bit more time to read up on matters and try to formulate an opinion.
I'm still conflicted, however, I've moved closer to the interventionist camp.
1. I think that there is a very real chance that Gaddafi's forces would have slaughtered tens if not hundreds of thousands of people had they taken Benghazi.
2. The US, Britain, and France were in an effective position to stop this.
There is a second, related question, regarding process:
I have a lot of respect for process. I would have very much preferred a situation in which Congress could have been recalled, informed of the facts, had time to deliberate, and reached a decision. However, I don't view this as remotely feasible. This would have taken a week. By the time the decision had been made, the decision would be moot.
There have been any number of situations in which Presidents have violated the Constitution.
Lincoln's suspension of Habeas Corpus is the prototypical example.
From my perspective, the lesson of this habeas corpus example is not that the Constitution is sacrosanct, never to be violated...
But rather if circumstances require that the President break the Constitution this needs to be done openly and publicly to allow for appropriate debate.