Power Grab
So the President thinks that he has the right to operate domestic spying operations without warrants? Huh. There are a million good articles written on this subject already, so I'm not going to bother linking to any. Go to any political or news site and you'll find a dozen or two.
But what really strikes me about this is what a completely audacious power grab this was by the President, and how it is exactly the sort of Executive Branch overreach that the Founders feared. Basically, the President felt that the existing laws passed by Congress did not grant him the power he needed, and that they hampered him by requiring that he obtain warrants from the Judicial Branch. So what did he do? He simply decided to go ahead and take the power he wanted regardless of the checks on his power imposed by the other two branches of government. And, most disturbingly, he did so in complete secrecy, such that no one would have even known about it without the skillful reporting of the New York Times.
Think about this, the President has claimed (based on laughably ridiculous Constitutional arguments) that he may do whatever he wants if he feels that it is within his power. And he feels almost no need to justify or explain his actions. That's exactly how our system is not supposed to work. And it is entirely consistent with other Bush Administration moves to increase the power and reduce the transparency of the Executive Branch. The actual substance of the policy is irrelevant.
1 comment:
The president (or I should say, "This president") doing whatever he wants and not caring about laws? I'm shocked! Shocked, I tell you!
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