Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

I was hoping this was some April fools joke, but the date said April 3rd

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    I was hoping this was some April fools joke, but the date said April 3rd

    http://www.zmag.org/content/showarti...04&ItemID=7569

    Introducing The Constitution Restoration Act

    by W. David Kubiak
    April 03, 2005

    Tired of waiting for the Second Coming to enforce Christ's rule on Earth? Fortunately, so is your Congress and they know how to "bring it on."

    Just when you thought the corporatist/Christian Coalition had milked the 9/11 "surprise" for all it was worth in powers, profits and votes, we regret to report that you may have to think again. Just in case you've briefly fallen behind on your rightwing mailing lists, you might have missed the March 3rd filing of Senate bill S. 520 and House version is H.R. 1070, AKA the "Constitution Restoration Act" (CRA).

    In the worshipful words of the Conservative Caucus, this historic legislation will "RESTORE OUR CONSTITUTION!", mainly by barring ANY federal court or judge from ever again reviewing "any matter to the extent that relief is sought against an entity of Federal, State, or local government, or against an officer or agent of Federal, State, or local government (whether or not acting in official or personal capacity), concerning that entity's, officer's, or agent's acknowledgment of God as the sovereign source of law, liberty, or government." [Emphasis demanded - see full text here .]

    In other words, the bill ensures that God's divine word (and our infallible leaders' interpretation thereof) will hereafter trump all our pathetic democratic notions about freedom, law and rights -- and our courts can't say a thing. This, of course, will take "In God We Trust" to an entirely new level, because soon He (and His personally anointed political elite) will be all the legal recourse we have left.

    This is not a joke, a test, or a fit of libertarian paranoia. The CRA already has 28 sponsors in the House and Senate, and a March 20 call to lead sponsor Sen. Richard Shelby's office assures us that "we have the votes for passage." This is a highly credible projection as Bill Moyers observes in his 3/24/05 "Welcome to Doomsday" piece in the New York Review of Books: "The corporate, political, and religious right's hammerlock... extends to the US Congress. Nearly half of its members before the election-231 legislators in all (more since the election)-are backed by the religious right... Forty-five senators and 186 members of the 108th Congress earned 80 to 100 percent approval ratings from the most influential Christian Right advocacy groups."

    This stunning bill and the movement behind it deserve immediate crash study on at least 3 different fronts.

    1. Its hostile divorce of American jurisprudence from our hard-won secular history and international norms. To again quote the Conservative Caucus: "This important bill will restrict the jurisdiction of the U.S. Supreme Court and all lower federal courts to that permitted by the U.S. Constitution, including on the subject of the acknowledgement of God (as in the Roy Moore 10 Commandments issue); and it also restricts federal courts from recognizing the laws of foreign countries and international law [e.g., against torture, global warming, unjust wars, etc. - ed.] as the supreme law of our land."

    Re the last point, envision some doddering judges who still revere our Declaration of Independence's "decent respect to the opinions of mankind," and suppose they invoke in their rulings some international precepts from the UN's Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the Covenant on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women or, God forbid, the Geneva Conventions. Well, under the CRA that would all be clearly illegal and, thank God, that's the last we'd ever hear from them.

    2. The political implications of replacing "we the people" with a Christian deity as the "sovereign source" of all our laws.

    Imagine hyper-zealous officers or "entities" of the Federal, State, or local government (like a governor, legislature or school board) that mandate Christian prayers, rituals and/or statuary in public buildings under their control. Were this to happen, some local Jews, Muslims and/or Buddhists might be moved to hire a lawyer and legally object. But if the CRA passes, their objection would be beyond any court's jurisdiction and that's the last we'd ever hear of that. It in fact demands "impeachment, conviction, and removal of judges" who dare to even hear a case that challenges its "Last Days" morphing of Christian church and state. (Just how our new Sovereign Source of Government's advocacy of public executions for adultery, gay-ness, contraception and blasphemy will fit into our current corrections system still remains to be seen.)

    3 The incessant mainstream media blackout on the bill's existence and import.

    The potential impact of the Constitution Restoration Act on American life, law and politics is so radical and vast that you would expect a boiling national debate. Yet just as with the crimes and questions of 9/11, everyone in the media seems terrifically busy looking the other way. If you want yet another dramatic metric of US journalistic dysfunction, try Googling "Constitution Restoration Act" in their News category and see what you get. Today, three weeks after the bill was filed, I find a grand total of three throwaway mentions in Alabama's Shelby County Reporter, the Decatur Daily, and the Massachusetts Daily Collegian. ("Terry Schiavo" in contrast will net you over a thousand news hits, and "Michael Jackson" just passed 36,000 with a bullet.)

    If the Alabama paper interest seems a little odd or sponsor Shelby's name a bit familiar, you should recall that this old boy AL senator was high among those same wonderful folks who kicked off the 9/11 cover-up. As his Senate bio proudly relates:

    "From 1995 to 2003, Senator Shelby served on the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence. In this capacity, he and the other committee members provided oversight of the intelligence community, and following the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, Senator Shelby served diligently to investigate the intelligence failures that led to those attacks." [Emphasis demanded again.]

    Got that? First he "oversees" intelligence for six years before 9/11, then "diligently investigates" its bizarre "failures" for two years more, and finally finds--in a no-fault judgment--it was all due to "deep institutional defects" and "systemic miscommunication" that he'd apparently never noticed or heard about before. Having so brilliantly defended the country before 9/11 and the official story since, some seem to find it comforting that he's now busy defending our court-harassed Constitution with a legally bulletproofed God. Some, alas, do not -- feel comforted, that is, either by Shelby's blurry oversight or fundamentalist agenda, not to mention the Orwellian performance of our autistic corporate press.

    In the meantime, however, before the CRA takes force and reduces legal education to a Bible study course, what say we undertake a little Constitutional defense of our own? To get up to speed on the current Christian right agenda, Moyers' "Welcome to Doomsday", Katherine Yurica's "The Despoiling of America" and John "The 9/11 Truth Candidate" Buchanan's "Fixing America" are excellent places to start.

    None of these analyses offer a silver bullet or paint a pretty picture, but as students of 9/11 now know, spreading the courage to face the truth is really the only hope we've got.

    W. David Kubiak is a Project Censored award-winning journalist and executive director of 911truth.org. He can be reached at david(at)911truth.org. (He is indebted to John Buchanan for the latest heads-up on this story and the Shelby office call.)
    The unnecessary felling of a tree, perhaps the growth of centuries, seems to me a crime little short of murder." ~ Thomas Jefferson

    #2
    Re: I was hoping this was some April fools joke, but the date said April 3rd

    If this ever happened, I'll be laughing at all of you from Canada.

    Comment


      #3
      Re: I was hoping this was some April fools joke, but the date said April 3rd

      will never happen. the country would be engulfed in flames the day it passed and our "leaders" know that. there is too much religious diversity here for them all to bow down and suddenly allow themselves to be ruled by one.

      mark my words, this will NEVER happen.



      Comment


        #4
        Re: I was hoping this was some April fools joke, but the date said April 3rd

        And for some reason, some person keeps giving me negative rep when I post articles like this.


        I think it's highly unlikely it will pass, but the fact that there really ARE people in our government that want to do things like such is frighteningly telling. And who knows. People said crude oil prices would never hit $50 a barrel, that we'd be out of Iraq in a month, and that the Homeland Security Act would never pass for the same exact same reasons Valk mentioned.
        The unnecessary felling of a tree, perhaps the growth of centuries, seems to me a crime little short of murder." ~ Thomas Jefferson

        Comment


          #5
          Re: I was hoping this was some April fools joke, but the date said April 3rd

          I'm confused. Are they going to try to force the Christian religion on everyone in the US or something? That's just wrong. This, coming from a Christian, too.
          "What if like...there was an exact copy of you somewhere, except they're the opposite gender, like you guys could literally have a freaky friday moment and nothing would change. Imagine the best friendship that could be found there."

          Comment


            #6
            Re: I was hoping this was some April fools joke, but the date said April 3rd

            The day this happens is the day I join a revolution, a revolution that will most likely consist of 60% of Americans.

            Comment


              #7
              Re: I was hoping this was some April fools joke, but the date said April 3rd

              OK, tomorrow, after my errands are done, I'm emailing my @#$%in' Congresspeople about this.

              As that's really the ONLY thing I can do as a citizen against this OBVIOUSLY XTIAN RIGHT WINGER bill.

              "GOD KNOWS ALL. IF YE DISAGREE, WE'LL KILL YE."

              PEOPLE LET'S JUST ABOLISH MONEY AND GET THESE BUSINESS AND RELIGIOUS-VOTE-GRABBERS OUT OF @#$%ING POWER ALREADY.

              So, uh, yeah.
              THIS SONG IS NOISE AND STOP!!

              NOOOOISE!! *drums*

              STOP!!

              F@#$ OFF!!!

              Eye from Destroy 2, Noise and Stop

              Comment


                #8
                Re: I was hoping this was some April fools joke, but the date said April 3rd

                Yup. Capitalism has failed. It's created a bunch of elitist aristocrats who want to run everything themselves.

                No wonder they though Communism was so evil. It prevented people from becoming Republicans.

                Comment


                  #9
                  Re: I was hoping this was some April fools joke, but the date said April 3rd

                  I'm no good with law. Is this saying that the Supreme Court has no power over any government institutes or officials because they are Gods people?

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Re: I was hoping this was some April fools joke, but the date said April 3rd

                    No, it's saying the Supreme court and any other government court can not keep people in the government from doing things if they believe and can 'prove' that it's God's will.


                    So if God wants us to go nuke China, and Bush can find 'evidence' to support this, the Supreme court can't intervene.


                    I think that's what it means.
                    ...and that's why.

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Re: I was hoping this was some April fools joke, but the date said April 3rd

                      But we are founded on the name of god. It is the basis of the laws, and the way everything was went about.

                      Whether or not they believed it, the founders did not go around founding this country on scientific imperialism for economic structure or moral code. They based it on puritanical christianity.

                      A tactic to divert money to society building, corporations, etc instead of science and technology by stifling efforts of the left.
                      Last edited by Mistafopa; 04-06-2005, 08:21 PM.

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Re: I was hoping this was some April fools joke, but the date said April 3rd

                        I've heard that whole "founded on" thing a ton of times. Just because we were founded on something, it doesn't make it right. I think it's time we moved on from certain things in history and started to evolve.
                        sssSSSpppPPPoooOOOoooOOOmmmMMM!!!

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Re: I was hoping this was some April fools joke, but the date said April 3rd

                          Let's go kill God!

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Re: I was hoping this was some April fools joke, but the date said April 3rd

                            Just because we were founded on something, it doesn't make it right.
                            Doesn't make it wrong either.
                            "What if like...there was an exact copy of you somewhere, except they're the opposite gender, like you guys could literally have a freaky friday moment and nothing would change. Imagine the best friendship that could be found there."

                            Comment

                            Working...
                            X