normally I enjoy saying I told you so.
Surprise, surprise. As in, if you're surprised, you simply haven't been paying attention.
The author of this article got one thing very wrong, though: he says "We are only now getting a full vision of Ashcroft's America." Sorry, Mr Turley, but this is precisely the sort of thing I excpected from Ashcroft, right from when his name was merely being bandied about as "under consideration" for the Bush regime Cabinet.
(At no time will you see me refer to a Bush presidency or administration, unless I'm referring to 1988-93; a moment's reflection should make the reason for this obvious.)
This is the sort of thing that the men currently running the United States have been wanting to do from the beginning, and the only thing that's held them back has been the necessity for creating a pretence of a political climate that excuses, nay, calls for it. This is why I shivered at Dubya's introduction of "Homeland Security." This is what's been at the root of every international policy decision the Bush regime has made -- how quickly we forget the middle-school-bully strategy of the spy plane incident with China, in these post-9/11 times.
I'm not surprised. I wish I was surprised. I wish I was still in Europe. I wish I had a convenient Stupid American to kick.
I wish I had no cause, right now, to say "I told you so" to people who said Dubya wasn't substantially worse than John McCain or Al Gore, or who supported him outright.
I wish the phrase "Homeland Security" didn't evoke echoes of Vaderland every time I came across it, or that the parallels were merely as incidental as the concidences shared by the Lincoln and Kennedy assassinations.
I wish this was a bad dream I could wake from.
Thanks to
niqaeli for the link.
This LJ now returns to its regularly scheduled slashly fannishness, already in progress.
The author of this article got one thing very wrong, though: he says "We are only now getting a full vision of Ashcroft's America." Sorry, Mr Turley, but this is precisely the sort of thing I excpected from Ashcroft, right from when his name was merely being bandied about as "under consideration" for the Bush regime Cabinet.
(At no time will you see me refer to a Bush presidency or administration, unless I'm referring to 1988-93; a moment's reflection should make the reason for this obvious.)
This is the sort of thing that the men currently running the United States have been wanting to do from the beginning, and the only thing that's held them back has been the necessity for creating a pretence of a political climate that excuses, nay, calls for it. This is why I shivered at Dubya's introduction of "Homeland Security." This is what's been at the root of every international policy decision the Bush regime has made -- how quickly we forget the middle-school-bully strategy of the spy plane incident with China, in these post-9/11 times.
I'm not surprised. I wish I was surprised. I wish I was still in Europe. I wish I had a convenient Stupid American to kick.
I wish I had no cause, right now, to say "I told you so" to people who said Dubya wasn't substantially worse than John McCain or Al Gore, or who supported him outright.
I wish the phrase "Homeland Security" didn't evoke echoes of Vaderland every time I came across it, or that the parallels were merely as incidental as the concidences shared by the Lincoln and Kennedy assassinations.
I wish this was a bad dream I could wake from.
Thanks to
This LJ now returns to its regularly scheduled slashly fannishness, already in progress.
*shudder*
The fact that this is even a question... *shakes head* And all this in the name of Homeland Security. Yeah. This is me, sleeping much better at night. Because there's nothing quite as reassuring as arbitrary law and punishment. Feh.
The proposed camp plan should trigger immediate congressional hearings and reconsideration of Ashcroft's fitness for this important office.
And begs the question of how the fuck was this guy deemed fit for his office in the first place.
Very scary, but yeah, you're right, not unexpected.
Re: *shudder*
No, it isn't a question. It's always been understood that the government isn't supposed to be able to do such things; that's pretty much the point of the Bill of Rights. Apparently Americans are past due for a reminder that, principles aside, there's nothing actually stopping their government and its agents from doing whatever they damn well please.