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May 19th Speeches
Sgt.
Joe Crisalli World
War II Veteran
Ronnie Dugger
Alliance for Democracy
Michael
D. Rectenwald
Citizens for Legitimate
Government
Louis
Posner
Voter March
The
New American Democracy
By Ronnie Dugger
It is an honor to be among you again.
On December 9th and 12th last, as
the second millennium was easing to an end, our 212-year-old American Republic was stolen from
us.
After the secret four-month constitutional convention in
Philadelphia, a matron of the city asked Benjamin Franklin what
they had
produced. "A Republic, if you can keep it,"
Franklin said.
Well, we haven't kept it--we've
lost it.
George W. Bush, his lawyers led by the crafty James Baker III,
Bush's
operatives in Florida led by his brother Jeb the Governor and
Secretary of
State Harris, and five members of the Supreme Court, inventing a
new
constitutional right for the occasion, usurped from the people
the right to
choose the President of the United States. The judges
overthrew the
government by selecting the President themselves, 5 to 4, rather
than letting
events take their constitutional course. When
Governor Bush was sworn in as
President by Chief Justice Rehnquist of the Court that had
stolen it for him
the government itself was seized in a judicial and presidential
coup d'etat. Bush gave James Baker the dog's assignment of seizing the
Presidency in
Florida as if it were a bone. The resulting compound crime
was one clear
line of events, each one pressed for or performed pursuant to a
determined
and relentlessly prosecuted scheme to abort the voters' will in
Florida. Bush was guilty from the outset as an originator and throughout
as the
principal beneficiary, moving on many fronts to stop the vote
recounting in
Florida, refusing to agree to a total manual recount of the
entire state, accepting the Presidency from Rehnquist after the Court had
stopped that
recount, selected him, and thereby stolen the office for him.
As James K.
Galbraith perceived, by obstructing the election of the
President, the Bush
people prevented it, causing democracy to miscarry. Taking
the oath, Bush
knowingly accepted the keys to the White House from the man
giving him the
oath and the four of his fellow judges who had stolen them.
Together they
denied the people of the United States the right to elect our
President, whether it would have been Albert Gore or George W. Bush, for
the four years
2001 to 2005.
Congress and the Presidency had already been delegitimized
across the past 20 years, for most of us, by the triumph over
the common good of
uncontrolled campaign finance corruption and bribery. Now,
in Bush v. Gore,
the Supreme Court delegitimized itself and therefore the court
system arrayed
below it. These are the only three branches that we
have--this is no longer
a respectable government. We have lost our entire
government to a corporate
oligarchy that now governs us without our permission.
Permit me to repeat what I said to you on January 20th.
The only basis
for democratic legitimacy is the consent of the governed.
That was the deal.
The Presidency has been seized. The government has been
seized. The
covenant is broken.
What does it mean, to admit, and to say, that your government is
illegitimate? According to the Oxford English
Dictionary it means the
government is "not in accordance with, or authorized by,
law." What Bush
ravaged when he accepted the stolen Presidency was much more
than our
politics, more even than our self-respect as a democracy--he
made a mockery
of our most fundamental agreement to respect and obey the laws
the government
passes, to cooperate with the government because it's ours.
This is what he
has done to the country that we love, he has undermined the
authority of law
here. That is what we have lost, the very authority of law
for our everyday
lives.
Going about his first 100 days, he cuts funding for
international family
planning groups. He cancels new rules to prevent
repetitive-stress injuries
for millions of new workers. He cancels a tightening of
the standard for
arsenic in drinking water. He abandons his campaign
promise to cut carbon
dioxide emissions from power plants. He reinstates the
federal subsidy for
roads into our trackless forests for corporate logging. He
moves to
weaponize space, under the cover of star wars, so that we can
destroy any
nation's communications from space and thereby dominate all the
nations and
peoples of the world. He puts a man over the Energy
Department who wanted to
abolish it. He refuses to slap price controls on power and
gasoline
profiteers. He shoves through the supine
Republican-and-Democratic Congress
an insane $1.3-trillion-dollar tax cut that further enriches the
already rich
on a ten-year set of assumptions that nobody, nobody at all, can
accurately
make, and which rises in the second decade to a four-trillion
cut which will
destroy Social Security and Medicare. He tries to
"fast-track"--that is, to
deny Congress the right to amend in any way--the
corporations-first trade
agreements, NAFTA, the WTO, the FTAA, that will destroy our
local, state, and
national sovereignty over our own environment, commerce, and
working
conditions. He calls protecting workers and the
environment in these
agreements "protectionism." He and his allies in
Congress have crushed all
talk of election reform because of the obvious fact that it
insults him for
stealing the Presidency. And everything he's doing,
everything, has no color
of law, is illegal, is illegitimate, is done in our names though
not we, but
five tyrannical judges gave him the power that he is so
tyrannically abusing.
If he had not stolen the Presidency we would have to accept it
when he
and the Congress and their corporate paymasters abolish the
estate
tax--abolish the tax that curbs, just a bit, the relentless
tendency of
hereditary wealth to destroy democracy and economic justice--
But he did steal the Presidency, and when and if the Congress
abolishes
the estate tax--or does any of the legions of other things akin
to it that he
and the corporate lobbyists he admires are demanding--why, then,
the hell we
will accept it. That will be just the action of a gaggle
of thugs in our
house at night dressed up as hereditary aristocrats.
How, now, with a straight face, without provoking outcries of
contempt,
can the man in the White House, trying perhaps to deal with some
crisis of
order or rebellion here or abroad, invoke respect for the law
having himself
stolen the Presidency?
He is no President of ours. Our Presidents in this free
country are
only elected, they are never selected, never appointed.
Only we elect our
Presidents and George W. Bush is not one of them.
I see from the signs among you that you know this next:
Having seized
the awesome power of the Presidency to which he is not entitled,
he uses that
power only as a tyrant. He feigns law-abidingness as did
the tyrant
Peisistratus in sixth-century B.C. Athens, who won over the
lawgiver Solon by
"shows of obedience" to Solon's laws except, of
course, to the one against
tyranny. Although the President of the United States has
absolute power only
in some momentous areas, such as control of our foreign policy
and the use of
our military might, including our hydrogen bombs, Bush, having
seized the
office, fairly well fits the Oxford English Dictionary
definition of a
tyrant, "One who seizes upon the sovereign power in a state
without legal
right; an absolute ruler; a usurper."
Looking back we should, and at least some of us will, label this
four
years of the Bush illegitimacy as the Lawless Years, the Tyranny
in American
history, the Tyrannical Interlude.
We trust that George the Second will not be succeeded by George
the
Third--throwing us right back where we were in 1775--because we
are men and
women and students on fire with controlled anger and we refuse
to consent.
We refuse to cooperate.
We refuse to accept.
We reject the Bush Presidency totally, altogether, in every
particular--we will not forgive the theft it rests on, we will
not forget
that all its acts are "not in accordance with, or
authorized by, law," and we
will work to turn back on these four years and all the
preparatory associated
betrayals of the people's good since the early 1970's and cancel
the damage
to the extent we can.
One idea for something that can be done now to limit that
damage--an
idea from Professor Bruce Ackerman of Yale Law School--is a firm
resolve among the
Senate Democrats to confirm none--none--of Bush's Supreme Court
nominations,
just letting the high court drop low to seven justices, or six,
leaving those
remaining to ruminate on the trust which their institution has
forfeited.
The Senate Democratic leaders shy, of course, from this, as from
any bold
idea, but Professor Ackerman has proposed an appropriate remedy.
The Constitution permits impeachment for high crimes and
misdemeanors.
Seizing the Presidency ranks among the highest crimes ever
committed in the
United States. Bush should be impeached, but it's not
going to happen in
such a Congress as this one.
A milder, but equally effective remedy is available, however,
for the
crime committed by Rehnquist, Scalia, Thomas, Kennedy, and
O'Connor. Scalia
told us all about Article II of the Constitution, that the
people don't have
the right to elect the President, but he failed to tell us about
Article III.
Article III provides that "the judges, both of the Supreme
Court and the
inferior courts, shall hold their offices during good
behavior." The five
judges who stopped the election and chose the President they
preferred should
be removed under this clause in Article III. Resolutions
should be
introduced in Congress to remove them; perhaps we will elect a
President and
Senate who will throw out as many of the five as still dare to
sit up there
in 2005.
Obviously this is a time, these are four years, when we citizens
must
stand forth as citizens. How about some citizens'
indictments? For purposes
of discussion, I propose that we draw up and inscribe our names
en masse, on
the Internet, to a citizens' indictment of George W. Bush,
Richard Cheney,
James Baker III, Katherine Harris, Jeb Bush, William Rehnquist,
Antonin
Scalia, Clarence Thomas, Sandra Day O'Connor, and Anthony
Kennedy for the
high crime of acting together to steal the people's right to
elect the
President.
Democracy without the people controlling the counting of their
own votes
is no democracy. Yet it goes unremarked in American
elections that in most
of the precincts of the country the votecounting is done
invisibly in
computers. Computers are not adding machines, they are
machines that obey
orders. Computer votecounting codes are prepared by
computer programmers in
the pay of the private election-business companies, which
jealously guard the
codes as "trade secrets." Elections
can be stolen by the computer
programmers, for themselves or for their companies, without
leaving a trace.
Democracy itself has been privatized--that is, corporatized--and
our
elections are subject to the tyranny of machines that conceal
the counting of
our votes from us. As votecounting specialist Dr. Rebecca
Mercuri wrote
recently, "a government that is by the machines, of the
machines, and for the
machines can scarcely be called a democracy."
To get our country back into our possession I believe that we
should
count our own votes again with our own hands and eyes in our own
precincts on
election night across the country--we are dumb to trust the
election
corporations' computerized systems, run by often
computer-illiterate local
election officials relying heavily on assistance from the
companies, to count
our votes in secret.
I believe, and challenge you to consider deep in your soul and
in your
body, that we should now go into nonviolent rebellion against
the theft of
our democracy last December in all its forms and
manifestations--
And that the first step in this revolt is to agree that we will
not call
Bush President.
Don't Call Him President.
Although I am fond of the idea of calling him George the Second,
most
people will probably feel better just calling him Governor Bush.
That's OK.
It's civil, and acknowledges he was a governor.
But can we agree never, in any context, written, spoken, or even
in our
thoughts, to call him President Bush unless and until we elect
him? In all
our references to him let's call him, civilly but
noncooperatively, Governor
Bush. Let's write letters challenging reporters and TV for
calling him
President. Let's amiably, but seriously tweak our friends
over a cup of
coffee or at dinner if they call him President.
This is one unmistakable symbolic way we can nod to each other
across
political parties, recognize each other across colors, and join
together
across this beautiful continent as the free Americans who will
not accept an
appointed President of the United States.
Second, how about a Back to Texas Movement? Bush and
Cheney, Back to
Texas. Rove, Armey, and Delay, too-Back to Texas.
We should refuse to acknowledge the authority of any judge whom
Governor
Bush appoints and the Senate confirms. Every federal judge
he appoints is
illegitimate, whether confirmed or not, and can have no lawful
authority to
sit in judgment looking down on us from those high federal
benches. On the
door of any judge Governor Bush gets confirmed should appear the
word,
"Illegitimate." And when we get a President and
a Congress with the courage
to do right by the United States every one of them, including
especially any
of his people who may make it onto the Supreme Court, should be
impeached as
unlawfully appointed by an unlawfully appointed President.
When you steal
our country, "Let bygones be bygones" is out, and out
for life.
Unless the Democrats in Congress stand tough against the
illegitimate
President all of us must demand to know, Why not? One main
reason the
American Republic is in terminal trouble is the fact that most
of the
officeholders of the Democratic Party, up at this level, have
sold their
souls to the major corporations and the very rich. Now our
collective civic
disaster has gone far beyond the tumults of party politics.
This is the
country we love and would die for and millions of our fellow
citizens have.
We must, I believe, ask Al Gore, too, why, when the Supreme
Court announced
that it had stolen the Presidency from him by a 5 to 4 vote, he
said that he
accepted it. This was his moment as a leader to say,
"No--this is our
country--we love it--you cannot have it--I am not the issue
here, the United
States is, and your decision is judicial tyranny." I
believe Gore has to get
right on this if he wants to continue to lead.
When the world's superpower ceases to be democratic it's the
world's
business, too. We should get together into a movement in
order to invite a
small group of distinguished former officials abroad, comparable
in stature
to our former President Jimmy Carter, to form a small
international
commission to investigate the 2000 presidential election--the
outrages
against African-American voters in Florida, the standing of an
election when
the Supreme Court aborts the votecounting, what we Americans are
supposed to
do about the fact that the President of our country was
appointed by five
judges who preferred his election, how we have come to let
private
corporations take over our votecounting and do it secretly,
invisibly, in
computers.
Governor Bush's people become indignant when the United States
gets
thrown off the UN body on human rights--as if his seizing the
most powerful
and the most dangerous office and military in the world leaves
our government
with the same standing we had before that happened, in the eyes
of democratic
civilization. --As if when the people in the rest of the
world, told that
he, himself, has decided that we will violate the ABM ballistic
missiles
treaty and the Kyoto treaty on global warming, should meekly
accept this
world-convulsing tyranny with what Governor Bush calls civility.
We citizens fighting to save our country not only from
injustice,
but now from illegitimate injustice, should demand that the
Senate ratify the treaty
establishing the proposed international criminal court not
despite the fact
that some Americans might get indicted, but because they might.
Finally, it is time, oh, it is time, for us to form now, among
all our
organizations, with all the sad, drifting citizens looking for
hope for our
country--it is time for us to form one national people's
movement,
independent of any political party, the Independent Allies, to
demand and
fight, for example, for--
Public funding of our elections.
Single-payer national health insurance.
The restoration of the corporate taxation system and the
progressivity of the income tax, replacing the Social Security
payroll tax with the increased
revenues.
Limits on the size of corporations, the cancellation of their
alleged
"personhood" and their alleged personal constitutional
rights, a stiff
criminal law taking them completely out of our politics, and the
confirmation
of their original nature as our artificial creations totally
answerable to
and totally subordinate to democracy.
Limits on personal wealth, and a guaranteed annual family
income.
Free education as high as any student can make the grades.
First-home building subsidies and the opening of some public
lands as
trust lands for homesteading to redeem the American dream of a
home for every
family.
Equal rights and equal pay for women.
A living wage by law for every working person.
Repeal of the Taft-Hartley law and criminal prosecution of
corporations
that bedevil union organizers.
That's just for starters.
And it is far past time that such a new national people's
movement
should link up with the citizens' movements abroad that are in
nonviolent rebellion
against the corporatization of human life, to work together
worldwide for
such attainable goals as--
Clean energy, wind and solar, and the as-rapid-as-possible
phasing down
and out of oil, coal, and nuclear power.
For international trade for people and the environment
everywhere, not
just for the rampaging transnational corporations.
And for world citizenship, and an international democracy with a
constitution worthy of the human race.
None of this can we get just because our government has been
stolen.
Some of this we can get fairly soon only if we rebel and
organize and
mobilize, as independent allies for communication, education,
and action, in
coalitions of coalitions, and then in one confederal,
interacting coalition
of independent organizations, all together.
Let's start with a bumper-sticker rebellion.
Don't Call Him President.
Governor Bush/Is Not the President.
The Supreme Court/Is Not Supreme.
Bush and Cheney-Back to Texas!
Much of the work of building the movement is not
high-profile--it's
demonstrating, registering voters, teaching people about instant
runoff
voting and proportional representation, marching and rallying as
we are
today, confronting our representatives, getting out the
vote--it's day-in,
day-out dutifulness.
More and more of us will move gravely into nonviolent civil
disobedience, too, as history requires--direct civil
revolt--risking ourselves, peacefully
putting our bodies where our patriotism is, facing handcuffs,
locked doors,
frozen faces, tear gas, police phalanxes.
The time has probably come to quit going where they go, Seattle,
Washington, Davos, Quebec City, Qatar--and to go where we want
to go to do
what we want to do. To mobilize and to go meet in small
numbers and large,
to act for and plan the society we want and organize to get it.
Whatever we do, let's do it nonviolently. Only
nonviolently.
Let's have a rule among all the people we agree to work with
that we are
against violence against persons and will not enter into
coalition or
cooperate with anyone who reserves the right to engage in any
kind of
violence.
At Seattle, the only people who committed violence against
people were
the police. But at Washington last year, as policemen
charged crowds on
horseback and idly knocked over young people armlocked together
blocking
streets, demonstrators threw rocks and other objects at
police--I saw them do
it. At Quebec City last month, the police gassed the
protesters, and people
from the Alliance saw some in the crowd throw rocks and other
heavy objects
at the police.
Learning from Gandhi and King, if the police attack us we will
not
respond physically--we will not oppose them--we will not touch
them.
Violence against people? No. Violence against the
police? No.
Violence against property? No.
You won't pledge not to be violent? Then you're off on
your own.
Learning since Seattle that the municipal police forces in major
U.S.
cities and in Canada are trying to repeal the freedom of
assembly, we will
assemble when and where we wish in crowds as large as we
wish--always
nonviolently, anti-violently--and we will morally overpower the
marching,
militarized, pepper-gas-firing police by the simple fact that we
are the
peaceable people.
We need the leader for all this. God, we all know, we need
her or him.
We don't have this yet.
So I have a proposal.
Let's bring back Martin Luther King.
Let's join our African-American brothers and sisters in their
just call
for reparations for slavery. Slaves worked to build this
nation. They
helped build this Capitol in front of you. They hoisted
Lady Liberty up to
the top of that dome. For this their pay rate was $5 a
day. The United
States government cut the checks for their work not to them, but
to their
owners.
Let's go with the slaves' descendants and with every other
oppressed
group to renew, to revive, Dr. King's great project, which he
was raising
money for just before he was murdered, to have a vast encampment
for peace
and economic justice in Washington, to end poverty, and stop the
Vietnam war.
It was bad then, people in poverty, blood in the streets, people
dying on TV every night. But it's bad now--we know the
world's great misery is within
our reach to ease--the corporate oligarchy has stolen our
government from
us--and they are blowing up the ABM and Kyoto treaties and
reaching to
control the world from space.
We are not going to just stand quiet for this.
We are, after all, Americans.
Let us declare ourselves, here and now together, the Democracy
and
Justice Movement.
We are Democrats, we are Republicans, we are Greens, we are
independents,
we are progressives, conservatives, populists, moderates,
libertarians,
everyday Americans, we are whites, African-Americans,
Hispanic-Americans,
Asian-Americans, men, women, workers, students, we are straight,
gay, bi, and
God knows what else, and what we are all is free, standing whole
in the same
dignity, self-respect, and power of being persons, just as our
forebears did
when they launched the American Revolution.
We are patriots--we are patriots--we all want to be just, we all
want to
participate in governing our own town and our city and our
country and our
world, and we will not be cooperative and obedient as usurpers
make over the
United States into dominator of the world.
Let's pay more heed to the likes of Scalia, William Buckley, Tom
Delay,
and George Will when they instruct us that the American Republic
is no
democracy and we should be grateful for the chance to serve our
betters.
Through the past two centuries by our many struggles we have
been
realizing the promise of the American Revolution, step by step.
We have
added, to the Republic, with one citizens' uprising and movement
after
another, freedom from slavery (though not yet from penury) for
blacks--the
legal right to form labor unions--an effective revulsion and
rebellion
against an unjust war that we were waging smack dab in the
middle of that
war--the vote and legal equality for blacks and women--equal
treatment for
gays.
But our persecuted labor unions are still ravaged by laws
written
for the corporations that are now exporting our industries and
raging out of control
all over the world, and the disparities of wealth and poverty
among us, and
between us and the rest of the human race, are becoming morally
unbearable.
If Bill Gates stopped to pick up $100 bills all over the street,
he'd
lose money. The assets of the 450 billionaires in
the world are equal to
the assets of half of humanity. Two billion people have no
toilets, and no
schools, but they do have anemia. The sales of the 200
largest corporations
are 18 times the combined annual income of the 1,200,000,000
people, one in
every four of us on earth, who live in absolute poverty on $1,
or less, a day.
Perhaps finally now, taking all this and the theft of the
Presidency
into account, we have to square our shoulders a bit and just let
the old American
Republic go, they've ruptured it, so let's just let it go, and
get about the
work of forming, how we don't yet know, but together, and
sooner, not later,
a new American democracy,--
--wherein we accept each other in
deepest equality,
--where everybody's vote is
counted and every material body of
opinion is represented proportionally in the government,
--where our President is the one
who gets the most votes,
--where the members of the
Supreme Court must stand in a contested
election every eight years,
--where the fairness of democracy
has come to mean, also, a democratic
distribution of the goods and services that everyone has a right
to in order
to have a fair chance to realize his or her best self.
Let's come together here in Washington--next fall?--next
spring?--let's
decide when and how together--and occupy the place, after all
it's ours, and
stop the government. Just stop it. Make the
Capital the epicenter of a
national nonviolent revolt, for full citizenship for the
citizens of the
District and full citizenship for us all. Stop the crimes
against democracy
here in the Capitol, and over there at the White House, and over
there at the
Supreme Court, stop them just by being here, peacefully,
eloquently,
honoring, remembering, and reciting from, Martin Luther King.
An encampment,
speaking out, picnics, singing, dancing, sleeping on the grass!
And, when
we're ready, we'll start things up again as the New American
Democracy--the
American Revolution--Democracy, and Justice--at last more nearly
realized
among us,
And then, we whisper, to each other, and to ourselves,
Yes,
The New American Democracy.
To communicate with Dugger or for
further information about the Alliance
for Democracy, email him at rdugger123@aol.com.
________________________________________________________________
Afternote: In this speech Dugger was expressing his own opinions and was
not
speaking for an organization. He wishes to thank, for
ideas which one way or
another are included in this speech, Marcus Raskin of the
Institute for
Policy Studies in Washington, D.C., Professor Steve Russell of
San Antonio,
TX., Nick Seidita, Northridge, Ca., and colleagues of Dugger's
on the Council
of the Alliance, especially Ted Dooley, St. Paul, Minn.; Nancy
Price, Davis,
Ca.; Sue Wheaton, Tacoma Park, Md.; Stefanie Miller,
Indianapolis, Ind.;
Vikki Savee, Sacramento, Ca.; and Dolly Arond, Northridge, Ca.

Speech
of Lou Posner, founder and chair of www.votermarch.org,
at the Voter
Rights March to Restore Democracy at the West Capitol Steps in
Washington DC
on May 19th at 1:00 pm:
What of ELECTION REFORM? The greatest democracy on earth has the
most
antiquated and UNEQUAL voting machines in the Western world, and
some of the
most unequal and unfair voting practices in the entire world!
How can we
fail to address our duty to preserve the tools that ensure the
principles of
our founding fathers that are the very bedrock of our democracy,
the tools
and principles that make us CITIZENS in this world, citizens of
a great
shining democracy and NOT subjects in a dark tyranny.
What of these? How can we fail to address this matter NOW?
For years, experts have decried the antiquated equipment and
practices, they
and government agencies recommending reform, but our legislation
has not
acted on those recommendations. What are we waiting for that we
ignore these
sacred obligations to the constitution's most fundamental
guarantee?
Today, let us look at "America," where a government is
now disconnected with
its country. Look at what has happened to this so-called
democracy, in our
recent presidential race. The high court stopped a legal hand
recount and
substituted their own votes to replace those of the electorate,
the bedrock
principle of ANY democracy. In other words, they canceled our
democracy.
They declared their winner as THE winner, vacating the votes of
millions
because of an alleged unfairness to only ONE citizen, who was
only ONE
candidate, in a regional state governed with an iron hand by
that one
candidate's brother. As a final insult, the Court told the
people - not to
worry, this is a one-time only deal - it will not be repeated.
One might ask, if the decision is so good and fine, why can it
not be
repeated? Now, the court knows it has created a precedent, yet
it pretends
it will NOT be a precedent, as if this election and hand count
were "sui
generis," when elections and hand counts go on and have
gone on ALL THE TIME
IN THIS COUNTRY IN THE PAST IN ACCORDANCE WITH OUR OWN LAWS!
Indeed, the
hand count is part of the WHOLE and NO LESS than the whole
election. And all
the experts in many states know perfectly well that the hand
recount is the
ONLY way to settle these things, being done routinely in the
very state the
candidate hails from, signed into law by his own hand. Indeed,
this
candidate, under the media radar, demanded and got a hand
recount in another
state in the country, in a brazen example of hypocritical
"privilege," and
"special rights." But the high court chose to ignore
this inconsistency,
this inequality, and by so doing, gave aid and comfort to all
the
irregularities and all the lawbreaking that accompanied this
state's vote.
People who get away with committing crimes with impunity, passed
over by the
highest court in the land, are only further emboldened to repeat
them.
Ah, the beauty of possessing no conscience: Lie and then call
your opponent
a liar. Demand hand recounts where they favor you and then call
your
opponent a criminal for demanding hand recounts where they favor
HIM. And
the final slap, GO AWOL and then accuse your opponent of
despising the
military.
But the Court seems to ORDAIN that it will not happen again,
providing a
balm to the masses, a false sense of security that their
democracy is still
alive, unchanged and unmolested. But it is not, my friends.
Judges may rule,
but they can never ORDAIN. They cannot project their decisions
and their
orders into the future, onto future courts and what they will
do. The Court,
comprised of mere mortals, have wrested from the
"demos" the one power
granted directly to the people in the government scheme known as
democracy.
That is a moral outrage no words can adequately convey.
Oh, but there were such difficulties, some say. It was messy.
Yes, democracy
is messy, which is why laws are created to ensure fairness, laws
this high
Court criminally ignored. It is not a fast buck made in a bubble
economy. It
is, as Winston Churchill said, the worst form of government
except for all
the other forms of government. A real democracy is hard work. It
is patient
work.
It is NOT, as we have seen with our country, the perfect scam.
Where we are
awash in evasions from officials who say, "I can't answer
that, I refer you
to another official," and that official refers back to the
first official,
or another official, or in the most egregious case, reporters
are referred
to an outside, private company, which unilaterally
disenfranchised thousands
of citizens of their right to vote, largely wrongly, it is later
discovered,
but implemented without question in many areas of this one
state. But when
some election supervisors, seeking to uphold their duty to the
Constitution,
asked this company for information on their methodology and
quality control,
they were told it was proprietary, commercial information and
they couldn't
have it.
Think of that, my friends. The constitutional right to vote is
outsourced to
a private company with no legal accountability. The
privatization of a
citizen's right and duty to vote. It should strike fear in all
our hearts at
the ease with which these "officials" dismiss this
breach of government
trust and the social contract, as the state government refers
you to the
company, but the company refers them back to the state, and in
the end all
the accountability that an election is designed to be is lost
forever in a
series of "I refer you to, I refer you to, I refer you to.
. ." The perfect
scam. No democracy, no accountability, no blame. And all
permitted to go
unpunished because of a high court's deliberate running out of
an imaginary
and unnecessary clock, for the sake of "fairness" to
only ONE of the
candidates, and to appoint that favored candidate a leader in a
country
founded upon democratic principles.
WE MUST NEVER let this happen in our country. A statement
throwing down the
gauntlet, pledging that we will NOT let this illegality stand.
We will be
legitimately governed, but never ruled or overruled in this most
important
of rights. I used to fear the enemy, but today I fear my
own corrupt
countrymen and their greed for power at the expense of people
and democracy.
Elections are not merely a substitution of ballots for bullets,
of this
candidate or that. An election in a Republic is the expression
of the will
of it citizens; it is our franchise, our birthright, a viewpoint
that is as
conservative as the Constitution itself. But in our country, it
has been
trampled upon with mob actions by a party and pistol-whipped
into
meaninglessness by a partisan court.
We must NEVER let this happen here. We cannot look away from our
duty, in
constant need of recharging, to preserve the tools that ensure
the
principles of our founding fathers that are the very bedrock of
our
democracy and our republic, the tools and principles that make
us CITIZENS
in this mortal world, citizens of a great shining democracy and
NOT subjects
in a dark tyranny.
SPEECH
OF MICHAEL D. RECTENWALD
Thank
you. And thank you, Louis and the Voter March organization,
for allowing me to speak today on behalf of Citizens for
Legitimate Government.
“Election” 2000, in Historical
Context
I have
been asked why our group is called "Citizens For
Legitimate Government." “Isn't the government already
legitimate?" enquiring minds, most of them Republican,
want to know. The question led me to consider what makes a
government legitimate in the first place. Legitimacy of
government, I reasoned, is judged by the fit between the
existing government and the declared principles of that government. To
understand a nation’s principles, one would turn to its
founding charter, its written laws, and its political history.
If one
does this review, the short answer to the question becomes
quite obvious. The U.S. government has been rendered
illegitimate by its own standards, the standards of electoral
democracy.
The
standard of electoral democracy was eliminated when the vote
counting for the Florida electorate was abandoned, and judges
selected a president. Contrary to the Constitution, Dale
Reynolds writes in his poem, “These Five Against Us All,”
[They]
decided "Republic" meant Republican,
though conflicts of interest they hadn't disclosed
hadn't pre-empted the candidate they chose,
and outside journalists reported it was Bush by a nose.
Bush by 5 to 4, The United States Supreme Court said.
The
standard for electoral democracy was eliminated when state
officials and party operatives broke laws in key posts,
spoiling the real electoral results. Reynolds continues, the
Supreme Court “would not hear the protest of black Americans
stopped outside the polls, / or stricken, curiously, from the
voting rolls.”
The
standard for electoral democracy was violated by the takeover
of government by corporate interests--and we now have the
epitome of that takeover in the white-collar criminal who
resides at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.
In terms
of the letter and the spirit of the law, then, our current
government is illegitimate--its establishment runs contrary to
our nation's constitution, which expresses our dearest
principles of representative, democratic government, and equal
rights.
Against
these principles, we saw government officials, party
operatives, and a federal judiciary, along with their media
mouthpieces, use every means possible to suppress the truth of
the voters' expressed will, and to install their own will in
its stead. The list of these crimes is long, starting with an
illegal purge of tens of thousands of voters, and ending with
the Supreme Court Injustices, and I refer you to legitgov.org
for the complete record.
The
violation of voting rights in the millennial year brings back
the long history of struggle for representation against
oppression and vote suppression. A complete history might
start with suffrage for propertied men in England and the
Americas from the 15th century; continue with a centuries-long
battle for lowered property requirements for adult male
voters; go on to the eventual inclusion of most white working
men by the late 19th century; detail the exclusion of African
Americans from voting until the late 19th century, along with
a series of reversals and victories thereafter, including the
Civil Rights movement; entail the exclusion of women from the
franchise until the early 20th century; and include the
barriers of racial profiling, property ownership, voting
tolls, and literacy requirements lasting well into the 20th
century, especially in the southern states.
The long
battle for voting rights brings us to Selection 2000, when the
United States was driven far afield of its historical
goal--universal adult suffrage. In the year 2000, we were set
back to a fate worse than that of pre-1832 Britain, when,
before the first Reform Bill, only thousands of propertied men
out of millions of British subjects could vote. In 2000, we
were reduced to having three white patriarchs, one token black
male, and one white woman determine the outcome of a
presidential election--by, as Dale Reynolds puts it, a
“majority of one.”
The
millennial election brings back the 1940s in Florida, when the
votes of African Americans were called “little jokers."
Made of tissue paper, these ballots fell apart and were thrown
away by laughing vote-counters; the ballot was a "little
joker" played on the African American "voter."
In election 2000, over 180 thousand little jokers were dealt
in Florida. At least 20,000 voters were purged in advance in a
Jim Crow-like manner, never even making it to little joker
status. Six million Floridian votes were thus rendered little
jokers as well. One hundred million votes thus turned to
little jokers. These were considered by a Supreme Court, whose
Chief Justice laughed scornfully and dismissed as ludicrous
the idea of counting all the little jokers--in Florida, or
anywhere else for that matter! The whole idea of an election
had been an expensive joke played on the country--the vote
wasn't required at all, the Chief Justice scoffed, it was
always already a little joker!
The
Selection and its aftermath is a nightmare of history come
back to haunt us, in new, monstrous proportions. Our little
jokers cast, the punch line of the bad joke was delivered: GW
Bush, that Big Joker's face and his policies mock our
expressed will. Bush's policies are an extension of the
antidemocratic grab for power by which he seized office. The
litany of these policies is familiar by now, so I will not
repeat it. But a few adjectives will do: anti-women,
anti-labor, anti-worker safety, anti-affirmative action,
anti-public-health, anti-public education,
anti-separation-of-Church-and-State, anti-consumer,
anti-child, anti-environment, anti-end-of-the-Cold-War,
anti-human, anti-other-species; Polices that benefit only one
species--that species of Big Business Animal that wrecks the
habitats of other species, like Exxon-Mobil, who junks
Global-warming science while raising the Global temperature.
Bush raids the national treasury and the national forests for
one group only: Big Business Owners. He throws a few crumbs to
the reactionary religious ideologues that delivered their
lambs for the slaughter.
In light
of this fraudulent and dangerous outcome, we say
"Nevermore." Nevermore can our votes be little
jokers. Nevermore can we be purged from the voting
rolls--under the guise of justice, under the pretense of
“equal protection,” to “protect the interests” of the
heir apparent!
At this
point, what do we do? We say “Nevermore.” But when
complicity is tantamount to treason, and the consequences are
literally world threatening, true patriots must say, too,
“NOT NOW, NOT EVER!” We must explore every avenue for
exposing and prosecuting the election theft, and for
countering the Bush Occupation. We must continue to protest
Bush's every appearance. We must oppose his every executive
act with activism. We must boycott Bush's contributors,
starting with Exxon-Mobil, the biggest polluter in Texas, the
second biggest energy industry GOP contributor, and the force
driving US policy against the Kyoto Treaty. We must register
voters, starting with our neighbors. We must vote into
Congress representatives and senators expressly opposed to the
Bush coup and Occupation. (This expressed opposition should be
a litmus test for their election). We must call for
investigations! We must work for impeachment! We must turn
these jokers into wildcards to trump the kings. We must work
to bring democracy to this stacked deck. We must work to bring
down this precarious house of cards called the Bush
presidency. We must undo the coup! That is what we must do.
Join us
at legitgov.org or any of the other activist groups you find
here -- join all Citizens for Legitimate Government, in our
long haul quest to undo the coup, and redo democracy.
We must
undo the coup!!
Thank
you!!!
Michael
Rectenwald, CLG

WORLD
WAR II VET FIGHTING FOR VOTER RIGHTS
By Sergeant Joe Crisalli
"In World War
II, to preserve our freedom, we had to hold back
fascism from our shores. We had to crush
tyranny at
the source in Germany and Italy. In the Pacific,
we had to fight to guarantee that there would
never be another Pearl Harbor attack. Now,
there is a new attack of tyranny and fascism –
from within. And it is time to fight again,
a fight against the right-wing Republicans who
attacked our freedom in their stifling of a fair
election in Florida.
I am a veteran of World War II and proud to have
served my country, and now I am part of a voters
rights group in order to serve my country once
again by insuring that our
freedoms are not infringed.
A government ‘of, by and for the people’ is
what America is all about. We are now concerned
with the ‘by the people.’ The right to vote
and be counted is the way the people’s voice is
heard. The disenfranchisement of thousands
of voters and the debacle in Florida proves that
we must be vigilant. The Battle for Freedom
for a government BY the people must continue with
the Voters March."
World War II
veterans like Joe Crisalli lead the Voter
Rights March in Washington DC on May 19th, Armed
Forces Day, to restore the democracy they fought
and died for.
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