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De vervolging van George W. Bush voor Moord

Zaterdag, 24 Mei, 2008

bush-murder.jpgDoor Vincent Bugliosi | Met betrekking tot een standpunt dat ik over de misdaden van George Bush heb ingenomen, wil ik in het begin verklaren dat mijn motivatie niet politiek is. Hoewel ik een oude Democraat (hoofdzakelijk omdat, tenzij er wat zeer dwingende reden is anders te zijn, ik altijd voor de „kleine kerel“) ben ben geweest, is mijn politieke richtlijn niet stijf. Bijvoorbeeld, steunde ik John McCain's looppas voor het voorzitterschap in 2000. Meer aan het punt, of ik een definitieve optelling aan de jury geef of één van mijn ware misdaadboeken schrijf, heeft geloofwaardigheid altijd alles aan me betekend. Daarom zijn mijn enige meester en mijn enige maitresse de feiten en de objectiviteit. Ik heb geen anderen. Vandaar dat kan ik u, de lezer, een 100 percentenwaarborg dat geven als een Democratische voorzitter welk Bush, ik had gedaan het zelfde, identieke stuk zou schrijven u op het punt staat te lezen. Misschien is het meest verbazende ding aan me over de overtuiging van velen dat George Bush aan het Amerikaanse publiek in de aanvang van zijn oorlog met Irak loog dat de liberale kroniekschrijvers die hem van slechts het doen van dit hebben beschuldigd dit punt, maken en dan op de volgende paragraaf in hun kolommen gaan. Slechts zeer doet niet vaak een kroniekschrijver toevoegen dat wegens het Bush zou moeten worden beschuldigd. Als de lasten waar zijn, natuurlijk zou Bush beschuldigd te zijn, moeten worden veroordeeld en, uit bureau worden verwijderd. Dat is bijna te duidelijk om te verklaren. Maar hij verdient veel meer dan beschuldiging. Ik beteken, in Amerika, beschuldigen wij blijkbaar voorzitters voor het hebben van consensueel geslacht buiten huwelijk en het proberen om het omhoog te behandelen. Als wij voorzitters voor dat beschuldigen, dan als de voorzitter het land aan oorlog op een leugen neemt waar duizenden Amerikaanse militairen afschuwelijke, hevige sterfgevallen sterven en meer dan 100.000 onschuldige Iraakse burgers, met inbegrip van vrouwen en kinderen, zelfs worden de babys gedood, moet de straf duidelijk zijn veel, strenger. Dat is enkel gezond verstand. If Bush were impeached, convicted in the Senate, and removed from office, he’d still be a free man, still be able to wake up in the morning with his cup of coffee and freshly squeezed orange juice and read the morning paper, still travel widely and lead a life of privilege, still belong to his country club and get standing ovations whenever he chose to speak to the Republican faithful. This, for being responsible for over 100,000 horrible deaths?* For anyone interested in true justice, impeachment alone would be a joke for what Bush did.

Let’s look at the way some of the leading liberal lights (and, of course, the rest of the entire nation with the exception of those few recommending impeachment) have treated the issue of punishment for Bush’s cardinal sins. New York Times columnist Paul Krugman wrote about “the false selling of the Iraq War. We were railroaded into an unnecessary war.” Fine, I agree. Now what? Krugman just goes on to the next paragraph. But if Bush falsely railroaded the nation into a war where over 100,000 people died, including 4,000 American soldiers, how can you go on to the next paragraph as if you had been writing that Bush spent the weekend at Camp David with his wife? For doing what Krugman believes Bush did, doesn’t Bush have to be punished commensurately in some way? Are there no consequences for committing a crime of colossal proportions?

Al Franken, on the “David Letterman” show, said, “Bush lied to us to take us to war” and quickly went on to another subject, as if he was saying “Bush lied to us in his budget.”

Sen. Edward Kennedy, condemning Bush, said that “Bush’s distortions misled Congress in its war vote” and “No president of the United States should employ distortion of truth to take the nation to war.” But, Senator Kennedy, if a president does this, as you believe Bush did, then what? Remember, Clinton was impeached for allegedly trying to cover up a consensual sexual affair. What do you recommend for Bush for being responsible for more than 100,000 deaths? Nothing? He shouldn’t be held accountable for his actions? If one were to listen to you talk, that is the only conclusion one could come to. But why, Senator Kennedy, do you, like everyone else, want to give Bush this complete free ride?

The New York Times, in a June 17, 2004, editorial, said that in selling this nation on the war in Iraq, “the Bush administration convinced a substantial majority of Americans before the war that Saddam Hussein was somehow linked to 9/11 … inexcusably selling the false Iraq-Al Qaeda claim to Americans.” But gentlemen, if this is so, then what? The New York Times didn’t say, just going on, like everyone else, to the next paragraph, talking about something else.

In a Nov. 15, 2005, editorial, the New York Times said that “the president and his top advisers … did not allow the American people, or even Congress, to have the information necessary to make reasoned judgments of their own. It’s obvious that the Bush administration misled Americans about Mr. Hussein’s weapons and his terrorist connections.” But if it’s “obvious that the Bush administration misled Americans” in taking them to a war that tens of thousands of people have paid for with their lives, now what? No punishment? If not, under what theory? Again, you’re just going to go on to the next paragraph?

I’m not going to go on to the next unrelated paragraph.

In early December of 2005, a New York Times-CBS nationwide poll showed that the majority of Americans believed Bush “intentionally misled” the nation to promote a war in Iraq. A Dec. 11, 2005, article in the Los Angeles Times, after citing this national poll, went on to say that because so many Americans believed this, it might be difficult for Bush to get the continuing support of Americans for the war. In other words, the fact that most Americans believed Bush had deliberately misled them into war was of no consequence in and of itself. Its only consequence was that it might hurt his efforts to get support for the war thereafter. So the article was reporting on the effect of the poll findings as if it was reporting on the popularity, or lack thereof, of Bush’s position on global warming or immigration. Didn’t the author of the article know that Bush taking the nation to war on a lie (if such be the case) is the equivalent of saying he is responsible for well over 100,000 deaths? One would never know this by reading the article.

If Bush, in fact, intentionally misled this nation into war, what is the proper punishment for him? Since many Americans routinely want criminal defendants to be executed for murdering only one person, if we weren’t speaking of the president of the United States as the defendant here, to discuss anything less than the death penalty for someone responsible for over 100,000 deaths would on its face seem ludicrous.** But we are dealing with the president of the United States here.

On the other hand, the intensity of rage against Bush in America has been such (it never came remotely this close with Clinton because, at bottom, there was nothing of any real substance to have any serious rage against him for) that if I heard it once I heard it 10 times that “someone should put a bullet in his head.” That, fortunately, is just loose talk, and even more fortunately not the way we do things in America. In any event, if an American jury were to find Bush guilty of first-degree murder, it would be up to them to decide what the appropriate punishment should be, one of their options being the imposition of the death penalty.

Although I have never heard before what I am suggesting — that Bush be prosecuted for murder in an American courtroom — many have argued that “Bush should be prosecuted for war crimes” (mostly for the torture of prisoners at Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo) at the International Criminal Court in The Hague, Netherlands. But for all intents and purposes this cannot be done.

*Even assuming, at this point, that Bush is criminally responsible for the deaths of over 100,000 people in the Iraq war, under federal law he could only be prosecuted for the deaths of the 4,000 American soldiers killed in the war. No American court would have jurisdiction to prosecute him for the one hundred and some thousand Iraqi deaths since these victims not only were not Americans, but they were killed in a foreign nation, Iraq. Despite their nationality, if they had been killed here in the States, there would of course be jurisdiction.

**Indeed, Bush himself, ironically, would be the last person who would quarrel with the proposition that being guilty of mass murder (even one murder, by his lights) calls for the death penalty as opposed to life imprisonment. As governor of Texas, Bush had the highest execution rate of any governor in American history: He was a very strong proponent of the death penalty who even laughingly mocked a condemned young woman who begged him to spare her life (”Please don’t kill me,” Bush mimicked her in a magazine interview with journalist Tucker Carlson), and even refused to commute the sentence of death down to life imprisonment for a young man who was mentally retarded (although as president he set aside the entire prison sentence of his friend Lewis “Scooter” Libby), and had a broad smile on his face when he announced in his second presidential debate with Al Gore that his state, Texas, was about to execute three convicted murderers.

In Bush’s two terms as Texas governor, he signed death warrants for an incredible 152 out of 153 executions against convicted murderers, the majority of whom killed one person. The only death sentence Bush commuted was for one of the many murders that mass murderer Henry Lucas had been convicted of. Bush was informed that Lucas had falsely confessed to this particular murder and was innocent, his conviction being improper. So in 152 out of 152 cases, Bush refused to show mercy even once, finding that not one of the 152 convicted killers should receive life imprisonment instead of the death penalty. Bush’s perfect 100 percent execution rate is highly uncommon even for the most conservative law-and-order governors.

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Have Your Say: The Prosecution of George W. Bush for Murder
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One Response to “The Prosecution of George W. Bush for Murder”

  1. Daphne
    Posted: May 25th, 2008 at 10:43 pm | Link to this

    We must hold the fire to the feet of congress, especially
    the speaker Pelosi, Harry Reid, John Conyers and our
    personal representatives. They must not continue their
    madness carte blanche. This is Aldous Huxley/George Orwell nightmare, “live and in living color”. The neocons have
    successful dumbed down enough of us to keep their strategy
    going. We must keep writing and talking, educating friends,
    family and neighbors so that WE MAY BE ABLE TO STOP THE
    MADNESS BEFORE IT IS TOO LATE. Not only our reputation
    and the lives of countless young American men and women,
    but also the lives of innocent Iraqi and Iranian men,
    women and chldren are also at stake every moment that we
    delay.

    Reply

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