The day the House Speaker was sworn in, Louis P. Sheldon and his
Traditional Values Coalition were sounding the alarm with their usual
hyperventilating rhetoric and same old scare tactics:
The New Congress: Analysis From Traditional Values Coalition
With far-left Democrats in control of the U.S. House and Senate, we
can expect them to introduce pro-homosexual bills, propose tax
increases, attempt to gut national intelligence, create more federal
bureaucracies and block judicial conservatives nominated to the federal
courts. The President’s veto pen will be our last line of defense. …
Sheldon has a
seething hatred of gay people, so it’s not surprising that equality legislation was the first concern in this tirade. For “
Lucky Louie†and his TVC, anything that seeks to assure civil equality for all Americans is “pro-homosexual.â€
As for blocking judicial nominees, perhaps Sheldon can explain why he
and the TVC had no criticism for Sen. Sam Brownback, the new “Golden
Boy†of the Christian Right.
Brownback was in the news late last year for holding up the
confirmation of Michigan state judge Janet Neff to a federal district
court because, in 2002, she attended a lesbian commitment ceremony in
Massachusetts. A year or so later, that state’s Supreme Court declared
same-sex couples could not be barred from the civil institution called
“marriage.â€
As the
New York Times reported,
Judge Neff, a Michigan state court judge, attended the commitment
ceremony of the daughter of a family who had lived next door to her for
26 years. She said that attending and delivering a homily was like
joining in an important event in the life of one of her own daughters.
Mr. Brownback, one of the most conservative senators, considered it to
be a disqualifier for the bench. Later, he made an equally
objectionable offer: he would allow a vote on Judge Neff if she agreed
to recuse herself from cases involving same-sex unions. The Senate does
not get to tell federal judges what areas of law they may rule on.
Brownback eventually backed off and promised to allow a vote of Judge Neff’s appointment. The
New York Times editorial made the critical assessment:
Senator Brownback now seems to be calculating that even in the
Republican Party, the sort of extreme bigotry he has shown toward gay
people would not be a selling point. At a time when Vice President Dick
Cheney’s lesbian daughter is pregnant and President Bush has declared
himself “
happy for her,†Mr. Brownback’s hostility puts him far out on the political fringe.
Mr. Brownback says that although he will allow Judge Neff’s nomination
to come to a vote, he is still likely to vote against her. If he does,
he should be asked to explain his vote if he hits the presidential
campaign trail. Whether someone has attended a same-sex commitment
ceremony is not a worthy litmus test to impose on someone seeking an
important office. Whether someone holds hateful views toward gay people
certainly is. [link added]
Not an organization that has ever let its own hypocrisy get in the way
of a good tirade, the Traditional Values Coalition’s message continued
with
On Thursday afternoon, after being elected Speaker of the House, Pelosi
participated in a number of photo ops with numerous Democrat Members of
Congress. Included were Tammy Baldwin, a homosexual activist from
Wisconsin with her domestic partner looking on and newly-elected Rep.
Keith Ellison, the first Muslim elected to Congress. Ellison took the oath of office on the Koran, instead of on the Bible. …
A “homosexual activist†winning election in Wisconsin? Come on, Lou.
Maybe she was just the better candidate. In the “mind†of Sheldon and
the TVC, a gay person is unfit for everything: unbridled bigotry and
hate hiding behind religion.
Note how Rep. Baldwin is juxtaposed with Rep. Ellison in the TVC
missive. If, as they claim, Sheldon and his organization truly believe
in religious freedom, shouldn’t they be applauding Mr. Ellison’s being
sworn in on the Koran?
Moreover, why is the Bible – or any religious text – used to swear in
officials of a secular, civil government that’s based on a Constitution
the First Amendment of which begins “Congress shall make no law
respecting an establishment of religion� Shouldn’t a copy of the
Constitution – not a religious text – be used to swear in public
officials?
TVC played all its hate cards at once when it came to the Senate:
Nevada Senator Harry Reid is the new Senate Majority Leader and is a
hard-core liberal. Reid is expected to push a pro-homosexual,
pro-abortion agenda, and Chairman of Senate Committees promise to hold
a series of hearings to investigate various aspects of the Bush
Administration – including the war on Islamic terrorism. …
The opening (and closing) of the TVC article appealed to George W. Bush
to use his veto pen freely and often. That figures. Connivers and
schemers appealing to the Conniver-and-Schemer-in Chief. Perhaps Sen.
Reid should begin his investigations with Bush’s
latest attempt to circumvent civil law and Constitutional protections:
“A signing statement attached to postal legislation by President Bush
last month may have opened the way for the government to open mail
without a warrant.â€
Bush’s signing statement read:
The executive branch shall construe subsection 404(c) of title 39, as
enacted by subsection 1010(e) of the act, which provides for opening of
an item of a class of mail otherwise sealed against inspection, in a
manner consistent, to the maximum extent permissible, with the need to
conduct searches in exigent circumstances, such as to protect human
life and safety against hazardous materials, and the need for physical
searches specifically authorized by law for foreign intelligence
collection.
“In exigent circumstances.†An ominous phrase to be sure given the Bush
administration’s previous “exigent circumstancesâ€: the fictitious
weapons of mass destruction used to justify invading Iraq.
According to the American Bar Association, Bush has issued at least 750 signing statements during his presidency,
more than all other presidents combined.
Signing statements are generally used to instruct government agencies
on how to carry out the law. But Bush’s often reserve the right to
revise, interpret or disregard laws as his administration sees fit.
Signing statements are the perfect vehicle for the
Conniver-and-Schemer-in-Chief, since Congress has no real recourse.
Whimsical rule by a loose cannon president totally out of touch with reality.
Sen. Charles E. Schumer got it right in relation to “
The Decider’sâ€
postal signing statement and his detachment from political realities
and common sense: “This last-minute, irregular and unauthorized
reinterpretation of a duly passed law is the exact type of maneuver
that voters so resoundingly rejected in November.â€
The New York Times echoed those sentiments in a January 7, 2007
editorial:
Observing President Bush in action lately, we have to wonder if he
actually watched the election returns in November, or if he was just
rerunning the 2002 vote on his TiVo.
That year, the White House used the fear of terrorism to scare American
voters into cementing the Republican domination of Congress. Mr. Bush
and Vice President Dick Cheney then embarked on an expansion of
presidential power chilling both in its sweep and in the damage it did
to the constitutional system of checks and balances.
In 2006, the voters sent Mr. Bush a powerful message that it was time
to rein in his imperial ambitions. But we have yet to see any sign that
Mr. Bush understands that – or even realizes that the Democrats are now
in control of the Congress. Indeed, he seems to have interpreted his
party’s drubbing as a mandate to keep pursuing his fantasy of victory
in Iraq and to press ahead undaunted with his assault on civil
liberties and the judicial system.
The postal signing statement is just the latest indication that as
megalomaniac Bush gets pushed further and further into the closet of his own delusions his
reactions will be dictatorial,
to say the least. As Ann Beeson of the ACLU noted, “The signing
statement raises serious questions whether he is authorizing opening of
mail contrary to the Constitution and to laws enacted by Congress. …
What is the purpose of the signing statement if it isn’t that?â€
What else indeed?
Sen. Schumer made another astute observation: “Every American wants
foolproof protection against terrorism. But history has shown it can
and should be done within the confines of the Constitution.â€
But what’s the Constitution to George W. Bush?
“I don’t give a goddamn,†Bush retorted. “I’m the President and the Commander-in-Chief. Do it my way.â€
“Mr. President,†one aide in the meeting said. “There is a valid case
that the provisions in this law undermine the Constitution.â€
“Stop throwing the Constitution in my face,†Bush screamed back. “It’s just a goddamned piece of paper!â€