Why Should Sleeping Dogs Lie?
Q: "What's the difference between Richard Nixon and Bill
Clinton?"
A: "Tip O'Neill, Sam Ervin, and Maximum John
Sirica."
Political fronts over the past two weeks have
been just hellish. Within the past few days, there's all the various
mens rea among the Clintooniac press coming to terms with fleeting
shadows of a criminal government amid the din of household goods
shipping. Going back a bit more there's the scattershot criminal
pardons, comprehending one that only very few are qualified to analyze
with principles. (That one goes like this: just because Rich was an
"economic criminal" doesn't mean it wasn't a rotten thing for Maximum
Bill to spring him.)
I was working my ass off in Houston and
had just arrived in my hotel room after a fifteen hour day when CNN
Headline news -- the only thing available at the hour -- spit out the
fact of the criminal plea bargain, and there I stood too weak to defend
myself from it. A savage underhanded blow to the least facades of
justice: nobody's even concerned to pretend anymore. I hadn't gotten the
story in real time so I missed all the sweet palliatives in original
song, but the outlines were broad enough. "It's for the best."
The Thing was loose. It hadn't even wriggled out of a cage the way The
Dark One had just before his last helicopter ride: Maximum Bill drove
the country like his own personal pickup truck chasing hill, dale and
border on a midnight dope run for eight years, and then walked out the
front door with a receipt in his pocket.
What's going to happen
when things have come to that? Aside, that is, from George W. Bush.
There is a point to "justice". Justice is a value for which human
beings act in order to correct something inimical to human life. It was
always a just thing to pursue the end of The Clinton Administration,
throughout all of it from first day to last. That was a just fight on
the premises that it is a good thing for human beings to live freely as
they choose, that nobody ever did that better than Americans, and that
this ghastly hillbilly thug and his monstrous wife were always a direct
face-front fang at the throats of the first two of these premises.
Long before they boarded the wretched "ship of state", they were
nobodies to let anywhere near it. Sorry as things were for the matter of
American liberty when their act rolled into town at D.C., these people
were natural trouble on the hoof. Who here didn't laugh out loud when
they boosted Les Aspin to the McNamara chair of international
relations?
A wise man -- my father, in this case, and about the
Colossus of Yorba Linda -- always told me, "If you think this president
is bad, wait'll you see the next one." The man was never wrong for
thirty years. Simply burned up from all the dragging nonsense of the
Bush government laying on the best years of my life when I was born a
free American, I didn't really get it, then, when Terror Bill came
around. I've never voted, but I never voted less than in 1992, because I
was far, far, too busy for it.
The way he played homosexuals in
the military; wotta laff that was. A couple of his puppets didn't make
it to cabinet or other, and from where I sat, he couldn't hear all the
bloody shooting in the Balkans...(not that I would have had him do
anything about it in my name, preferring the idea of American
volunteer action, but I might have at least expected the man to show
some sign of life over it...) Bits & pieces of the beginning of the
end, is what I got.
My phone rang some time in the fall of '93,
and my brother was bending my ear about something, along the course of
which he mentioned odd facts in the case of a White House Counsel found
shot dead in a park near where Ethan Allen might mount an assault on the
capital these days. "So what else is new?" I thought, generally. Another
dead guy.
This Thing didn't really start catching my attention
until That Woman tried to sign me up to one of her doktors. I wasn't
going to have that in any way, and that would mean stuff like going to
ground under her thumb beyond not paying taxes for this rotten fraud,
which I already wasn't doing. If I had to take to the hills, there was
just no way in life that this government was ever going to take care of
me.
It was never necessary to stipulate to the
Constitution of the United States in order to denounce these horrible
people, but it often made decent sport to point out why no reasonable
person should respect it or pay for its administration. The way November
1963 lays in history across nearly four decades has never seriously been
dealt with as a question of why free people put up with awful,
completely intolerable fraud... and a line of that sort really only begs
questions of why, then, Nixon happened, or why any of this, down
to the present day, was not only allowed to proceed, but was actually
bought and paid for by hundreds of millions of otherwise apparently sane
individuals.
"How does it become a man to behave
toward this American government to-day? I answer, that he cannot without
disgrace be associated with it."
(Henry David Thoreau -
1849)
There is nothing erroneous or otherwise wrong about that
statement just because it's over one hundred fifty years old, and here's
the point: there is nothing essentially different about the times just
because of the way they're dressed up. These are despicable times in
American history, when slaves strut their "freedom," and
"rights" are a cracked whip. They follow on times in which people who
should have known what they were talking about when they spoke those
words sold them to vultures in order to just make the screeching stop. I
don't want to hear about Ronald Reagan's birthday: I'm sure he was a
very nice man, but, personally, I didn't need him to set the federal
dogs on every person working for a living in my homeland, yes, for the
first time in its history.
All I needed to hear next was that
Bush character telling me that "from now on, any definition of a
successful life will include the concept of service to others." In my
early thirties, I was: ready to punch his lights out for laying claim to
my life. Nobody in real life could have gotten away with telling me
something like that and seriously trying to enforce it.
A bunch of clowns put on a circus in 1994. (No: I'm not talking about
D'Amato's hearings.) Here we sit with the Department of Education.
Thanks a lot, ladies and gentlemen. Y'all are dismissed.
There
hasn't been a real principle worth fighting for in people other than
outright brats, toads and thugs, as long as I've been alive. It was only
a matter of time before the worst came around again.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
There is not, and never has been, one shred
of evidence that Vince Foster shot himself at Ft. Marcy Park with that
Colt .38 the way they say he did. More than ninety percent of the people
who have ever remarked on the case in my view were completely
incompetent to come to terms with that fact. There was never the dimmest
prospect that they would grasp what it meant that the case was defrauded
in every official report.
It was the sheer scope and breadth of
that sort of thing that made it eminently necessary to storm the White
House with SWAT teams and "dynamic entry" by January of 1998. The
Lewinsky Shitbomb finally touched a raw nerve among the more spineless,
and they mounted their pathetic assault on "the legacy" or something.
That's because it couldn't have been justice, or they simply were
not grown up to the task, or both.
If Richard Nixon went down
on the rails of perfidy to the game, then, looking at The Ozark Long
March, I'd like to know what the game is.
The place was just
rife with crumbs and cockroaches. When they weren't out getting
face-time with that "TheAmericanPeople" riff in their
kinder-gentler-machine-gun style, every crank got a turn on cue in order
to grind out "more ecstatic modes of living" and other mindless rubbish.
Charles "Ironsides On Crack" Ruff couldn't be bothered to ring up
Yezhov-Reno the day he found the WHCA videotapes that the skells were
lying about and the clock ran out. "Whoops!" Mistakes were made. Move
along, citizen: nothing to see here. Steps have been taken, measures are
in place, and the Attorney General's so mad that, why, she's just
shaking.
The thing to do, all along, was to toss Imelda
Rodham's place for the notes she took on L. Patrick Gray's fireplace
scene. Even when she worked for the House Judiciary Committee, she
doubtless figured that guy too dim to keep copies to pop from a
stage-left dressing room at the right moment.
And the
Clintooniac press is distressed over a dresser, now. Pardon me when I
say I live in despicable times.
What didn't they lie about? Why
didn't they lie about it? What was it they weren't constantly lying
about?
These people, to include their various mannequins and
apparat, were out there throwing bloody cruise missiles at guys in
sandals. They were doing that because The Lying Bastard had drained
himself in a White House sink and some people in authority wanted to
know what the hell that was all about. These twisted scheming anglers
went out and blew up somebody's private productive property -- in my
name -- in a cynical sleight-of-gland from his balls to sheeps' guts
soaking it up on TEEVEE, and left America holding the terrorist-threat
bag.
These people never stopped waving bloody chickens' heads
at the fearful of the land like cheap revivalists, aimed at lining them
up for serial and parallel processing. "A hundred thousand more cops!"
is what we got after "Showtime" at Waco: just ask 'em, and they'll tell
you all about it in the "legacy." If you ever get within
ear-shot of one of the era's pressitutes, ask if two million people in
prison is part of the "legacy."
These people -- these
specimens -- never stopped pressing their claims to my life, and that,
amid an array of pro forma scandal in unprecedented panorama, was the
first thing that always made them indictable. It doesn't matter that
their evil philosophy was never strictly adjudicated in trail of that
word. The machine can go hang itself: there is no reason why individual
people cannot reject with prejudice the things these people thought in
action at the levers of government. That judgment does not require
official imprimatur.
They were grown to it from a time when
dingbats swerved into steely-eyed ideologues and the resulting crash
strew tie-dyed starry-eyed neuroses throughout a hitherto fairly healthy
culture. The Civil Rights Movement will always be an heroic gleam on the
American record, and more than wistful, too, because it was a long time
coming. That stinking war was the right thing to fight over, too.
After that, though, they couldn't find enough of America to
destroy, and a fight that big was going to comprehend the roots of the
whole project. Which meant: sooner or later I'd be taken care of.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Maybe The Lying Bastard walked because,
sooner or later, I'll be taken care of.
The damned Republicans
are cooing over "a patients' bill of rights" that will shake the loose
sand out of the HMO gravel and square that "sector" away. That's what's
going to happen with that. It's probably the next best thing without
ditching Medicare and Medicaid because constrained markets always
require more coercive correction, but it's headed to hell, anyway. The
United States is manufacturing its "health care crisis", has been for
more than three decades, and these people have no hope of heading it
off. Dennis Hastert said so in a discussion with Imelda Rodham about
medicine. ("Holy mackerel, these are philosophical issues...")
To indict the infamous Arkie thug might lead to unhelpful questions
about why he and his henches behaved the ways they did in their time. It
was because killing America was always worth lying about, to them.
Bonior and Imelda both copped to it within hours of the House
impeachment vote when they sternly warned the troops not to let the VRWC
attack their "ideas." There was no obvious reason for that,
except for the connection to the fact that The Lying Bastard was what he
was and presently driving the government. Here were means to ends, and
that was worth all kinds of rampant deceit.
The deceit was
necessary to con the marks. It mostly worked, but that's just a measure
of the damage done by the time they came along.
Now, everybody
knows this. Everybody who is not right now lying, knows all this, and
more, about it.
What is going to happen in the times after the
first president to cop a criminal felony plea? How many people know in
their bones that it was among the measliest of his tramplings? How many
bones in the ground know it?
And he's just walked out
the door for cheeseburgers over Carnegie Hall. Perhaps he stole a
leather chair into which he can sweat after a good jog.
Terror
Bill got away because justice has slipped its currency in America now.
What counts is action, over all, as long as it frames right in
viddiebits to harried people hearing it from sharp angles. That's the
presumption where the action is seeping past its reaches in the last
eight years. There are agendas and moving-on to get done now and nobody
considers what might the times have been like after a criminal president
-- and presidency -- were treated according to their real scale against
a precedent like The Dark One himself.
Be they ever so
Democrats, and even unto the present day in the case of the lately
miserable Sarbanes, they were nonetheless giving good battle to a
corrosion that had to be stopped, then. Tip O'Neill, on his accession as
majority leader in 1972, was ready for action already in a way that
Republicans couldn't even plausibly fake for eight whole years of the
Clinton regime. The trains have run on time, The Big Lug dabs that like
a napkin at the shirt-front of his "legacy" in a diner photo-op, and
that sort of thing is what allegedly important people find
important.
These are despicable days.
It's no good to
handwave in the direction of "uniting" with something irreconcilable.
I'm not interested in "uniting" with people who will not act for
justice, as justice, and I'm pretty "divided" from that sort of
corrosion, which is only going to get worse as it goes. People who keep
discarding facts and ignoring the truth end up stupid and blind, and no
one like that will ever be an authority to me.