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PRESIDENTS' DAY NEWSLETTER #1

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OMNI PRESIDENTS’ DAY February 18/GEORGE WASHINGTON’S BIRTHDAY FEB. 22 NEWSLETTER #1, February 18/22, 2013.  Compiled by Dick Bennett for a Culture of Peace.

My blog:   War Department/Peace Department
My Newsletters:

See OMNI Newsletters on Bush, Obama, Bill of Rights Day, CIA, Civil Liberties, Constitution Day, Drones, FBI, Geneva Conventions, Human Rights Day, Imperialism, NationalSecurityState, Nuclear Weapons,  Nuremberg Principles, Patriot’s Day, Permanent War, Surveillance, Torture.


OMNI NATIONAL/INTERNATIONAL DAYS PROJECT


Contents Feb. 18/22, 2013

350.org 2012 AND 2013 actions

Dick:  What Is Presidents’ Day?

Wills: Presidential Bomb Power

Consaon: It Is Happening

Mayer: War on Terror = War on US

Scheer: “Defense” (= War) Hawks and 9-11

Daniel Ellsberg, Interview: Presidential Unconstitutional Abuse of War Power


Our year, our future  [D: 350.ORG’S 2013 PRESIDENTS DAY ACTION]

May Boeve - 350.org 
Jan 13, 2013

Friends,
I think this is going to be the year we start to turn the climate crisis around.
Everywhere I look, good people are working harder than ever to build a better, safer, more sustainable world. From Canada to Indiato Texas, people are demanding that better world.
But it’s still a fight, and bigger than ever. 2012 was the hottest year on record in the United States, climate impacts are being felt acutely around the world, and the fossil fuel industry maintains a powerful grip on Washington.
The first battle of 2013 is right around the corner, when President Obama makes his decision about the Keystone XL tar sands pipeline. That's why we’re working with the Sierra Club, the Hip Hop Caucus and folks from across the movement to host a giant action in WashingtonDC on Presidents Day weekend to send a message that this is the issue that will define his presidency.
Already over 10,000 people have signed up to be there -- will you join us in Washington on February 17th to demand that President Obama move our country forward and reject Keystone XL?
If the President intends to take us forward into a clean energy future -- rather than let us slide into climate chaos like what we only just began to glimpse in 2012 -- then Keystone XL will be the first and simplest test of how serious he is.  
It’s a decision that is the President’s to make, and no one else. And it’s a big decision: Keystone XL is the key to unlocking the Canadian tar sands, the second largest pool of carbon on the planet, and NASA’s top climate scientist says that burning all that oil will mean ‘essentially game over for the climate.’
President Obama alone has the power to reject the pipeline -- but  we have the power to force him to make the right decision.  Over 10,000 people have already signed up to be at the action on Presidents Day weekend. That’s pretty good, but our goal is to make this the largest climate rally in history. Will you help us make it 20,000?
This is our year. This is our future. Let’s demand a better one.
Onward,  May
350.org is building a global movement to solve the climate crisis. Connect with us on Facebook andTwitter, and sign up for email alerts. You can help power our work by getting involved locally, sharingyour story, and donating here. 


 

 

What is Presidents' Day?  By Dick Bennett

Presidents Day (or Presidents' Day) is the common name for the federal holiday officially designated as Washington's Birthday. As the first federal holiday to honor an American citizen, the holiday was celebrated on Washington's actual birthday in 1796 (the last full year of his presidency) on February 22.

While the holiday is still officially known as Washington's Birthday, it has become popularly known as "Presidents’ Day", honoring both Washington and Lincoln, as well as all the other men who have served as president.

ALL the other presidents?  We wish to honor all the presidents equally with Washington and Lincoln?   We wish to honor ALL the presidents?   I doubt if Washington and Lincoln would like that.

It’s the subject of a large book that I hope will be written.  George Washington helped craft a Constitution notable for its balance of powers among executive, judicial, and congressional.  If any imbalance were considered, the Founders believed the Congress should be the leading branch.   The intent of the Founders was to prevent a recurrence of the tyranny they had endured under Britain’s King George III.   The result was the US Constitution with its sophisticated scheme to balance power in a republic.

But modern U.S.history is signalized by the steadily increasing executive power at the expense of the other two.   Countless scholars and the public have observed this development.   For example:   “The separation of powers,” writes Chalmers Johnson, “that the Founders wrote into our Constitution as the main bulwark against dictatorship increasingly appears to be a dead letter.”   “Congress [is] no longer capable of asserting itself against presidential attempts to monopolize power.” 

The recent Republican assertion of power in Congress via anti-debt, anti-deficit, anti-gay, anti-immigrant, anti-abortion, and pro-guns and God policies is only a minor delay in the steady rise of presidential power described in book after book.   Some of this power expresses a barely concealed dislike for the black President Obama.  But President Obama’s continuity with the rise of presidential power is clear:  he continues not only US imperial policies of expanding military bases worldwide,  but he also embraces the well-established alliance with corporations and the wealthy one percent.   We call this alliance the National Security-Corporate-Pentagon-White House-Congress-Mainstream (Corporate) Media Complex.

Let us forget Presidents’ Day February 18 therefore and return to a joyful commemoration of Washington’s Birthday February 22, for Washington and our other Founders “envisioned a supreme legislative branch as the heart and soul of America’s central government….America’s modern presidency, with all its trappings, would be unimaginable to men like Madison, Washington, and Franklin.”   Admittedly, the Congress is now subject to the avalanche of campaign money, often outright bribery, from corporations and the wealthy.  But concentration on the Constitution’s emphasis upon balance of powers (along with the nation’s early public control of corporations by charter) will empower the movement to reject the Supreme Court’s ruling giving personhood freedoms to corporations and to reverse the trend of presidential power..

 References
Berkin, Carol.  A Brilliant Solution: Inventing the Constitution. 
Johnson, Chalmers.  Nemesis:The Last Days of the AmericanRepublic2006.
Schwarz, Frederick, Jr. and Aziz Huq.  Unchecked and Unbalanced: Presidential Power in a Time of Terror.  2007.
Wills, Garry.  Bomb Power: The Modern Presidency and the NationalSecurityState.  2010.



THOSE WHO KNOW

Gary Wills,  Bomb Power: The Modern Presidency and the NationalSecurityStatePenguin, 2010.   Wills reveals how the atomic bomb transformed our nation down to its deepest constitutional roots by dramatically increasing the power of the modern presidency and redefining the government as a NationalSecurityState.  He draws a direct line from the Manhattan Project to the usurpations of future presidents and particularly to George W. Bush.

Joe Conason, It Can Happen Here: Authoritarian Peril in the Age of Bush.  Dunne/St. Martin's, 2007.  Presidential power has expanded in the direction of dictatorship.  Take Pres. Nixon: he and the Republican Party perverted the electoral process, the law enforcement system, and government itself in a manner the nation had not seen before.  Most harmfully, he undermined the Constitution by dismissing congressional authority:  by impounding funds appropriated by Congress for purposes he didn't approve, by reorganizing the government without consulting the Congress that had created those departments, and by circumventing Congress in his conduct of war in Vietnamand Cambodia.   Add wiretapping, burglaries, infiltrations of antiwar groups, espionage against Democratic campaigns, misuse of the IRS and Justice Dept., dirty tricks of every description, bribery, obstruction of justice, perjury, and all financed by illegal corporate slush funds.  (pp. 168-69).  And later generations of Republicans have sought to vindicate Nixon by further expanding his authoritarian vision of executive power.  And they were often enabled by the Democrats. 

Jane Mayer, The Dark Side: The Inside Story of How the War on Terror Turned into a War on American Ideals.  Doubleday, 2008.  President Bush, Vice-President Cheney, his adviser David Addington, and others used the post-9/11 crisis to further their long-held agenda to enhance presidential powers to a degree never known in U.S. history and to obliterate constitutional protections that define the very essence of the American experiment in constitutional government.

Robert Scheer, The Pornography of Power: Ho w Defense Hawks Hjiacked 9/11 and Weakened America.   Hachette, 2008.   Esp. the final chapter, “Empire VS. Republic.”

Dick:   So let us speak out against these unconstitutional usurpations of power by the executive branch, and speak up to President Obama not to repeat them, but to reverse  them, and return our government to one of separation of powers as our Founders had intended.


PRESIDENTIAL UNCONSTITUTIONAL ABUSE OF WAR POWER:  FROM TRUMAN TO OBAMA
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Daniel Ellsberg: All the crimes Richard Nixon committed against me are now legal”   Posted by:Jay Kernis - Senior Producer  June 7, 2011

ONLY ON THE BLOG: Answering today's OFF-SET questions is Daniel Ellsberg, author, defense analyst and prominent whistleblower.
He is the subject of a documentary about his life, "The Most Dangerous Man in America," nominated for a 2010 Academy Award, which took its title from the words former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger used to describe Ellsberg in 1971.
Getty Images
In the 1960s, Ellsberg was a high-level Pentagon official, a former Marine commander who believed the American government was always on the right side. But while working for the administration of Lyndon Johnson, Ellsberg had access to a top-secret document that revealed senior American leaders, including several presidents, knew that the Vietnam War was an unwinnable, tragic quagmire.
Officially titled "United States-Viet NamRelations, 1945-1967: A Study Prepared by the Department of Defense,"–the Pentagon Papers, as they became known–also showed that the government had lied to Congress and the public about the progress of the war. In 1969, he photocopied the 7,000-page study and gave it to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. In, 1971, Ellsberg leaked all 7,000 pages to The Washington Post, and 18 other newspapers, including The New York Times, which published them.
Not long after, he surrendered to authorities and confessed to being the leaker. Ellsberg was charged as a spy. His trial, on twelve felony counts posing a possible sentence of 115 years, was dismissed on grounds of governmental misconduct against him. In April 1973, the court learned that Nixon had ordered his so-called "Plumbers Unit" to break into the office of Ellsberg's psychiatrist to steal documents they hoped might make the whistle-blower appear crazy. In May, more evidence of government illegal wiretapping was revealed. The charges against Ellsberg were dropped. This led to the convictions of several White House aides and figured in the impeachment proceedings against President Nixon. (*More bio below)
The federal government has now declassified the Pentagon Papers. The Nixon Presidential Library & Museum will release the documents on June 13, forty years to the day that leaked portions of the report were published on the front page of  The New York Times.
Also, the PBS series POV  is streaming “The Most Dangerous Man in America: Daniel Ellsberg and the Pentagon Papers,” on June 13 and 14. 
In this interview, Ellsberg says, "Richard Nixon, if he were alive today, would feel vindicated that all the crimes he committed against me–which forced his resignation facing impeachment–are now legal. " (Thanks to the Patriot Act and other laws passed in recent years.) And he says all presidents since Nixon have violated the constitution, most recently President Obama, with the bombing of Libya.
INTERVIEW BEGINS (2011)
Until now, the public has been able to read only the small portions of the report that you leaked. What do you think the impact of releasing all 7,000 pages might be?
The "declassification" of the Pentagon Papers–exactly forty years late–is basically a non-event.  The notion that "only small portions" of the report were released forty years ago is pure hype by the Nixon Library.  Nearly all of the study–except for the negotiations volumes, which were mostly declassified over twenty years ago– became available in 1971,  between the redacted (censored)  Government Printing Office edition and the Senator Gravel edition put out by Beacon Press.
(I've heard that most if not all of this has long been online.  Here's a link I just looked up; there probably are others: CLICK HERE.)
It would be helpful if the publishers indicated, by brackets or different type, what was withheld earlier. But that would be very embarrassing to the Library and the government; I'll be surprised if they do it.  Most of the omissions in the GPO edition "for security"–a ridiculous claim, since their substance was nearly all available to the world in the simultaneous Gravel/Beacon Press edition–will appear arbitrary and unjustified.
I'd really like to see someone–a journalist or an anti-secrecy NGO– compare this version in detail with the redacted white space in the 1971 GPO edition, for a measure of what the government has regarded as necessarily classified for the last forty years.  And then ask: just why was most of what was released by the GPO, covering 1945 to1968, kept secret as late as 1971? Hint: it wasn't for "national security."
What that comparison would newly reveal is the blatant violation of the spirit and letter of the FOIA declassificationprocess by successive administrations (including the present one), in rejecting frequent requests by historians and journalists for complete declassification of the Papers over the years.
But if the hype around this belated release got a new generation to read the Pentagon Papers  or at least the summaries to the various volumes (my highest hope, pretty unlikely), they'd get from them as good an understanding as they could find anywhere today of our war in Afghanistan.
The Pentagon Papers didn't explicitly present that last alternative, but their release contributed to that result, eventually.  Is it too much to hope that their re-release could do the same?
Yes, it is.  But fortunately there are a few Congresspersons, like Dennis Kucinich and Barbara Lee, Walter Jones and Ron Paul who got that message the first time, even if the Republican and Democratic leadership hasn't, yet. (CLICK HERE to see a salon.com essay pointing to the only way out of Afghanistan, as it was the only way out of Vietnam).
On June 23, 1971, in an interview with CBS News anchor Walter Cronkite, you said,  "I think the lesson is that the people of this country can’t afford to let the President run the country by himself, even foreign affairs, without the help of Congress, without the help of the public. I think we cannot let the officials of the Executive Branch determine for us what it is that the public needs to know about how well and how they are discharging their functions." How concerned are you that elected officials haven't learned those lessons?
I still stand by my cited conclusions, both for 1971 and for every single year since, including this one.  But I never expected elected officials in the Executive branch (of which there are exactly two in each administration) or their myriad subordinates to "learn those lessons" or to accept them as warnings. 
Leaders in the Executive branch–in every country– know what they're doing, and why they're doing it, and they always want to stay in office and keep on running things with as little interference from Congress, the public and the courts as possible: which means, with as much secrecy as they can manage.  So I'm not exactly concerned that they're still at it (which is why I'm still at what I do), since that is so predictable, in every government, tyrannical or "democratic."
 Our Founders sought to prevent this. Article I, section 8 of the Constitution, for the first time in constitutional history,  put the decision to go to war (beyond repelling sudden attacks) exclusively in the hands of Congress, not the president.  But every president since  Harry Truman in Korea–as the Pentagon Papers demonstrated up through LBJ, but beyond them to George W. Bush and Barack Obama–has violated the spirit and even the letter of that section of the Constitution (along with some others) they each swore to preserve, protect and defend.  
However, as has been pointed out repeatedly by Glenn Greenwald,  ( CLICK HERE) and  Bruce Ackerman , David Swanson and others, no president has so blatantly violated the constitutional division of war powers as  President Obama in his ongoing attack on Libya, without a nod even to the statutory War Powers Act, that post-Pentagon Papers effort by Congress to recapture something of the role assigned exclusively to it by the Constitution.
This open disregard of a ruling statute (regardless of his supposed feelings about its constitutionality, which Obama has not even bothered to express) is clearly an impeachable offense, though it will certainly not lead to impeachment–given the current complicity of the leaders of both parties–any more than President George W. Bush's misleading Congress into his crime against the peace, aggression, in Iraq, or President Johnson's lies to obtain the Tonkin Gulf Resolution.
Yet the most important point, as I see it, is not the secrecy and the lying, or even the blatant disregard of the Constitution, the Presidential oath and the rule of law.
As the Pentagon Papers documented for the much of the Vietnam era (we still lack, and we still need, the corresponding Papers for the Nixon policy-making, that added over twenty thousand names unnecessarily to the Vietnam Memorial and over a million deaths in Vietnam) and the last decade confirms: the point is that the Founders had it right the first time.
As Abraham Lincoln explained their intention (in defending to his former law partner William Herndon his opposition to President Polk's deliberately provoked Mexican War): "The provision of the Constitution giving the war making power to Congress was dictated, as I understand it, by the following reasons: kings had always been involving and impoverishing their people in wars, pretending generally, if not always, that the good of the people was the object.  This our convention understood to be the most oppressive of all kingly oppressions, and they resolved to so frame the Constitution that no one man should hold the power of bringing this oppression upon us."   ( CLICK HERE to read the whole letter, which I keep pinned to the wall of my office).
As Lincolnput it, the alternative approach (which we have actually followed in the last sixty years) "places our President where kings have always stood."  And the upshot of that undue, unquestioning trust in the president and his Executive branch is: smart people get us into stupid (and wrongful) wars, and their equally smart successors won't get us out of them.

Either we the people will press elected officials in Congress–on pain of losing their jobs–to take up their Constitutional responsibilities once again and to end by defunding our illegal, unjustifiable (and now, financially insupportable) military occupations of Afghanistan and Iraq and air attacks on Pakistan, Libya and Yemen: or those bloody stalemates will continue indefinitely.
 In March–at the age of 79–you were arrested in front of the White House–and then again outside of Quanticomilitary prison–while protesting in support of Army private Bradley Manning, accused of being the Wikileaks leaker. Manning, charged with 34 counts including "aiding the enemy," faces life in prison and possibly, execution. Have you been able to communicate with Bradley?
It was then almost impossible to communicate with Bradley Manning, and I have so far done so only through his few visitors.  In front of the White House and at Quantico, I was attempting to communicate with those holding him prisoner, to protest the abusive and illegal conditions of his detention, amounting not only to punishment of someone not tried, convicted or sentenced but to torture forbidden by domestic and international law and the Constitution even as punishment.
Do you believe what Bradley did was necessary and heroic?
Yes.
Do you still have all 7000 pages of the Pentagon Papers?
I don't really know.  Hundreds of boxes of files have gone from storage into my basement, and my old copies of the Papers may or may not be somewhere in there.  I'm not going to go searching among them for the still-classified eleven words.
These days, when you find yourself thinking about Richard Nixon, what comes to mind?
Richard Nixon, if he were alive today, might take bittersweet satisfaction to know that he was not the last smart president to prolong unjustifiably a senseless, unwinnable war, at great cost in human life.  (And his aide Henry Kissinger was not the last American official to win an undeserved Nobel Peace Prize.)

He would probably also feel vindicated (and envious) that ALL the crimes he committed against me–which forced his resignation facing impeachment–are now legal. 
That includes burglarizing my former psychoanalyst's office (for material to blackmail me into silence), warrantless wiretapping, using the CIA against an American citizen in the US, and authorizing a White House hit squad to "incapacitate me totally" (on the steps of the Capitol on May 3, 1971). All the above were to prevent me from exposing guilty secrets of his own administration that went beyond the Pentagon Papers.    But under George W. Bush and Barack Obama,with the PATRIOT Act, the FISA Amendment Act, and (for the hit squad) President Obama's executive orders. they have all become legal.
There is no further need for present or future presidents to commit obstructions of justice (like Nixon's bribes to potential witnesses) to conceal such acts.  Under the new laws, Nixon would have stayed in office, and the Vietnam War would have continued at least several more years.
Likewise, where Nixon was the first president in history to use the 54-year-old Espionage Act to indict an American (me) for unauthorized disclosures to the American people (it had previously been used, as intended, exclusively against spies), he would be impressed to see that President Obama has now brought five such indictments against leaks, almost twice as many as all previous presidents put together (three).
He could only admire Obama's boldness in using the same Espionage Act provisions used against me–almost surely unconstitutional used against disclosures to the American press and public in my day, less surely under the current Supreme Court–to indict Thomas Drake, a classic whistleblower who exposed illegality and waste in the NSA.
Drake's trial begins on June 13, the 40th anniversary of the publication of the Pentagon Papers.  If Nixon were alive, he might well choose to attend. 
 *        *        *
*MORE BIO: After graduating from Harvard in 1952 with a B.A. summa cum laude in Economics, he studied for a year at King’s College, CambridgeUniversity, on a Woodrow Wilson Fellowship. Between 1954 and 1957, Ellsberg spent three years in the U.S. Marine Corps, serving as rifle platoon leader, operations officer, and rifle company commander.
AFP/Getty Images
From 1957-59 he was a Junior Fellow in the Society of Fellows, HarvardUniversity. He earned his Ph.D. in Economics at Harvard in 1962 with his thesis, Risk, Ambiguity and Decision. His research leading up to this dissertation—in particular his work on what has become known as the “Ellsberg Paradox,” first published in an article entitled "Risk, Ambiguity and the Savage Axioms"—is widely considered a landmark in decision theory and behavioral economics.
In 1959, Ellsberg became a strategic analyst at the RAND Corporation, and consultant to the Defense Department and the White House, specializing in problems of the command and control of nuclear weapons, nuclear war plans, and crisis decision-making. In 1961 he drafted the guidance from Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara to the Joint Chiefs of Staff on the operational plans for general nuclear war. He was a member of two of the three working groups reporting to the Executive Committee of the National Security Council (EXCOM) during the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962.
Ellsberg joined the Defense Department in 1964 as Special Assistant to Assistant Secretary of Defense (International Security Affairs) John McNaughton, working on the escalation of the war in Vietnam. He transferred to the State Department in 1965 to serve two years at the U.S. Embassy in Saigon, evaluating pacification in the field.
On his return to the RAND Corporation in 1967, Ellsberg worked on the top secret McNamara study of U.S. Decision-making in Vietnam, 1945-68, which later came to be known as the Pentagon Papers. In 1969, he photocopied the 7,000 page study and gave it to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee; in 1971 he gave it to the New York Times, the Washington Post and 17 other newspapers. His trial, on twelve felony counts posing a possible sentence of 115 years, was dismissed in 1973 on grounds of governmental misconduct against him, which led to the convictions of several White House aides and figured in the impeachment proceedings against President Nixon.
Ellsberg is the author of three books: Papers on the War (1971), Secrets: A Memoir of Vietnam and the Pentagon Papers (2002), and Risk, Ambiguity and Decision (2001). In December 2006 he was awarded the 2006 Right Livelihood Award, known as the “Alternative Nobel Prize,” in Stockholm, Sweden, “. .  for putting peace and truth first, at considerable personal risk, and dedicating his life to inspiring others to follow his example.”
Since the end of the Vietnam War, Ellsberg has been a lecturer, writer and activist on the dangers of the nuclear era, wrongful U.S. interventions and the urgent need for patriotic whistleblowing.
He is a Senior Fellow of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation.

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