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Drive out the Bush Regime!!!

posted October 18, 2006 - 4:25pm
Drive out the Bush Regime!!!

Here is the transcript of a speech I gave on Octover 5th on the University of Arizona mall in front of 300 people. It received thunderous applause.

“The only thing necessary for evil to flourish is for good men to do nothing.” –Edmund Burke
Today I would like to talk to you about the fascists in control of our country.
I’m sure most of you have heard the humorous quotes Bush has botched up in his speeches, like “they misunderestimated me” or “rarely is the question asked, is our children learning”. Well, here’s a quote Bush said that’s not so humorous. When some Republican leaders were warning Bush about how his push to renew the Patriot Act could alienate conservatives, he yelled at them, “I don’t give a G.O.D.D.A.M.N.! I’m the President and the Commander-in-Chief. Do it my way!” When they further pressed him that there was a valid case that provisions in the law violated the Constitution, he snapped at them, “Stop throwing the Constitution in my face! It’s just a G.O.D.D.A.M.N. piece of paper!”
This, ladies and gentleman, is the mentality of a fascist. Do it my way, or else. Either you’re with me, or you’re against me. The constitution is meaningless to them.
There are people who say, “Fascism will never control the U.S.” How can you say that? We now have an administration in power that holds suspects in prison with no trial indefinitely. We now have an administration, and a president, who claims that anyone who questions the motives of the war in Iraq is “giving comfort to the enemy.” How long will it be before they start jailing dissenters to the war? Holding them for months or years without trials?
I would also like to talk to you today about the fascists who support this administration, and how hateful they really are!
Ann Coulter, one of the fascist propagandists. Nothing that comes out of her mouth has the least bit of humanity to it. Take for example, when she called 4 widows from the 9/11 attacks “Witches.” Because they dared to speak out against the administrations failures to the American people, Ann Coulter claimed that they took great happiness in their husband’s deaths.
Ann Coulter claimed that Sen. Lincoln Chafee, a republican, should be killed for opposing the Bush Administration. She has also argued during the Monica Lewinsky witch hunt that the question wasn’t whether he “did it,” but whether “to impeach or assassinate him.”
And if this fascist hate speech isn’t enough, then perhaps the most hateful and most chilling phrase out of her was when she targeted the entire Muslim community, saying: “We need to invade their countries, kill their leaders, and convert them to Christianity.”
Fascism doesn’t just occur out of nowhere. It’s a cancer that slowly spreads through society, so slowly that many people don’t even notice it when it’s established. All freedom-loving Americans need to stand up to the fascists in our community and in office. We must show them that we will never accept their vision of hate and totalitarian rule by fear. I hope that you will join in the mass protests outside of the Federal building, 300 W. Congress, at 4:30 today. We will be victorious when we become the majority of willpower in the streets. Thank you.



Comments

Well, there's still a

Well, there's still a problem. These articles keep mentioning "sources" but never identify who they are. I can say that I've received information from democrat sources that Al Gore really doesn't believe in global warming, and then throw in some ridiculous quotes, but that doesn't mean there must be some truth to it. I have a problem with anonymous sources. If they can't stand on their own convictions and say what they feel needs to be heard, then there must be something wrong. Grow a spine and come out with it. If it bothers you that much, it shouldn't be so difficult to explain. I know many leftists think Bush would say something like that, but I find it hard to believe. And my opinion of him has nothing to do with politics.

Response

Google the phrase. Here, I did it for you. http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=%22stop+throwing+the+constitution+in+my+face%22 28,800 results. A quote doesn't get that widespread on heresay. And even if it, through some miracle, was heresay, read this. http://www.counterpunch.org/leupp12142005.html December 14, 2005 Bush and the Constitution "Just a Goddamned Piece of Paper" By GARY LEUPP Doug Thompson, publisher of Capitol Hill Blue, says he's talked to three people present last month when Republican Congressional leaders met with President Bush in the Oval Office to talk about renewing the Patriot Act. That act, passed by legislators who hadn't read it, in the immediate aftermath of 9-11 (when most people were shell-shocked and lawmakers in particular disinclined to use their brains), has of course been criticized as containing unconstitutional elements. All three GOP politicians quote their president as saying: "Stop throwing the Constitution in my face! It's just a goddamned piece of paper!" At least one of Thompson's sources says the president, when told his insistence on preserving some provisions of the act could further alienate conservatives following the Harriet Miers Supreme Court nomination disaster, stated, "I don't give a goddamn: I'm the President and the Commander-in-Chief. Do it my way." I don't know how credible this report is, of course, but let's suppose it's true. It has the ring of truth, it seems to me, given numerous earlier reports on the Commander-in-Chief's state of mind and penchant for profanity. (Capital Hill Blue has earlier noted his "short temper and tirades" during cabinet meetings. Thompson and Teresa Hampton, citing "a number of White House staffers" wrote in June 2004 that "[Bush] who says he rules at the behest of God can also tongue-lash those he perceives as disloyal, calling them 'fucking assholes' in front of other staff, berating one cabinet official in front of others." The Drudge Report has carried similar stories. The most recent Newsweek contains a report that Rice has to warn foreign diplomats, "Don't upset him" before meeting the Chief.) The man told Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas in 2003 that "God told me to smite [Saddam Hussein]. And I smote him." Why should a man who conducts such conversations care about a document which makes no reference to God? One can only hope that if Thompson's story is true, one of those three Republican politicos will at some point share with the public the details of the Oval Office encounter. I mean, what a scandal for the faithful to learn that a man who in his oath of office swore to uphold the constitution of the United States, a document with virtually scriptural authority among his political base, is inclined to privately dis this "piece of paper" (sic---parchment, actually) while demanding that loyal Republicans help him sabotage some of its key provisions in order to prosecute his "War on Terrorism." That war, being a goddamned piece of cynical Nazi-like manipulation of fear and prejudice to unite people around an open-ended program for endless aggression, isn't going well. It's inevitably producing dissent, and the president wants to leave all options on the table as he confronts not only genuine terrorists but his critics among the American people. That's we the people who have amended that constitution over time, and obtained whatever constitutional advances we have through struggles against oppressive authority. President Bush majored in history at Yale, presumably American history, and ought to know that. But he was a C-student, and probably didn't take his studies seriously, and privileged throughout his life, he seems to lack the empathy with normal humans that humanistic study encourages. Recall how he mocked Karla Faye Tucker, sentenced to death in Texas? How his former Harvard business professor Yoshi Tsurumi described him as "totally devoid of compassion, social responsibility, and good study discipline"? How his one-time biographer Mickey Herskowitz has quoted him as saying, in 1999, "If I have a chance to invade [Iraq]. I'm not going to waste it"? The man, a Canadian official opined in 2002, is "a moron." He's certainly an ignorant man, perhaps impaired by bad habits, lacking intellectual curiosity, poorly traveled, confused about basic geography, clueless about the history of religions but certain of the truth of his own. A thug indifferent to torture, happy to be led by advisors who specialize in subtly playing the race/religious bigotry card, driven by religious fanaticism rivaling that of any al-Qaeda militant, cockily averring that he "knows" the American people are good and Ariel Sharon is a man of peace, unable to admit error or even speak without embarrassing himself in any extemporaneous public situation. A man who read from his note cards with absolute assurance that Saddam Hussein threatened the world with his weapons of mass destruction. This is the man who calls the U.S. constitution a "goddamned piece of paper" which ought not stand in the way of his presidential mission. Let his remaining supporters chew on that. Personally, I confess, I have no constitution fetish. To me there's nothing sacred about that document, and if Americans are around in 300 years I expect we'll be working with a better one. Many years ago I was recommended by a professor for a lectureship position in a state university, and after getting the job was told off-handedly that before starting I needed to make a trip to the Federal Building downtown. That state required loyalty oaths for state jobs, so I had to swear to uphold the constitution against all enemies foreign and domestic. I felt vaguely guilty, like I was reciting the Apostle's Creed, secretly harboring doubts about the Trinity. But I did it pragmatically, needing the money and the job experience. Years later the university that had employed me offered a job to a senior scholar, who after hearing he'd have to perform this ritual turned the lucrative opportunity down. He said he'd always opposed loyalty oaths and would not swear one now. I felt slightly ashamed at my own spinelessness. But now I think of the heroic work of the Center for Constitutional Rights, founded by the late great William Kunstler. I think of the domestic enemies of the constitution, the advocates of torture and detention without charges or trial, and I confess that with whatever reservations, these days I want to uphold the goddamned thing! It's a document of the eighteenth century Enlightenment, based on reason and humanism, very impressive when read in context. It just takes up a few pages in your almanac. Imagine ripping them out, wadding them up, and along with hundreds of others armed with similar goddamned pieces of constitutional confetti paper chanting, "In your face! In your face!" hurling them at the Commander-in-Chief as his motorcade passes. I'm not suggesting that, because I don't want to be accused of advocating assault in these sensitive times. Just thinking aloud here. But I would suggest thinking seriously about American and world history, and reflecting on the history of fascism. Weimar Germany, with a constituion William Shirer called "the most liberal and democratic document of its kind the twentieth century had ever seen" morphed into the Third Reich, step by step as a crazy man with unthinking admirers convinced them that external and internal enemies threatened them. Hitler insisted that as "a defensive measure" (against communists, whom he readily conflated with Jews) "for the Protection of the People and the State," the seven sections of the Weimar constitution guaranteeing individual and civil liberties had to be suspended. In that context those targeted made common cause with any who would join in a united front against war and fascism. The antifascists disagreed on many things, but found themselves obliged to break old and form new alliances based on the conviction that defense against fascism overrode all other concerns. Again, I urge any present at the above-quoted Bush explosion to speak out. Defend that piece of paper by exposing how little it means to a Commander-in-Chief using fear and intimidation, doing things his way, not giving a goddamn about we the people of the United States or people anywhere else. Gary Leupp is Professor of History at Tufts University, and Adjunct Professor of Comparative Religion. He is the author of Servants, Shophands and Laborers in in the Cities of Tokugawa Japan; Male Colors: The Construction of Homosexuality in Tokugawa Japan; and Interracial Intimacy in Japan: Western Men and Japanese Women, 1543-1900. He is also a contributor to CounterPunch's merciless chronicle of the wars on Iraq, Afghanistan and Yugoslavia, Imperial Crusades.

I am with

I am with some of the others that would like a little more facts than heresy. I dislike some of his decisions too but I almost become a Missourian during these times - show me.

il pacco, nobody said he was a Saint to begin with

Just because he is Christian does not mean he is perfect or without sin. History is full of salty mouth types who were good Christian men, and made a difference in the world. Would you prefer, say a Nancy Pelosi who may never curse but supports abortion with her whole heart. I don't make excuses for Bush but it is a very competitive business he is in, politics. Running the country with all the stress and diversity and people always taking shots at you is enough to make any man curse. Being a Christian means he may pray to his maker for understanding, strength and forgivness in dealing with his imperfections. As for your comparison with Nixon and using profanity in front of women, first that is only hearsay, what Bush has done. If it is proven to be true don't forget that these women of today are different from Nixon's era in the simple fact that many of them today would make Nixon blush. So what kind of women are we talking about here. Still, not saying it's right and that is between Bush and his maker as I said before.

anthony b

to qualify my last comment

I don't doubt that he took The Lord's name in vain, I just want to know how Philip heard of this. Afterall, we have 2 public accounts of this so called born again Christian's potty mouth:#1 when he was campaigning & refered to a reporter as a "major league asshole" and #2 just recently when he was talking to Tony Blair about the then crisis W/Israel & Hezbala. I also read that both Bush & Tricky Dicky would blackflag(swear)around women;The one difference? Nixon never used the "F" word in the presence of womaen. I just wonder what the Religious Right, his other base, thinks about all of this. Back in 2000 when he was still campaigning, this chick I used to work with was all over him."He's a Christian, we need him." she'd say. And her other note of praise was,"He's so cute!!!" Yeah, that's always important criteria for choosing a president. I'm done.

Cute

I absolutely love watching people rant and slobber over the "vast Conservative conspiracy" instituted by these murderous pirate anti-christs who feast on Muslim babies and wash down their precious flesh with barrels of precious oil. If the evil master plan of the current administration was to shoot itself in the foot on every concievable occaision and parade about like royal idiots, then they've suceeded wonderfully. The thing is, the tenets of Bush's foreign policy have been an undercurrent in American political thinking since the Jefferson administration, when we first went to war with Muslim pirates off the Barbary Coast. A government must act to protect the interests of it's people. In a historical sense, it can be implemented by wars or intensive diplomatic sessions over generations. Bush followed understandible norms. He percieved a threat, and he acted on it... in Afghanistan. His problem was rushing a campaign that should have focused on large-scale intelligence work and political reform. In short, he moved far too quickly. What should have been done behind the scenes; intelligence gathering, regime destabilization, forging international alliances, ect, activities that take many years over many administrations, he crammed into the course of several months, resulting in a resounding military victory and a humanitarian nightmare. There are volumes of procedures that should have been implemented for such an undertaking as the war in Iraq and the War on Terror that were cut or underutilized. We ignored some smart people and let ideals govern reality. I don't think they were bad ideas. I don't think that the U.S government works on a moralistic dichotomy, as much as its representatives try to convey. I think that the events that transpired after September 11th were fueled by collective national shame and anger. I think they were hurried and reckless. It is true that the government cannot function with complete transparency and that there are serious threats to our security. However, terrorism is not one of them. Bipartisan bickering is. All the crap spewed by the news media fuels tirades by our friend here and serves to pull us down along party lines and results in perfect inaction. The quote by Burke that starts off this speech.. if you can call it that.. is especially duplicitous. Burke was a speaker of Parliment who opposed England's involvement in our Revolution. He sure made some nice speeches, but he wasn't freezing his ass off in Valley Forge with Washington or threatening his career to end the war. As to Iraq, history will be the judge. As to America, the only thing that can destroy us are Americans, and it's this misinformed, beligerent kind of ignorance on every side of the political spectrum that's doing a better job than any terrorist ever could hope to accomplish.

Phillip Lorenze, John Kerry would still be begging the French

For permission to respond to 9 / 11. Thats how much he would have done. The Golden Gate, and the Statue of liberty would probably be history under that kind of leadership. And you would be getting blown to bits by bin laden while you were giving your famous speeches in Arizona. I don't agree with everything the President does but he is decisive and moraly a good man. Your nitemare scenario of a Mussolini or hitler just ain't gonna happen. Trust in your leadership, especialy during wartime. The restrictions and what you consider the taking of your liberties will dissapear after we defeat the enemy. Uh, in case you don't realize it, WE ARE AT WAR!

anthony b

But uh,

Now, I'd like to believe that Bush has such a potty mouth, but where did you learn that he said all this? Did you read an account of it somewhere? Is your source accurate? It's just like when I watched "Fahrenheit 9/11" and that part where Bush is giving the fancy party and says something about the guests being the haves and the have mores, or as he calls them, his base. I wondered if he really said that, or if Mike Moore did some sort of trickery. But later, I saw some news footage of the same speech. As for Anne Colder(I spelled it like that on purpose), I thought she was kinda cute back in the early 90's.That was before I heard her talk & discovered she was just another Clinton basher. Back then, she was only good for one thing as far as I was concerned. These days, she's not that good looking.

You received "thunderous

You received "thunderous applause" from this? Who were the republican leaders you referred to? It would be interesting to know their names and the quotes from this conversation with the president. Do you believe foreign terrorist suspects should be granted the rights of American citizens? Do you think they should be tried in our federal courts?

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