Air America conducted a poll that asked a question
raised by Time Magazine's Joe Klein: "Should Obama pardon
George W. Bush, Donald Rumsfeld, and Dick Cheney?" The idea: a
pardon would brand them for crimes without the agony of a
trial.
Air American's aren't buying the Klein
solution. They want the whole lot thrown in jail. No trial
necessary! A whopping 90% of our 9000 respondents want to see Bush
and Company pay for their crimes with either hard time in the pokey
or hard time in the pokey after enhanced interrogation
techniques. (Shocking!)
In an interview last year with Philadelphia
Daily News reporter Will Bunch, Barack Obama said something
that seemed to signal the presidential hopeful might prosecute
George W. Bush and his staff for crimes committed during the
eight-year death march also known as the 43rd presidency of the
United States of America.
It was one of the many moments that whipped up my
own private Obama fervor. But did he say what I thought he said?
Not really.
"I would want to find out directly from my
attorney general--having pursued, having looked at what's out
there right now--are there possibilities of genuine crimes as
opposed to really bad policies."
That's as strong as it got. There was never any
statement of positive intent regarding the prosecution of George W.
Bush. Obama never ventured beyond the milquetoast, "We'll
look into it." This is the equivalent of a disappointed
soon-to-be ex-lover eliciting a "maybe" from a wholly
disinterested wished for-former one. It's meaningless.
Last go around we had Bushisms, those zany journeys
into the what-the-f-isms of linguistic barbarism. This time around
we learn another language lesson among many to come in what seems
to be an emerging mode of communication in the Obama camp. Call it
Obama-speak. The defining characteristic is an NPR-like
far-sightedness, and long form intelligence. Our president has the
uncanny ability to perform advanced political calculus on the fly
and express the results of those many wondrous equations in simple,
if somewhat involved, communications.
A year ago people in the know saw a financial bump
in the road. The mortgage crisis was apparent. And while no one in
the mainstream media foresaw the immensity of the economic collapse
that began last fall (lots of fringers make claims of
clairvoyance), a clear-headed leader (yes, Obama) could at least
see the clouds on the horizon and so we had the pleasure of
listening to a man (Obama) who seemed to understand that
over-promising anything at this juncture in history was
ill-advised. It's one of the many reason's Obama prevailed
in November. He had an appreciation of the profundity of our last
error-prone (and possibly malfeasant) president, an idea of the
mess that the Bush administration would be leaving behind, and a
responsible vision for cleaning that very messy house.
So what do we get? We don't know yet, because
unlike George W. Bush and Bill Clinton, our president doesn't
moonlight as over-promiser in chief. Whether or not caution of the
variety being exercised in Obama's White House will win the day
is an open question, and will remain so for quite some time.
It's a boon of the tortoise approach--we have to wait. A boon
to Obama. That is one of the advantages of Obama-speak. It slows
things down to a sane pace.
The issue we need to face now, more than anything
else, is the economy. Can an investigation and a trial of Bush and
his cronies help the economy? Perhaps in a small way. It would
generate a few expert-class jobs inside the Beltway. Media
companies would benefit because everyone would want to know the
latest news. What else?
It's hard to say how to place a value on the
national conscience, but that is the issue here. What's at
stake is finally our democracy. We need to investigate the Bush
years for possible crimes because too many of us fear the worst
from an administration that never gained our trust. The divide
between bad policy or criminal acts dressed up like official
declarations and government contracts is clear. The air is not.
Joe Klein's question is valid, and clever to
boot. There is enough to go on to green-light an investigation.
Only criminals get hurt. We create a few taxable dollars by way of
new jobs, and we set a whole array of fears to rest. (A recent USA
Today/Gallup poll said more than 60% polled wanted their
consciences eased regarding Bush-era crimes.) Indeed just looking
at the Iraq quagmire with all its sweetheart contractors lining up
at the Bush gravy train would make one wonder how there could be
any hesitation. Pull a thread and the veil falls apart. It was
always a see-through veil, etc...
Senator Patrick Leahy of Vermont has a petition to
show Obama that an investigation of possible crimes committed by
the Bush administration is the will of the nation. You can sign it
here.