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Republicans’ impeachment-mania: How it achieves a subtler, dangerous end (Cue spooky music)
Salon ^ | July 8, 2014 | Emmett Rensin

Posted on 07/08/2014 10:17:07 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet

Despite Sarah Palin's calls, the president won't be impeached. But here's how her demand normalizes other lunacy.

“By the Grace of God,” the English used to say, when asked by what authority their monarch ruled. “Divine right” was the answer, and that was that – you didn’t have to like the queen, but God did, and that’s why she was in charge.

Simpler times, those were.

Today, former GOP vice-presidential candidate Sarah Palin announced her belief that President Obama should be impeached. Last week, Speaker of the House John Boehner announced his intention to launch the first congressional lawsuit against the executive branch since United States v. Nixon. Days later, the Republican Party of South Dakota became the first state-level party organization to formally call for Obama’s impeachment.

If some Republicans are to be believed, the only rationale behind Congress’ tamer lawsuit route is feasibility: “If we were to impeach the president tomorrow, you could probably get the votes in the House of Representatives to do it. But it would go to the Senate and he wouldn’t be convicted,” congressman Blake Farenthold told BuzzFeed last year.

The occasional call is nothing new. Presidents from Abraham Lincoln to Franklin Roosevelt have faced the fringe demand for congressional removal, and despite two successful efforts in the House (against Andrew Johnson and Bill Clinton), none has ever seen the bad side of a subsequent Senate trial. President Obama will not be impeached; despite their bluster, the GOP-controlled House will never even propose a trial in earnest. The Clinton years taught them well enough what happens when such an effort backfires and you become the guys who just wasted a year of the country’s time.

What ought to concern us is not the serious possibility of the president being removed from office, but the sense of what – in a world where such a conversation occurs at all – suddenly seems reasonable by comparison. Consider an interview earlier this year, in which Fox News host and Santa Clause ethnicity specialist Megyn Kelly asked Mitch McConnell why he and the rest of the congressional GOP hadn’t seriously explored the “meaningful option” of impeaching President Obama for vaguely defined “abuse of power.”

It doesn’t matter that McConnell said they wouldn’t: That the question was even asked on a major television network by a prominent (if not necessarily respected) member of the press to one of the most powerful figures in the federal government reflects something more than just fringe lunacy. It is indicative of a broader trend in our civic culture, one more subtly (but perhaps tellingly) betrayed in Senator McConnell’s then-contention that simply defunding every executive initiative and refusing to let the country function while President Obama remains in office would be a comparatively reasonable, “less dramatic” option.

We’ve gotten into the habit of delegitimizing our presidents — not just contesting their election or pushing back against their policies, but denying their very claim to the White House. From the farcical (birthers) to the faux-serious (“anti-American socialist!”), we’ve moved beyond mere opposition and into a deeper civic sickness, where casting aspersions on the policies of an opposition president has given way to challenging his very right to implement those policies.

It didn’t start with Barack Obama. This new kind of cynicism has been gaining ground for years. The conspiratorial style is catching. Growing up during the Bush administration, I joined plenty of my fellow leftists in righteous conversations about hanging chads and Diebold-stolen votes. Before that? It was eight years of Bill Clinton: Whitewater murder suspect and blow job perjurer.

That isn’t to say it doesn’t make a certain kind of sense. The impulse to delegitimize the president serves as a useful solution to an old dilemma in American politics: How do you respond to a leader who is at once enemy and ally — someone who was bitterly opposed in his ascension, but having nonetheless prevailed, is now not just their candidate, but your president, as well?

As cynical as we’ve become, Americans still retain a certain reverence for the presidency. Watergate eroded it some, sure; and the ensuing soap operas — from Iran-Contra to Monica to Tallahassee 2000 have certainly tarnished the brand. But within our civic consciousness, the presidency retains a transcendent air, an office occupied by a politician, but still not entirely political. The president is the commander-in-chief. He is the head of government, yes, but he is the head of state as well. The office still retains that luster, and across table from prime ministers and kings, he speaks for all of us. There is a reason we still don’t tolerate his challengers attacking him when overseas.

But pressed by a modern world into an unprecedented form of zero-sum politics, the tension between “our guy abroad” and “their guy at home” proved more difficult to sustain. So the delegitimizers found a work-around: If you can’t strip the presidency of its protective insulation, you can strip it from a chief executive by insinuating that he isn’t really the president in the first place. And that’s when the loyal opposition becomes a crusade against occupation, poisonous to a functioning government.

It’s a dangerous game. When the “grace of God” gave way to “the grace of an electorate,” it was vital – if people were to be governed by consent – that that consent, once given, be respected. When we allow ourselves to start believing that consent is counterfeit whenever we disagree with our leaders, the national experiment breaks down. The well is poisoned. Wars against usurpers involve no compromise, and so we see endless gridlock. We see politics as trench warfare. We see a polity where reaching across the aisle is a betrayal and defunding every initiative is the “reasonable” response. We see a system in which every year is little more than a battle to reclaim the throne from a fraud — the very thing we broke with Britain to avoid.

God save the queen.


TOPICS: Issues; Parties; U.S. Congress; U.S. Senate
KEYWORDS: bush; impeachment; obama; palin
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

The trick will be to impeach Obama while appearing not to do so.


21 posted on 07/08/2014 10:52:38 PM PDT by Berlin_Freeper
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To: kcvl
Who the hell is that pouty little girl?
22 posted on 07/08/2014 10:52:41 PM PDT by The Cajun (Ted Cruz, Sarah Palin, Mark Levin, Mike Lee, Louie Gohmert....Nuff said.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

The crony establishment Senate is petrified they’d have to vote on an impeachment against a political mob boss charged with crimes much, MUCH worse than a cigar and a blowjob, let alone stealing 20 minutes of audio.

Not impeaching over the IRS fiasco alone would hang a string of garlic over the Senate’s “Tweed Ring” vampire neck for at least the next 30 years. This would upset the corrupt “apple cart” of the beltway syndicate for a long, LONG time.


23 posted on 07/08/2014 10:53:41 PM PDT by Up Yours Marxists
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
The Clinton years taught them well enough what happens when such an effort backfires and you become the guys who just wasted a year of the country’s time.

Personally I do not think that the time the House and the Senate spent on Impeaching and Trying Bill Clinton were wasted.

To me when they were occupied with Clinton they were not doing the more destructive things they usually do.

And there was the added benefit that quite a number of citizens got a lesson in how the government is supposed to work rather than how it has come to dysfunction.

24 posted on 07/08/2014 10:55:56 PM PDT by Pontiac (The welfare state must fail because it is contrary to human nature and diminishes the human spirit.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

N u t. c a s e ...

The first thing we should note about Rensin’s narrative of his long-term tumultuous relationship with his polyamorous girlfriend Lou is how un-polyamorous the whole relationship appears. There is little to the actual relationship that would seem to be meaningfully impacted by the very definitions of polyamory Rensin gives, of being able to pursue relationships with multiple people at the same time. Sure he mentions the time he and Lou go out with other people, sleep with others, and engage in non-monogamous activities that Rensin thinks defines polyamory. However, his narrative of his relationship with Lou is characterized more by their uneasy reliance and, as Rensin dubs it, co-dependency on each other. Fragile egos lead to fights, fights lead to break ups that don’t last, cohabitation continues more out of habit than desire, miscommunications occur on both sides. On the one hand these details support Rensin’s conclusion that there is nothing abnormal about being polyamorous; polyamory is not an ideal condition that will save you from making terrible choices in your choice of partners or relationships in other words.

How should we square Rensin’s personal narrative then with his emphasis that polyamory, in the long term, is better than monogamy? Rensin’s beef with monogamy is that it is often unrealistic and provides fantastical narratives for people that they cannot possibly live up to. Rensin even sometimes seems to believe that his relationship’s failure stems from not letting go of monogamous ideals enough, of still viewing fighting and riled emotions as signs of care for another person. Perhaps this is true of Rensin’s relationship – though it is difficult to fully judge because we only have Rensin’s words to take on this and the other important player, Lou, shifts from being a real, independent person to another character in his story. By the end of this personal narrative Rensin is indeed single but still polyamorous and so with each new relationship has to negotiate the waters of “coming out” as polyamorous to all the monogamous others that, for Rensin, dominate the world. The ending is hardly satisfactory, and for all his apparent disclosures there is still an element of smugness to Rensin’s account, that he has figured something out that the rest of us mortals are ignorant of, even though he claims to have already overcome such zero-sum thinking.

http://theoreticalliving.tumblr.com/post/76731426220/polyamory-in-theory


25 posted on 07/08/2014 10:56:37 PM PDT by kcvl
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

If Hairy Reid can call Clarence Thomas a white man, we can call Juan McCain a yellow Democrat.
And if Juan thinks impeachment’s a bad idea, it must be a great idea.

I know a lot here say, “ Bad idea, he won’t be removed.”
Well, we don’t know that for certain, and impeachment by itself might have a prophylactic or salutary effect on President Narcissus.
And it’s not like the Congress is busy doing anything else ...


26 posted on 07/08/2014 10:57:05 PM PDT by tumblindice (America's founding fathers: all armed conservatives)
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To: The Cajun

Emmett Rensin is an author, essayist, and playwright, originally from Los Angeles, CA. His work has appeared in The Los Angeles Times, Salon, The New Republic, USA Today, and elsewhere. He is a founding member of First Floor Theater in Chicago, where he currently lives.

27 posted on 07/08/2014 10:59:05 PM PDT by kcvl
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Ain't he cool (feet on the table)

28 posted on 07/08/2014 11:04:37 PM PDT by kcvl
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To: kcvl

God save the Queen? I didn’t say it.


29 posted on 07/08/2014 11:05:13 PM PDT by glyptol
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
Is that a man or a woman?

No.

30 posted on 07/08/2014 11:13:36 PM PDT by little jeremiah (Courage is not simply one of the virtues, but the form of every virtue at the testing point. CSLewis)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

How dare you ask! It is admirable if the sex of an individual can’t be determined. Marriage arguments and restroom designations—BAH!

We’re an anachronism.


31 posted on 07/08/2014 11:24:22 PM PDT by Irenic (The pencil sharpener and Elmer's glue is put away-- we've lost the red wheelbarrow)
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To: GeronL

There aren’t any martyrs in this, Geron. Martyrdom is usually noble. All I see are cowards & corrupt pieces of crap. Liars.

(I agree with you about flushing out the RINOs. But please don’t call them martyrs.)


32 posted on 07/09/2014 1:24:49 AM PDT by KGeorge (Till we're together again, Gypsy girl. May 28, 1998- June 3, 2013)
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To: tumblindice
>" it’s not like the Congress is busy doing anything else "

Give the Cons a break! They're stuffing their pockets with both hands as fast as they can man.

33 posted on 07/09/2014 2:47:41 AM PDT by rawcatslyentist (Jeremiah 50:32 "The arrogant one will stumble and fall ; / ?)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
The intellectual and outright personal dishonesty here is amazing to contemplate. This guy has moral standards that are hinged in the middle and he doesn't care. Pure Evil with a capital “E”.

Putting aside the Constitution dismissing savagery of this president, del-igitimization is TACTIC ONE in the Lefts playbook. They don't argue the merits of anything EVER;

34 posted on 07/09/2014 3:07:15 AM PDT by TalBlack (Evil doesn't have a day job.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
"Is that a man or a woman?"

Or somewhere in between?

35 posted on 07/09/2014 4:57:16 AM PDT by Carl Vehse
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