Tip:
Highlight text to annotate it
X
OLBERMANN: And lastly tonight, a special comment about lying.
While the leadership in Congress has self-destructed over the revelations of an unmatched, and
unrelieved, march through a cesspool...
While the leadership inside the White House has self-destructed over the revelations of
a book with a glowing red cover...
The president of the United States - unbowed, undeterred and unconnected to reality - has
continued his extraordinary trek through our country rooting out the enemies of freedom:
The Democrats.
Yesterday at a fundraiser for an Arizona congressman, Mr. Bush
claimed, "177 of the opposition party said, 'You know, we don't think we
ought to be listening to the conversations of terrorists.'"
The hell they did.
A hundred seventy-seven Democrats opposed the president's seizure of yet another part
of the Constitution.
Not even the White House press office could actually name a single Democrat who had ever
said the government shouldn't be listening to the conversations of terrorists.
President Bush hears what he wants.
Tuesday, at another fundraiser in California, he had said that, "Democrats take a law enforcement
approach to terrorism. That means America will wait until we're attacked again before
we respond."
Mr. Bush fabricated that, too.
And evidently he has begun to fancy himself as a mind reader.
"If you listen closely to some of the leaders of the Democratic Party," the president said
at yet another fundraiser, Monday in Nevada, "it sounds like they think the best way to
protect the American people is, wait until we're attacked again."
The president does not just hear what he wants, he hears things that only he can hear.
It defies belief that this president and his administration could continue to find new
unexplored political gutters into which they could wallow. Yet they do.
It is startling enough that such things could be said out loud by any president in this
nation's history.
Rhetorically, it is about an inch short of Mr. Bush accusing Democratic leaders, Democrats,
the majority of Americans who disagree with his policies of treason. But it is the context
that truly makes the head spin.
Just 25 days ago, on the fifth anniversary of the 9/11 attacks, this same man spoke to
this nation and insisted, "We must put aside our differences and work together to meet
the test that history has given us."
Mr. Bush, this is a test you have already failed.
If your commitment to "put aside differences and work together" is replaced in the span
of merely three weeks by claiming your political opponents prefer to wait to see this country
attacked again, and by spewing fabrications about what they've said, then the questions
your critics need to be asking are no longer about your policies.
They are, instead, solemn and even terrible questions, about your fitness to fulfill the
responsibilities of your office.
No Democrat, sir, has ever said anything approaching the suggestion that the best means of self-defense
is to "wait until we're attacked again."
No critic, no commentator, no reluctant Republican in the Senate has ever said anything that
any responsible person could even have exaggerated into the slander you spoke in Nevada on Monday
night, nor the slander you spoke in California on Tuesday, nor the slander you spoke in Arizona
on Wednesday - nor whatever is next.
You have dishonored your party, sir; you have dishonored your supporters; you have dishonored
yourself.
But tonight the stark question we must face is - why?
Why has the ferocity of your venom against the Democrats now exceeded the ferocity of
your venom against the terrorists?
Why have you chosen to go down in history as the president who made things up?
In less than one month you have gone from a flawed call to unity to this clarion call
to hatred of Americans, by Americans.
If this is not simply the most shameless example of the rhetorical of political hackery, then
it would have to be the cry of a leader crumbling under the weight of his own lies.
We have, of course, survived all manner of political hackery, of every shape, size and
party. We will have to suffer it for as long as the Republic stands. But the premise of
a president who comes across as a compulsive liar is nothing less than terrifying.
A president who since 9/11 will not listen, is not listening - and thanks to Bob Woodward's
most recent account - evidently has never listened.
A president who since 9/11 so hates or fears other Americans that he accuses them of advocating
deliberate inaction in the face of the enemy.
A president who since 9/11 has savaged the very freedoms he claims to be protecting from
attack - attack by terrorists, or by Democrats, or by both? It's now impossible to find a
consistent thread of logic as to who Mr. Bush believes the enemy truly is.
But if we know one thing for certain about President Bush, it is this:
This president - in his bullying of the Senate last month and in his slandering of the Democrats
this month - has shown us that he believes whoever the enemies actually are, they are
hiding themselves inside a dangerous cloak called the Constitution of the United States
of America.
How often do we find priceless truth in the unlikeliest of places?
I tonight quote not Jefferson nor Voltaire, but "Cigar Aficionado" magazine.
"On Sept. 11th, 2003, the editor of that publication interviewed General Tommy Franks, at that
point, just retired from his post as commander-in-chief of U.S. Central Command - of CENTCOM.
And amid his quaint defenses of the then nagging absences of weapons of mass destruction in
Iraq, and the continuing freedom of Osama bin Laden, General Franks said some of the
most profound words of this generation.
He spoke of "the worst thing that can happen" to this country: First, quoting, a "massive
casualty-producing event somewhere in the Western World - it may be in the United States
of America."
Then, the general continued, "The Western World, the free world, loses what it cherishes
most, and that is freedom and liberty we've seen for a couple of hundred years, in this
grand experiment that we call democracy."
It was this super-patriotic warrior's fear that we would lose that most cherished liberty,
because of another attack, one - again quoting General Franks - "that causes our population
to question our own Constitution and to begin to militarize our country in order to avoid
a repeat of another mass-casualty-producing event. Which, in fact, then begins to potentially
unravel the fabric of our Constitution."
And here we are, the fabric of our Constitution being unraveled, anyway.
Habeas corpus neutered; the rights of self-defense now as malleable and impermanent as clay;
a president stifling all critics by every means available and, when he runs out of those,
by simply lying about what they said or felt.
And all this, even without the dreaded attack.
General Franks, like all of us, loves this country, and believes not just in its values,
but in its continuity.
He has been trained to look for threats to that continuity from without.
He has, perhaps been as naive as the rest of us, in failing to keep close enough vigil
on the threats to that continuity from within.
Secretary of State Rice first cannot remember urgent cautionary meetings with counter-terrorism
officials before 9/11. Then within hours of that lie, her spokesman confirms the meetings
in question. Then she dismisses those meetings as nothing new, yet insists she wanted the
same cautions expressed to Secretaries Ashcroft and Rumsfeld.
Mr. Rumsfeld, meantime, has been unable to accept the most logical and simple influence
of the most noble and neutral of advisers. He and his employer insist they rely on the
"generals in the field." But dozens of those generals have now come forward to say how
their words, their experiences, have been ignored.
And, of course, inherent in the Pentagon's war-making functions is the regulation of
presidential war ***.
Enacting that regulation should include everything up to symbolically wrestling the Chief Executive
to the floor in necessary.
Yet - and it is Pentagon transcripts that now tell us this - evidently Mr. Rumsfeld's
strongest check on Mr. Bush's ambitions, was to get someone to excise the phrase "Mission
Accomplished" out of the infamous Air Force Carrier speech of May 1, 2003, even while
the same empty words hung on a banner over the President's shoulder.
And the vice president is a chilling figure, still unable, it seems, to accept the conclusions
of his own party's leaders in the Senate, that the foundations of his public position,
are made out of sand.
There were no weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, but he still says so.
There was no link between Saddam Hussein and al Qaeda, but he still says so.
And thus, gripping firmly these figments of his own imagination, Mr. Cheney lives on,
in defiance, and spreads around him and before him, darkness, like some contagion of fear.
They are never wrong, and they never regret - admirable in a French torch singer, cataclysmic
in an American leader.
Thus, the sickening attempt to blame the Foley scandal on the negligence of others or "the
Clinton era," even though the Foley scandal began before the Lewinsky scandal.
Thus, last month's enraged attacks on this administration's predecessors, about Osama
bin Laden, a projection of their own negligence in the immediate months before 9/11.
Thus, the terrifying attempt to hamstring the fundament of our freedom, the Constitution,
a triumph for al Qaeda, one the terrorists could not hope to achieve on their own with
a hundred 9/11's.
And thus, worst of all perhaps, these newest lies by President Bush about Democrats choosing
to await another attack and not listen to the conversations of terrorists.
It is the terror and the guilt within your own heart, Mr. Bush, that you redirect at
others who simply wish for you to temper your certainty with counsel.
It is the failure and the incompetence within your own memory, Mr. Bush, that leads you
to demonize those who might merely quote to you the pleadings of Oliver Cromwell: "I beseech
you, in the bowels of Christ, think it possible you may be mistaken."
It is not the Democrats whose inaction in the face of the enemy you
fear, Sir. It is your own - before 9/11, and - and you alone know this -
perhaps afterwards.
Mr. President, these new lies go to the heart of what it is that you truly wish to preserve.
It is not our freedom, nor our country - your actions against the Constitution give irrefutable
proof of that.
You want to preserve a political party's power. And obviously you will sell this country out,
to do it.
These are lies about the Democrats - piled atop lies about Iraq - piled atop lies about
your preparations for al Qaeda.
To you, perhaps, they feel like the weight of a million centuries - as crushing, as immovable.
But they are not.
If you add more lies to them, you cannot free yourself, and us, from them.
But if you stop - if you stop fabricating quotes, and stop building straw-men, and stop
inspiring those around you to do the same - you may yet liberate yourself and this nation.
Please, sir, do not throw this country's principles away because your lies have made it such that
you can no longer differentiate between the terrorists and the critics.
Goodnight and good luck.