Preamble to the Constitution of the United States
of America
There are many important issues facing our nation
and the 110th Congress. Minimum wage increases and universal health
care are long past due.I certainly appreciate the stirrings about
bringing our troops home from Iraq within 3 or 4 months, too!
After all, (sic) more troops were killed yesterday while our politicoes
are playing footsies with each other! We thought that Nov. 7th
was a day to celebrate! When the last of our brave young people
come limping home to their relieved families that will be a joy-filled
and historic day.
I believe, though, that those same troops and others
who have fought so bravely, died so needlessly, and have been
wounded for life deserve justice for what the Bush regime has
put them through. I believe that this country and the world deserve
justice for the raping and pillaging by the pirates who have stolen
our liberties and inflicted torture and other pains and hardships
upon the world. I believe that impeachment proceedings are the
most important issue that the 110th Congress should put on OUR
table.
Since I have written open letters to George and
Reps Pelosi and Conyers, I have had almost overwhelming support
for the ideas, but there are also some legitimate concerns that
need to be addressed.
First of all, many people believe that impeachment
proceedings will be seen as "political" revenge for what the Republicans
have done to the Democrats for the last 12 years or revenge for
the impeachment of Bill Clinton. Impeachment is not a political
tool as used by the Republican Congress, but it is a Constitutional
remedy for elected or appointed officials who are abusing their
powers. If George has not abused his powers as president and commander
in chief, then no president in history has. I will not detail
his high crimes and misdemeanor and crimes against peace and humanity,
because all of his illicit activities have already been well documented.
Justice should not be a partisan issue and if Congress took their
oath to the Constitution as seriously as they take their allegiance
to the special interests and to partisan politicking, George would
have already been impeached.
Secondly, many people are fearful that impeachment
proceedings will bog down Congress. Elizabeth Holtzman who was
a Representative from New York and sat on the investigative committee
that recommended impeachment articles be charged against Richard
Nixon said, last weekend at our impeachment forum in Philadelphia's
Constitutional Hall, that this kind of reasoning doesn't give
Congress enough credit. Ms. Holtzman said that Congress is able
to "walk and chew gum" at the same time. I will have to take her
word for it, since she is the reasoned voice of experience.
Lastly,
people are concerned that holding George accountable will further
divide a country already damaged and split by the "Uniter." This
is a legitimate concern, but our country healed completely after
the Nixon debacle, and we will heal again. I would like to also
give us Americans the credit that we deserve. We have proven over
and over again that we are very resilient and strong enough to
withstand a quest for accountability.
Recent polls have shown that most Americans want
proceedings instituted against BushCo. The newly elected Congressional
leadership will not institute these proceedings unless the will
of the people is shown. Many members of the Congresses, in both
parties, that have been seated since BushCo came to power in an
illegal electoral coup in 2000, have been willing co-conspirators
in the Bush crimes against everything and it is up to the will
of the American people to correct the course that is robbing the
Blessings of Liberty from all of us and from our posterity. As
the preamble states, it is our Constitution, as well as it is
theirs, and we need to reclaim our country and our humanity before
it is lost to us forever.
Bringing Articles of Impeachment against BushCo
will not only bring resolution and justice to our nation and the
world, but if this regime is made to be held accountable for their
crimes and abuses of power, then future administrations may be
slower to commit such blatant and belligerent crimes and the world
will be a safer and more peaceful place. But there is an overriding
reason for these proceedings to be instituted as soon as possible:
A president is not above the law, or the law. A president is an
elected official who has a duty to obey, carry out and protect
the laws of our land, not break them as if he were a dictator
of a banana republic, not leader of a once great nation. We need
to restore our greatness and our credibility to a world that despises
us for allowing BushCo free rein to commit their aggressions against
the world.
By attaining this justice that our world so desperately
needs, we people of compassion and courage cannot bring back the
hundreds of thousands of people who have been killed already.
We cannot put the buildings back together that the war machine's
bombs have destroyed. We cannot make whole the people who have
been emotionally and physically wounded by these high crimes and
misdemeanors. We cannot put back together the families who have
been torn apart by illegal wars. No matter how hard we try, we
cannot prevent the pain that has already been caused by BushCo,
but by bringing them to justice, we can, and will prevent more
needless suffering here at home and abroad for the present and
for our posterity.
Our dead, our soldiers, and the people of Iraq are
voiceless in the debate on accountability and we must be their
voices. The Constitution cannot break out of its glass at the
National Archives and sit-in in front of the White House or walk
the Halls of Congress to demand that BushCo quit desecrating it
and what the US used to stand for. It is up to us, the citizens,
to protect humanity and the law of our land. As historian Howard
Zinn states in the introduction to Impeach the President, the
Case against Bush and Cheney, edited by Dennis Loo and Peter Phillips:
We cannot expect either Republicans or Democrats
in Congress to initiate any challenge to the existing order
of things. In the history of the nation, serious injustices---slavery,
racial segregation, the rights of working people, the condition
of women, the war in Vietnam---have only been remedied by powerful
social movements that have forced the government to change its
policies.
Now we have another such time.
Our very existence as a nation of laws and justice
depends on it.
Please visit Impeach
for Change to learn about the new and powerful people's movement
for accountability. Sign up for an impeachment forum in your area
on Human Rights day, December 10th, or organize one locally if
there is not one near you. I will be speaking with, among other
notable Americans, Elizabeth Holtzman, at the forum in NYC that
day.
Please visit Gold
Star Families for Peace to learn about our Walk for Change
campaign in the Halls of Congress on January 3rd and 4th, 2007.
You can join Gold Star Family members in our demand for peace
and accountability.
2006 was the year of the Awakening and 2007 will
be the year of the Change!
Cindy Sheehan is the mother of Spec. Casey Sheehan
who was KIA in the Bush regime's war of terror on 04/04/04. She
is the co-founder and president of Gold
Star Families for Peace and founder and director of the Camp
Casey Peace Institute. Cindy has published three books and the
latest is Peace
Mom: A Mother's Journey Through Heartache to Activism.