Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Torturing Blagojevich, torturing in our name

I was thinking a deep thought: Perhaps if more American journalists had asked Bush somewhat more rigorous questions during the run-up to the Iraq invasion, an Iraqi journalist wouldn't have felt compelled to throw his loafers at the President of the United States.

Anyway, as Greenwald alludes, it would be peachy if during Obama's next news conference, journalists would ask the president-elect slightly less about a meaningless act of corruption in Chicago (that might not even have been illegal) and slightly...anything...about the bipartisan Senate report -- released only last Thursday -- indicating that the torture and abuse of Iraqi and Afghani prisoners was the result of actions by the highest ranking members of the Bush administration, including Bush himself.

This Report was issued on Thursday. Not a single mention was made of it on any of the Sunday news talk shows, with the sole exception being when John McCain told George Stephanopoulos that it was "not his job" to opine on whether criminal prosecutions were warranted for the Bush officials whose policies led to these crimes. What really matters, explained McCain, was not that we get caught up in the past, but instead, that we ensure this never happens again -- yet, like everyone else who makes this argument, he offered no explanation as to how we could possibly ensure that "it never happens again" if we simultaneously announce that our political leaders will be immunized, not prosecuted, when they commit war crimes. Doesn't that mindset, rather obviously, substantially increase the likelihood -- if not render inevitable -- that such behavior will occur again? Other than that brief exchange, this Senate Report was a non-entity on the Sunday shows.

Instead, TV pundits were consumed with righteous anger over the petty, titillating, sleazy Rod Blagojevich scandal, competing with one another over who could spew the most derision and scorn for this pitiful, lowly, broken individual and his brazen though relatively inconsequential crimes. Every exciting detail was vouyeristically and meticulously dissected by political pundits -- many, if not most, of whom have never bothered to acquaint themselves with any of the basic facts surrounding the monumental Bush lawbreaking and war crimes scandals. TV "journalists" who have never even heard of the Taguba report -- the incredible indictment issued by a former U.S. General, who subsequently observed: "there is no longer any doubt as to whether the current administration has committed war crimes. The only question that remains to be answered is whether those who ordered the use of torture will be held to account" -- spent the weekend opining on the intricacies of Blogojevich's hair and terribly upsetting propensity to use curse words.


Emphasis Greenwald's, of course.

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