Gerald Ford Was Guilty

The more I think about it, the more I think Gerald Ford was guilty. I read the comments on my last post about Ford and I think the people who wrote in made two excellent points.

BobKincaid pointed out:

"The fact is, Gerald Ford helped create the idea of an imperial presidency that bedevils us today. Richard Nixon argued that it was de jure impossible for the president to break the law. While Ford's pardon superficially disagreed with that assessment, its legal effect was to ratify it."

When Nixon broke the law there should have been consequences. The fact that he was embarrassed is not good enough. When someone is caught robbing  a bank, they are also embarrassed, but we don't leave it that.

Sending our President to jail would not have sent a bad message, it would have sent a great message. That we are truly a nation of laws, not men. That no one -- absolutely no one -- is above the law in this great nation.

Instead, we sent the message that the President never has to personally face the consequences of any of his decisions or law breaking. That left the only punishment for breaking federal laws like FISA as "embarrassment." Whoop di doo. As we have seen over and over, George W. Bush and Dick Cheney are impervious to embarrassment.

Ford sent the signal not just to the whole nation and all future presidents, but also to Dick Cheney, his Chief of Staff, that the President could break the law -- and get away with it. This wound up coming back to haunt the country.

Second, QuestionandThink wrote in:

"Cenk, the entire country has the Gerald Ford disease! We're in a war that never should have been started, the administration is at the point of escalating our involvement rather than withdrawing, budget and trade deficits are growing worse by the day, global warming is still described as merely a liberal hoax, and the U.S. is down to 20th place on the world corruption index, but no one says anything."

I love it. Gerald Ford disease! That's exactly it. That's what I'll call anyone who is afraid to speak up until it's too late from now on. Or anyone who waits around to do something after they die. What a stunning lack of courage and initiative.

This was the whole point of my last post, but it must be emphasized again. Ford sat around waiting to die so that his opinion could be heard. I find that disturbing to my core. Speak the fuck up, Gerald! I can't hear you from the grave.

Please, please, don't wait to do anything until you're dead. It's an awful strategy. It leaves you dead both before and after you die.

The Young Turks

< New poll - Bush worse than Satan! | Where are the Mass Graves? >
 Display:
OF COURSE Ford should have spoken out - it's EVERY Americans duty, whether you're a past President or not. Why is there even a discussion?

My biggest surprise through the last few days is the LACK of mention of him as the last surviving Warren Commission member, which (for those who don't know) did the "magic bullet" cover-up in the Kennedy assassination.

Now, THOSE are some posthumous facts I'd like to have come out.

And the fact that we're still using leftovers from his administration now should tell us how far the Republicans have come in the last 40 years. Talk about getting the same ol' same ol'!

by MedfordTim on 12/30/2006 08:18:29 PM EST

I'll admit that Gerald Ford was a worthless lump, even though I think bashing the dead is poor sportsmanship.

I listened to everyone on AirAmerica attack Ronal Reagan during the week of his funeral.

So you guys are now officially on notice. When Jimmy Carter finally does the world a favor and quits breathing, I plan to be mean.

by KenTX on 12/30/2006 08:34:44 PM EST

...that would be different from the way you treat him now...how?

by MedfordTim on 12/31/2006 12:09:17 AM EST

[ Parent ]
I, for one, will miss the ol' sweetheart we all knew

by SeattleStory on 01/02/2007 02:17:49 AM EST

[ Parent ]
Nice to have you back soleilnu.

No more jokes about assassinations, OK?

Then we're totally cool. 

by KenTX on 01/02/2007 02:21:44 AM EST

[ Parent ]
 Display: