After some nagging, I am relenting and putting up a blog post again. It’s not as if I haven’t had anything to say. I’ve been working seven days a week for the past 5 weeks and I am *really crabby*. And I have rants galore about store clerks, perps being chased by police, the network at my job, and so-called Communists in China that I just haven’t had time to commit to cyberspace. Perhaps if I had been exiled at the beach, I’d have had time to write about all this. Instead I will take a moment to note an absurdity that took place today (one of oh so many).
The Court of Appeals in Washington has upheld the dismissal of Valarie Plame’s lawsuit against Vice President Cheney et al. for destroying her career. As you probably know, it is not illegal for a journalist to reveal the identity of a spy and put her and her contacts at risk and destroy her career and perhaps put you and me as citizens of this country at more risk than we would otherwise face. Revealing the identities of those who have been trained at taxpayers' expense and who put their lives on the line protecting this nation and, indeed, defend the world from grave danger is what patriotic journalists are supposed to do and that is why we admire them so much.
It is, however, illegal for a U.S. government official to reveal the name of a U.S. spy (thus one of the bases for the lawsuit against Vice President Cheney et al.). In the original dismissal of Plame’s suit the judge said, essentially, that Vice President Cheney et al.’s desire for revenge against her was understandable. The latest dismissal upheld that decision, saying that even though revealing Plame’s identity might be illegal, it is within the scope of, say, Vice President Cheney’s official duties. Or Vice President Père Ubu or whatever his name is. Appeals Court Chief Judge David Sentelle wrote in his opinion, "The conduct, then, was in the defendants' scope of employment regardless of whether it was unlawful or contrary to the national security of the United States." Well, who can argue with that?
Now, I’m not a lawyer, and I’m sure Judge David Sentelle writes fantastic opinions every day. In fact, I am just too lazy to read through this thing, which in all likelihood I am incapable of understanding anyway. What I don’t get is why Cheney's top aide, Lewis "Scooter" Libby, was convicted of perjury and obstruction of justice. Wasn’t that within Libby’s scope of employment regardless of whether it was unlawful or contrary to the national security of the United States in his important work for Vice President Ubu Enchaîné?
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1 comment:
Nagging, huh? Let me tell you something, mister, I've been working my keester off. Haven't had anytime to go to the beach all week and I'm a seven minute walk away from it.
I'm tired, I've been putting 12 hour days all week. Are you still crabby?
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