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December 26, 2005
The Washington Post produces a hit-piece against John Yoo, the former Bush administration lawyer who wrote a number of controversial memos defending the president's power to take various actions to combat terrorism. Peter Slevin seems astonished that, having had the audacity to take positions with which liberals and some moderates disagree, Yoo is defending these positions instead of doing penitence. Thus, the headine of the story is "Scholar Stands By Post-9/11 Writings On Torture, Domestic Eavesdropping." But why wouldn't he? Slevin never attempts to show that these positions are wrong, let along indefensible. He does assert that unidentified "constitutional scholars" have "skewered" Yoo's reasoning. But absent any discussion of that reasoning or the arguments lodged against it, this amounts to cheerleading on the Post's part. In the same vein, Slevin writes, Yoo has alienated so many influential opponents that he is considered uncomfirmable for a judgeship or high office. . .Yet Yoo. . .can be found at seminars and radio microphones standing up for Bush administration legal arguments that will be studied for decades. Again, is Yoo supposed to hide from the public because he has "alienated influential opponents?" Sounds like a liberal fantasy to me. By the way, did the Washington Post write any pieces wondering how Clinton administration attorneys who came up with unsuccessful argument after unsuccessful argument in favor of Clinton's assertions of executive power -- in the name of concealing Clinton's misconduct and perjury -- had the gall to defend their positions in public? I don't recall any. |