Dick Cheney was here in Montana yesterday, speaking at a fundraiser for the re-election of Sen. Conrad Burns. (Burns was implicated in the Abramoff scandal as one of those who had his hand out for payoffs; after initially denying he'd accepted any $ from Abramoff and his co-lobbyists and expending $ on TV ads claiming innocence, Burns was forced to recant and ended up donating the $ he'd received - which he'd already spent - to charity. He also has proven ties to big oil, not surprising in a state like MT which has oil reserves).
Anyway, Cheney was stating how his party has improved the security of the nation and is continuing to work on its improvement. Cheney, as a believer in centralized gov't's "right" to enforce security, is hardly an unbiased person when it comes to determining his party's role in balancing freedom vs. security. As Sgt. Ladylove observed, it's a golden moment for politicos to claim how the system is working to preserve our safety. It hardly seems to matter to the same politicos that their claims are severely compromised by their own undiluted self-interests. What's worse, every such "victory" is trumped up into a reason for a further increase in security measures and a corresponding loss of personal liberty.
I could accept this if some sort of timeframe was involved - I don't mean an actual calendar, but if I knew my liberties were being suspended until a certain objective was reached (military or political) I could at least look forward to a resumption of the freedoms I formerly enjoyed. Unfortunately, Cheney, Rumsfeld, and the other advocates in strong centralized gov't see these measures as in no way reducible - they aren't "war measures" but standard procedure intended to stand for all time. There is nothing new about the measures they've put in place - every wartime gov't has had them - but we're being asked to maintain them indefinitely, without even a real declaration of war or any timeframe for its objectives to be met. The "freedom" of Iraq was a political, not a military, objective. But our C in C has no conception that the two aren't the same thing - a grave error.
You know, I could live w/a wartime situation - rationing, price controls and the rest - which we currently don't have - and which prevented, during WWII, a steep increase in the prices of commodities (although when price ceilings were removed post-1946, there was a period of inflation). But the strong centralized gov't doesn't have the balls to impose these - it has to keep up the bread and circuses necessary to distract the average citizen from what's really being eroded - personal liberty - and which this gov't has no intention of giving back.
Oh, and in case anyone has any doubt: I find the idea of $250-a-plate luncheons for sitting VPs in a "wartime" situation morally odious.