In a clip, Allen
West finally sets record straight about National Defense Authorization Act.wmv;
West reads the summary of the National Defense Authorization Act which
states that the bill is specific to Al Qaeda and other terrorists and not to
Americans. West also emphasizes no new powers are given to the Federal
government. He then goes to page 657 and reads verbatim the paragraph that
exempts Americans from Military Custody. (West says he is reading page 657, but
he is not.) In fact, he is actually reading on page 430, Section 1032b (1) of
S1867 or page 266 Section 1022 of HR 1540, which he read as follows:
…(1) UNITED STATES CITIZENS.—The
require
11ment to detain a person in military
custody under
12 this section does not extend to
citizens of the United
13
States….
West challenges the audience to tell him where in
the bill there is anything suggesting something different than this exemption. I
wish I had been there: I read the bill. One
has to wonder what West would have done had someone in the audience known
anything about the bill. Perhaps they didn’t bother to read it because they
were expecting West to be the expert to guide them.--So much for the value
of expert guidance. So, to his challenge
is the following, from S1867 and HR1540, Sections 1032 and 1022 a (4), respectively, the paragraph
just preceding--and specific to--the one he read, (cited above), reads:
(4) WAIVER FOR NATIONAL SECURITY.—The
2 Secretary of Defense may, in consultation with the
3 Secretary of State and the Director of National In
4 telligence, waive the requirement of paragraph (1) if
5 the Secretary submits to Congress a certification in
6 writing that such a waiver is in the national security
7 interests of the United States.
It is not difficult to understand that
the waiver in the paragraph he didn’t read is specifically referring to the one
he did considering the use of Paragraph b “(1)” which includes the language
about “the requirement”.
Mr. West introduced himself as a
qualified expert on the bill, as one who sits on the Armed Forces
Committee. Hmm. Did Mr. West know what was
in the bill but simply defrauded the audience? Or did he do what notoriously
happens on the Capitol: he didn’t really read the bill?
This public incident should be an
embarrassment to Mr. West. To be amply
fair to him, we should err on the side of charity and conclude that he isn’t
nefarious but, rather, careless and/or naïve. Sadly, either way, he has done a
great disservice to his constituency, the audience, and those of YouTube. All
legislators make mistakes and holding someone’s entire political career in the
balance for one bad blunder is probably a little harsh. But when a legislator qualifies himself as a credentialed
expert because—as in this case for example, he serves on the Armed Services Committee—and
then publically renders a verdict on the bill, spreads that through the
general public, a higher standard and expectation must be adhered to.
Beyond West’s exclusion of the facts
in the bill--as bad as that is, this incident illustrates a larger issue. It shows two significant paradigms that must
change as part of a strategy to mend our political and societal problems in
America.
First, Americans need to lose their
naiveté and start reading bills themselves. The Constitutional debates include
specific discussion that legislation should be short and clearly understandable
to the average citizen. (Tongue in cheek: this bill is short—shy of 700 pages
and obviously understandable given all the debate. Of course it helps to read
the entire bill.) Moreover, Americans seem to believe that somehow those who
represent us are more intelligent than we are. This example with West is not an
exception, but more the rule. It would
behoove Americans to expect that if they can’t read a bill, (excluding summaries
as “the bill”), it’s likely their representative can’t either. Americans should
make it clear that if they cannot get through a bill, it doesn’t get passed.
Period.
Secondly, any legislator or any person
who reads the summary under the assumption that it equates to reading the bill
is both naïve about the bias of summaries and lazy. This cherry picking of the
bill to emphasis what the summary says is precisely why we have bills that are
improper, inaccurate to their intent and/or in denial of the Constitution
outright.
Sadly, this is precisely the kind of
misguidance that is leaving the American public in a dizzying state of
confusion and disenchantment with their own politics. Allen West has some
explaining to do and it better not equate to selling proverbial swamp land in
Florida. More importantly Americans have
simply got to stop buying swamp land.
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