The U.S. Senate's senior
Constitutional scholar has correctly equated Bush with Hitler, and the
usual attack dogs are howling. But they are wrong, and Americans must
now face the harsh realities of an increasingly fascist and
totalitarian GOP. Octogenarian Senator Robert Byrd of West Virginia
made the equation in the context of Bush's attack on Senate procedures
which might slow or halt his on-going attempt to pack the courts with
extreme right-wing fanatics. Byrd said Bush's moves to destroy
time-honored Senate rules parallel Hitler's ramming fascist legislation
through his gutted Reichstag. "Hitler never abandoned the cloak of
legality," said Byrd. "He recognized the enormous psychological value
of having the law on his side. Instead, he turned the law inside out
and made illegality legal." Anti-Defamation League Director Abraham
Foxman has played the holocaust card for the Republicans, saying "It is
hideous, outrageous and offensive for Senator Byrd to suggest that the
Republican Party's tactics could in any way resemble those of Adolph
Hitler and the Nazi Party. GOP Chair Ken Mehlman has labeled Byrd's
remarks "reprehensible and beyond the pale," remarks joined by
Pennsylvania Senator Rick Santorum. Santorum is best known for equating
sexuality between consenting gays with bestiality between humans and
dogs. But Byrd is one of the few in either house of Congress to truly
understand the Constitution and to advocate for the Bill of Rights. He
points out that like Hitler, Bush is pursuing a strategy designed to
win absolute rule by one party and one leader. Hitler's central slogan
"Ein Volk, Ein Reich, Ein Fuhrer" -- one people, one government, one
dictator -- accurately describes the current GOP strategy of Karl Rove,
Bush's Joseph Goebbels. Now the Republicans have renominated extreme
right-wing judges to high courts from which they were barred prior to
the 2004 election. With enhanced majorities in Congress, the GOP is
moving to gut rules put in place to protect the rights of minorities
within the government. For the GOP, as for Hitler, such safeguards are
annoying barriers to absolute power. [more]