Get News & Views Updates
Most Popular This Week
Popular content
Today's Top News
Ten Reasons to Move Cheney’s Book to the Crime Section
Former Vice President Dick Cheney was given a multi-million contract to write a book about his political career. According to Cheney’s media hype, the book, called In My Time, will have “heads exploding all over Washington.” The Darth Vader of the Bush administration offers no apologies and feels no remorse. But peace activists around the country are stealthily gearing up to visit bookstores, grab a stack of books, and deposit them where they belong—the Crime Section.
Here are ten of Cheney’s many offenses to inspire you to move Cheney’s book, and to insert these bookmarks explaining why the author of In My Time should be “doin’ time.”
1. Cheney lied; Iraqis and U.S. soldiers died. As Vice President, Cheney lied about (nonexistent) weapons of mass destruction and Saddam Hussein’s (nonexistent) ties to the 9/11 attack as a way to justify a war with a country that never attacked us. Thanks to Cheney and company, hundreds of thousands of Iraqis and over 4,000 American soldiers perished in a war that should never have been fought.
2. Committing War Crimes in Iraq. During the course of the Iraq war, the Bush/Cheney administration violated the Geneva Conventions by targeting civilians, journalists, hospitals, and ambulances, and using illegal weapons, including white phosphorous, depleted uranium, and a new type of napalm.
3. War profiteering. U.S. taxpayers shelled out about three trillion dollars for the Bush/Cheney wars in Iraq and Afghanistan—a major factor in our nation’s present economic meltdown. But Cheney and his cronies at Halliburton made out like bandits, getting billions in contracts for everything from feeding troops in Iraq to constructing the U.S. Embassy in Afghanistan to building the infamous Guantanamo prison. Cheney was CEO of Halliburton from 1995-2000, leaving for the VP position with a $20 million retirement package, plus millions in stock options and deferred salary. Before the Iraq War began, Halliburton was 19th on the U.S. Army's list of top contractors; with Cheney’s help, by 2003 it was number one—increasing the value of Cheney’s stocks by over 3,000%.
4. Violating basic rights. Cheney shares responsibility for holding thousands of prisoners without charges and without the fundamental right to the writ of habeas corpus, and for keeping prisoners hidden from the International Committee of the Red Cross. He sanctioned kidnapping people and simply rendering them to secret overseas prisons. His authorization of the arbitrary detention of Americans, legal residents, and non-Americans--without due process, without charges, and without access to counsel--was in gross violation of U.S. and international law. A fan of indefinite detention in Guantanamo, Cheney writes in his book that he has been “happy to note” that President Obama failed to honor his pledge to close the Guantánamo prison.
5. Advocating torture. Cheney was a prime mover behind the Bush administration's decision to violate the Geneva Conventions and the U.N. Convention Against Torture and to break with decades of past practice by the U.S. military by supporting “enhanced interrogation techniques.” This led to hundreds of documented cases in Iraq and Afghanistan of abuse, torture and homicide. The torture included the practice known as "water-boarding," a form of simulated drowning. After World War II, Japanese soldiers were tried and convicted of war crimes in US courts for water-boarding. The sanctioning of abuses from the top trickled down, as the whole world saw in the photos from Abu Ghraib, becoming a recruiting tool for Al Qaeda and sullying the reputation of our nation.
6. Trying to prolong the Afghan war. Not content with the damage he caused as VP, Cheney continues to encourage more grist for the war machine. In his book he criticizes President Obama’s decision to withdraw, by September 2012, the 33,000 additional troops Obama sent to Afghanistan in 2009. He has also cautioned Obama not to pull out all the troops from Afghanistan at the planned date of 2014. “I don't think we need to run for the exits,” he told Fox News Sunday" host Chris Wallace.
7. Abusing executive privilege: Cheney used executive privilege to refuse to comply with over a dozen Congressional subpoenas related to improper firing of Federal attorneys, torture, election violations and exposing—for political retribution--the identity of Valerie Plame, a covert CIA operative working on sensitive WMD proliferation.
8. Spying on us. Cheney was the mastermind behind the National Security Agency’s warrantless wiretapping program that spied on thousands, perhaps millions of American citizens on American soil. This massive government interference with personal phone calls and emails was in violation of FISA (the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act), the Federal Telecommunications Act, and 4th Amendment of the Constitution.
9. Bomb, bomb, bomb Iran. When Cheney was CEO of Halliburton, the company skirted the law against investing in Iran by using a phony offshore subsidiary. Once VP, however, Cheney advocated bombing Iran. "I was probably a bigger advocate of military action than any of my colleagues," Cheney said in response to questions about whether the Bush administration should have launched a pre-emptive attack on Iran’s nuclear facilities prior to handing over the White House to Barack Obama. Cheney thinks Obama is too soft on Iran, and has said that the only way for diplomacy with Iran to work is if Obama also threatens to bomb the country. Negotiations are “bound to fail unless we are perceived as very credible” in threatening military action against Iran, he said. It seems that wars with Iraq, Afghanistan and Libya, plus drone attacks in Pakistan and Yemen, are not enough to satisfy Cheney’s war addiction. But wait, there’s more….
10. Favored bombing Syria—and North Korea—instead of negotiating. One of the key anecdotes in Cheney’s memoir is his recollection of a session with the National Security Council in 2007, when he advised Bush to bomb a suspected Syrian nuclear reactor site. “After I finished,” he writes, “the president asked, ‘Does anyone here agree with the vice president?’ Not a single hand went up around the room.” Luckily, Cheney's advice was dismissed in favor of a diplomatic approach (although the Israelis bombed the site in September 2007). As for North Korea, in his book, Cheney calls former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice naive for trying to forge a nuclear weapons agreement with North Korea.
Enough? Since President Obama is not interested in holding Cheney accountable, the least we can do is show our disgust by dumping his books in the Crime section and inserting this bookmark. And if you happen to be lucky and catch one of Cheney’s book signings, bring along a pair of handcuffs.
Comments
Note: Disqus 2012 is best viewed on an up to date browser. Click here for information. Instructions for how to sign up to comment can be viewed here. Our Comment Policy can be viewed here. Please follow the guidelines. Note to Readers: Spam Filter May Capture Legitimate Comments...



33 Comments so far
Show AllCheney's actions prove two things. First, there are no limits to power at the highest levels of government. Second, most Americans are easily deceived.
Dick Cheney is only one among a rouges gallery of un-indicted war criminals of the Bush and Obama administrations.
Cheney was indicted in Nigeria for bribery. Caving to pressure from the U.S., Nigeria dropped the indictment against Cheney.
I wish that some magistrate had the courage to indicted Cheney on charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity as a Spanish magistrate did in indicting former Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet in 1998. Cheney should be indicted and brought before the ICC at the Hague to stand trial.
These are the two who stand out the most because their crimes were so apparent.
But most US presidents have done the same things. How many coups has the US, CiA been involved in?
How about the other presidents that lied us in to wars?
The US is full of war criminals.
Well, I can't blame Cheney for wearing a little rouge; the synthetic plasma pumped through his plastic heart gives him an unnatural corpse-like pallor that makes cosmetics a must. I wouldn't be surprise if he borrows some of Boehner's Man-Tan before long.
Incidentally, FWIW Judge Baltasar Garzón, who resolutely ordered the arrest of Pinochet, was indicted in 2010 for "exceeding his authority" by launching an investigation into the disappearance of more than 100,000 civilians at the hands of Franco supporters during the Spanish Civil War. He is facing three separate trials.
I'm rooting for him, but it's no accident that Spain's overclass is persecuting Garzón, and hoping to make an example of him to chill those who are inspired by, and seek to emulate, him.
Why in the world are criminals like Cheney and Rumsfeld allowed to make millions of dollars by selling books that brag about their war crimes. Proof that the U.S. is definitely the equivalent of the Star Wars "Evil Empire"
Number eight is still going on, isn't it?
The line about "sullying the reputation of our nation" was a hoot. By the time the Abu Ghraib festivities were published, our reputation was so sullied it could not have been made worse.
And Obama is "not interested in holding Cheney accountable"? Obama is complicit in the Bush/Cheney war crimes and every vote for him in 2012 is a vote approving of the Bush/Cheney/Obama war crimes. By failing to prosecute obvious war criminals, the entire U.S. government has lost all credibility and deserves the support and respect of no one.
Thank you, Medea, for another great article. Please write another one, specifying how we citizens of this utterly disgraced and despicable demonic nation can bring these war criminals to the same level of justice that was meted out to the war criminals of other wars. Or shall we dig up the hanged German and Japanese warmongers and waterboarders and apologize to them for their harsh punishment, offering them suitable book deals instead?
Wademingzi, I hope you don't mind if I use your quote about the vote for Obama? Spot on, mate?
We need of a "Son of Sam" law to prevent politicians from further cashing in on their crimes via book sales. What's next? Paintings by Rumsfeld featured alongside Gacy's clowns?
How dare Cheney tell Obama to return troops from the war that Obama loves so much and campaigned to ramp up???!!
Failed to mention the stand-down orders Cheney gave from the "bunker" on 9-11, as disclosed by Norman Minetta.
I noted that my favourite bookstore did stock two copies each of bush and dick's memoirs. One copy of each were placed in the 'horror' section, and the 'crime' section of the bookstore long before I could suggest such a thing. Of course, it's not a major chain bookstore...
As for other countries trying to arrest and charge those responsible for torture and other crimes against humanity... It's not going to happen. The USA would invade and/or bomb any nation that dared to do the right thing in this matter, and you bloody well know it. I don't hold out much hope for a restoration of the rule of law in the USA, once you lose that principle you have nothing.
I did like the pictures of placement in the linked article. I also liked the article, keep up the good work Medea.
Why do people here still believe there are laws to hold the ruling elite accountable?
We are an empire ruled by fiat, now.
We can't just submit to these injustices without fighting back, that's what they depend on to continue committing war crimes with impunity.
Thanks Medea for a wonderful article and for the creative action as always! His book definitely belongs in the crime section of bookstores!!
They are all coming back out of the woodwork to cash in on the 10th anniversary of 9/11. They are proud of what they did and to a person have said they would do it again. But American exceptionalism trumps everything and these criminals are celebrated and rewarded for the death and destruction they caused, as are too many current "politicians" and "patriots". Sick.
Ray McGovern's incisive article on CD today works as a powerful complement to this piece by Medea Benjamin.
My reaction is that had science not stepped in, to provide this Evil doer (Bush's favorite term) with a fake heart... the world would not have had to face the death and destruction his dead (if salvaged) heart managed to bring on.
When we count up all of science's credits and debits, I bet the honest toll would be ZERO. One set would entirely negate the other.
A few telling examples:
Monsanto's rape of nature and its shot-gun wedding equivalent of bio-engineered sterile seeds and plant "products"
The deadly technologies the MIC is able to utilize to hugely expand the untold body counts (of alleged enemies)
... like the A-bomb and its newer, more efficient versions
The motor engine and its net impact on global climate change
Cloning...
Do you really think that had Cheney not been alive, Bush the lessor would not have found someone equally reprehensible?
I do understand why you dislike science, after all there isn't a scientist on the planet who thinks that astrology is anything but bunk. (which it is.)
I suppose you also decry the fact that science provided a cure for polio, smallpox and other diseases that at one time would also have weeded out the defective ones like Cheney (along with a few million other individuals). Of course, you might be one of those who thinks that the bathwater can be tossed without tossing the baby too. :)
Don't forget that scientists came up with manufactured fertilizers, which make the feeding of nearly 6 billion people possible. I suppose that is a bad thing because it also leads to overpopulation tho, eh?
Oh, and air conditioning that makes it possible to be comfortable in the heat of a Florida summer. (wasn't the A/C invented in Florida?)
Thing is, you're kinda right, but mostly wrong. Science does have some issues, but to claim that it has had no positive impact at all on our species is bullshit and you know it. You'd have been burned at the stake for witchcraft in the days before the scientific revolution. I'd rather have modern medicine that 'faith' healing. I'd rather have the modern scientific description of the universe than your mystical fiction. I'd much rather use a car (or train, plane, or ship) than rely on the horse (or sail) for transport.
I know little of astrology though no star chart has the capability to destroy all life on our lovely planet. No scientist can cure radiation sickness.
I should hope you also realize that the star chart also cannot improve anything on the planet. I think that you might also find that there has been 'cures' found for some cancers, and I also would suggest that mild radiation sickness can indeed be cured. Not everyone dies of that you know. Are you going to argue that as the doctors can't cure AIDS that we shouldn't trust them?
You're also lumping all scientist together aren't you? Is the biologist responsible for the discoveries of the physicist? Why? Do you really think that the atomic bomb was first conceived of by Newton, or Darwin?
And with that we depart from discussing the article at all...
How about ten reasons to move Cheney to death row?
the pyschotic's handbook to getting away with anything
The monster's reign of terror was not accidental. I believe in 2004 over 96% of voters voted for warfare as usual by voting either Repuk or Demok candidates, and "bringing on" yet another four years of fascist escalation in the world's most grotesquely militarized society, then on to another four riding the fascist mega-wave, ehh? Concept: "Responsibility in the Voting Booth" accepted? Rejected? My suspicion is "rejected".
He will spend his between-lives times in the lower astral realms sometimes known as Hell. There, he will have a continuous non-stop 'nightmare' of sorts of all the evil he committed in his last life. This will be inbetween being taunted and tortured by other souls of his low evolution who delight in causing each other various torments of the soul. His next hundred lives or so will NOT be pretty. He will reap what he sowed and incarnate to work out all the bad karma he has stored up.
No. He will die and rot. That's it. No pie in the sky, nor torture by demons under the earth await him after death as they are fictions. There will not be justice for cheney, unless he has a stroke and spends another decade drooling onto his chest, unable to move or speak.
I see why you and others want to believe in the magic of the sky god(dess) who spanks the naughty people good and proper after death. I just think it's better to try and get bastards like cheney (and bush) into jail where they can suffer NOW! Damn shame that that's not going to happen either.
Dick Cheney-an unabashed war criminal, Oligarchic madman, power-hungry paranoid demagogue--and one of the last representatives of the old, white, European, Manifest-Destiny embracing faux-rulers who sees the clock ticking and a new, strange world emerging. Yet even with a fragile heart, he shows no sign of any humility, nor any Humanity. Hence, I could care less about him, except to hope he faces his crimes, and his accusers, here on earth and then in the next world. Cheney, I hope you have to stare into the eyes of every single soldier you sent to their death for your LIES, you SOB!!
What an unrepentant piece of garbage this person is.
Oops! I accidentally spilled my coffee all over a stack of his books! That's been happening to me a lot lately, not exactly sure why... Well, gotta get outta this bookstore now, then grab me another cup a joe. : )
.
.
.
"We also have to work, through, sort of the dark side, if you will. "
––Dick Cheney, days after the terrorist attacks of 2001
"Go fuck yourself"
—Dick Cheney, to Sen. Patrick Leahy on the floor of the US Senate
In an April 2010 interview with Dennis Miller, Dick Cheney reflected on telling Sen. Patrick Leahy to "go f**k yourself", saying "That's sort of the best thing I ever did."
Such a high opinion of his own legacy. And I have to agree with him!
LOL! Fabulous.
Good one!
♻ 'Twere better it went straight into the recycling bin. ♲
☠ Cheney himself is, of course, too toxic to recycle. ☣
Aaronica - There is no sky god or goddess who dishes out punishment, as you say. However, the punishment is real. It is self-delivered. The mind survives bodily death.
I will totally agree with you, Wademingzi. As a psychologist/therapist/healer for the past 25 years, it is all predictable. However, i wouldn't call it 'punishment'. It is simply a matter of balance. Punishment is a very primitive paradigm, which is still based in the 'punishing Father' mindset which was projected onto the Father Sky God.
No one can be intentionally destructive (and denial never seems to work as an exemption), and expect to feel peace. They will create their own hells. I for one, would not want to be inside Cheney's skin - for more than superficial reasons. The fact that we are all connected simply is the way it is. What we do to another we do to ourselves.
Which by the way, is why i knew obama was a con man from the start. Going to a voting booth wasn't gonna get the u.s. off the hook. Learning happens, consciously or not. The hordes of obama believers - what had they learned? Obviously they still couldn't 'see' beyond superficialities.
I would hope that Afghans and Iraqi's and other Victims read CD Posts and Comments...I really hope that they don't believe we Americans {USA'ns} are all Evil People like Cheney and so many others like him...