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News (Media Awareness Project) - US CO: Column: Want To Run The Show? Go Rogue
Title:US CO: Column: Want To Run The Show? Go Rogue
Published On:2010-02-19
Source:Fort Collins Coloradoan (CO)
Fetched On:2010-04-02 12:31:55
WANT TO RUN THE SHOW? GO ROGUE

"I am in control here in the White House." - Secretary of State
Alexander Haig, 1981.

Ah, the good old days when even a big shot like Gen. Al Haig could
get in trouble for such mavericky declarations that defy basic
constitutional precedents.

In the 21st century, that's ancient history. We've so idealized
cowboy-style rebellion in matters of war and law enforcement that
"going Haig" is today honored as "going rogue." Defiance,
irreverence, contempt - these are the moment's most venerated
postures, no matter how destructive or lawless.

The Bush administration's illegal wiretapping and torture sessions
were the most obvious examples of the rogue sensibility on steroids.
But then came McCain-Palin, a presidential ticket predicated almost
singularly on the rogue brand. And now, even in the Obama era, that
brand pervades.

It began re-emerging in September with Gen. Stanley McChrystal's
Afghan escalation plan. McChrystal didn't just ask President Barack
Obama for more troops - protocol-wise, that would have been
completely appropriate. No, McChrystal went rogue, pre-emptively
leaking his request to the media, then delivering a public address
telling Obama to immediately follow his orders.

Of course, while McChrystal's insubordination was
extra-constitutional in spirit, he at least made the effort to obtain
the commander-in-chief's rubber-stamp approval. The same cannot be
said for the rogues inside Obama's Drug Enforcement Agency.

One year ago, Obama instructed the DEA to follow his campaign pledge
and respect local statutes legalizing medicinal marijuana. When the
DEA kept raiding pot dispensaries in states that had passed such
laws, Attorney General Eric Holder reiterated the cease-and-desist
decree, stating, "What (Obama) said during the campaign is now
American policy."

As even more raids nonetheless continued, the Justice Department then
issued an explicit memo ordering federal agents to refrain from
prosecuting those who are in "compliance with existing state laws
providing for the medical use of marijuana."

And yet the DEA has recently intensified its crackdown. Here in
Colorado, the feds not only raided two dispensaries, but did so in a
way that deliberately humiliated their superiors.

In January, the DEA stormed a company that performs cannabis quality
tests. The firm's alleged infraction? Following protocol and formally
applying for a federal equipment license. DEA rogues responded to the
request with the gestapo.

This was topped last week when DEA agents arrested a medical
marijuana grower who dared discuss his business with a local news
outlet. Sensing a PR opportunity, DEA agent Jeffrey Sweetin used the
spectacle to insist that he will not listen to stand-down directives
from his bosses.

"The time is coming when we go into a dispensary, we find out what
their profit is, we seize the building and we arrest everybody,"
Sweetin menacingly intoned.

Once again, a rogue going wild and once again, tacit acceptance.
Rather than personnel changes reining in the out-of-control agency,
the president has nominated the acting Bush-appointed DEA
administrator, Michele Leonhart, to a full term.

The message, then, should be clear: If you're looking for who is "in
control" of our military and police forces, don't look to the
established chain of command and don't look to constitutional
provisions that mandate civilian authority over the government
bayonet. Look to the most reckless rogues - it's a good bet they're
the ones running the show.
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