Credit to Rand Paul for showing how a real filibuster is done, but that's about all that came of it. Image: AP
The history of the American filibuster has all the shame, sorrow, and beauty of this country wrapped into it. In fact, a Revolutionary War hero, one who shot the first Secretary of the Treasury, kicked it off. The window for filibuster was, unintentionally, pried open by Aaron Burr, after he suggested that a previous question motion be nixed.In 1806, when the Senate recodified its regulations, it adopted Burr’s idea. Perhaps, most admirably, it was successfully used by 12 anti-war senators to kill a bill aimed to arm merchant vessels. Their victory led Woodrow Wilson to urge the Senate to adopt a rule for cloture. The rule was invoked in 1964, after more than 75 hours of one of our most despicable filibusters: the Southern Democrats’ attempt to block passage of LBJ’s landmark Civil Rights Act.
We all know what Rand Paul, the Kentucky senator who filibustered the nomination of John Brennan Wednesday night, thinks about the Civil Rights Act of 1964. While running for office, he kicked up controversy by criticizing it, saying “I'm not in favor of any discrimination of any form. I would never belong to any club that excluded anybody for race. We still do have private clubs in America that can discriminate based on race. But I think what's important about this debate is not written into any specific 'gotcha' on this, but asking the question: What about freedom of speech?” After making these comments on Rachel Maddow’s show, critics dug up a letter he wrote to a paper in 2002, defending businesses' right to discriminate.
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Rand Paul’s political positions are toxic, but, like most libertarians supported by the Tea Party, he is a broken clock. On the subject of the American government’s right to assassinate its citizens, a point that Attorney General Eric Holder has continually waffled on, Paul is completely right: the very idea is a deplorable, unconstitutional joke that should be opposed by any human being a conscience.Two perplexing themes dominated the discourse throughout Twitter and the blogosphere during the, frequently surreal proceedings. The first one was predicated on an inquiry: “Where are the Democrats?” Why is Paul, a caricature of libertarian wackiness, willing to challenge the president on this crucial issue, while liberals sit on their hands?Why is Paul, a caricature of libertarian wackiness, willing to challenge the president on this crucial issue, while liberals sit on their hands?
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For starters, who cares? Where’s the contradiction here? As Salon’s Natasha Lennard tweeted, “We don't have to like Rand Paul, We don't have to like unlimited executive power and permanent state of exception. We can hate it all kids.”Secondly, the fact that Paul was able to ignite so much support from those who would, usually, oppose such measures is kind of the entire point. These types of battles tend to boil down to inane partisan bickering. It's the stuff of DC gossip columns, not international law. By the way, after his Jay-Z quote, Rubio explained, "Well I don't know if it was all good a week ago, but I can tell you that things have really changed, because if the president was George W. Bush and this was a question being asked of him and his response was the silence we've gotten, we'd have a very different scenario here tonight.”Yeah, no shit. No Republicans would be there, but, realistically, how many Democrats would even show up? Writing about the left-wing debate surrounding Rand Paul’s father, last year, political theorist Corey Robin articulated the issue perfectly. “Both sides are right," he wrote. "Not in a the-truth-lies-somewhere-in-between sort of way. Nor in a can’t-we-all-get-along sort of way. No, both sides are right in the sense that I laid out above: Ron Paul is unacceptable, and it’s unacceptable that we don’t have someone on the left who is raising the issues of imperialism, war and peace, and civil liberties in as visible and forceful a way.”Many pundits have been trying to define exactly what a wacked-out senator filibustering the nomination of a CIA director connected to an illegal torture program says about contemporary American political culture. It says a whole lot. What does it say that Obama’s pick was nominated the next day, with both parties ultimately backing the draconian consensus? Everything.Of course, it’s beyond hilarious to see people like Palin, Ingraham, and Drudge stand up against the executive branch while maintaining a straight face.