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June 26, 2007

William Rivers Pitt: How Dick Cheney Broke My Mind

Filed under: Uncategorized — Volt @ 10:02 am

William Rivers Pitt: t r u t h o u t , June 26, 2007

I was absolutely savaged by an unexpected emotional detonation on Thursday. Every rough emotion I am capable of experiencing – anger, fear, sorrow, rage, bitterness, despair, loathing, astonishment, woe, regret, horror, fury – erupted within me at the same time that day. I spent hours in the aftermath trying to type an accurate description of what had happened to me and why, but I failed. For the first time in a long, long while, I was completely unable to write.

What could have been powerful enough to huff and puff and blow my house down? What manner of mind bomb could hurl me so far off kilter that I was incapable of explaining it on paper?

It was, of course, Dick Cheney.

The news story that started it all was just another report on Dick being Dick, doing his Dick thing the way Dick always does. If they ever hold a contest to decide which politician has the most appropriate first name, you should bet the farm, the barn, the house, the cow, every crop, every truck, and throw in all your shoes besides, on Dick winning in a walk. Dick would win in such a dominant fashion that the NBA Finals would appear competitive by comparison.

It was Dick, and he got me on Thursday but good. You’ve probably heard the news story by now, and maybe you reacted to it like I did.

The National Archives is basically the federal filing cabinet where all governmental paper records are stored and organized. The Archives is an invaluable repository of our governmental history. These documents are publicly available, and are a giant treasure trove for historians, biographers or anyone who loves to feel a bit of history between their fingers.

So the Archives people had asked Cheney’s office for his papers, because it was time to do so, because doing so is the law, because those papers are the property of the people. We pay for their printing and we pay for their storage, and the return on our investment can be found in the History/Biography/Politics section of any bookstore in America.

Dick turned the National Archives down flat, and this is what destroyed me on Thursday. Not only did he turn them down, his office wrote – actually wrote on paper in a letter to the Archives – their amazing explanation for refusing to hand over the papers. If you’ve not heard this, brace yourself.

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