House Representative Congressman John Conyers on the Judicial Committee
is asking you to, through his legislative assistant Alexia, fax or email
if you want Bush impeached.
Fax to
ATTN. : ALEXIA, assistant to Hon. Congressman John Conyers
MESSAGE FROM ALEXIA: FAX OR EMAIL, CAUSE PHONES ARE RINGING OFF HOOK
Message from Alexia:
The phones are currently ringing off the hook, so please send a brief
message stating whether you are for or against impeachment via email or
fax: e mail:
john.conyers@mail.house.gov OR Fax: (313) 226-2085
A letter:
Dear Congressman Conyers:
President Bush seized power in an illegal coup d'etat. His thugs
disenfranchised Slave descendants in a former Reconstruction
state, mocking the 14th Amendment, then interpreted by the
runaway Republican Supreme Court as elevating absentee voting
privileges of snowbirds above the cemeteries at Gettysburg and
Arlington. Such a disgrace could never have occured had not the
officer Constitutionally charged with enforcing an honest vote
count, Senate President Gore, acquiesced. Evidently he and his
Senate Democratic colleagues, not one of whom would challenge
Florida's tainted vote, lacked the backbone to face just such
cries of illegitimacy as Bush has brushed aside. September 11,
2001, made shockingly and awesomely evident the world cannot
afford an American President who is a coward and a weasel.
In 1998, when President Clinton tried to rally America against
the Jihad, Republican politicians drowned him out with cries of,
'Wag the dog!' and 'Impeach!' In America's history, it has never
declared war on any communist country, including Vietnam,
including Korea. However, my close following of the 1990 Senate
vote says that a technical state of war does exist between the U.S.
and Iraq. So, to launch a politically-based impeachment campaign
against a president, even an illegitimate one, in wartime, could
be considered treason, if calling the commander-in-chief a criminal gives
aid and comfort to the enemy.
In peacetime, if his party has just won an overwhelming
bi-election, it is merely a waste of all of our time. Instead,
why not call upon ex-President Carter to demand a new, fair and
free presidential election in the USA? Mistakes were made.
Maybe then my disgusted 21 year-old will want to vote again.
Steven E. Conliff
Columbus, Ohio