Bush swore an oath of office to support and defend the Constitution. He has sponsored and signed laws that violate Articles I (denial of Habeas Corpus), IV (denial of Full Faith and Credit), VI (abrogation of the Supremacy Clause), and the 4th (illegal searches and seizures), 5th (lack of due process), 6th (denial of counsel, denial of access to courts), and 8th (no torture) Amendments. He has ordered actions that have violated Articles I (abrogation of Presentment and Bicameral Clauses), III (rejection of judicial authority of federal courts), IV (denial of Privileges and Immunities Clause), and the 1st (breach of Establishment Clause, denial of Freedom of Association, denial of Right to Petition), 4th (illegal searches and seizures), 5th (denial of Due Process, improper Takings, refusal to follow Grand Jury requirements), 6th (denial of counsel, abrogation of Confrontation Clause, denial of public trial), and 8th (no torture) Amendments. He refers to the Constitution as "just a g*d*mn piece of paper". This is failure to support and defend the Constitution, which is a betrayal of his oath of office.
Bush swore an oath of office to ensure that the laws of this nation were faithfully executed. He has put into place 800 signing statements, the vast majority of which assert that he does not intend to follow or enforce a particular law if he doesn't want to. He has lied to Congress about those signing statements, which is a violation of federal law. He has ordered illegal warrantless wiretapping in violation of FISA and Title III of the Omnibus Crime Control Act (18 USC 2511). He has committed actions our own laws clearly define as war crimes (18 USC 2441). He has willfully violated federal law thousands upon thousands of times, by his own admission and according to findings of the US Supreme Court. This is failure to ensure that the laws are faithfully executed, which is a betrayal of his oath of office.
That's just what he's admitted doing, and what the Supreme Court has determined he's done.
Article II Section 4. "The President, Vice President and all civil officers of the United States, shall be removed from office on impeachment for, and conviction of, treason, bribery, or other high crimes and misdemeanors."
2006-09-15 11:54:43
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answer #1
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answered by coragryph 7
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Yes, I would. He has seriously been messing up this whole idea of democracy and equality. He know wants to torture prisoners. Even the terrorists dont torture their prisoners. I thought we were supposed to be fighting them because of their evil ideas. Now, we'd have absolutely no reason to look down upon the terrorists because hey, we're worse than them. and Bush is a complete idiot. If he was smart and had something to say, hed have that debate that Iran's president offered. The only reason he's not doing it is probably because hed get stuck on all the questions. Recently, I read an article about a guy whos son died in Sep 11. He was angry and wanted to get back at the terrorists. He had the army write his sons name on some weapons that were used against the Iraqis. Later on, he realized that Saddam had nothing to do with the terrorists. He now cant trust his own president. Bush is trying to come up with reasons for the things he does and he wants to decieve us all. We shud really realize what hes doing and seriously, hes making our country look bad.
2006-09-15 19:42:57
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answer #2
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answered by A Being 3
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Gee, I haven't seen this question in maybe a week. First, no, I would not like to see George Bush impeached. Second, even if I DID want to see him impeached, I'd be disappointed because he has committed NO CRIME for which he could be impeached.
2006-09-15 18:48:02
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Yes, because nothing much has gone right since he's been president. I have nothing against him as a person just as president.
2006-09-15 18:49:42
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answer #4
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answered by randomwoman56413 2
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