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 31 August 2011 from Truthout Website 
 
 
	 June 20, 2007 file photo 
	(Photo: Doug Mills / The New 
	York Times) 
 
	 
 They all do it, sometimes more than once. Richard Nixon is the main example of one who produced a multi-volume apologia; by the time he went into the ground, he'd penned enough books to fill a wide shelf. Henry Kissinger was similarly prolific, which leads one to wonder about the relationship between criminal activities and the printed page. 
 Nixon was chased from office after a series of crimes that, at the time, had no precedent, and Kissinger is still so infamous that he cannot travel abroad for fear of arrest. 
 
	Both wrote enough books to take up half the 
	political science section of any local bookstore, perhaps in the vain 
	attempt to explain away the lasting damage their actions did to the 
	republic. 
 I'm sure you've heard about it by now; he laid the groundwork for its release by claiming the contents would cause heads to explode in Washington, causing a lot of people who should know better by now to say, 
 
	It isn't, at all, but I must confess that my 
	head did come very close to launching itself off my shoulders... not because 
	of what's in the book, but because I have to deal with the rancid reality of 
	a free and un-convicted Dick Cheney appearing in the public eye once again. 
 If there were any justice to be found, Mr. Cheney would be forced to contend with the "Son of Sam Law," which, according to World Law Direct, 
 The Son of Sam, a.k.a. David Berkowitz, killed six people and wounded several others during his notorious summer-long shooting spree in New York. 
 Berkowitz is an absolute piker compared to Dick Cheney, whose actions directly caused deaths and injuries that number in the hundreds of thousands. The deaths he is responsible for are ongoing to this day, in fact. 
 
	If there were any justice to be found, whatever 
	profits he earns from his book would be spread out between the families of 
	dead and wounded soldiers whom he lied into war in Iraq, between the 
	families of dead and wounded Iraqi civilians, and between Americans like 
	
	Valerie Plame, who along with numerous other intelligence figures, had their 
	lives bulldozed by Cheney's eight-year rampage through our system of 
	government. 
 
	According to Wikileaks, not only has the Obama 
	administration failed to seek a reckoning with Cheney, they worked 
	vigorously behind the scenes to ensure that no such reckoning will ever come 
	to pass. 
 
	Remember that? They called it a "deferred 
	retirement benefit," an annual check with six zeroes to the left of the 
	decimal, and all the while Cheney was steering your tax dollars into 
	Halliburton's coffers with a blizzard of bald-faced lies about weapons of 
	mass destruction in Iraq. 
 There was all this, and so much more besides, but one incident stands out in my mind above all else. 
 It was only an accent in the symphony of wrongdoing Cheney directed from his office, and was barely noticed at the time, but I will never forget it. It was a simple thing, really: 
 Dick Cheney said no. 
 
	No, you cannot have any papers from the office 
	of the Vice President, and for one reason: the office of the Vice President, 
	because I say so, is not part of the Executive Branch. 
 
	The unmitigated gall required to utter such a 
	claim, especially after so much talk about the "Unitary Executive," is 
	unparalleled in modern American history. 
 Dick Cheney is the ultimate American terrorist, one who not only lacks respect for American law and government, but who spent his eight years in office actively working to destroy and dismember the functions of that government. 
 He tore the place up, deliberately and with intent, because he hated the law and the government it supported, and we will be a long time recovering from his deeds. He is directly and personally responsible for thousands of deaths and injuries. 
 
	If this is not terrorism in the raw, then the 
	word has no meaning. 
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