Memo To: House Impeachment Managers
http://www.polyconomics.com/ Memo on the Margin There is a definite confusion in the minds of the Senators on the
difference between "the state" and "the nation." Some seem to use it
interchangeably, when in fact they are two different animals. The White House wants this
confusion to continue, because it allows many Democrats to believe that an impeachment
must be a crime against "the state," when in fact the far worse crime of a
President is that which is against "the nation." A mechanism can be more easily
repaired than the nation that it serves. Im constantly surprised to see the
television lawyers, such as those who do the legal prattling for CNN, agreeing with each
other that even if the President strangled the First Lady, he could not be removed from
office, because her departure would not damage the state. Only treason and bribery and
other high crimes and misdemeanors are interpreted as messing up the state. The law would
have to wait until a new President took office in 2001 before they brought out the
handcuffs for Bill Clinton. This is because it has not occurred to many folks that ours is the only
nation that was brought forth by a state. In the history of the world, all other states
were preceded by nations, as national interests led to the creation of a mechanism to
serve the state. The state is only a task-oriented mechanism. A nation is a community of
interests -- social, political, commercial, and religious. The United States is a union of
diversified states that in combination make up a new nation, conceived in liberty and
dedicated to the principle that all men are created equal. We became the nation of
nations. In her interviews, Senator Barbara Boxer [D-CA] always exonerates the
President because he did nothing to damage the state, which may or may not be correct.
Another California Democrat, Senator Dianne Feinstein, confuses "state" and
"nation." She says Clinton did nothing to damage the nation when she means
"state." Practically everyone agrees the President has damaged the nation to one
degree or another, even if the Senate decides the damage is not sufficient to remove him
from office. The constitutional framers clearly indicated that high crimes and
misdemeanors include ethical lapses that undermine the fabric of society. As Rep. Lindsey
Graham [R-FL] put it, we know the damage that results when a father is forced to tell his
children, do as I say, not as I do. The children are confused and the standard is
devalued. The President not only is father to the country, but also father to the whole
world. For the Senate to conclude that it is okay to commit these crimes against the
nation sends a cultural wave that will ripple to every corner of the world. For the Senate
to expel the President and cleanse the office also sends a positive and wholesome cultural wave around the world and into history.
27 January 1999
Jude Wanniski
January 27, 1999
A Nation and a State
Memo To: House Impeachment Managers
From: Jude Wanniski
Re: Confusion on Nation and State