Senator Robert Byrd has been the most eloquent voice in the U.S. Senate, criticizing the foreign policy of the current administration.
He has a past that is besmirched by his membership in the Ku Klux Clan from 1945-1946. For more information on his history, check the Wikipedia
bio, and draw your own conclusion.
His most recent speech is an attempt to wake the Senate up to the fact that ending the filibuster rule is another step on the road to totalitarianism (my characterization, not his.)
This is one of his best speeches, and closes thusly;
Stopping a Strike at the Heart of the SenateFor the temporary gain of a hand-full of “out of the mainstream” judges, some in the Senate are ready to callously incinerate each Senator’s right of extended debate. Note that I said each Senator. For the damage will devastate not just the minority party. It will cripple the ability of each member to do what each was sent here to do – – represent the people of his or her state. Without the filibuster or the threat of extended debate, there exists no leverage with which to bargain for the offering of an amendment. All force to effect compromise between the two political parties is lost. Demands for hearings can languish. The President can simply rule, almost by Executive Order if his party controls both houses of Congress, and Majority Rule reins supreme. In such a world, the Minority is crushed; the power of dissenting views diminished; and freedom of speech attenuated. The uniquely American concept of the independent individual, asserting his or her own views, proclaiming personal dignity through the courage of free speech will, forever, have been blighted. And the American spirit, that stubborn, feisty, contrarian, and glorious urge to loudly disagree, and proclaim, despite all opposition, what is honest and true, will be sorely manacled.
Yes, we believe in Majority rule, but we thrive because the minority can challenge, agitate, and question. We must never become a nation cowed by fear, sheeplike in our submission to the power of any majority demanding absolute control.
Generations of men and women have lived, fought and died for the right to map their own destiny, think their own thoughts, and speak their minds. If we start, here, in this Senate, to chip away at that essential mark of freedom – – here of all places, in a body designed to guarantee the power of even a single individual through the device of extended debate – – we are on the road to refuting the Preamble to our own Constitution and the very principles upon which it rests.
In the eloquent, homespun words of that illustrious, obstructionist, Senator Smith, “ Liberty is too precious to get buried in books. Men ought to hold it up in front of them every day of their lives, and say, ‘I am free – – to think – – to speak. My ancestors couldn’t. I can. My children will.”
Of course, Ken Maulman (sic), RNC Chairman, is straining at the end of his leash;
Byrd Compares Proposal to Nazi Germany Conservatives are attacking Sen. Robert C. Byrd for a speech he made on the Senate floor Tuesday.
Byrd criticized Republican proposals that would limit debate in the Senate on judicial nominees. In the speech, Byrd made references to Nazi Germany and fascism.
In a news release, Republican National Committee Chairman Ken Mehlman criticized the West Virginia Democrat, saying:
"Senator Byrd's invocation of Hitler's Germany in discussing the duty of U.S. Senators to advise and provide consent on judicial nominees is reprehensible and beyond the pale. While members of the Senate are free to agree and disagree on the issues, this poisonous rhetoric only serves to illustrate the desperation and weakness of Senator Byrd's position."
Senator Byrd's invocation of Hitler's Germany is 100% appropriate, Maulman. Now, go back to your kennel.