On his radio show yesterday, Mark ‘The Great One’ Levin said that Republicans “have to grow a set” and go after the imperial president, also known as President Barack Obama. He said this in response to a question from a listener who wondered whether it was time for Republicans to throw around the ‘I-word’: impeachment.
Levin:
“I’m going to tell you, Obama is going to use an executive order again to change the Second Amendment, and I’ve had enough of this. We need to use the I-Word, we need to say it’s an impeachable offense, and we need to start laying down barriers now. Enough is enough. The IRS is out of control, every department of this government, the EPA, the Justice Department – they’re all on the loose, they’re all rogue. It starts from the top, it’s getting worse. Hillary Clinton is running around saying, ‘I’m going to out-do Obama, I’ll govern by more executive orders and fiats.’
“We’ve lost the country. Is it too much to ask for the Republican Party to grow a set?!”
Undoubtedly, the Republican and Democratic elites and their friends in the mainstream media will pretend that Levin is going too far – I can hear them scream now: “It’s insane, he’s a radical, an extremist!” – but that’s not even almost true. There’s a reason the Constitution was set up the way it is, with a procedure to impeach a sitting president: it’s supposed to be used when a president is out of control, has gone rogue, and wipes his behind with the Constitution – the very document he has sworn to uphold. If he doesn’t do it, it’s up to Congress to step in and do whatever is necessary to prevent the country from going down the drain.
On the very day Obama first became president he started to side-step the Constitution. Ever since, he has ruled by executive fiat. That’s not how America is supposed to be governed. Every branch of the U.S. government is limited by the Constitution – a branch that oversteps its authority has be stopped. This is not “extreme”; it’s the very path the Constitution says should be taken when a president behaves like a king – or worse, an emperor.
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