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Page 2 of 2 AMY GOODMAN: As you go around the country with your book, you're invited on a lot of conservative talk shows. JOHN DEAN: Yes.  AMY GOODMAN: What is the response of listeners and viewers? JOHN DEAN: Well, that surprised me more than anything, because, you know, I understood that a lot of moderates, progressive liberals would say, “Ah, this is fascinating. This is what we always suspected,” and conservatives would reject it. To the contrary. Those who I would call thinking conservatives, conservatives with a conscience, are very aware of this problem. They're very troubled by it. There is no question they recognize it. In fact, in doing some of the call-in shows, the hosts have expected me to be barraged by hostile callers. Exactly the opposite have happened, where callers have called and said, “John, we realize this is a part of our movement, and we know we're nasty. We know we're mean-spirited, and we do this for whatever reason.” So it hasn't been a rejection of it, and maybe it's spread some understanding of it. Another reason, of course, you do a book like this is, if we ever have another 9/11, God forbid, it will probably -- it could be worse, and it could drive more people into these ranks. AMY GOODMAN: Do you think Bush administration officials should be tried for war crimes? JOHN DEAN: You know, that's a question -- I’ve been looking and talking to people like John Conyers about the whole question of whether impeachment should be pursued if they gather control. I don't think there's any question in my mind they're going to. Now, whether that will go to the next stage or not, into war crimes or not, you know, I don't think that's realistically going to happen in this country. AMY GOODMAN: It's interesting that the latest news of the Bush administration attempting to quietly rewrite the War Crimes Act. JOHN DEAN: Unbelievable. You know, I’ve thought about this. I thought, you know, Richard Nixon in his darkest day, in his worst mood, I can't imagine endorsing or recommending torture. He was in World War II. I watched him handle My Lai and how he felt about that and how he was horrified by it. And yet we have a presidency today that is indeed embracing and still pushing for torture as the norm for how we treat detainees. And it is to me just a classic example of a conservative without conscience. It's the authoritarian at his worst. AMY GOODMAN: John Dean, you served as Nixon's White House lawyer for the last thousand days of his presidency, among the White House staffers implicated in the 1972 break-in of the Democratic National Headquarters inside the Watergate Hotel. JOHN DEAN: I wasn’t the break-in. I blew the whistle on it. AMY GOODMAN: You agreed to testify to Congress that Nixon was guilty of covering up. Now, how would you compare Nixon to Bush right now? JOHN DEAN: Well, you know, what I find very interesting about these two men, as somebody who's looked at both presidents pretty closely -- I don't know Bush as well; I know his father -- what's very interesting about the men, they're two men who refer to the presidency in the third person. It's very unique in our presidents. Most of them, most presidents -- say, Reagan or Clinton -- they all talk about themselves as president. These people use the third person, and I began looking at it. Nixon learned about the presidency from Dwight Eisenhower, a man he greatly respected. Bush learned about the presidency from his father, a man he greatly respects. I don't think that either Nixon or Bush quite feel they fill the shoes of the job like the men they learned about it from. They're two men who get out of that office as frequently as possible. Nixon used to go down to San Clemente or Key Biscayne, or he was up at Camp David. Bush is in Crawford, he's traveling all the time. They don't seem terribly comfortable with the office. And that may well effect the way they have run their presidencies. AMY GOODMAN: You also have a quote at the beginning of your book by Professor Bob Altemeyer: "If you think the United States could never elect an Adolf Hitler to power, note that David Duke would have become governor of Louisiana if it had just been up to the white voters in that state." A lot of people criticize any references to the Holocaust or Adolf Hitler, when talking about what's going on in this country. JOHN DEAN: Well, Altemeyer is one of the finest and most leading authorities in this question of authoritarianism. He was most gracious to me to take me where I spent almost a year in this body of science as an outsider. The inexplicable thing to me, and actually to him, is that this science has never been explained outside the academic community. And it's information Americans need. It's something that should be in the public square and for discussion. Altemeyer makes that point, because it's very real. And he actually, ironically, started writing some of his peer journal material in peer-level books during Watergate, when he was struck at how long so many Americans clung to the Nixon presidency, never willing to say that this man had done anything wrong, down to -- it gets to about 23% to this day thinks he did no wrong. He said, “John, that's a very typical pattern in the demographics in the United States of the hardcore authoritarian followers, that their leaders can do -- or their authority figures can do no wrong. They won't question them. They will hang with them forever. They're like lemmings.” Unfortunately, those numbers have grown substantially since 9/11. The Republicans, the Bush administration realizes this, not necessarily from this science, but just from their own polling, that fear-mongering works, and they're doing it in spades again. It's going to be the norm for the mid-term election. AMY GOODMAN: What do you think of the Republican Party embracing not the Republican candidate in Connecticut, but Joseph Lieberman? JOHN DEAN: Typical. I think it's highly expedient. You know, any dissent they can create and cause by wedging, making Lieberman into a wedge issue, when it's clearly, you know, not only a statement by the Democratic Party of their position, it's also a very anti-incumbent statement. So I’m sure that they're concerned about the implications of the Lieberman race in the broader text nationally. You know, it's clearly this is a man who’s embraced the President, so they're thrusting themselves right into Connecticut politics. AMY GOODMAN: Do you see the country becoming more authoritarian, the government becoming more? JOHN DEAN: One of the reasons you write a book like this is you hope that you will catch thinking people before they thoughtlessly become authoritarian followers and just say, “Well, I want the security. I don't care if I’m being wiretapped or my emails are being reviewed by the National Security Agency, because I’m too frightened.” That really is not keeping terrorism in perspective, and that's exactly what the Bush people want to happen, where we keep it out of perspective. AMY GOODMAN: John Dean, I want to thank you for being with us. His book is Conservatives Without Conscience. Recommend this article...
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