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Old 06-12-2010, 10:15 PM
 
Location: Lafayette, Louisiana
14,100 posts, read 28,577,173 times
Reputation: 8075

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Friends in High Places | The Weekly Standard
It's a very long and well written article. Below is one section of the article. Please read the entire article before responding to this topic.


From the onset, Justice has denied that any political appointees were involved in the decision to dismiss the case. This line was repeated in multiple letters to and face-to-face meetings with Republican representatives Frank Wolf and Lamar Smith and in statements to the media. We now know that this is incorrect. In interrogatory answers supplied to the civil rights commission, the department acknowledged that Attorney General Eric Holder was briefed on the decision to dismiss the case and that the number three man in Justice, Associate Attorney General Tom Perrelli, was consulted as well. Katsas testified, “Certainly DoJ’s decision to abandon all claims against the party, Malik Shabazz, and Mr. Jackson [the second polling place intimidator], despite their refusal to even defend the case, would have qualified as important enough for the leadership of the Civil Rights Division to raise with [Perrelli].” The same is true of the decision to seek only a narrow injunction against the billy club-wielding defendant. He notes that the filing of the case may have been routine, but the decision to dismiss it was so extraordinary that someone of Perrelli’s rank must certainly have played an “active role.”
The department is, moreover, trying to characterize King and Rosenbaum, who instructed the trial team to dismiss the case, as “career attorneys with over 60 years of experience.” It is true that they both served in career positions at Justice in the past. But under the Federal Vacancies Reform Act, as soon as someone is appointed to fill a political position—as Rosenbaum and King were early in the Obama administration—they are political appointees.
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Old 06-12-2010, 10:17 PM
 
20,366 posts, read 19,983,593 times
Reputation: 13485
The real comical part is that some judge ruled that the Black Panther can't carry a club to a voting place until 2012.

Ya just can't invent this stuff

Last edited by doc1; 06-12-2010 at 10:23 PM.. Reason: spellin'
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Old 06-12-2010, 10:20 PM
 
Location: Lafayette, Louisiana
14,100 posts, read 28,577,173 times
Reputation: 8075
Below is another damning quote from the above article

While the interference by political appointees in the NBPP case has been egregious, there is a critical issue with implications far beyond this single case: Whether the attorneys who populate the civil rights division of the Justice Department believe that civil rights laws exist only to protect minorities from discrimination and intimidation by whites. In a farewell address to his colleagues before his reassignment to a U.S. attorney’s office, Coates spoke about this widespread sentiment and why it was antithetical to the department’s mission to seek equal enforcement of federal laws.
Former voting rights attorneys confirm that the belief is omnipresent in the Justice Department. DoJ attorneys openly criticized the Panther case, objecting not to any lack of evidence or to the legal arguments but to the notion that any discrimination case should be filed against black defendants. There are instances of attorneys refusing to work on cases against minority defendants. In 2005, for example, Coates pursued, filed, and won a case (upheld on appeal to the Fifth Circuit in 2009) of egregious voter discrimination by black officials in Noxubee County, Mississippi. Colleagues criticized Coates for filing the case and refused to work on it.
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Old 06-12-2010, 11:18 PM
 
159 posts, read 144,637 times
Reputation: 118
What more could you expect from the most open, honest and ethical administration ever.

Without question we need one or both houses of congress to flip republican. There are just way too many things that need to be investigated at this point.
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Old 06-13-2010, 10:36 AM
 
296 posts, read 273,838 times
Reputation: 100
Quote:
Originally Posted by sailordave View Post
Friends in High Places | The Weekly Standard
It's a very long and well written article. Below is one section of the article. Please read the entire article before responding to this topic.
You know the people that need to read this can only comprehend one word in this article: parrot and that is only because that is what they do best.
Anyone wondering why this country is turning into a massive failure should pay particular attention to this part:
Quote:
Liberal civil rights lawyers argue that because “a history of official discrimination” can be one subsidiary factor in voting cases it “wipes out every other factor” and prohibits cases from being brought against blacks. And further, that since “socio-economic” factors can be considered in determining whether voting discrimination has occurred, these cases cannot be brought against black defendants until there is economic parity between blacks and whites. Such attorneys use phrases like “traditional civil rights cases” and “traditional civil rights victims” to signal that only minority victims and white perpetrators concern them. Justice sources tell me that career attorneys have been “assured” that cases against minority defendants won’t be brought. In testimony before the civil rights commission, Thomas Perez denied he was aware of any such conversations or sentiments.
I noticed a lack of apologists and parrots in this thread. What's up with that? Cat got your all's tongue or something?
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Old 06-13-2010, 11:15 AM
 
30,120 posts, read 18,730,821 times
Reputation: 20965
Quote:
Originally Posted by sailordave View Post
Friends in High Places | The Weekly Standard
It's a very long and well written article. Below is one section of the article. Please read the entire article before responding to this topic.


From the onset, Justice has denied that any political appointees were involved in the decision to dismiss the case. This line was repeated in multiple letters to and face-to-face meetings with Republican representatives Frank Wolf and Lamar Smith and in statements to the media. We now know that this is incorrect. In interrogatory answers supplied to the civil rights commission, the department acknowledged that Attorney General Eric Holder was briefed on the decision to dismiss the case and that the number three man in Justice, Associate Attorney General Tom Perrelli, was consulted as well. Katsas testified, “Certainly DoJ’s decision to abandon all claims against the party, Malik Shabazz, and Mr. Jackson [the second polling place intimidator], despite their refusal to even defend the case, would have qualified as important enough for the leadership of the Civil Rights Division to raise with [Perrelli].” The same is true of the decision to seek only a narrow injunction against the billy club-wielding defendant. He notes that the filing of the case may have been routine, but the decision to dismiss it was so extraordinary that someone of Perrelli’s rank must certainly have played an “active role.”
The department is, moreover, trying to characterize King and Rosenbaum, who instructed the trial team to dismiss the case, as “career attorneys with over 60 years of experience.” It is true that they both served in career positions at Justice in the past. But under the Federal Vacancies Reform Act, as soon as someone is appointed to fill a political position—as Rosenbaum and King were early in the Obama administration—they are political appointees.

The scary thing will be the elections in 2012. Obama and the libs will realize that there is no chance at all of being re-elected in a legitmate election. I truely think that they will mobilize groups like the black panthers to intimidate voters and will enlist ACORN to help them with votes from the dead and imaginary 'citizens". I really do not think that Obama will permit what we have previously known as free elections.
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