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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: swisstrader who wrote (112108)12/12/2000 12:52:27 PM
From: alan w  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769670
 
Now you are saying that you like black people if they conform to your stereotyping. Why can't Justice Thomas be conservative if he chooses?

alan w



To: swisstrader who wrote (112108)12/12/2000 12:58:56 PM
From: kvkkc1  Respond to of 769670
 
You continually advertise kkk. You sound like an incognito member, with your continual bashing of a successful black man.knc



To: swisstrader who wrote (112108)12/12/2000 1:01:02 PM
From: The Street  Respond to of 769670
 
<<C. Thomas as a complete sellout<<

WHAT did he sell-out? The BS about the DemoLibs helping black people?



To: swisstrader who wrote (112108)12/12/2000 1:10:09 PM
From: Gordon A. Langston  Respond to of 769670
 
This is an indirect challenge for someone to find a negative article on Trent Lott or Tom Delay published in the news today.;)

From todays' Washington Times:

December 12, 2000

Daschle blocks bill on military voting
By Rowan Scarborough
THE WASHINGTON TIMES

Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle is blocking passage of a bill that would authorize polling
places on domestic military installations and ease the obstacles some service members face in
absentee balloting

The Clinton administration also opposes the bill, which the House approved in a 297-114
bipartisan vote Oct. 12. Many Republicans accuse Democrats of stopping the bill as part of a larger
strategy to suppress the military vote, just as the party did in Florida in challenging hundreds of
overseas military ballots.
Senate aides say Mr. Daschle, South Dakota Democrat, placed a "hold" on the bill, a maneuver
that would kill the measure if the Senate does not vote before the current session expires at
year's end.

"They're shutting down military absentee ballots in Florida and putting a hold that could have
increased the total number of people who could have voted in this election," said Rep. Bill
Thomas, California Republican and the bill's chief sponsor. "It would have been a lot nicer if
Daschle had cooperated and it would have moved through both houses. . . . It's a little
embarrassing. They are still stopping this thing. Some people can't be shamed into anything."
A spokesman for Mr. Daschle did not return a phone message yesterday.
Meanwhile, a federal appeals court in Atlanta yesterday upheld a lower court's decision to reject the
effort by 13 Florida Democratic voters to nullify 2,400 absentee ballots, mostly from military
personnel.
Democrats hoped a favorable court decision would tip the presidential race to Vice
President Al Gore. George W. Bush won 65 percent of overseas ballots opened after the Nov. 7
presidential election in Florida.
Mr. Thomas said his bill would legally authorize what several commanders have done in the past:
open polling places on remote bases where it is difficult for personnel and their families to get to
the polls. Such a case exists in his district at the desert-surrounded Edwards Air Force Base, he
said.
Mr. Thomas said his bill was prompted by fears that the Pentagon would more strictly enforce its
policy against polling places, based in part on Civil War-era law.
Two days before the House passed the bill, Defense Department General Counsel Douglas A.
Dworkin strongly opposed it in a letter to Mr. Thomas, who is chairman of the House Administration
Committee.
"The Department has a longstanding policy prohibiting the use of military installations as polling
sites for elections," Mr. Dworkin wrote Oct. 10. "This policy is based on sound public policy of
maintaining strict separation between the military and the political process. The policy of
separating the military and partisan politics is critically important to maintaining public support for
and confidence in our armed forces, as well as maintaining good order and discipline within military
ranks."
Mr. Dworkin, quoting federal law directly, said personnel face criminal penalties if they "impose or
attempt to impose any regulation for conducting any general or special election in a state,
different from those prescribed by law" or "interfere in any manner with an election officer's
discharge of his duties."
Mr. Thomas said his bill would override the old law.
Glenn Flood, a Pentagon spokesman, said the department every two years sends out directives, as
it did in December 1999 in preparation for this year's election, reminding commanders against
allowing campaign activities or polling places on military bases.
"This time people actually looked at that," said Mr. Flood. "People this year all of a sudden said,
'We've been breaking the law.' "
He said a few reserve and National Guard armories were used in the last election as voting centers
for the general public.
The Thomas bill states, in part, that service secretaries "may make a building located on a military
installation under the jurisdiction of the secretary available for use as a polling place in any
federal, state or local election for public office."
Mr. Thomas and two other committee chairmen wrote to Defense Secretary William S. Cohen on
Oct. 17 asking him to reconsider the Pentagon's opposition.
"We concluded that while the provision cited by the general counsel was intended to prevent
intimidation of voters at polls by the military, it does not prohibit merely the location of a voting
site on DoD property," said Mr. Thomas, House Armed Services Chairman Floyd D. Spence, South
Carolina Republican, and Veterans Affairs Committee Chairman Bob Stump, Arizona Republican.
A spokesman for Mr. Thomas said the congressman has not received a reply from Mr. Cohen.
Democrats were put on the defensive during the Florida recount when scores of party lawyers
challenged military absentee ballots based on what Republicans considered minor technicalities.
Service members have reacted angrily in e-mail exchanges, and some retired officers
(kvkkc 1, was that you) have
complained to Mr. Cohen. The secretary has ordered the Pentagon inspector general's office to
review the entire process of processing overseas ballots, some of which lacked a postmarked date
used by some election boards to validate the vote.
The Bush campaign actively cultivated the votes of service members, promising to rebuild what it
considers a weakened military.



To: swisstrader who wrote (112108)12/12/2000 8:31:43 PM
From: Cola Can  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769670
 
black society at large view C. Thomas as a complete sellout

Would that be because C. Thomas proved that a black man can
achieve sucess without playing the "race card" and that
is taboo to "black society"? I believe it is the democrat
elected officials that want the black society to think that.
A free thinking, successful black person, will shake off the shackles of bondage by the democrat party. It isn't
that C. Thomas soldout, it is that he called every democrat
a liar, just by his success. For more to follow suite
spells the end of the democrat party, and the power the
democrats hold over the black community. So, those who are
elected don't wont to loose their power, call C. Thomas
a "sell out."

The democrat motto:

1. Keep them down
2. Keep them dumb
3. Keep a vote.