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


To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (527840)1/22/2004 1:25:03 PM
From: Hope Praytochange  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769667
 
kenny: look at the number 65-28 so where are the 49 demohacks and one so-called independent ??? you have to accept the fact that demohacks just try to talk on BOTH side of their mouth

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[13:15] <SimonTS> OFFTOPIC> this is a nice bull...
[13:15] <SimonTS> (__)
[13:15] <SimonTS> (oo)
[13:15] <SimonTS> /-------\/
[13:15] <SimonTS> / | ||
[13:15] <SimonTS> * ||----||
[13:15] <SimonTS> ^^ ^^
[13:15] <SimonTS> and this is a mad demohack ...
[13:15] <SimonTS> * )__(
[13:15] <SimonTS> / (oo)
[13:15] <SimonTS> \--___--\/
[13:15] <SimonTS> | |
[13:15] <SimonTS> /\----/ \
[13:15] <SimonTS> ^ ^ ^ ^
[13:15] <SimonTS> can you make the difference? ;)



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (527840)1/22/2004 1:27:11 PM
From: Hope Praytochange  Respond to of 769667
 
here are more shocking numbers for you:
Message 19720818



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (527840)1/22/2004 1:42:44 PM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769667
 
and for just about anything wrong with this country...and why???? CHENEY AND SCALIA is just the TIP OF THE ICEBERG
Groups See Conflict With
Cheney, Scalia

Sun Jan 18, 9:30 AM ET

Add White House - AP to My Yahoo!

By JONATHAN D. SALANT, Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON - Government watchdogs are raising concerns about
a potential conflict of interest for Justice Antonin Scalia (news - web
sites) because he had dinner and went on a hunting trip with Dick
Cheney (news - web sites) while the Supreme Court was involved in a
case about the vice president's energy task force.

Scalia and Cheney, longtime friends, had
dinner at a restaurant on Maryland's Eastern
Shore in November, two months after the
Bush administration asked the justices to
overrule a lower court's decision requiring
White House to identify task force members.

The men went duck hunting in Louisiana this
month, not long after the court agreed to hear the case.

Scalia says there is no reason to question his ability to judge the case
fairly. Cheney's office referred questions about the propriety of the social
encounters to the court.

Watchdogs said Scalia and Cheney should have kept their distance until
the court had ruled.

"It gives the appearance of a tainted process where decisions are not
made on the merits where you have judges fraternizing with people
before the court," said Charles Lewis, director of the Center for Public
Integrity.

Rogan Kersh, a Syracuse University political science professor, said
Scalia should withdraw from the case. He said questions remain about
the court's evenhandedness in the aftermath of its decision to stop the
Florida recount, which gave the 2000 presidential election to George W.
Bush.

"There's the adage of where there's smoke, there's fire," Kersh said.
"There may be no fire in this case. Supreme Court justices, more than
any other actors in national politics, want to avoid even a whiff of
smoke."

The administration is resisting efforts by Judicial Watch, a watchdog
group, and the Sierra Club (news - web sites), an environmental
organization, to make public the names of those on the task force.

"It certainly raises questions about the appearance of impropriety, which
is the standard that judges are held to," said David Bookbinder, the
Sierra Club's Washington legal director.

The groups contend that industry executives, including former Enron
chairman Ken Lay, helped shape the administration's energy policy.

Scalia, in a written statement to the Los Angeles Times for its story
Saturday on the duck hunting trip, said: "I do not think my impartiality
could reasonably be questioned." A court spokeswoman, Kathy Arberg,
confirmed the statement Saturday and said Scalia would have nothing
more to say.

In September, the administration asked the Supreme Court to overrule a
lower court's ruling requiring public disclosure of task force members.

Two months later, Scalia and Cheney joined Defense Secretary Donald
H. Rumsfeld and others for foie gras, lamb and crab cakes at a
restaurant on Maryland's Eastern Shore, according to accounts of the
dinner in The Star Democrat of Easton, Md., and The Daily Times of
Salisbury, Md.

The court agreed to hear the case in December. Earlier this month,
Cheney and Scalia spent several days in south Louisiana on a duck
hunting trip.

Both Cheney and Bush are former energy company executives, and the
administration-backed energy bill, which passed the House but stalled in
the Senate, provides $21.5 billion in tax breaks for the energy industry.

The energy industry has contributed $4.7 million to Bush's two
presidential campaigns, according to the Center for Responsive Politics,
a research group.

Scalia withdrew in October from the court's consideration of whether
it is unconstitutional for public school children to pledge their
allegiance to "one nation under God."

Scalia had told a religious group that courts went too far to keep
religion out of public schools and other forums, and lawmakers rather
than judges were better suited to decide the pledge question.