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Politics : American Presidential Politics and foreign affairs -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: FJB who wrote (44357)7/27/2010 3:25:22 AM
From: DuckTapeSunroof  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 71588
 
Re: "Bob Schieffer could not have heard about the New Black Panthers case...."

(That... and he was away on vacation at the time and there wasn't much - if any - actual news value in such a piddling thing anyway.)

I mean it was only two dudes making asses out of themselves. The cops were called and they were escorted away, but later the authorities could never find any actual voters to say they were 'intimidated' (a requirement of that law which, by the way, has seen only THREE actual prosecutions in it's ENTIRE HISTORY since it was passed in the 'seventies. <g>)

The Bush administration dropped the criminal prosecution and then the incoming Obama administration secured a civil win in the case.

And that's pretty much it.... (Oh, excepting for the occasional ratings-driven hyperbolic breast-beating of certain 'news commentators' and, er... 'entertainers'. <g>)

Not much "there" there though....



To: FJB who wrote (44357)11/18/2010 9:36:10 AM
From: Peter Dierks3 Recommendations  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 71588
 
The undeciders
Last Updated: 12:25 AM, November 16, 2010
Posted: November 16, 2010

It was a year ago this week that Attorney General Eric Holder first announced plans to try 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheik Mohammed in a New York federal court -- provoking wholly justified outrage and a swift suspension of the scheme.

The issue has been bubbling in the background ever since. Now, 12 long months later, the administration still hasn't decided what to do with KSM.

A civilian trial? A military tribunal?

Who knows?

Even last November's announcement on trying KSM in federal court came seven months after Holder first suggested such a trial was "on the table" -- which itself followed the insistence of White House officials several months earlier that it was not.

No worries, though: A decision is due, um, "soon," says Holder -- who by now must be feeling every bit as silly as he's lately been looking.

As silly as America has been looking.

Frankly, the KSM case is a metaphor for the way the Obama administration governs -- or doesn't, as the case may be.

Got a hard decision?

Punt.

It took a year and a half for President Obama to decide on what he declared was a final policy on the prosecution of the war in Afghanistan -- and that included three months of dithering over just how many troops to provide for the planned troop surge.

And even that decision apparently wasn't binding. The secretaries of state and defense and the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff were busily walking away from it just last week.

Meanwhile, it took only a few hours last week for White House senior adviser David Axelrod to do an about-face on the Bush tax cuts -- first announcing that Obama was on board with extending them for all Americans, only to reverse himself after Capitol Hill Democrats like Nancy Pelosi balked.

Also last week, Obama strolled into South Korea and sought to rewrite the free-trade pact first negotiated by President Bush in 2007 in order to accommodate the protectionism favored by the Democrats and their Big Labor allies -- and seemed startled when Seoul balked.

Is it any wonder that the rest of the world is treating the administration as some sort of sad joke?

Memo to the president: Regarding the matter of Khalid Sheik Mohammed, de cide already -- and then move on.

It's what presidents do

nypost.com



To: FJB who wrote (44357)4/18/2012 11:59:04 PM
From: greatplains_guy2 Recommendations  Respond to of 71588
 
The New Black Panthers Are Lawbreakers
The Holder controled Department of Justice appears uninterested in pursuing the group.
John Fund, National Review
April 13, 2012

George Zimmerman is facing charges of second-degree murder. A jury will decide his guilt or innocence. Here’s hoping the criminal-justice system cools rather than exacerbates the passions the killing of Trayvon Martin has raised.

But Attorney General Eric Holder isn’t helping. Wednesday, he appeared before the Reverend Al Sharpton’s National Action Network to praise Sharpton “for your partnership, your friendship, and your tireless efforts to speak out for the voiceless, to stand up for the powerless, and to shine a light on the problems we must solve, and the promises we must fulfill.”

This is the same Al Sharpton who has led several rallies against Zimmerman, in which he called for civil disobedience and an “occupation” of Sanford, Fla., where the shooting occurred, if an arrest wasn’t made.

This is the same Al Sharpton who has never apologized to Steven Pagones, the assistant district attorney he falsely accused of raping Tawana Brawley, a black teenager. The “dastardly deed” Sharpton accused Pagones of was found to be a complete fabrication. In 1998, Sharpton was found liable for seven defamatory statements he’d made against Pagones and ordered to pay $65,000.

Earlier in the 1990s, Sharpton had become famous exacerbating racial tensions in New York’s Crown Heights neighborhood, tensions that led to the killing of Anthony Graziosi. In 1995, Sharpton denounced the owners of Freddy’s Fashion Mart in Harlem as “bloodsuckers” and “white interlopers” over a rent dispute the business had with tenants. A short time later, a man entered Freddy’s and told all the black people present, patrons and employees alike, to leave. Once they did, the man firebombed the building, killing seven people — including a black security guard. Sharpton insisted he bore no responsibility for the incident, saying it was only a tenant/landlord dispute that had escalated out of control.

It is exceedingly strange for Holder to praise the likes of Al Sharpton and bring him greetings from President Obama. But it is even stranger that Holder should pledge to the Sharpton activists that he will take appropriate federal action against any civil-rights crime, while he appears completely uninterested in the ugly forces calling for violence against George Zimmerman.

It’s been three weeks since Mikhail Muhammad, leader of the New Black Panther Party, offered a $10,000 bounty for the “capture” of Zimmerman and warned that Zimmerman “should be fearful for his life.” The Panthers have distributed wanted posters of Zimmerman and offered the bounty “dead or alive.” Just this week, Michelle Williams, the chief of staff for the Panthers, told WTSP-TV in Tampa, “Let me tell you, the things that’s about to happen, to these honkies, these crackers, these pigs, these pink people, these [inaudible] people. It has been long overdue. My prize right now this evening . . . is gonna be the bounty, the arrest, dead or alive, for George Zimmerman. You feel me?”

Ms. Williams later apologized for her remarks, but her statements and those of other Panthers amount to criminal threats, and could break federal hate-crime laws.

Indeed, a relative of George Zimmerman wrote to Attorney General Holder this week noting the threats. “The Zimmerman family is in hiding because of the threats that have been made against us, yet the DOJ has maintained an eerie silence in this matter,” read the letter, which was obtained by the Daily Caller. “Why, when the law of the land is crystal clear, is your office not arresting the New Black Panthers for hate crimes? . . . Since when can a group of people in the United States put a bounty on someone’s head, circulate Wanted posters publicly, and still be walking the streets?” The DOJ’s public-affairs office has not responded to inquiries by reporters asking if Holder’s statement on federal civil-rights crimes also applies to the New Black Panther Party.

Holder’s Justice Department has taken a pass on the New Black Panther Party in the past. In 2009, it inherited from the outgoing Bush administration a civil-rights lawsuit against the Party and three of its members for showing up armed outside a Philadelphia polling place in 2008 and shouting racial threats at voters. Bartle Bull, a former civil-rights lawyer who had been arrested in the South in the 1960s and later went on to become publisher of the liberal Village Voice, actually witnessed the intimidation and reported the Panthers’ actions to Justice.

When the defendants failed to answer Justice’s lawsuit, a federal court in Philadelphia entered a default judgment against them. The Holder Justice Department responded by snatching defeat from the jaws of victory, suddenly dropping the charges against the Panthers and two defendants. The third defendant was merely barred from displaying a weapon near a Philadelphia polling place for the next three years. The bizarre decision prompted congressional outcries and a formal investigation by the U.S. Civil Rights Commission, which sent a letter to Justice in August 2009 saying, “We believe the Department’s defense of its actions thus far undermines respect for rule of law.” The Commission later issued a harshly condemnatory report of Justice’s behavior in the case. Could Justice’s leniency encourage the Panthers to think they can act with impunity in the future?

Bartle Bull says he is very concerned that Justice is practicing a double standard when it comes to enforcing civil-rights laws. “When he took office, Attorney General Holder stated that America was a ‘nation of cowards’ when it comes to race,” he told me in 2010. “But who are today’s ‘cowards’ on race? This kind of double standard is not what Martin Luther King and Robert Kennedy stood for.”

— John Fund, a writer based in New York, is the author of Stealing Elections: How Voter Fraud Threatens Our Democracy.

nationalreview.com