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JandP

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Screeching at Judge Sonia

I knew it the moment I heard Barack Obama had chosen Sonia Sotomayor for the Supreme Court. The Republican screechers were immediately going to come zooming out of their cave to attack her. Here is some of their bile to date:

* Raving Rush Limbaugh called Judge Sotomayor a "reverse racist."
* Dropout Karl Rove doubted that she was "intellectually strong."
* Pat Buchanan called her an "affirmative action pick."
* Tom Tancredo said "she appears to be a racist." (Tom Tancredo!!)
* Glenn Beck snidely called her "Hispanic chick lady" and said she was a racist.
* Newt Gingrich said that the "Latina woman racist should withdraw."
* Senator James Inhofe questioned her ability to rule fairly "without undue influence from her own personal race (and) gender."
* Senator John Ensign asked if she had the "right intellect."
* Mark Krikorian of the nativist Center for Immigration Studies said that "putting the emphasis on the final syllable of Sotomayor is unnatural in English."
* Oh, by the way, Mike Huckabee said she comes from "the Far Left," calling her Maria Sotomayor -- you know, all those Hispanic chick ladies are called "Maria."

I'm sure this is just the beginning.

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

The depressing Sessions

With Arlen Specter's move to the Democratic side, the number one Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee is... Alabama's very own Senator Jefferson Beauregard Sessions III. God help us.

In 1986, Ronald Reagan named Sessions a federal judge, despite his fame for harassing civil rights workers during voter registration drives to increase the number of black voters in Alabama.

In confirmation hearings, a career federal employee testified that Sessions had said the NAACP and the ACLU were "un-American" and "Communist-inspired" groups that "forced civil rights down the throats of people." He also testified that Sessions had called a white lawyer handling voting rights cases a "disgrace to his race." Undaunted, Sessions stood by his contention that the Voting Rights Act of 1965 was a "piece of intrusive legislation."

Another witness said that Sessions was overheard by legal personnel during a 1981 KKK murder investigation saying that he "used to think (the Klansmen) were OK" until he found out some of them were "pot smokers." This same witness said Sessions had called him "boy," told him to "be careful what you say to white folks," and said that the National Council of Churches and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference were "un-American."

In the end, the Judiciary Committee (controlled by Republicans) voted 10-8 against sending the nomination to the full Senate. But in 1994 Sessions became Alabama's attorney general, and In 1996 the state elected him to the US Senate.

Since then, he has opposed federal affirmative action programs, hate-crime laws and investigation of the disproportionate number of minority kids in detention centers. And now he will influence decisions about the Supreme Court and immigration. His circle includes John Tanton, the grandfather of today's white nationalists. (The Southern Poverty Law Center reports that Tanton is founder of the" racist Social Contact Press" and has corresponded "with Holocaust deniers, white nationalist intellectuals and Klan lawyers for decades." He also founded the white nationalist groups CIS, NumbersUSA and FAIR. NumbersUSA named Sessions its 2008 Defender of the Rule of Law.)

Sessions is a top-level anti-immigration voice. When the Senate tried to bring about comprehensive immigration reform two years ago, he called it the "Terrorist Assistance and Facilitation Act of 2007."

Even with a black president and a new generation of colorblind citizens, some people apparently can't leave the "good old days" behind. And that's pathetic.

Friday, May 01, 2009

A wretched anniversary

It was six years ago today that George W. Bush donned a flight suit and landed on the deck of the USS Abraham Lincoln. The millions watching this show on TV did not realize that the carrier was just off the coast of Southern California, an easy ride in the presidential helicopter. Then the Decider put on a suit and tie and stood beneath that famous "Mission Accomplished" banner to talk about 9/11, how the perpetrators "got war," how the regime with weapons of mass destruction was brought down. Except that Iraq was in no way the perpetrator and there were no weapons of mass destruction.

It is clear that violence in Iraq is has gone way down; it is nowhere near the violence of 2006-2007. But it is going up again. Last month 355 Iraqis, 290 of them civilians, were killed (and that is not counting 80 Iranian pilgrims who were killed.)18 US troops were killed, the most since September.

Today the number of US troops who have been killed in Iraq stands at 4,281. Just Foreign Policy [www.justforeignpolicy.org] estimates that 1,320,110 Iraqis have died as a result of Bush's invasion.

What an accomplishment for The Pilot who was The Decider.