David Weigel | September 21, 2007
The short version:
- Hillary Clinton stayed in front of the Democratic field and won the endorsement of Wesley Clark, the NATO commander during her husband's administration.
- The U.S. Senate finally held a vote on Iraq, pulling troops... sorry, condemning MoveOn.org for running an ad about General David Petraeus, just as America's Crazy Grandpa hoped they would. Hillary Clinton and Chris Dodd voted against it, while Barack Obama and Joe Biden found somewhere else to be. MoveOn claims they've raised about a million bucks since the controversy started.
- 10,000 people marched in Louisiana to protest the railroading of six black men who beat up a white kid.
- Rep. Jerry Weller, announcing his retirement from congress,* pushed a reporter down the stairs. Or maybe his aide did. Come on, like it matters?
Everybody Hates Republicans (Except McCain): Judging by the way they whacked at Hillary Clinton's milquetoaste reaction to Gen. David Petraeus, Republicans are convinced both that she'll be their general election foe and that her high unfavorablity numbers will make her beatable. A problem with this: With one exception, Republicans' favorability numbers are hurtling down the mineshaft.
Check out this week's Gallup poll, which includes the trend lines of GOP candidate favorability ratings from January to today. In January frontrunner Rudy Giuliani was still basking in his 9/11 aura with 62 percent of people saying they liked him and only 20 percent saying they didn't. That's dropped to 52 and 38 percent. In April Fred Thompson's favorable numbers were 65 and 24. Five months of bumbling and dithering later he's at 39 and 38 percent. Mitt Romney's fall has been the farthest, from 65 and 18 percent favorable/unfavorable to 38 and 35 percent.
The only candidate's who's grown a little more popular? John McCain. He'd been suffering all year, bottoming out at a 42/41 favorable/unfavorable rating in August, but a great month of Iraq news has bumped him back up to 53/34. People like an underdog and people like a guy who sticks to his guns, and McCain's been loudly convincing people that he fits both descriptions.
This answers a couple of long-running campaign questions. Will Rudy's 9/11 halo fade? Yes. Did Fred Thompson's dithering pre-campaign hurt him? Yes. Can America learn to love Mitt Romney? Nope.
Below the fold...
- Ryan Sager wonders what the hell Rudy Giuliani meant when he said stuff like the MoveOn ad "shouldn't be allowed." He gets an answer from the campaign.
- Whenever Patrick Toomey needs to be convinced that Congressional pork is a problem, he visits the International Peace Garden.
*fixed a typo
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Hillary Clinton stayed in front of the Democratic field and
won the endorsement of Wesley Clark, the NATO commander during her
husband's administration.
Wesley Clark=VP nominee under Hillary.
Wesley Clark=VP nominee under Hillary.
That might cost her the New York Money
People vote.
That might cost her the New York Money People
vote.
Shes the Senator from New York. Who are else will they vote
for?
Note: I don't mean Jews. I really do mean people with money in New
York, Jew or gentile. I'm pretty sure they vote 90%+
Democratic.
10,000 people marched in Louisiana to protest the
railroading of six black men who beat up a white kid.
Sure sounds like they were over-charged and poorly represented but
"railroaded" suggests that they somehow aren't guilty.
If a 6 on 1 beatdown/stomping is a "schoolyard fight" then why
isn't the unrelated hangman's nooses in the schoolyard tree
considered a "harmless prank".
If a 6 on 1 beatdown/stomping is a "schoolyard fight" then
why isn't the unrelated hangman's nooses in the schoolyard tree
considered a "harmless prank".
It was. The student who did it was recommended for expulsion, but
the sentence was overturned by the school board.
Weigel,
Those numbers you cite for the Republicans sound like an
insurmountable problem- if the election were held today.Of course
the election isn't being held today, or the first tuesday in
November.13 months and change is a lotta time to close the
gap.
Cesar,
Wesley Clark is a bit of a loose cannon as evidenced by his
allusion to jews among other things.I'd say Bill Richardson would
be a more likely choice. If I was her (shudder, gag) I'd strongly
consider Harold Ford Jr.With good ods I'd even bet on it.
Wesley Clark is a bit of a loose cannon as evidenced by his
allusion to jews among other things.I'd say Bill Richardson would
be a more likely choice. If I was her (shudder, gag) I'd strongly
consider Harold Ford Jr.With good ods I'd even bet on
it.
A woman won't choose a minority running mate. Its just not
politically smart. Sad, but very true.
I thought our former governor Mark Warner would have been a good
choice for her. He was extremely popular, and a charming guy that
could trick conservatives into voting for him. Pro-gun, too. But
hes running for Senate now.
"If a 6 on 1 beatdown/stomping is a "schoolyard fight" then why
isn't the unrelated hangman's nooses in the schoolyard tree
considered a "harmless prank"."
I have to say, I totally agree with SIV here. I can't believe the
obtuse stupidity of current civil rights leaders. There are
numerous cases of African-Americans that were totally innocent
being railroaded, but they choose to go all out for 6 thugs who
brutally beat some kid seemingly at random (his dad was on NPR
today and said his son had his eye swollen shut and blood coming
out of both ears!). Hanging nooses is a stupid, class-less
neanderthal thing to do but hardly amounts to a prosecutable
offense in my opinion, hardly comparable to a gang beatdown...Since
I get accused of shilling for the Democrats a lot, let it be said
by me that the race hustlers leading this farce, Al Sharpton, Jesse
Jackson, Ray Nagin, etc., are all warmly embraced by the Democratic
party. Sickening!
A woman won't choose a minority running mate.
Bill Richardson can "pass".
Friday Night....I'm outta here.
Anybody seen "Eastern Promises" yet?
I might go tomorrow. I try to see all of David Cronenberg's movies
on the big screen.
I should note that, according to the NYT story, only
one of the guys has even been tried, and his convictions were
tossed out by the appellate court (though it fails to mention
why).
The DA has yet to bring the others to trial, either because he
doesn't have enough evidence to convict them, or he is unwilling to
bear the scrutiny the trials will incur.
My favorite line in the story is this one:
She could not understand why the students who hung the nooses
were not punished severely; the students were suspended briefly
from Jena High School, and on Wednesday, the district attorney,
Reed Walters, said the act appeared to violate no state
law.
Let me see if I got he arguement correct: A young black male
with three criminal convictions for violent attacks-one of which he
was already on probation for a previous conviction of attacking
people-knocks the hell out of a white boy in the back of the head
knocking the white boy completely out, and then kicking that white
boy in the head and body while on the ground out cold while five
other black males who all conspired before the attack to commmit
the attack, IS OKAY FOR THE BLACK MALES TO DO BECAUSE some other
white boys put some nooses in a tree THREE MONTHS EARLIER?
Is that your argument Jesse Jackson?
Attempted murder in the second degree is a charge that covers cases
where the actor intended to do bodily harm and planned it ahead of
time and the injuries could have lead to death. Kicking an
unconscious person the head and body while you are the person who
made that person unconscious IS ATTEMPTED MURDER IN THE SECOND
DEGREE.
The charge was correct. The age and previous record made it correct
to put him on trial as an adult.
How about this AL Shparton: Since some white male did some things
to some black males a long time ago, any black male NOW should be
alllowed to coldcock any white male they feel like and kick them
around on the ground for awhile, and so long as the white male
doesn't spend too long in the emergency room, the black male GETS A
FREE PASS!!!
They hung a noose, from a tree. Again, it really is neanderthal
behvaior, but should it be illegal? WTF? On the other hand, beating
a man warrants something stiff (though attempted murder is too
high; I've read that the DA actually tried to meet the element of
attacking with a weapon by saying the attackers TENNIS SHOES were
the weapon when he kicked the victim!!!!).
Someone may, and should, point out that there were some incidents
prior to the beating that warranted stiffer responses and the Jena
authorities blew it off. From what I read there is merit to that
argument. However, the quotes from the protestors suggest that
their big beef is the nooses and non-prosecution. That's stupid in
my opinion.
I only heard about jena a few days ago, and what I read above is
about all I know.
If those comments are an accurate portrayal, then this would seem
to be a good opportunity to discredit JJ and AS as well as the
"progressive" blogs. So, why isn't anyone doing that?
As for the ClintonRichardson ticket, please, no! That's the one I
fear the most. If she selects BR, we probably won't even have to
vote she'd be such a shoo-in.
It would be nice if someone mentioned item 8 in this post:
http://www.dynamist.com/weblog/archives/002629.html
Rep. Jerry Weller, announcing his retirement from
congressman, pushed a reporter down the stairs.
Huh?
It is odd in Jena that in a town with enough blacks to have these incidents, there was an all-white jury. A question that remains unanswered, though there may be a good one.
He gets an answer from the campaign.
More like he gets a backpedal from the campaign.
"It is odd in Jena that in a town with enough blacks to have
these incidents, there was an all-white jury."
I read somewhere or other that when the potential jurors were
summoned, no blacks showed up. If true, that's really amusing in a
way...
The Bush administration is planning to attack Iran
before it vacates office unless we exert political pressure to stop
them! Thousands of innocent lives are at risk! The Bush
administration must be stopped from initiating another needless
war!
American Conservative...
http://www.amconmag.com/2007/2007_06_04/index1.html
and the libertarian (not lefty), Antiwar.com...
http://antiwar.com/justin/?articleid=11599
...both do a fine job covering the machinations behind the planned
attack, as well as the arguments in opposition.
Government does lots of stupid things but needless war is the worst
government program of all. I've been commenting here for like 7 yrs
so a lot of you know me pretty well and I don't mind admitting that
I'm pleading with you to get involved in the effort to stop our
government from attacking Iran.
Each of us should contact our representative and senators and tell
them that we oppose an attack on Iran and that we also favor
impeachment of the president if the administration completely
ignores our constitution and orders an attack on Iran sans
congressional approval:
http://www.visi.com/juan/congress/
Please join the fight. You may well help to prevent the
destruction of thousands of innocent lives, stop mopre needless
American troop deaths, as well as forestall untold blow-back from
this tragic government insanity.
The black community leaders really need to watch themselves.
Their antics of the past 10 years or so have converted people a
bunch of people I know from self-hating white liberals to people
who don't even want to see a black person ever again.
They are doing more than anything else to drive a wedge between
blacks and ALL other races in this country. People don't want to be
around blacks because they're afraid some misunderstood word or
comment is going to result in a trip to HR, a lawsuit or even a
physical attack. I'm serious. It's getting really bad down in the
trenches of the real world.
Especially several of my Asian and Hispanic coworkers. They come
right out and tell me they've had it. They'll deal with blacks when
forced to, but they will NEVER have any voluntary relationships
with any American black person. They don;t care if it's probably
just a "few bad apples". It's just not a type of life roulette they
are willing to play.
I can't believe the obtuse stupidity of current civil rights
leaders. There are numerous cases of African-Americans that were
totally innocent being railroaded, but they choose to go all out
for 6 thugs who brutally beat some kid seemingly at
random...
Imagine the good they could have done by speaking up about Cory
Maye - but them they would have to explain his situation to the
media. It wouldn't have been the flashpoint this situation is, and
they wouldn't have gotten the media coverage and donations they
have.
Fuck you, Al Sharpton. Fuck you, Jesse Jackson.
in Louisiana to protest the railroading of six black men who beat up a white kid.
I always like to flip these sort of incidents 180 degrees to see
how they sound....
in Louisiana to protest the railroading of six white men who beat up a black kid.
Gosh, now it sounds like a hate crime punishable by life in prison,
with the Klan marching and demanding their release.
They hung a noose, from a tree. Again, it really is
neanderthal behvaior, but should it be illegal? WTF?
I believe it's called communicating a threat in most jurisdictions,
and HELL YES it should be illegal. Should a 6 on 1
beating be illegal? HELL YES it should and is.
Jena LA is obviously a redneck shithole town that I wil endeavor to
never visit. A whites only shade tree, give me a fuckin' break. If
you're looking for saints here, you're wasting your time.
- Whenever Patrick Toomey needs to be convinced that
Congressional pork is a problem, he visits the International Peace
Garden.
Damned good link, David. Bravo Zulu.
Not to nitpick too much here, but "six black men who beat up a
white kid" is a rather loaded way to say "six black high school
students who beat up a white schoolmate".
Because this case is so emotionally loaded, it is important
(especially for those who seek to let reason be their light) to
state the facts as clearly as possible. The juxtaposition of men
and kid is especially dangerous in this example, since one of the
chief complaints is that students are being charged as
adults.
As J sub D has noted, one should not look for saints among the
alleged criminals or their victims; the problem with Jena is the
response of the adult community and the justice system.
J sub D-I see your point, I guess it is the equivalent of
calling someone and saying "hey buddy, I'm going to kill you if
keep coming to the tree." I do think though that when it comes to a
threat being criminal that we should keep the idea of imminence in
mind. If I'm across the parking lot and I say "hey buddy, I'm
coming over to kill you now" that strikes me as illegal. I'm not
sure about "hey buddy, I'm gonna kill you" over the phone or
insinuated by a noose in a tree or something like that. How is that
different than a person saying to their ex-spouse over the phone
"you drive me crazy, I wish you were dead, I could kill you right
now?"
I also stand by the assertion that even if this should be a
criminal offense (and like I said there is a good argument there),
it's nowhere near akin to gang beating a kid into
unconsciousness.
I get the sense while reading about the Jena 6 that the
protesting and demonstrations are not as much about seeing justice
done as having the opportunity to imitate personal heroes from the
civil rights movement. A lot of the protesters, it seems, are from
liberal arts or traditionally black colleges and all the quotes
from these kids are something along the lines of "It's great to
march for justice just like ______ (MLK, Malcom X, take your
pick)".
These kids are not the Scottsboro Boys; there is no ambiguity about
the fact that they beat another classmate into unconsciousness,
scarring him physically and emotionally for the rest of his
life.
The DA might have been a little excessive when charging the boys,
and whoever hung those nooses might have gotten off a little light,
but if this is the flashpoint of the modern civil rights movement
then that says a lot about the modern civil rights movement.
Mr. Nice Guy, your analogy of an ex-spouse saying, "I could kill
you right now," is a fair one. That IS the communication of a
threat and grounds for a domestic violence order of protection
(restraining order), at least in NC (where I live).
It's important to remember that less than fifty years ago, whites
were getting away with murder-by-noose. The Klan has certainly gone
underground and isn't nearly as powerful as it used to be, and
things have changed in the South, but a specter of the past is
still there.
When I was a kid (in NC in the 1980s), the KKK still marched down
Main Street once a year. When I was in college (in NC 15 or so
years ago), the local Klan called in a bomb threat to my school
when Spike Lee was scheduled to talk. And just a couple of years
ago I got to know some very well respected folks in Black Mountain,
NC (church elder, boy scout leader, etc), only to find out that
they were very plugged in to the Christian Identity movement (i.e.
Aryan Nations, etc).
These are just examples, but it doesn't hurt to keep in mind that
they all happened in North Carolina, which has always been one of
the more moderate Southern states. Things are getting better, but
the threat of violence is still under the surface in the South.
It's simply more subtle and less prevalent than it used to
be.
The best explanation of Jena that I've read is on the Nation's
website: Jena Is
America
A few days before the white boy was attacked one of his alleged
(because there havebeen no convictions except for those of the one
boy (who was 16 at the time and that was overturned and sent back))
attackers went ot a party in the white part of town.
He was attacked, one ADULT was arrested for it, using a beer bottle
as a weapon. Others were involved, but Justin Sloan, 22, was
arrested and convicted of a misdemeanor crime and given
probation..an adult attacking a legal child with a beer bottle. The
victim says others were involved, but when the police arrived the
black kids were just told to get back to their side of town and no
firther arrests were made.
So when one of the people who had been there/participated in the
attack on the young black kid (Bailey) was bragging about the
attack, he (Barker, the white kid) was set upon, allegedly by six
black kids who were charged with attempted murder.
It's a bit dodgy here...the DA to get the case into adult court had
to charge attempted murder to remand a juvenile. The acutal charge
he wanted to lay would not remand the kids. But once he got it into
adult court, he then lowered to charges to the aggravated assault
that he could have charged the kids with in juvenile court..but
with the much stiffer penalties.
The higher court threw out the conviction, saying this should have
been kept in the juvenile system.
It isn't just about the nooses and the attack on the white boy.
It's messy.
And yes, the line " six black men who beat up a white kid." is
so wrong.
"Six black kids beat up a white schoolmate" is the correct
sentence.
That might cost her the New York Money People
vote.
No, actual Jewish voters aren't suckers, and have consisted avoided
falling for the race-card pandering of the neoconservatives
throughout the Bush presidency.
It's disgusting how Jesse Jackson said those six black high
school students are heros!
Oh, wait. He didn't? He said they should be convicted of assault,
carry criminal records, and be put on probation? He called the
crime a crime, but criticized the charge?
Just too good to check, I guess. These things usually are. Damn
civil rights leaders!
One of the accused students, Mychal Bell, 17, was convicted in June of aggravated battery and conspiracy. Those charges were tossed out by two different appeals courts, most recently last Friday, but Mr. Bell has not been released from jail
why is that? (emphasis added)
They hung a noose, from a tree. Again, it really is
neanderthal behvaior, but should it be illegal? WTF?
I believe it's called communicating a threat in most jurisdictions,
and HELL YES it should be illegal.
Even if it is your tree on your property?
I can understand the school punishing minors hanging nooses in a
tree on school property. Considering the ongoing racial tensions at
the school in Jena they likely weren't punished enough.
The State making a legalcharge of "Communication of a Threat" based
solely on a knot tied in a length of rope sounds like a thought
crime.
I intended to seperate the words legal and charge.That is a typo
and not an intentional coinage like IllegalMexican.
I assume this is an open thread so what does anyone think about the
FOMC rate cut last week?
Reading around it seems displeasure with monetary policy is a
"non-partisan" issue with people of all political persuasions
upset.
Quite a few Democrats vehemently disagree with their Party's
proposed legislative fixes for the housing/mortgage/credit mess as
well.
Even if it is your tree on your property?
Maybe. How about "Hey, Darkies, I'm going to kill you!" sign on
your front lawn? I'd say that pretty clearly constitutes a
threat.
There is a line somewhere, but I don't think it's drawn at who owns
the property, but whether the threat is conveyed.
joe,
Are you saying that the knotted rope in of itself is a threat
rising to the level of legal sanction?
What if it is a Halloween decoration?
Weigel linked to some leftist site called Crooks and Liars.I read
the lefty blogs on occasion but that C&L site is crazy
stupid.
The State making a legalcharge of "Communication of a
Threat" based solely on a knot tied in a length of rope sounds like
a thought crime.
If lapdancing is speech, hanging a noose at the "whites only" tree,
certainly is. And if it wasn't a threat, what the hell was it? An
Arbor Day decoration? Let's get real here.
Even if it is your tree on your property?
Depending on the context, yes.
Obviously, a noose as part of a Halloween display is not a
threat.
A noose with a sign that says "you're next" in Jena today obviously
would be.
Just a noose, on your tree in your yard? Prosecutors would have a
very difficult time getting a conviction.
Let's just all admit that Jena, LA, is a fucked up, racist,
redneck, shithole of a town. Let's all admit that 6 on 1 beatdowns,
are, in spite of legitimate grievences, a serious criminal
matter.
Goddamit, I viscerally dislike being in agreement with you, joe. But I guess you can be reasoable about somethings.
Damn civil rights leaders!
Well these folks want ALL
charges dropped against the six students. The group was founded by
some guy who worked for Moveon.org
I found the link at the C&L site.
Another amusing item there is they believe Fred Thompson can't win
the GOP nomination because James Dobson doesn't like him.
joe,
There is a line somewhere, but I don't think it's drawn at who
owns the property, but whether the threat is conveyed.
So you would advocate criminal punishment for anti-war protesters
who displayed the noose with an effigy of Bush or General
Petraeus?
We've had a few commenters here who've maintained that the
Democrats can't be blamed for the Iraq war not ending, that it's
all the fault of the Republicans plus a few Democratic turncoats,
and if the left-statists we can just pick up a few
more seats and elect Hillary and get socialized
medicine the troops can all come home?
Any of you care to rationalize explain the 28-70 vote
to cut off Iraq war funding in the Senate? That means 28 Democrats
in favor of cutting off funding, 23 against.
So you would advocate criminal punishment for anti-war
protesters who displayed the noose with an effigy of Bush or
General Petraeus?
SIV - Too easy, it wouldn't be perceived as, or be, a threat. You
know it. Are you done being obstinate?
thanks, Hak!
Prole - um. I think you're on the wrong site with those
questions.... um...
you'll find that most hier don't want "socialized medicine" any
more than faith-based government programs, NCLB, or idealistic
nation building exercises... so um. huh?
Any of you care to rationalize explain the 28-70 vote to cut
off Iraq war funding in the Senate? That means 28 Democrats in
favor of cutting off funding, 23 against.
Again, too easy. It's harder to get out of a war than it is to get
into one. You'd have thought Dick Cheney would have explained that
to GWB.
For those who use terms like "climate change deniers", care to discuss the article and temperature graph here:
Mr. Bell has not been released from jail
Here's why:
"Again, [Judge] Mauffray pointed out that Bell now has either been
adjudicated or convicted of five crimes of violence.
...He cited Bell's presence on probation and the fact that there
were three other cases - not including the case Bell is currently
in jail for - awaiting disposition."
VM:
I agree that, overwhelmingly, people who visit
here are against socialized medicine, but due to a vocal minority
of left-statists, the number of posts pro and con on any of these
theads about socialized medicine is generally split down the
middle.
I was particularly interested in how certain left-statists here,
who keep repeating the mantra that about 90% of the Democrats in
Congress are intent on ending the war, intend to spin this evidence
that they are *ahem* wrong.
Prolefeed:
I think the most charitable way to frame the Democrat predicament
is that there are a lot of cowardly Senators who would choose to
end the war, but who are unwilling to challenge the President
politically by defunding the war.
If they can get Bush to march out they'll do it, but they're - for
some reason - deathly afraid of being accused of "abandoning the
troops".
And there's something to that. Upon passage of a defunding bill, a
prudent President would withdraw the troops. A petulant bitch would
leave them in place to run out of fuel, food and ammo. Which type
of President do you think we have right now? When dealing with
Bush, it's important to at least consider the possibility that he
might be willing to let the troops play a few rounds of Stalingrad
rather than accept the will of the Congress.
The only reason most Dems pretend to be against the War is
because they aren't running it. Until they are they will play
politics with our National Security. Once they have the levers of
power expect it to continue.
Does anyone seriously believe that if Gore won in 2000-or had
succeeded in stealing the election-that we wouldn't be in Iraq
right now?
Flemur:
I asked on the foot fetish thread if it was genetic like many
people believe homosexuality is.If you are still around, Do you
think foot fetishism is a disease spread by an unidentified
bacterial or viral infection?
In the accounts I read there was much conflicting testimony as
to whether the black student had indeed been hit with a beer
bottle. Was the hitting with bottle actually proven in court? Also,
I read that the DA explored charging a federal hate crime, but that
there are certification issues with juveniles he deemed too fraught
with difficulties. I will be the FIRST to admit that the US in
general, the South more so, and many small towns therein in
particular are hotbeds of ugly racism and that their justice
systems need serious cleaning up and monitoring. But in this case
the equation of hanging nooses with gang beatings is in my opinion
crazy.
The charge of attempted second degree murder supposedly encompasses
doing things to someone that could have killed them, and gang
kicking an unconscious boy seems to fit the bill...
Joe-did someone say Jesse called these kids hero's? My point was
that they are indeed a unsympathetic face for such a march. I could
think of numerous incidents of blacks being railroaded by Southern
justice systems that did not involve the brutal gang beating of a
kid. I'm certainly for the vigorous defense of unsympathetic
characters charged with crimes, but my point is this is one stupid
move politically. It makes Jesse et al seem unconcerned with the
white victims of such beatings. Chants of "hey, the Jenna 6 are
brutal, cowardly attackers who deserve convictions and criminal
records, but not second degree murder convictions" don't exactly
inspire me of thoughts of the march on Washington...
J sub D-I agree with you the hanging of a noose or joe's
hypothetical sign are clearly speech and conveigh threats. I only
submit that in a context that does not invite imminence that a
crime warranting state intervention seems uncalled for. If someone
expressed the ugly sentiment of joe's hypo on a webpage should he
be charged with a crime? What is the difference?
Upon passage of a defunding bill, a prudent President would
withdraw the troops. A petulant bitch would leave them in place to
run out of fuel, food and ammo. Which type of President do you
think we have right now? When dealing with Bush, it's important to
at least consider the possibility that he might be willing to let
the troops play a few rounds of Stalingrad rather than accept the
will of the Congress.
Fluffy -- I think we're dealing with a petulant bastard (not
"bitch", unless Bush had a hushed-up sex change operation that I
haven't heard about) who nonetheless wouldn't leave the troops to
be slaughtered. Bush likes the troops. They're his kind of people.
No, he'd pull them out, then claim that the U.S. was THIS close to
winning, but the Democrats snatched victory from defeat.
Too many of the Democrats want it both ways -- they want to hang
the war around the necks of Republicans, while continuing it as
long as they keep on picking up seats in Congress. The Republicans,
with a few exceptions like Governor AH-nold and Ron Paul, are
frickin' clueless on this issue. They just keep downing the hemlock
and asking for seconds (and thirds, and ...)
I suspect the war will end only when the Democrats start losing
seats in Congress over this issue -- say, after the 2010 elections.
I hope I'm too pessimistic, but that 28-70 vote says it all.
[Jackson] said they should be convicted of assault, carry
criminal records, and be put on probation.
Gee, probation, huh? Is he running for office on a law-and-order
platform? I have to wonder if he think that would be appropriate
punishment for six whites who perped the same crime on a
black.
Having said that, I'll admit it has been a long time since I lived
in the Deep South. Some of the posts after mine reminded me of the
racial tension that was palpable everywhere. I don't think letting
6 thugs off just because they have to live in that climate is an
appropriate response, though.
Since I haven't addressed the issue of two honorable reverends',
Jackson and Sharpton, involvement yet, I will now.
These two hypocritical, lying, bottom feeding, race baiting, money
grubbing, bigoted charlatans disgust me. Completely, absolutely,
entirely disgust me. They make me want to blow chunks. In their
faces. That these two hucksters are considered "Men of God" is one
more reason I'm proud to be an atheist. Anybody who believes that
they are in Jena for anyone other than themselves is too naivee too
be let outside alone.
Compare that diatribe with my previous posts on this subject on
this thread and tell me, am I a bigot? I ask this because if I were
to become a public figure (Odin forbid) the aforementioned would
get thrown in my face, repeatedly, and completely out of context.
That tendency to play gotcha rather than calmly discuss the issues
today, keeps a lot of good thoughtful people silent.
Shit that just depressed me. Bartender, make that a double.
Does anyone seriously believe that if Gore won in
2000...that we wouldn't be in Iraq right now?
Um...yes. If Al Gore had won in 2000, we would not be in
Iraq.
What do you believe? Gore would have had a "neo-liberal"
administration - have the CIA fake evidence of massive carbon
emissions coming from Iraq and use it as a pretext to invade to
promote global ecology?
I agree that the Jena 6 aren't the most sympathetic case, but I
think they are getting railroaded.
The way the nooses hung from the "whites only" oak tree is being
brushed off as a length of rope with some knots is ridiculous. This
isn't "ZOMG! There's a square knot tied to an elm," nooses have
some historical (in their parent's generation) context.
I'm sure if someone spray painted swastikas on a school, people
would wonder why people are getting up in arms about painting
ancient Indian symbols.
"I will be the FIRST to admit that the US in general, the South
more so, and many small towns therein in particular are hotbeds of
ugly racism and that their justice systems need serious cleaning up
and monitoring."
There are plenty of white racists in the US, and, yes, that
includes some in the South. There are other kinds of racists,
though. There are the racists who vehemently object to the Lacrosse
players in Durham being declared innocent. Yes, maybe they are not
guilty of the minor crimes of rape, sexual assault and sodomy, but
they *are* guilty of the grave crime of white maleness!
Not to mention Jackson and Sharpton, who (a) believe in
discrimination against whites and Asians ("affirmative action"),
and (b) support double standards in the criminal justice system
depending on the race of the defendant. If that's not racism, the
word is too malleable to have any real meaning.
Mo,
Depending on where the "facts" are coming from the nooses don't
have anything to do with the beating attack.They serve to show
disparate punishment for White and Black students for the
"narrative" however.The rope hanging students were punished by the
school as this does not rise to the level of a criminal offense
according to the LA DA. The perpetrators of the beating were
charged by the judicial system.
In a former life for which I'm still atoning, I spoke "Wall
Street."
So forgive me for saying McCain is having a "dead cat bounce."
re the Racist Ol' South
I'm old enough to remember vicious angry whites attacking Black
children just for trying to go to school in a previously segregated
system.
It happened in BOSTON MASSACHUSETTS in the
1970s.
I remember Howard Beach as well.I don't recall any high profile
incidents of White on Black racial violence in the South as they
were before my time(really young or before I was born).
Take the Civic
Literacy Quiz. This was in the News last week. Test showed
Harvard students score worse as seniors than they do as incoming
freshman.
I scored %95 bitches ! That was taking the test casually at maximum
speed(avg 15 seconds per question timed) without considering all
multiple choice answers -- just reading the question once and
filling in the first answer I thought was correct.Not my usual
standardized test strategy.
The average college student fails this miserably.Test was
challenging and fun.
Flemur:
I asked on the foot fetish thread if it was genetic like many
people believe homosexuality is.If you are still around, Do you
think foot fetishism is a disease spread by an unidentified
bacterial or viral infection?
SIV wins this the thread.
care to discuss the article and temperature graph here:
Yes. That's an adjustment to the United States temperature trends.
The global trend still shows an increase with this
correction.
Any of you care to rationalize explain the 28-70 vote to cut off Iraq war funding in the Senate? That means 28 Democrats in favor of cutting off funding, 23 against.
Remember the less aggressive proposal by Jim Webb (D-VA) requiring
troops as much time at home as abroad (supporting the troops),
simultaneously causing a troop drawdown given current roster
levels? It received 56 votes (50-D + 6-R). Unfortunately, John
Warner, whose voting record I (as an ex-Virginian) generally
approve of,
"...announced dramatically on the Senate floor that he was withdrawing his support for the proposal based on information provided by Defense Secretary Robert Gates and other senior military officials.
'I endorsed it,' Warner said of the Webb proposal. 'I intend now to cast a vote against it.'" (here)
J sub D-I agree with you the hanging of a noose or joe's hypothetical sign are clearly speech and conveigh threats. I only submit that in a context that does not invite imminence that a crime warranting state intervention seems uncalled for. If someone expressed the ugly sentiment of joe's hypo on a webpage should he be charged with a crime? What is the difference?
The difference is imminence of committing the crime. An "I could
kill you" during a phone call from NY to CA isn't likely to happen.
A blog's hoarse threat won't mobilize computer screens. A
schoolyard noose replete with hazing youngsters? A threat.
"SIV wins this the thread."
Cesar,
In spite of your nom de plume, you hereby lose the power to annoit
this the, that the or the other the as winner of any thread.
Sorry about this the that.
KingHarvest:
The global temperature has not been adjusted to fix the errors
found in the U.S., and in addition to that is generally less
reliable. If you look at the temperature chart for the U.S.
here (look at the blue lines for the year by year data), the
climate scientists were predicting a new ice age when the
temperatures troughed in the 1970s, and are now predicting a global
warming catastrophe now that the temperatures have climbed back to
around the range reached in the 1930s. Five of the last ten warmest
years in the last century occurred prior to WWII.
We do have anthropogenic global warming data -- that is, we do have
humans coming up with shaky data from which they extrapolate a
shaky thesis of global warming driving an even shakier political
agenda of statist intervention in the economy.
Here's a picture of one of those temperature sensing stations,
located next to recently relocated air conditioning units venting
waste heat onto the sensors.
SIV: I asked on the foot fetish thread if it was genetic
like many people believe homosexuality is.If you are still around,
Do you think foot fetishism is a disease spread by an unidentified
bacterial or viral infection?
Of course not, nor do I think homosexuality is a disease, and never
made that claim. But I do think your reading comprehension is
rather lacking.
F Lemur,
I could have sworn you put forth the idea that homosexuality was
biological in that it was caused by an infectious agent.
Without researching it, I considered the idea intriguing and put
looking into it on the stove, albeit the backburner. I am open to
the idea because I believe many "non-infectious" diseases may be
unrecognized infectious conditions(stomach ulcers for ex.).Much as
parasites can change the behavior of their hosts for their own
benefit I would assume microbial infections could possibly do the
same.I still havn't looked into what I thought you were
referecing.
Excuse me for distorting your views if that is the case.
Whooops! Didn't mean to post the above link by itself.
I was going to include it with more such as Patterico's on Glenn
Reynolds and Balko
Patterico points out what Balko doesn't.I know he is a hopeless
law enforcement apologist but he certainly informs the story
here.
It would be nice if someone mentioned item 8 in this
post:
http://www.dynamist.com/weblog/archives/002629.html
More proof that there is no God, or if there is, he's an evil
mf.
I'm watching Press the Meat right now, and, following Hillary's
dodge-a-thon, Alan Greenspan is saying that the Iraq war was
justified because we had to keep Saddam from gaining control of the
Strait of Hormuz and thus the global oil supply.
Strangely, Russert forgets to ask how Saddam would have been
capable of doing any of that.
SIV,
Neither of the cases you bring up would cause a reasonable person
to perceive a threat.
That's the standard here - is it actually a threat, or is it an
action which, in some other context might be considered a threat,
but in its real context is not.
Yup, the meaning of a message depends on context. I believe they
teach this in elementary school.
Considering that Al Gore gave a much-covered speech decrying the invasion of Iraq as a terrible mistake, and laying out a different global strategy for fighting terrorism, months before the war was launched, it seems somewhat short of Pascal's wager to conclude that he wouldn't have invaded Iraq.
joe,
You hanging a noose in my tree might be a threat.If I hang one in
my own tree it doesn't matter how you perceive it or try to define
the context.
Nonsense. I can easily come up with contexts that make that a
clear threat.
If black kids walk back and forth to school in front of your house,
and you've gotting into racial-slur-lader shouting matches with
them, hanging a noose in your tree most certainly would convey a
threat.
Considering that Al Gore gave a much-covered speech decrying
the invasion of Iraq as a terrible mistake, and laying out a
different global strategy for fighting terrorism, months before the
war was launched, it seems somewhat short of Pascal's wager to
conclude that he wouldn't have invaded Iraq.
joe,
Invasion of Iraq was not an option for Gore at that point as he
lost the election.The administration he served in nearly went in in
1998 and was obsessed with those WMDs that ultimately proved
lacking. Gore would have had the same Pentagon, CIA and State
Department as Bush did.
Sure, but backing the administration or remaining silent - as he
had on every other issue that had come up to that point of the Bush
presidency - were options for him.
He didn't take them. He broke his self-imposed rule against
denouncing the way the President was governing for that one
specific case.
Yet more evidence of how strongly he was opposed to invading
Iraq.
he administration he served in nearly went in in 1998 and was
obsessed with those WMDs that ultimately proved lacking
Actually, what they "proved" was that there were WMDs in Iraqi in
1998, which were destroyed by the Saddam regime after Operation
Desert Fox. This has been confirmed by the military and the
ISG.
But let's set that aside; yes, Gore and Clinton were concerned with
the WMDs and had a history of taking action to protect us from the
problem. AND YET they didn't invade the country - they
only, as you say, nearly went in, meaning they didn't go
in, they dealth with it some other way.
Some other way that was much less definitive and satisfactory than
having a couple hundred thousand troops on the ground to guarantee
that they threat they were concerned about was eliminated.
Demonstrating that they didn't go into Iraq when they were
concerned about its WMD capabilities - that they took other action
instead - is yet another argument against the thesis that Gore
would have invaded Iraq. They showed us what they would do in that
situation - bombing runs, coercive inspections under the UN
mandate, and other containment actions.
You know, exactly the ones Al Gore was urging in that speech he
gave.
joe,
Does the noose only convey a threat to Black people?
What other "symbols" should be prohibited on private property?
It's funny to me to see conservatives and Republicans arguing
that Democrats would have done exactly the same thing in regards to
Iraq after 9/11, and working so hard to spread the blame.
That certainly wasn't what they were saying in 2002 and 2003.
What was it Benito said to his mobbed-up police chief at Ground
Zero? Thank God Al Gore isn't the president?
SIV,
I'm not going to play dumb with you anymore about the noose.
My point is made, and your weaselling isn't going make your
position look any more reasonable.
Nah, that's not true. Beating up on you is so much fun.
Are you arguing that the threat implied in hanging a noose from a
tree near the property line between a white family and a black
family depends on which limb it is hung from?
Sadly, you are.
What other "symbols" should be prohibited on private
property?
Whichever ones convey an overt threat to do bodily harm to another
person.
Once again, there are rather obvious answers to these questions you
keep throwing out as if they were trump cards.
What other "symbols" should be prohibited on private
property?
Whichever ones convey an overt threat to do bodily harm to another
person.
Who defines that? Would you suggest the Duke University Liberal
Arts Faculty?
I'm not going to play dumb with you anymore about the
noose.
Why not? you are doing an excellent job of "playing" dumb.
"Alan Greenspan is saying that the Iraq war was justified
because we had to keep Saddam from gaining control of the Strait of
Hormuz and thus the global oil supply."
crimethink,
I'm disappointed Greenspan, of all people, wouldn't have "faith" in
the fact that those with control over the oil over there would find
a way to SELL IT! Strait of Hormuz or no Strait of Hormuz.
(I have "faith" the price of oil is much higher now than it would
have been if the US had never tried to "protect" it in the first
place.
People anthropomorphize oil like they do guns and certain drugs.
They give inanimate substances power that they simply don't
possess.
Ruthless,
I don't think the problem would be the oil not being sold -- the
problem would be who it would be sold to (China) and in what
currency (not US$).
I think the Hormuz being closed would be a problem, but there's no
way Saddam had the capacity to threaten it before the invasion. If
anything, our current saber-rattling with Iran is far more
dangerous in that regard.
SIV,
I can hang a sign "on my own property" that say KILL SIV
AND YOU GO TO HEAVEN! GOD WANTS YOU TO KILL SIV!? WTF are
you saying? After all, letters, even spoken words, are "symbols".
Other symbols also possess meaning. If you can't see or won't admit
this, I dub thee, fool.
JsubD,
Who defines the meaning of the symbols?
Can you find any example of a noose hung on one's own property-in
any context-constituting a legally sanctionable threat in of itself
under any law within the United States?
You and joe are racing to create new categories of thought
crimes.
"Alan Greenspan is saying that the Iraq war was justified
because we had to keep Saddam from gaining control of the Strait of
Hormuz and thus the global oil supply."
Sorry, Mr Greenspan, Saddam had no, repeat no capability to close
the Strait of Hormuz. Talk about grasping at straws.
Gosh, joe, we're defending each other. They're curling in Hell as we speak. ;-)
Check out another of Rudy's "Rudyness" moments during an NRA
speech. Here:
http://youtube.com/watch?v=hB0qjvi9kLE
P.S. I am not sure if this has been brought up on H&R.
SIV: I could have sworn you put forth the idea that
homosexuality was biological in that it was caused by an infectious
agent.
Now you're closer. Pinker phrases it: "Is homosexuality the symptom
of an infectious disease?"
Without researching it, I considered the idea intriguing and
put looking into it on the stove, albeit the
backburner...
It sounds like you're familiar with the so-called "New Germ
Theory." The idea is easy, and stems from basic evolutionary ideas:
if a condition interferes with reproduction, it's either rare (and
genetic)* or the result of infection by a disease organism or some
other injury, and not necessarily some exotic unknown organism
(even though, IIRC, biologists estimate that less than 1% of
possible pathogens have been identified). Reproduction rates are
like compound interest: small differences become quite significant
over many generations.
* Known genetic diseases (=any condition that interferes with
reproduction) typically occur in 1 out of thousands of births, not
1 out of dozens or hundreds.
This
paragraph from a pop-psych article explains the idea:
"What caused Seth's anxiety, his tics, his obsessive-compulsive
behavior? Astonishingly, it was probably that minor sore throat,
his doctors concluded. Today, scientists are increasingly coming to
recognize that the bacteria and viruses that frequently invade our
bodies and cause sore throats and other minor ailments may also
unleash a host of major mental and emotional illnesses*, including
anorexia, schizophrenia and obsessive-compulsive disorder."
*From an evolutionary viewpoint, any physical (including the brain,
of course) condition that interferes with reproduction can be
considered an illness. This'd include things like arthritis, etc.,
not just "mental" problems, although the latter's been open to
confusion thanks to psychs placing the blame on silly things like
toilet training and bad parenting.
And note that nobody's claiming that there's an
"obsessive-compulsive" virus or bacteria, just that some people, a
small number, react differently to common, or perhaps unknown,
disease organisms: e.g. 99.9% of the kids get a sore throat, .1%
might get some additional symptoms, some long-term. The differences
in reactions appear to have a partially genetic basis.
Excuse me for distorting your views if that is the
case.
No problem. If you're interested there's plenty of nitty-gritty at
gnxp.com.
Joe -
I think the question about the noose really isn't whether or not
it's a threat. The question is whether it's a legally actionable
threat.
Words have meanings. Symbols have "possible" meanings.
If I stand in the street in front of your house and shout, "I'm
gonna kill you!" I am making a threat and you should be able to
have me arrested. If I hang a noose from a tree in my yard, maybe
I'm making a threat and maybe I'm not. The fact that the noose is
not an explicit, unambiguous, non-debatable threat should mean that
it's not actionable.
Some would argue that a jury should be allowed to determine what it
thinks the noose must have meant, but I think that's crap. Only the
person who hung the noose can ultimately state what it meant.
now for somethig IMPORTANT. do I start Drew Brees or Jake Delhomme in Fantasy Football this week?
I'm not sure who could control the Strait of Hormuz, but I am sure it would make little difference if all Middle East oil were first sold to China and priced in rupees.
If I hang a noose from a tree in my yard, maybe I'm making a
threat and maybe I'm not.
To joe it may not, but to an African American it may. One also has
to ask: How often do people hang nooses in their yards and not mean
it in a threatening way? If it is socially known that hanging a
noose means something that is non-threatening, then I agree with
what Fluffy says. But it is not a widely spread act.
Still, I do have trouble with not being able to express what you
want, especially when what one is expressing is on one's own
property. But, as someone on H&R once quoted George Bernard
Shaw:
"Liberty means responsibility. That is why most men dread
it."
So, to my noose-hanging-in-their-yards friends I say, you are free
to say/express what you want, but just be responsible. It is good
for all.
Only the person who hung the noose can ultimately state what
it meant.
joe, J sub D,
What Fluffy said.....
"10,000 people marched in Louisiana to protest the railroading
of six black men who beat up a white kid."
Funny...here's is a republican paper editorial, the Chicago
Tribune, with a slightly different take on it than yours.
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/opinion/editorials/chi-0920edit2sep20,0,5070694.story
Can't see any reason why liberals might think that the state rights
crowd (as opposed to state powers crowds) might think that states
rights crowds are less than concerned that those of African descent
might not enjoy the same citizenship privileges as their European
cousins.
I thought that they were protesting that if pointing a gun at
someone isn't attempted murder, than kicking them with gym shoes on
certainly isn't, especially if the kicked went to a party 4 hours
after getting kicked.
Funny me, must be my "liberal" sensitivities that makes me think
that whites in that town should have the same legal structure as
the blacks. Just a dumb ole liberal here I guess. Just like the
republicans over at the Chicago Tribune.
Since this is an all-purpose weekend political thread, I'd just
like to point out that Ron Paul came in third at the Mackinac
Republican straw poll this weekend, beating out both Giuliani and
Thompson.
Usually Dondero's thug avoids all straw polls so he can say the
results don't mean anything, but in this instance both Giuliani and
Thompson attended the event and solicited votes.
You can't hope to stop Ron Paul, you can only hope to contain
him.
How about "Hey, Darkies, I'm going to kill you!" sign on
your front lawn? I'd say that pretty clearly constitutes a
threat.
Officer,
arrest that website!
"Again, [Judge] Mauffray pointed out that Bell now has either been adjudicated or convicted of five crimes of violence.
...He cited Bell's presence on probation and the fact that there were three other cases - not including the case Bell is currently in jail for - awaiting disposition."
Given this background, do any of you really think attempter murder
is unreasonable. Do any of you really think this was a school yard
scuffle?
I have not read much of the news coverage of this. Was the white
kid who was beaten unconscious the one who put a noose in a tree
three months prior to his beating?
"I'm not sure who could control the Strait of Hormuz, but I am
sure it would make little difference if all Middle East oil were
first sold to China and priced in rupees.
"
What if Saddam had kept Kuwait and simply cut production by 50%? Is
that OK?
By the way, you are wrong about the "little difference"
reasoning.
SIV, Fluffy,
Who defines that? Would you suggest the Duke University Liberal
Arts Faculty?
In our legal system, we use the "reasonable person" standard.
BTW, this is not a new law or concept. Both the crime of
Threatening and the Reasonable Person standard go back
centuries.
Joe, I know what you're saying, but to me that still requires a
verbal or written threat that employs words.
Only the meaning of words can be reasonably evaluated. Symbols are
by their nature so ambiguous that in almost every instance I can
imagine, a directed verdict of not guilty on the basis of
reasonable doubt would be in order.
A noose may mean "I'm gonna kill you." But given how frequently a
noose appears in just these contexts but no actual lynching ensues
[i.e. 99.9% of the current instances], it can just as reasonably
mean "I hate black people and want them to be unhappy."
Fluffy,
You don't think a finger drawn across the throat, followed by a
finger held in front of pursed lipe, can convey a perfectly clear
threat?
Here is an actual timeline of the Jena affair (bottom of page - scrolling is kind of funky) as reported in the hometown newspaper, so, you know, people can actually read and understand the facts instead of projecting them based upon a pre-existing sociopolitical framework.
Joe-
I won't quibble that a noose in a tree or the gesture you mention
are threats, I think they certainly are. My only point is that we
should hae an imminence recquirement for that to be illegal.
If someone puts a sign up in their yard that says "I'm gonna get
you [fill in the racial group here]" how is that different from a
website that says the same, or for that matter different from
someone who posts a sign in their yard with Jefferson's quote that
we need to water the tree of liberty with some blood every now and
then. I think with threats we need a clear and present danger type
of test or else we start punishing sentiments. In 1st Amendment
jurisprudence they used to disqualify speech that was "threatening"
government overthrow or revolution. The court rightly then decided
that there must be some imminence to the threat.
"the media fanned the flames of racial tension"
"raided the fair Barn Party"
Perhaps not the best source for one looking to avoid the projection
of a pre-existing sociopolitical framework onto the facts?
MNG,
I could see how a non-imminent threat could qualify more as
disorderly conduct than a specific threat to a person or group of
people.
"You don't think a finger drawn across the throat, followed by a
finger held in front of pursed lipe, can convey a perfectly clear
threat?"
OK, I have to give you that one.
Although I would say that the gesture as described above would
count as tampering if it was, say, directed at a witness to a
crime. Whether it would rise to the level of menacing if you did it
to someone talking in a movie theatre is a different question.
Perhaps not the best source...
It was the most comprehensive and complete timeline that I could
find. And I noted that it was the hometown paper. Yes, there is
some editorializing, but it is actually pretty slight. And it cuts
both ways; I love that way they keep mentioning that the
authorities did not find a racial basis for the initial hangman's
noose as if that was at all believable.
That was my take on it, too.
I suspect that the reporter in question confused "found no basis
for a federal hate crimes charge" with "found no racial basis for
the noose."
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