The American Truth Machine

April 11, 2009

Somali Pirates: Why “Arrr” They Tolerated?

Filed under: The World

Is it just me, or is the response to the Somali pirates a bit weak?  They have an American Hostage and are demanding money.  Yet they are in a little boat (out of fuel I might add) and the Navy is right there, capable of taking them out.  But they can’t, because they have the hostage.  The captain is clearly a hero.  I hope he makes it out okay. 

BTW, the french have some pirate problems too.  But it looks like they were able to use force.  Whoda thunk it, the French with a more forceful response than the US.  

Check out these stores from foxnews.com and cnn.com:  


U.S. Navy Blocks Ships Coming to Aid Pirates in Standoff


Hostage, 2 pirates killed in French rescue operation

 

Eric Holder Politicizing Justice

Filed under: Politics

Remember hearing how the Bush Administration "politicized" the Justice Department?  Well, it seems that Eric Holder, the new Attorney General, is doing just that.  Of all the Obama appointees, Holder is the worst.  Sure, Geithner is a tax cheat, but at least he hasn’t done anything a congressional investigation called "unconscionable."  Here’s part of a great article from the Washington Post:

 

Intense controversy has flared in recent years over a previously obscure but high-powered office in the Department of Justice — the Office of Legal Counsel. OLC has traditionally provided the final word to executive branch officials on the meaning of the Constitution and federal statutes. Disputes over whether it faithfully carried out its assigned role in national security matters during the Bush administration have erupted on newspaper front pages. Whatever the merits of those disputes, virtually everyone has agreed that it is imperative that OLC provide high-quality legal advice that is not slanted to advance a president’s policy agenda — and that the president and his top advisers respect that advice.

But now it appears that we have an attorney general who is himself running roughshod over OLC.

During Eric Holder’s confirmation process, his tenure as deputy attorney general in the Clinton administration sparked serious concerns among senators. In scandals involving Clinton’s pardons of Puerto Rican nationalists and fugitive Marc Rich, Holder had violated departmental protocols, ignored the views of victims and law enforcement professionals, colluded with Rich’s attorneys, undermined prosecutors and circumvented DOJ’s pardon attorney. A congressional investigation in 2002 called his conduct "unconscionable."

At his recent confirmation hearing, a chastened Holder assured senators that he had learned from the past and was committed to upholding the department’s high standards. He specifically promised not to politicize DOJ’s legal positions: "We don’t change OLC opinions simply because a new administration takes over," he said. Any review "will not be a political process, it will be one based solely on our interpretation of the law."

Alas, less than two months into his tenure as attorney general, according to accounts in The Post last week, Holder has abused OLC for partisan political purposes. The facts, admittedly, are somewhat sketchy — largely because Holder isn’t complying with President Obama’s promise of transparency. But here’s what they show.

 






















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