On Oct 25, 9:20*pm, John H. wrote:
On Sun, 25 Oct 2009 10:50:37 -0700 (PDT),Loogypicker
wrote:
On Oct 24, 6:29*pm, Tosk wrote:
In article 7aed2ec8-fffe-4050-b159-07417cc78500
@m11g2000vbl.googlegroups.com, says...
On Oct 24, 4:05*pm, H the K wrote:
...have an idiot as president and a criminal as vice president:
http://tinyurl.com/yhc57ex
Photos.
Yeah, now we have a moron for president and a clown for veep.
Or an idiot for veep and a crim for pres..
What crime has Obama ever been convicted of in a court of law? For
that matter, what has he ever been charged with?
Loogy, is it your belief that no crime has ever been committed by one
who wasn't charged or convicted?
No, but I don't go around accusing someone of commiting a crime
without evidence of such. Harry does that, too you know.
I would bet there's been some crimes committed right there in Atlanta
for which no one has been charged or convicted.
But does that mean that you blame a specific person for those crimes
without evidence of such?
I personally think the attempts to stifle a free press are criminal
activities, don't you?
Are you talking about Bush?:
Imprisoning journalists
Other than the fact that the President believes that he has the power
to break the law and has been continuously exercising that power, the
issue about which I've written most on this blog is the sweeping and
dangerous attacks by this administration on investigative journalism.
Those two issues are quite related, as the latter is intended to
conceal and thus enable the former.
The administration's assault on a free and vital press took a huge
leap forward this weekend, when Attorney General Alberto Gonazles
announced on national television that the Bush administration has the
power to imprison journalists who publish stories revealing conduct by
the President which the administration wants to conceal (such as the
warrantless NSA eavesdropping program, which he specifically cited).
Gonazles went further and made clear that the administration is
actively considering prosecution against journalists who publish such
stories.