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Al Franken triples down on stupid
Powerline ^ | 2/10/17 | Paul Mirengoff

Posted on 02/10/2017 8:55:02 PM PST by markomalley

I’m not enough of an elitist to believe that only Senators with legal training should serve on the Senate Judiciary Committee. However, the ability to engage competently in legal reasoning ought to be a prerequisite.

In his work on the Judiciary Committee, Al Franken has failed to display this ability. Indeed, he shows a lack of competence in basic logic that, in a better world, would disqualify him from the Senate.

In this post, I discussed Franken’s laughable attempt, when questioning Jeff Sessions, to show that the then-Senator misrepresented his involvement in prosecuting several civil rights cases while he served as a U.S. Attorney. In this post, I discussed Franken’s rambling, intellectually dishonest diatribe against Sessions on the same subject during a Judiciary Committee hearing.

In both instances, Franken’s main claim was that Sessions had no real role in several voting rights case brought by the U.S. government while he was a U.S. Attorney. Franken claimed that Sessions just signed the pleadings and therefore misrepresented his role when he said he personally handled the matters.

In his effort to make this showing, Franken relied heavily on a Washington Post op-ed in which Gerry Hebert, lead counsel in some of these cases, claimed that Sessions basically had no role. But there were two problems with relying on Hebert.

First, he has a history of dishonesty. Second, Hebert testified back in 1986 that Sessions was actively involved in helping him (see below).

Nonetheless, Franken tripled down on this line of attack in a speech on the Senate floor during the debate on Sessions’ confirmation. In the process, Franken served up this affront to logic:

[During my questioning of Sen. Sessions] I. . .moved on to question him about four cases that he had listed on his committee questionnaire, which asked him the — quote — ten most significant litigated matters he personally handled, personally handled. Among those ten cases were voting rights cases and a desegregation case.

Now, I know Senator Sessions and I know his record on voting rights. He is no champion of voting rights.

He has called the Voting Rights Act intrusive and complained about states with a history of discrimination being subject to preclearance. But here his questionnaire seemed to tout his involvement in three voting rights cases and one desegregation case.

It seemed to me that given his previous experience before this committee and given the concern the civil rights community had expressed about his nomination, that it had been the transition team or others managing Senator Sessions’ nomination had attempted to revise some of his history and recast him as a civil rights champion.

So Franken was arguing: (1) Jeff Sessions thinks the Voting Rights Act is too intrusive and he objects to its preclearance requirements (because they are based on assumptions about how certain states behave that were made 50 years ago and are out-of-date); therefore (2) it’s highly unlikely that Sessions was involved to any real degree in cases where the Department of Justice sued under the Voting Rights Act.

This is a non sequitur. Sessions may not agree with some of the more extreme aspects of the Voting Rights Act. However, this doesn’t remotely suggest that he wouldn’t be significantly involved in any lawsuit under the Act (Indeed, it doesn’t even mean he wouldn’t be significantly involved in a lawsuit pushing a part of the Act he doesn’t like; lawyers sometimes take positions they don’t agree with).

Consider, by analogy, the Civil Rights Act’s ban on employment discrimination. One could strongly disagree with that Act’s ban, via disparate impact theory, on “unintentional discrimination,” yet vigorously and enthusiastically pursue a solid case alleging intentional discrimination (i.e., disparate impact).

Thus, Franken’s argument is stupid, and in a revealing way. He’s saying, in essence, that if you don’t agree with me on all positions that I think are encompassed by “civil rights”, then you’re probably not decent enough to have taken any worthwhile positions on civil rights.

That’s leftist thinking in a nutshell. It makes me believe that the Democrats actually might nominate this arrogant, dogmatic clown for president.

Let’s conclude by recalling what Hebert, Franken’s star witness, said in 1986 about Jeff Sessions’ involvement in civil rights cases he handled:

We have had difficulties with several U.S. Attorneys in cases we have wanted to bring. We have not experienced that difficulty in the cases I have handled with Mr. Sessions. In fact, quite the contrary. . . .

I have had occasion numerous times to ask for his assistance and guidance. I have been able to go to him and has had an open door policy, and I have taken advantage of that an found him to be cooperative. . . .

I needed Mr. Sessions’ help in those cases and he has provided that help every step of the way. In fact, I would say that my experience with Mr. Sessions has led me to believe that I have received more cooperation from him — more active involvement from him because I have called upon him.

I have worked side-by-side with him on some cases in the sense that I have had to go him for some advice.

(Emphasis added).

Jeff Sessions read this testimony by Hebert to Franken during the Judiciary Committee hearing. Franken tried at one point to cut him off. Thereafter, he ignored it, ultimately opting to triple down on stupid.


TOPICS: Editorial; Government; US: Minnesota
KEYWORDS: agsessions; first100days; franken; sessions; trump45; trumpcabinet
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To: boycott

And note what it says about the people who elected him! And they are dead-souled enough to re-elect him.


21 posted on 02/11/2017 5:52:21 AM PST by MHGinTN (A dispensational perspective is a powerful tool for spiritual discernment)
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To: markomalley

Indeed, he shows a lack of competence in basic logic that, in a better world, would disqualify him from the Senate...

He came from SNL and a liberal. He’s unqualified to be human.


22 posted on 02/11/2017 5:52:38 AM PST by maddog55 (America Rising)
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To: BraveMan; txrefugee

I know a lot of people in Minnesota across the political spectrum. Also across the intelligence spectrum. So here is my view of what motivates Minnesotans to vote so foolishly or recklessly:

1. The majority of native Minnesotans (not the recent imports - refugees, illegals, Chicagoans - are some of the nicest people you’d ever want to meet. They naively believe that everyone else is nice like they are and honest like they are and they believe what people tell them. They are hard-working and honest themselves, so they assume that it’s a good idea to be generous with welfare because if they were on the receiving end they would not abuse it and would get back to work asap.

2. The Jesse Ventura election. I think they were fed up with both parties and figured they needed a change and that it couldn’t be much worse than what they were getting. Not a lot different, in terms of attitude/frustration, than the election of Trump.

3. Franken. That election was stolen. There is zero doubt in my mind that Franken lost, but recount after recount was done in order to foist him on Minnesota and the nation so that he could cast the needed vote for 0vomitcare. The fact that it was close enough for them to steal is frightening.

4. Minneapolis and St. Paul are now infested with radicals, gangs, and welfare mooches of all sorts. Somalis, Hmong, people (mostly black) who take the bus from Chicago, collect welfare, then take the bus back to Chicago to collect again, muslims, leftwing agitators. The rest of the state is mostly sane. But there is enough corruption in MSP to swing the state to the left.

IMO, Minnesota is drifting rightward again because those who have naively voted D are beginning to wake up. If Trump can clean up election fraud, I think we will start to see Minnesota voting for a lot more Republicans.

Just my observations and opinions.


23 posted on 02/11/2017 5:52:56 AM PST by generally ( Don't be stupid. We have politicians for that.)
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To: markomalley

Low bar.


24 posted on 02/11/2017 6:01:12 AM PST by Renkluaf
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To: markomalley

Frankin got elected in the first place via ELECTION FRAUD

he is an “unfunny clown” and that is about it....


25 posted on 02/11/2017 7:26:46 AM PST by zzwhale
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To: markomalley

Fat, dumb & stoned is no way to go thru life, Son.


26 posted on 02/11/2017 7:38:24 AM PST by Tallguy
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To: markomalley

Franken: too stupid for words.


27 posted on 02/11/2017 11:55:54 AM PST by jch10 (President Trump, President Trump, President Trump! I just love saying that!)
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To: skimbell
But the guy sure does know how to find them "miss placed votes"

I don't believe Franken found any votes.

It was the Democratic machine in place in Minnesota that made sure it came out that way.

Franken is their pawn just as he was a paid actor on SNL.

28 posted on 02/11/2017 5:14:58 PM PST by VideoDoctor
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To: boycott

Franken also wants an “independent” commission to investigate Trump’s ties to Putin and he said that Trump is mentally unstable. Can’t we find a way to get the moron Franken out of the senate? What is wrong with Minnesota?


29 posted on 02/12/2017 5:24:16 PM PST by Pining_4_TX (For they sow the wind, and they shall reap the whirlwind. ~ Hosea 8:7)
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To: markomalley

30 posted on 03/04/2017 10:57:07 AM PST by Jack Hydrazine (Pubbies = national collectivists; Dems = international collectivists; We need a second party!)
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