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To: Diogenesis
I agree with you 100%. The entire 911 commission is an absolute disgrace. I seriously question Kean's credibility, too, in that he is so bent on keeping Gorelick on the commission. Almost every person on the commission has some sort of conflict of interest to begin with. The only thing that has come out of this commission so far is that the previous administration was totally incompetant, had no regard whatsoever for our national security, and is exploiting the victims and survivors of 911 to do some political grand standing on behalf of their clients being sued. (Believe me, at the end of the commission hearings, any attorney on this panel that has anything to do with 911 law suits will use the minutes of these meetings to manipulate the truth to points beyond recognition on behalf of their high paying clients).

Gorelick is one of many people in the Clinton Administration who is directly responsible for the demise of our national security in the 90s. The Bush administration should have nothing to do with her except some serious interrogation. In fact, she should probably be under inditement for what she did and did not do. If she is still allowed to receive daily presidential briefings, God only knows what she is doing with the information, and how many people she discusses it with.

The biggest mistake the American people can make is elect attorneys or people with law degrees into positions of power. When attorneys run the country, like they did in the 90s, this is the result. That these people are still positions of power at the taxpayers expense is nothing less than appalling.


28 posted on 04/16/2004 1:43:54 PM PDT by tomball
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To: tomball
Absolutely! But let us not forget that, as the DAG, Ms. Gore-lick was also responsible for other things. She was also in a position to ensure that members of the law enforcement community not share/exchange information on other matters. In 1995, the National Drug Intelligence Center began to produce multi-agency profiles of high-level drug trafficking organizations - precisely what it was created to do in 1993. NDIC's mission changed to "strategic drug intelligence," which ended in-depth examination of all-source information on organizations. Anyone ever heard of Mena, Arkansas?
30 posted on 04/16/2004 1:55:51 PM PDT by ManHunter (You can run, but you'll only die tired...)
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