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Action Alert: Help Force Jamie Gorelick's Resignation From the 9/11 Commission! (click here)
Congress.Org ^ | 4-20-04

Posted on 04/20/2004 5:57:44 PM PDT by jmstein7

I have set up an easy-to-use action alert on Congress.Org -- it is an easy way to send the message to your congresscritters/Senators

Simply follow these easy steps:

1)  Click HERE to open the action alert.

2)  Select and copy the text of the message (it is similar to an earlier posting on FR).

3)  Enter your zipcode.  Depending on your district, you may need to put more info in on the next page.

4)  Enter the Subject and Message.  You can simply paste the message you copied from the first page or compose your own.  Wing it :)

5)  The rest is self-explanatory.

6)  Post your experience with the site to this thread, if you like.

7)  Good job!  Thanks!  Pass it on to your friends!


TOPICS: Activism/Chapters; Announcements
KEYWORDS: 911commission; contactgovernment; gorelick
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To: jmstein7
Why aren't the alphabet channels forcing this resignation the way they did for Trent Lott? </sarcasm off>
41 posted on 04/22/2004 2:34:57 PM PDT by uncitizen
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To: jmstein7
done
42 posted on 04/22/2004 3:41:39 PM PDT by samtheman (www.georgewbush.com)
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To: jmstein7
Done. Thanks for making it easier.
43 posted on 04/22/2004 6:11:03 PM PDT by Marylander
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To: Octar
I hope she stays. That will help to discredit the commission's report which, as all indicators suggest, will be worthless, who can we blame, crap.

I agree. Gorelick's presense will make the report highly suspect and more of a scandal than any Bush-bashing conclusions they could ever come up with.

44 posted on 04/22/2004 9:13:49 PM PDT by Jorge
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To: jmstein7
Advantage taken, and thank you.
45 posted on 04/23/2004 5:28:11 AM PDT by vandykelastone (I'm so glad Goober Pyle is the Governor of New Mexico, aren't you?)
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To: jmstein7
Good job jm...my message:

Dear Senator Craig, Senator Crapo, and Representative Simpson,

Although I'm living and working a long ways from my home in XXXXX, Idaho, I feel I have to request that you insist that Jamie Gorelick resign from the 9/11 Commission and testify, under oath before that same commission.

It is unbelievable that Ms. Gorelick is not testifying before the commission, as she is the one person in America who did the most to insure that critical anti-terrorist data could not be shared between various law enforcement agencies.

It is obvious that Ms. Gorelick is doing everything she can to insure that the Clinton administration is held blameless for anything having to do with the tragic events of September 11, 2001. If she does not go, the findings of the commission will forever be considered meaningless and the product of the most cynical form of partisan politics.

Sincerely,
Cuttnhorse
46 posted on 04/23/2004 5:58:05 AM PDT by Cuttnhorse
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To: jmstein7
BUMP
47 posted on 04/23/2004 6:03:49 AM PDT by Dante3
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To: jmstein7
Bump
48 posted on 04/23/2004 6:50:53 PM PDT by Cuttnhorse
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To: jmstein7
E-mails to the commission are a waste of time and effort.

FAX the bastards, at:

1-202-296-5545

The address is:

Tom Kean or whoever you want to address
National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States
301 7th Street, SW Room 5125
Washington, DC 20407

Give em hell.

They can delete an e-mail before reading it. With a FAX, at least they have to pick it up to take it out of the machine.
49 posted on 04/23/2004 7:01:10 PM PDT by jackbill
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To: jackbill
FAX the bastards, at: 1-202-296-5545 The address is: Tom Kean or whoever you want to address National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States 301 7th Street, SW Room 5125 Washington, DC 20407 Give em hell. They can delete an e-mail before reading it. With a FAX, at least they have to pick it up to take it out of the machine.

Thanks for the info!

50 posted on 04/23/2004 7:21:16 PM PDT by Paul Ross (Since when is FLATTENING Fallujah a bad idea?)
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To: jmstein7
Bump
51 posted on 04/24/2004 1:25:58 PM PDT by Cuttnhorse
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To: All
Update:

The action item has been viewed 893 times and 178 actions have been taken. Surely we can do better than that!
52 posted on 04/25/2004 8:53:42 AM PDT by jmstein7 (Real Men Don't Need Chunks of Government Metal on Their Chests to be Heroes)
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To: jmstein7
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1122668/posts?page=124#123
53 posted on 04/25/2004 10:35:39 AM PDT by pc93 (Please visit http://bellsouthpwp.net/p/c/pc93/terri_schindler_life_ribbon_campaign.htm)
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To: jmstein7
A house divided cannot stand
San Diego Union Tribune ^ | April 25, 2004 | Zell Miller


Posted on 04/25/2004 2:44:13 PM PDT by Hildy


Finger-pointing before 9/11 panel is hurting nation, helping foes

By Zell Miller
April 25, 2004

Finger-pointing before 9/11 panel is hurting nation, helping foes

After watching the harsh acrimony generated by the September 11 Commission – which, let me say at the outset, is made up of good and able members – I've come to seriously question this panel's usefulness. I believe it will ultimately play a role in doing great harm to this country, for its unintended consequences, I fear, will be to energize our enemies and demoralize our troops.

After being drowned in a tidal wave of all who didn't do enough before 9/11, I have come to believe that the commission should issue a report that says: "No one did enough in the past. No one did near enough."

Then thank everyone for serving, send them home and let's get on with the job of protecting this country in the future. Tragically, these hearings have proved to be a very divisive diversion for this country. Tragically, they have devoured valuable time, looking backward when we should be looking forward.

Can you imagine handling the attack on Pearl Harbor this way? Can you imagine Congress, the media and the public standing for this kind of political gamesmanship and finger-pointing after that "day of infamy" in 1941? Some partisans tried that ploy, but they were soon quieted by the patriots who understood how important it was to get on with the war and take the battle to America's enemies, and not dwell on what FDR knew when.

You see, back then the highest priority was to win a war, not win an election. That's what made them "The Greatest Generation."

I realize that many well-meaning Americans see the hearings as "democracy in action." Years ago, when I was teaching political science, I probably would have had my class watching it live on television and using that very phrase with them.

There are also the not-so-well-meaning political operatives who see these hearings as an opportunity to score cheap points. Then, there are the Media Meddlers who see this as great theater that can be played out on the evening news and on endless talk shows for a week or more. Congressional hearings have long been one of Washington's most entertaining pastimes. Joe McCarthy. Watergate. Iran Contra. They all kept us glued to the TV, and made for conversation around the water coolers and arguments over a beer at the corner pub.

A congressional hearing in Washington, D.C. is the ultimate aphrodisiac for political groupies and partisan punks. But, it's not the groupies, punks and television-sotted American public that I'm worried about.

No, it is the real enemies of America that I'm concerned about. These evil killers who right now are gleefully watching the shrill partisan finger-pointing of these hearings and grinning like a mule eating briars.

They see this as a major split within the Great Satan America. They see anger, they see division, instability, bickering, peevishness and dissension. They see the president of the United States hammered unmercifully. They see all this and they are greatly, greatly encouraged.

We should not be doing anything to encourage our enemies in this battle between good and evil. Yet, these hearings, in my opinion, are doing just that.

We are playing with fire. We're playing directly into the hands of our enemy by allowing these hearings to become the great divider they have become.

Dick Clarke's book and its release coinciding with these hearings have done this country a tremendous disservice, and someday we will reap its whirlwind. Long ago, Sir Walter Scott observed that revenge is "the sweetest morsel that ever was cooked in hell." The vindictive Clarke has now had his revenge, but what kind of hell has he, his CBS publisher and his axe-to-grind advocates unleashed?

These hearings, coming on the heels of the election the terrorists influenced in Spain, bolster and energize our evil enemies as they have not been energized since 9/11.


Chances are very good that these evil enemies of America will attempt to influence our 2004 election in a similar dramatic way as they did Spain's. And to think that could never be in this country is to stick your head in the sand.

That is why the sooner we stop this endless bickering over the past and join together to prepare for the future, the better off this country will be. There are some things – whether the city of Washington believes it or not – that are just more important than political campaigns.

The recent past is so ripe for political second-guessing "gotcha" and Monday morning quarter-backing. And it is so tempting in an election year. We should not allow ourselves to indulge that temptation. We should put our country first.

Every administration from Jimmy Carter to George W. Bush bears some of the blame. Dick Clarke bears a big heap of it because it was he who was in the catbird's seat to do something about it for more than a decade. Tragically, it was the decade in which we did the least.

We did nothing after terrorists attacked the World Trade Center in 1993, killing six and injuring more than 1,000 Americans.

We did nothing in 1996 when 16 U.S. servicemen were killed in the bombing of the Khobar Towers.

When our embassies were attacked in 1998, killing 263 people, our only response was to fire a few missiles on an empty tent.


Is it any wonder that after that decade of weak-willed responses to that murderous terror, our enemies thought we would never fight back?

In the 1990s is when Dick Clarke should have resigned. In the 1990s is when he should have apologized. That is when he should have written his book. That is, if he really had America's best interest at heart.


Some will say, "We owe it to the families" to get more information about what happened in the past and I can understand that. But no amount of finger-pointing will bring our victims back. So, now we owe it to future families and all of America now in jeopardy not to encourage more terrorists, resulting in even more grieving families, perhaps many more than the ones of 9/11.

It's obvious to me that this country is rapidly dividing itself into two camps: the wimps and the warriors.

The ones who want to argue and assess and appease, and the ones who want to carry this fight to our enemies and kill them before they kill us. And, in case you haven't figured it out, I proudly belong to the latter.

This is a time like no other in the history of this country, and this country is being crippled with petty partisan politics of the worst possible kind. In time of war, it is not just unpatriotic; it is stupid, and it is criminal.

So, I pray that all this time, all this energy, all this talk and all this attention could be focused on the future instead of the past.

I pray we would stop pointing fingers, assigning blame and wringing our hands about what happened on that day David McCullogh has called "the worst day in our history" more than two years ago. And instead, pour all of our energy into how we can kill these terrorists before they kill us – again.

For make no mistake. They watch these hearings. They are scheming and smiling about the distraction and the divisiveness they see in America. And while they may not know who said it years ago in America, they know instinctively that a house divided cannot stand.

There is one other group that we should remember is listening to all of this – our troops.

I was in Iraq in January and one day when I was meeting with the 1st Armored Division, a unit with a proud history known as Old Ironsides, we were discussing troop morale, and the commanding general said it was top notch.


And I turned to the division's sergeant major, the top enlisted man in the division, a big, burly, 6-foot-3, 240-pound African-American. And I said, "That's good, but how do you sustain that kind of morale?"

Without hesitation he narrowed his eyes, and he looked at me and said "The morale will stay high just as long as these troops know the people back home support us."

Just as long as the people back home support us. What kind of message are these hearings and the outrageously political speeches on the floor of the Senate sending to those marvelous young Americans in the uniform of our country?


I say, unite America! Before it is too late! Put aside these petty partisan differences when it comes to the protection of our people. Argue and argue and argue and debate and debate and debate over all the other things – jobs and education and the deficit and the environment – but please, please do not use the lives of Americans and the security of this country as a cheap-shot political talking point.

Miller, a Democrat, is the senior U.S. senator from Georgia. This commentary was taken from recent remarks Miller delivered on the Senate floor.


54 posted on 04/25/2004 4:37:06 PM PDT by truth4
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