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To: Sir Gawain

She’s calling for a “Truth Commission”.

Positively Orwellian...


17 posted on 05/14/2009 8:24:51 AM PDT by null and void (We are now in day 115 of our national holiday from reality.)
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To: null and void

does botox migrate to the reasoning portions of the human brain...? This woman is a few sandwiches shy of a full picnic basket


33 posted on 05/14/2009 8:27:30 AM PDT by silverleaf ("Never forget that everything Hitler did in Germany was legal ( Martin Luther King))
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To: null and void

40 posted on 05/14/2009 8:29:19 AM PDT by Califreak (Stammer Lee, TOTUS and Beltway Bob have turned 1600 into a circus)
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To: null and void
Did you see how she's trying to bargain with the American people, trying to push free healthcare forward?

Pelosi the pathetic.

107 posted on 05/14/2009 8:41:09 AM PDT by TheThinker (America doesn't have a president. It has a usurper.)
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To: null and void
OK, now it is beginning to make sense. She is accusing the CIA, but her real target is Obama's justice department who is fighting for the release of the photos. Pelosi wants to shut down this whole issue and is willing to blame the CIA, but the administration knows that if a "Truth Commission" is put into action, Obama's ploy to vote, "present", just isn't going to hold up to the light of day.

Here is part of an article that is on NRO, today, about Holder and his role in this.

Is there any more important context crying out for transparency than a Justice Department misstep that could have cost American lives?

This misstep, it is worth remembering, does not occur in a vacuum. President Obama has stocked his Justice Department with lawyers who have spent (or whose firms have spent) the last eight years volunteering their services to America’s enemies. This includes Attorney General Holder himself, whose former firm’s website continues to brag about representing 18 alien enemy combatants and about attacking the validity of the Bush-era military commissions. (Those would be the same commissions that President Obama suddenly decided aren’t so bad after all, according to the administration’s most recent Friday Night Bad News Dump.)

It can be no coincidence that, with this DOJ team in place, we’ve already seen: the premature announcement of the closure of Guantánamo Bay, when there was clearly no plan for what to do about the detainees; the outright release of Binyam Mohammed, who plotted with “Dirty Bomber” Jose Padilla to attack American cities; the purging of the terms “enemy combatant” and “war”; the release of the CIA memos over the strenuous objection of the intelligence community, and in a shamefully dishonest manner that revealed interrogation tactics but suppressed from public view the life-saving information the tactics yielded; the announcement of an investigation of Bush-administration lawyers and the leaking of information from the related ethics probe; AG Holder’s under-the-radar suggestion that he’d cooperate with Spain’s investigation of Bush administration officials; the sweetheart plea deal for Ali al-Marri (a terrorist who, like Binyam Mohammed, was planning to conduct a post-9/11 second wave of mass-murder attacks in the U.S.); the plan to release trained terrorists in the U.S. in violation of federal immigration law (to say nothing of common sense); and, now, the decision to release the prisoner-abuse photos that the president, thankfully, has rescinded. That’s quite a track record in just a hundred days. There is palpable ground for concern that DOJ decisions are not being made with the best interests of American national security in mind.

Will Attorney General Holder release the Justice Department memos that led to his inexplicable decision to publicize photos President Obama concedes would have endangered our troops? If Holder won’t voluntarily disclose them, will Congress demand that he do so? After all, though some say it’s time to look forward, not back, today’s Democrats are quick to point out that all of us — other than Nancy Pelosi — must come clean and learn from the mistakes of history if we are to avoid repeating them.

Or is this one truth that Pat Leahy would just as soon not have a commission over?

— National Review’s Andrew C. McCarthy is a senior fellow at the National Review Institute and the author of Willful Blindness: A Memoir of the Jihad (Encounter Books, 2008). \

206 posted on 05/14/2009 9:56:05 AM PDT by Eva (union motto - Aim for mediocrity, it's only fair.)
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To: null and void

“She’s calling for a “Truth Commission”.”

Oh, that’s rich...


253 posted on 05/14/2009 5:42:06 PM PDT by SeattleBruce (God, Family, Country and the Tea Party! Take America Back!)
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