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Posts Tagged ‘Thomas Jefferson’

Thomas Jefferson wrote, “The duty of an upright administration is to pursue its course steadily, to know nothing of these family dissentions, and to cherish the good principles of both parties.”

Anyone who has spent any time on this blog knows that I firmly believe that pure party politics are disastrous for our country.  I initially used the moniker “supercynic” in response to neo-con Republican tactics used here in Mississippi.  But there was never a doubt that the puppetmaster was in Washington — Karl Rove.

It has now been confirmed — except to Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity, and their ilk — that the Justice Department was politicized like never before under Bush.  As a lawyer, I find this particularly disgusting. I have written before that literally nowhere on this planet can an illiterate old lady from the backwaters of Mississippi stand on equal footing with a multinational corporation than in a court of law.  It is the great equalizer.  To politicize the U.S. Justice Department is despicable.  Below is an article regarding the recent findings of the internal ethics investigator at the DOJ.

Gonzales Aides Broke Laws in Hiring, Report Concludes

By ERIC LICHTBLAU

Senior aides to former Attorney General Alberto Gonzales broke the law by using politics to guide their hiring decisions for a wide range of important department positions, slowing the hiring process at critical times and damaging the department’s credibility and independence, an internal report concluded Monday.

The report, prepared by the Justice Department’s inspector general and its internal ethics office, singles out for particular criticism Monica Goodling, a young lawyer from the Republican National Committee who rose quickly through the ranks of the department to become a top aide to Mr. Gonzales.

Ms. Goodling, who testified before Congress in May 2007 at the height of the scandal over the firings of nine United States attorneys, introduced politics into the hiring process in a systematic way that constituted illegal misconduct, the report found.

Last month, the inspector general, Glenn A. Fine, released a separate report that found a similar pattern of politicized hiring at the Justice Department in reviewing applications from young lawyers for the honors and intern programs. The new report released Monday goes much further, however, in documenting pervasive evidence of political hiring for some of the department’s most senior career, apolitical positions, including immigration judges and assistant United States attorneys.

The inspector general’s investigation found that Ms. Goodling and a handful of other senior aides to Mr. Gonzales developed a system of using in-person interviews and Internet searches to screen out candidates who might be too liberal and to identify candidates seen as pro-Republican and supportive of President Bush.

When interviewed by the inspector general, Mr. Gonzales said he was not aware that Ms. Goodling and other aides were using political criteria in their decisions for career positions. Mr. Gonzales resigned last summer in the face of mounting accusations from congressional Democrats that politics had corrupted the department.

His successor, Attorney General Michael Mukasey, said in a statement Monday after the report’s release that he was disturbed by their findings that improper political considerations were used in hiring decisions relating to some career employees.

“I have said many times, both to members of the public and to Department employees, it is neither permissible nor acceptable to consider political affiliations in the hiring of career Department employees,” he said. “And I have acted, and will continue to act, to ensure that my words are translated into reality so that the conduct described in this report does not occur again at the Department.”

He said that over the course of the last year and a half, the Justice Department has made institutional changes to remedy the problems discussed in today’s report.

“It is crucial that the American people have confidence in the propriety of what we do and how we do it,” he said, “and I will continue my efforts to make certain they can have such confidence.”

An attorney for Ms. Goodling, John Dowd, did not return a phone message Monday.

In her position as White House liaison for the Justice Department, Ms. Goodling was involved in hiring lawyers for both political appointments and non-political, career positions. Regardless of the type of position, the report said, Ms. Goodling would run through the same batch of questions, asking candidates about their political philosophies, why they wanted to serve President Bush, and who, aside from Mr. Bush, they admired as public servants. Sometimes, Ms. Goodling would ask: “Why are you a Republican?”

Such questioning was allowed for candidates to political appointments, but was clearly banned under both civil service law and the Justice Department’s own internal policies, the inspector general said. Ms. Goodling’s questioning also generated complaints from one senior official who believed it was improper, long before the issue became a public controversy following the firings of nine United States attorneys. The inspector general concluded that Ms. Goodling knew that questioning applicants to career positions about their political beliefs was improper.

In one case, for instance, Ms. Goodling slowed the hiring of a prosecutor in the United States attorney’s office in Washington, D.C., for a vacancy because she said she was concerned that he was a “liberal Democrat.” After the United States attorney, Jeffrey Taylor, complained to her supervisors, he was allowed to hire the candidate anyway.

And in another case, colleagues said that Ms. Goodling refused to extend the appointment of a female prosecutor because she believed the lawyer was involved in a lesbian relationship with her supervisor, according to the report.

And in another case cited by the inspector general, Ms. Goodling blocked the hiring of an experienced prosecutor for a senior counter-terrorism position because his wife was active in Democratic politics. The candidate was regarded as “head and shoulders above the other candidates” in the view of officials in the executive office of United States attorneys, but they were forced to take a candidate with much less experience because he was deemed acceptable to Ms. Goodling.

In forwarding a résumé in 2006 from a lawyer who was working for the Federalist Society, Ms. Goodling sent an e-mail message to the head of the Office of Legal Counsel, Steven Bradbury, saying: “Am attaching a résumé for a young, conservative female lawyer.”

Ms. Goodling interviewed the woman herself for possible positions and wrote in her notes such phrases as “pro-God in public life,” and “pro-marriage, anti-civil union.” She was eventually hired as a career prosecutor.

Ms. Goodling also conducted extensive searches on the Internet to glean the political or ideological leanings of candidates for career positions, the report found. She and other Justice Department supervisors would look for key phrases like “abortion,” “homosexual,” “guns,” or “Florida re-count” to get information on a candidate’s political leanings.

Nice going Ms. Goodling.  You’ve served your country well. Our forefathers, most of whom despised party politics, would be quite proud.  (Please note the extreme sarcasm.)

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UPDATED: I’m going to keep putting this one up 1st until somebody comments.

SIGH. A really big sigh. I just sat down to catch up on the news and I came across an article about how Congress is a bit ticked off that the fine folks over at Major League Baseball’s HQ and players union may have withheld information from Congress regarding steroid use in MLB back in 2005. Tsk. Tsk.

Ask your average person why the American Colonies entered into a rebellion against the United Kingdom and you’ll hear answers such as these:

Oppressive taxation policies.  Oppressive and unfair trade policies.  Freedom from tyrannical and arbitrary mandates, etc.  Balderdash to all of that, I say.  That’s all revisionist history; high-minded poppycock from the intelligentsia of our time.

Real students of history know that when our Founding Fathers risked all of their material possessions, literally placed on the table of Fate the safety of their lives and those of their families to form a new nation unlike any before seen on this tiny blue marble we call Earth, they did it — dramatic pause — so that they could regulate games.

“The treachery that is now so pervasive in checkers stands before us like Goliath on the battlefield. If Parliament will not grab the stone for David’s sling, then it is up to us to form a new nation to stamp out the evils that threaten to taint forever this most noble game,” penned Benjamin Franklin in an early call for independence.

Thomas Jefferson, upon hearing the news of the increasingly brazen usage of cards hidden in the puffy sleeves of Bridge players wrote, “The skullduggery that has now become so common place at the card table can no longer be ignored by our monarchy.  If King George III and the wise coterie of earls, dukes, and lords that we call Parliament will not root out this debauched behavior, then it is incumbent upon us as creations of Providence to reclaim the inherent goodness that is Bridge. If we are restrained from rising to the challenge by an uncaring government an ocean away, then we shall do it as free men.  We cannot remain loyal to the Crown if that very loyalty requires us to avert our glance from the decadence taking place at card tables across our great colonies.”

It is true that Thomas Paine was instrumental in inflaming the passion for revolution, but it was not over taxation without representation or man’s God-given right to control his own destiny.  Paine was infuriated at having lost a petition in the Court of Common Pleas against a fellow dice player who he claimed had used a loaded die.  Putting quill to ink and then to paper, Paine wrote, “No longer can we stand tranquil and allow the rules of established gaming to be trampled upon by cheaters who are in turn coddled by tyrants.”

And thus the American Revolution commenced and a new nation was born. For well over 200 years, giants in the field of public service have convened in the form of our Congress in Washington, D.C., to ensure that the vision of our Founding Fathers remains fulfilled; that their hopes and dreams for a country in which our children could play an honest game of marbles would be realized.

Paraphrasing Christ himself, we are that shining city on a hill where good men and good women can come together to play dominoes resting in the sweet assurances passed down from our forefathers that Granny is not padding the score.

Brave, honorable men and women shed their blood, lose their limbs — indeed, give their lives — daily so that our modern-day Washingtons, Franklins, and Jeffersons, will remain free to protect the integrity of our games. After all, whether our ports are secure from terrorism pales in comparison to whether the Padres’ middle reliever is injecting anabolic steroids into his pitching arm.

Thank you Rep. Waxman (D-CA) and Rep. Davis (R-VA) for putting aside the partisanship that too often leads us to worthless debates on petty subjects such as the policies shaping our foreign affairs, our conduct of two wars and talks of a third, our energy supplies and consumption, our nation’s healthcare sytem, education, fair and equitable taxation, record budget deficits, immigration, and terrorism.  What are these meaningless trifles that should take up your precious time?

Thank you for boldly standing before the world and saying, “Damn these minor issues that take up far too much of our valuable energy here in the center of the most powerful nation on earth.  In the spirit of Franklin, Jefferson, Adams, Lee, Paine, Washington, and all the countless others who laid their lives on the line for this nation, we shall shine the light of truth on the darkness that surrounds whether the left fielder for the Milwaukee Brewers used human growth hormones. No longer shall we sit in darkness about whether the second baseman for the Cincinnati Reds hit that triple of his own accord or whether his baseball bat was merely an extension of a hypodermic needle.”

Well done Congressmen.  History will remember you. And remember you favorably. I go to bed tonight proud to be an American; proud to know that my Congressional leaders will allow men with sticks to hit balls only so long as they are powered, not by illicit chemicals, but by a healthy, balanced diet of fruits and vegetables.

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