Visit Counter

Thursday, July 29, 2010

Rangel Reportedly Strikes Deal With Ethics Panel












Rep. Charles Rangel reportedly has struck a deal with the congressional panel investigating alleged ethics violations as House Speaker Nancy Pelosi stood by her pledge to "drain the swamp" in the House and said she would let Rangel's chips "fall where they may."

The CBS affiliate in New York reported the deal was in the works -- though any arrangement would have to be approved by the subcommittee hearing the case, the full ethics committee and potentially the full House of Representatives. 

If there is an arrangement, it could be discussed at the ethics hearing set for Thursday afternoon. 

Pelosi acknowledged "individual cases" of ethical lapses as Rangel prepared to face the panel over a string of tax violation allegations that have embroiled not only him but the entire House Democratic delegation.



The scene behind the scene
Pelosi said the hearing and investigation are a "top priority" and that she has no idea what the committee will recommend. She made no mention of a deal. 

"This ethics process will play out and we'll go from there," she said. 


But House Minority Leader John Boehner said "the speaker owes the American people some answers to their questions."

"The fact is, the swamp has not been drained," Boehner, R-Ohio, said. "This is a sad moment for the House. Not for Charlie Rangel. It's about Speaker Pelosi and her most glaring promise to drain the swamp."

Amid the hubbub, Rangel admitted Thursday morning that he was having a bad day, or a series of them, a confession very unlike Rangel's usual behavior to shrug off complaints about him. 

"Years ago, I survived a Chinese attack in North Korea and as a result I wrote a book that having survived that, that I hadn't had a bad day. Today, I have to reassess that statement, thank you," he said.

Rangel's "bad day" comment was a reference to him being wounded by shrapnel on the battlefield in Korea in 1950. That experience was the inspiration for his 2007 autobiography, "And I Haven't Had a Bad Day Since."

The special subcommittee was poised to proceed Thursday with an open hearing detailing the charges spelled out by a lower-level ethics panel. Such a forum is rare. The House has only conducted two similar open hearings in the past 13 years -- one for former Rep. Jim Traficant and one for former House Speaker Newt Gingrich. 

Eight House lawmakers had been tasked with determining the former Ways and Means chairman's guilt or innocence relating to a series of possible tax violations. A number of Democrats considering calls for the Democrat to resign will get their first look at the allegations.

Rangel and his counsel are not required to speak at the hearing and so far have not asked to make a statement. Though the allegations will be detailed this afternoon, an outcome was not expected Thursday. If a deal is not approved, a trial-like forum probably would not begin until September -- dangerously close to Election Day for Democrats. 

In the end, the House only recognizes three forms of discipline -- reprimand, censure and expulsion, though the House occasionally sanctions members with letters of admonishment. 






"I think everyone is looking forward to getting all the facts out in the open and people will have to react once we know what we're dealing with," said Rep. Mike Quigley, D-Ill. 

Rangel is tied for fourth in House seniority. He's still vigorous at 80 years old. He had substantial influence as chairman of the ways and means panel, which handles taxes, trade, portions of health care, Medicare and Social Security. Rangel stepped down from that post in March after the ethics committee criticized him in a separate case, saying he should have known that corporate money paid for two trips to Caribbean conferences. 



After a two-year investigation, researchers have narrowed the allegations to Rangel's misuse of his office for fundraising, failure to disclose income, belated payment of taxes and possible help with a tax shelter for a company whose chief executive was a major donor. 

The 42-member Congressional Black Caucus has warned Democrats against a rush to judgment, and any lawmaker with a significant African-American constituency must consider whether it's worth asking Rangel to quit. 

Sounds like the same brain thrust that acquitted OJ!

However, some Democratic House members in close races may think it's more important to distance themselves from Rangel. They don't want to have to answer negative Republican ads about Speaker Nancy Pelosi's promise to wipe Congress clean of ethical misdeeds. 

Two Democrats didn't wait to hear the charges. 

Rep. Betty Sutton of Ohio, a second-term lawmaker who received 65 percent of the vote two years ago, said Rangel needs to resign to preserve the public's trust in Congress. 

Rep. Walt Minnick of Idaho, a freshman who got 51 percent of the vote last time, called for resignation if the charges are proven.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.


Share/Bookmark

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Have we gone insane?




You're gonna build what on ground zero!




If you never watched any videos I posted... you would be a fool if you didn't watch this one.





Bloomberg who is Jewish, is a complete ass----! What does he hope to gain from this. Muslims hate him even more then us "regular infidels". He says we are being insensitive. 


We're insensitive? Is he insane? 
A Muslim will kill you because of a cartoon or a teddy bear they didn't like! 


This truly nauseates me. I used to think New Yorkers were tough. I can't believe they are going to stand by and allow this to happen! If someone said they wanted to build a mosque on 9-12-01 they would have been shot.


How quickly we forget. 




PS: Maybe we should have put a 100 foot statue of the Emperor of Japan at Pearl Harbor.


We didn't. Why?


Back then we had fu----- brains!




Share/Bookmark

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Rangel Scrambling to Make Deal on Ethics Charges



You don't try to cut a deal when your innocent


see my post 7-23



WASHINGTON -- Embattled Democratic Rep. Charles Rangel was meeting with the head of the House ethics committee and other top Democrats amid rumors he may try to work out a deal rather than face a full vetting of the charges he is now facing.

A settlement would mean Rangel must admit he committed some ethical misconduct.

House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, D-Md., said Tuesday that "everyone would like for the Rangle issue to go away" and that the ethics process with Rangel is not a pleasant one.

Ethics committee Chairwoman Zoe Lofgren has been preparing to launch a rare, public ethics inquiry on Thursday into alleged misdeeds by the New York Democrat.
Lofgren will chair an "adjudicatory subcommittee" that will present its case against Rangel. An investigative panel reported last week that it had found ethics violations by Rangel.

For nearly two years, the ethics committee has probed Rangel on a host of issues, ranging from tax evasion to improper use of Congressional stationery to raise money for a school of public affairs in the Congressman's name at City College of New York.
Rangel met with Lofgren on Monday night and sought closed-door counsel from Rep. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md., a special assistant to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and chairman of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee.

"I think he's in the process of trying to determine the best course forward," said Van Hollen. "I was presenting him with my observations."

A settlement would spare him an embarrassing ethics trial and would be a relief for other Democrats, who fear that an dragged-out ethics proceeding during the fall election campaign would hurt their ability to maintain their House majority.

At least two Democrats are trying to distance themselves from Rangel as the process plays out.

"Now that the investigation is complete and provided the facts are as alleged, I think it's clear that he should resign from Congress," said Rep. Walt Minnick, D-Idaho

"I didn't know him when I accepted money from him," added Rep. Kathy Dahlkemper, D-Pa., who has returned campaign donations. Dahlkemper said it's a "common practice" for party leaders to "give money to people who they think will be successful. So politically it could become an issues, but I decided to take care of it before it did."

Fox News' Chad Pergram and Shannon Bream contributed to this report.









Share/Bookmark

Monday, July 26, 2010

The hot potato gets hotter... even when it's tossed around


The Saga of Shirley Sherrod



First of all if you listen to the whole video the white farmer according to her acted like he was “superior” to her. The gist of what I got out of the video was she was kind of bragging to the NAACP audience how she screwed a white guy. At the time I didn’t know this took place over 20 years ago and she had become friends with the white farmer.


 But there is a lot more to this story then meets the eye.





It came from the top




 Because the White House is terrified of this guy. 




Sherrod may be the only official ever dismissed because of the fear that Fox host Glenn Beck might go after her. Sherrod says Deputy Undersecretary Cheryl Cook called her Monday to say “do it, because you’re going to be on ‘Glenn Beck’ tonight.” Again she stated… The White House… called her 3 times while she was driving her car. The third time…”pull over and resign!”






Naturally…The White House… made Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack fire her so these two could take the fall.








O’Reilly apologized to her for running the story and Beck never ran any story except to support her.



                               














                               


                                             Then she said this:





In an interview with Media Matters, she stated FOX network would... “love to take us back to where we were many years ago. Back to where black people were looking down, not looking white folks in the face, not being able to compete for a job out there and not be a whole person.”






NAACP said they were snookered by FOX. 

They must depend on FOX to do the investigative work for them because there to freaking lazy to do it themselves!




They chastise her… then blame FOX! Typical of them don’t you think? She had already resigned before FOX ran the damn story!

“If a house is burned to the ground, you can whine about the firefighters or criticize the building material — but first you blame the guy who started the fire, right?”


He starts out ok but totally misses the real point.






So you have ask yourself this:



1. Who shot the video and sent it to Breitbart?



2. How many white people attend a NAACP meeting?





Share/Bookmark

Sunday, July 25, 2010

The other side of Redneckism



redneck dishwasher



(from Jean Sweet)



We have enjoyed the redneck jokes (like the one above) for years. It's time to take a reflective look at the core beliefs of a culture that values home, family, country and God. If I had to stand before a dozen terrorists who threaten my life, I'd choose a half dozen or so rednecks to back me up. Tire irons, squirrel guns and grit -- that's what rednecks are made of. I hope I am one of those. If you feel the same, pass this on to your redneck friends.



You might be a redneck if: 

It never occurred to you to be offended by the phrase, 'One nation, under God..'


You might be a redneck if: 

You've never protested about seeing the 10 Commandments posted in public places.


You might be a redneck if: 

You still say ' Christmas' instead of 'Winter Festival'



You might be a redneck if:

You bow your head when someone prays.



You might be a redneck if: 

You stand and place your hand over your heart when they play the National Anthem.


You might be a redneck if: 

You treat our armed forces veterans with great respect, and always have.



You might be a redneck if: 

You've never burned an American flag, nor intend to.


You might be a redneck if: 

You know what you believe and you aren't afraid to say so, no matter who is listening.



You might be a redneck if: 

You respect your elders and raised your kids to do the same.



You might be a redneck if: 

You'd give your last dollar to a friend.





The best for last:

You might be a redneck if: 

You drive this truck.








Share/Bookmark