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 Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be amused. Quote: 
 http://www.usccr.gov/NBPH/Commission...11-23-2010.pdf And of course they didn't directly prevent many votes, but to Trump voters, I can see how it appears like unequal enforcement. | 
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 TM | 
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 Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be amused. Quote: 
 Your effort to compare the two while keeping yourself neutral by mentioning Trump voters' intent at evening things up is just stupid. Own your bullshit argument. Don't act like the voting public is getting its revenge for Eric Holder's selective prosecution. TM | 
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 Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be amused. Quote: 
 I admit that I, personally, am offended by the proposition, by whomever it is made, that only rights of minorities and non-English speakers are worthy of protection. If there were another case as egregious as Ike Brown, and the DOJ declined to prosecute, I would be pretty pissed. OTOH, I sincerely wish that the DOJ could act in a reasonably non-partisan way on *both* sides. It has fostered a lot of the division in this country and the insurgence of the burn it all down crowd. I am no fan of the federal government generally, but I think a neutralish DOJ would go a long ways to alleviating the mistrust of government. Yeah, I think Sessions will be suck, he got his job by sucking up to Trump. But I don't think that the Lynch/Bill Clinton meeting on the tarmac to discuss "grandchildren" did much to increase perceptions of the office of the Attorney General either. | 
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 Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be amused. Quote: 
 eta: Not that you seem to care what DOJ was thinking, but I read the complaints from Coates and perceive that DOJ officials did not think that whites don't have voting rights, but were consciously changing the enforcement priorities from the Bush Administration, a very different thing. (I am more familiar with the inner workings of DOJ than most people are, and if I had a dollar for every time I heard a staff lawyer complain that they knew better than a political appointee who making a decision, I'd be rich. Most of those beefs get the attention they deserve, but if you are a white guy and complain that minorities aren't protecting whites, you can get all the attention you want.) | 
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 Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be amused. Quote: 
 Sure, white people's voting rights should be protected too (although I'll leave open whether the Voting Rights Act does that, because I don't know). I just don't think they are under any significant threat. Quote: 
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 Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be amused. Quote: 
 Okay, so there was one time in a disagreement over the proper application of the federal sentencing guidelines, but that's about it. FTC, on the other hand... | 
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 Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be amused. Quote: 
 In fact, I can't even believe we are discussing instances of white people's votes being suppressed given (i) the conditions under which that could happen and (ii) what is actually happening in this country. But I suppose this is where we are. Quote: 
 I wonder how pissed you'd be if minorities controlled the three branches of government and dominated every fucking political institution in this country. Quote: 
 Ridiculous. Quote: 
 TM | 
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 Merry Christmas!!! Http://media.nj.com/mets_main/photo/...d5d8daf63f.jpg Edited by the Not Bobster to fix the margins. By the way, Icky, Not Bob is also happy about the signing. More Major World commercials, please! | 
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 Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be amused. Quote: 
 "There are career people who feel strongly that it is not the voting section's job to protect white voters," the lawyer said. "The environment is that you better toe the line of traditional civil rights ideas or you better keep quiet about it, because you will not advance, you will not receive awards and you will be ostracized."It also quotes testimony from a former DOJ staffer, Coates, saying that he did not believe that someone senior to him at DOJ, King, "supports equal enforcement of the Voting Rights Act". Not that she (King) said this, but that he (Coates) believed it. It further quotes Coates and another DOJ staffer about an Obama political appointee at DOJ, Fernandes, as follows: Ms. Fernandes responded by telling the gathering there that the Obama administration was only interested in bringing traditional types of Section 2 cases that would provide equality for racial and language minority voters. And then she went on to say that this is what we are all about or words to that effect....Coates in particular described this as hostility to race-neutral enforcement of voting rights laws. I quoted what the report actually said because I don't think that is the best interpretation of the evidence in, or even a particularly fair one, but obviously it is a politically useful one, and in some circles it is accepted as the truth. | 
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 Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be amused. Quote: 
 The perception of a politicized DOJ. Quote: 
 I would think that you would be literate enough to indicate that my use of the subjunctive case is an indication that I was making a hypothetical proposition. It is also necessarily an acknowledgment that the Ike Brown case *was* prosecuted. I fail to see how you can conclude based on a statement that if a prosecution of circumstances similar to specific named event of voter suppression, were not to be prosecuted, that I don't give a crap about any kind of voter suppression. And someone needs a Leap to Conclusions Mat to then assume that it means I do not acknowledge that there is systemic racism in a million small ways, just because of the sole example of what was *one* particularly egregious case of reverse racism, that was in fact prosecuted. Heck, every single case of fraud that I know about from the presidential election was a dumbass Trump voter who tried to vote multiple times because he said to. And now we are in a situation where Gary Freaking Johnson is the only candidate not bitching about the election results. I absolutely believe that voter suppression is a bigger issue than voter fraud. And I agree that we need to re-evaluate felon voting rights or think about the consequences before making changes like reducing early voting days. And the DOJ should go after changes to laws that do have the intent or effect of suppressing the vote, and not encouraging the adoption of such rules (that will ultimately hurt the GOP anyway. I tend to agree that the GOP base is dying off, and they need to diversify, and Trump/Sessions is a move in the exact opposite direction if they want the party to survive. The future supply of angry white people is limited.) And Ty, I hear you about what statements in the DOJ get publicity. Point taken. | 
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