Author Topic: Dissecting Slander: The Untold Story of Jeff Sessions’ 1986 ‘Borking’  (Read 1568 times)

Dos Equis

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Long but very interesting and informative read.  Another example of why you cannot trust the mainstream media. 

Dissecting Slander: The Untold Story of Jeff Sessions’ 1986 ‘Borking’
by JULIA HAHN
28 Dec 2016
Washington D.C.

http://www.breitbart.com/big-government/2016/12/28/dissecting-slander-the-untold-story-of-jeff-sessions-1986-borking/?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=social

Dos Equis

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Somebody needs to send them a copy of this article.  ^^^

NAACP Stages Sit-In Protest at Sen. Sessions' Office
By Jason Devaney   |   Tuesday, 03 Jan 2017

Members of the NAACP and its Alabama chapter occupied Sen. Jeff Sessions' local office Tuesday in a sit-in protest of his nomination to serve as attorney general.

NAACP President Cornell William Brooks posted a photo of the protesters on his Twitter feed, which shows Brooks and three other people on the floor in Sessions' Mobile, Ala. office.

 Cornell Wm. Brooks ✔ @CornellWBrooks
The @NAACP & @AlabamaNAACP are occupying the Mobile office of @jeffsessions--untill he withdraws as a AG nominee or we're arrested.@tvonetv
7:44 AM - 3 Jan 2017 · Mobile, AL
  6,353 6,353 Retweets   10,415 10,415 likes

According to the Montgomery Advertiser, the NAACP brought a list of five reasons why it believes Sessions should not serve as attorney general under President Donald Trump after the latter takes office Jan. 20.

The adviser identifies the protesters as Brooks, NAACP Alabama President Bernard Simelton, Mobile Branch President Lizzetta McConnell, and Joe Keffer from the Alabama moral movement.

"We're just sitting in his office. We presented some demands to Sen. Sessions and have not heard anything back, so we're going to remain here until we do," Simelton told the Advertiser. "We wanted to talk to him and explain our demands directly to him.

"We're doing what we're well within our rights to do. It's a public office, we're not disturbing the peace. We're doing work too. We're having a great day here."

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 Cornell Wm. Brooks ✔ @CornellWBrooks
On behalf of my hungry colleagues who are sitting in, I want to thank a @NAACP friend in Boston for sending pizza to Mobile. @DemAwakening
9:56 AM - 3 Jan 2017 · Mobile, AL
  95 95 Retweets   370 370 likes

Trump nominated Sessions, who has served in the Senate since 1997, to lead the Department of Justice Nov. 18. His two-day confirmation hearing with the Senate Judiciary Committee is scheduled for Jan. 10-11.

http://www.newsmax.com/US/naacp-sit-in-protest-jeff-sessions/2017/01/03/id/766637/

Dos Equis

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First on CNN: Condoleezza Rice endorses Sessions for attorney general
By Dana Bash and Daniella Diaz, CNN
Mon January 9, 2017

Washington (CNN) — Condoleezza Rice, who served as secretary of state to former President George W. Bush, endorsed former Alabama Sen. Jeff Sessions Monday to be President-elect Donald Trump's attorney general.

Rice, who is also from Alabama, wrote a letter of appreciation to Sen. Chuck Grassley about Sessions, where she said that Sessions, a "friend," was someone she admired "greatly."

"He is a man who is committed to justice and knows that law and order are necessary to guarantee freedom and liberty," she wrote.

Rice, the first African-American woman to serve as secretary of state, also said that Sessions has worked hard to heal the wounds in Alabama brought on by the "prejudice and injustice against the descendents of slaves."

Rice's endorsement of Sessions could help Sessions gain the support he needs from the Senate as his confirmation hearings begin Tuesday. Sessions, who was the first US senator to endorse Trump, will likely be dogged by old allegations of racism during his hearings.

She noted Sessions spearheaded the effort to award the Congressional Gold Medal to one of her "personal heroes," Rosa Parks.

"I know that Sen. Sessions will uphold the laws of our great country and will work to ensure that every person here in the United States is given the voice that is deserved," she wrote.

http://www.cnn.com/2017/01/09/politics/condoleezza-rice-endorses-jeff-sessions-for-attorney-general/index.html

Irongrip400

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What are their five reasons for hating the guy?

Dos Equis

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What are their five reasons for hating the guy?

They begin and end with him supposedly being a bigot, but if you read the article in the first post it blows that up. 

Yamcha

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Here some random MTV "journalist" is trying to "protest" the Sessions confirmation...

(That's his granddaughter btw)

a

Yamcha

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Here some random MTV "journalist" is trying to "protest" the Sessions confirmation...

(That's his granddaughter btw)



Well that was quick...

a

Dos Equis

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If you want to see academics making fools of themselves, look at Jeff Sessions' confirmation hearings
By  John R. Lott   
Published January 24, 2017
FoxNews.com

The headline on the front page of the Washington Post sure sounded impressive: “More than 1,100 law school professors nationwide oppose Sessions’s nomination as attorney general.” Since then, the total has increased to 1,424 faculty members from 180 law schools in 49 different states.

With Senate Judiciary committee getting ready to vote on Senator Jeff Sessions’ confirmation today, the letter is being used as Exhibit A for many liberals arguing that experts view Sessions as unqualified and outside the mainstream.

But with 17,080 faculty members nationwide, perhaps the real question is why there were so few signers. Only 8.3 percent of faculty members signed the letter.

Given that 82 percent of law professors identified themselves as Democrats in 2010, one can infer that only about 10 percent of Democrat professors signed the letter.

From 1991 to 2002, over 23 percent of law professors at the top 20 law schools contributed at least $200 exclusively or mostly to Democrats. By contrast, just 4 percent of law professors were active Republican donors. Assuming that over 23 percent figure has held true today (and given the inordinate hatred for Trump, this might be an underestimate), just a third of active donors to Democrats signed the letter.

The letter itself is written vaguely to maximize signatures. There is a regurgitation of charges made in 1986 that Sessions was “prejudice[d] against African Americans.” It continues: “Some of us have concerns about … his consistent promotion of the myth of voter-impersonation fraud ... his support for building a wall along our country’s southern border … his robust support for regressive drug policies that have fueled mass incarceration … his repeated opposition to legislative efforts to promote the rights of women and the members of the LGBTQ community.”

The faculty members could disagree with all of these points and still be able to sign the letter. Indeed, it is hard to find any other letter signed by academics (and there are a lot of them) that offers so many escape clauses for signers. But the goal was to get signatures, not to provide a coherent argument against Sessions.

The charges themselves are absurd.

Take their first claim. Only liberal academics would believe that “voter-impersonation fraud” is a myth.

A recent study in the peer-reviewed journal Electoral Studies estimated that illegal aliens cast about 1.4 million votes in the 2008 and 2010 elections, and that their votes “likely gave Senate Democrats the pivotal 60th vote needed to overcome filibusters in order to pass health care reform and other Obama administration priorities in the 111th Congress.”

Here are some cases of suspected impersonation fraud discovered during just the month-and-a-half prior to the November election:

• San Pedro, Calif.: 83 absentee ballots were sent to different registered voters who all supposedly lived in the same small, two-bedroom apartment. If not for an observant neighbor, this case would never have been discovered.

• Pennsylvania: Democrat organization FieldWorks LLC was raided by Pennsylvania State Police on allegations that it fraudulently filled out registration forms for thousands of voters.

• Indiana: State police “believe there could be hundreds of fraudulent voter registration records with different combinations of made up names and addresses with people’s real information.“

• Chicago: An investigation by CBS-2 found that “119 dead people have voted a total of 229 times in Chicago in the last decade.”

• Virginia: After examining just eight of the state’s 133 counties, 1,046 illegal aliens were discovered to already be registered voters.

• New York City: In an undercover video, Democrats themselves were caught complaining about the amount of voter fraud created by Mayor Bill de Blasio’s decision to give out ID cards without checking recipients’ identities.

The law professors’ second claim doesn’t cite any specific concerns about the wall along the Mexican border. So there is nothing to respond to.

Their third claim blames drug crimes for mass incarceration. But in 2012, only 20 percent of inmates at state and federal prisons were incarcerated for possessing or trafficking any type of illegal drugs — and those sentences were primarily for trafficking hard drugs. Data from Arizona indicate that as few as 0.3 percent of inmates were incarcerated for marijuana possession, and these are rare individuals who have been arrested multiple times. In California, only 1 percent of state prisoners are incarcerated for any type of marijuana-related offense.

The fourth claim doesn’t mention any specific things that Sessions has done to harm women or others.  But presumably it focuses what was raised during the hearings, Sessions’ vote against the Violence Against Women Act.  But neither law professors nor his opponents during the hearings over the last two days have seriously addressed Sessions explanation for his vote.  Sessions had previously supported the Act, but opposed its renewal in 2012 over concerns that it was unconstitutional when changes were made expanding Indian tribes’ jurisdiction over non-tribal members.  Tribal courts also have a history of failing to provide adequate legal protections to defendants.  No evidence was ever provided that prosecuting non-tribal members in US courts posed any problems to protecting Indians.

Academics keep making fools of themselves with letters like this, which have everything to do with not wanting a Republican attorney general who supports policies they disagree with. Their letter has nothing to do with Sessions’ ability to uphold the law in good faith.

http://www.foxnews.com/opinion/2017/01/24/if-want-to-see-academics-making-fools-themselves-look-at-jeff-sessions-confirmation-hearings.html?intcmp=ob_article_sidebar_video&intcmp=obnetwork

mazrim

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Sessions=Great guy who loves his country.

Straw Man

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how did his lawsuit for slander go?

did he win?

Soul Crusher

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Re: Dissecting Slander: The Untold Story of Jeff Sessions’ 1986 ‘Borking’
« Reply #10 on: February 01, 2017, 07:30:01 PM »
how did his lawsuit for slander go?

did he win?

Triggered

George Whorewell

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Re: Dissecting Slander: The Untold Story of Jeff Sessions’ 1986 ‘Borking’
« Reply #11 on: February 01, 2017, 08:23:54 PM »
how did his lawsuit for slander go?

did he win?


Outed.

Straw Man

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