Tag Archives: judiciary

White House Takes Media Blackouts to New Level, Bars Reporter from Kagan Brother’s High School Class

The White House has gone to extraordinary lengths to prevent the press corps from having meaningful access to Supreme Court nominee Elena Kagan. Such measures are hardly unprecedented, though they stand in stark contrast to then-candidate Barack Obama’s message of openness and press transparency. But now the White House has outdone itself in media opacity. It apparently blocked a New York Times reporter from sitting in on Kagan’s brother Irving’s constitutional law class at Hunter College High School. Yes, that’s right. The White House is now trying to determine who can or cannot sit in a school class for teenagers. According to watchdog group Judicial Watch, White Hosue Deputy Press Secretary Joshua Earnest intervened after hearing of Times reporter Sharon Otterman’s intention to sit in on one class. “I’m definitely not comfortable with this at this point,” Earnest told Kagan, according to documents it obtained from the school. This reporter says she has permission from you and from the school to sit in on your class. I’ve articulated my concerns to the [Hunter College public relations representative] Meredith [Halpern] – who now says she agrees with me. I’ve articulated my concerns to the reporter, who’s feeling misled that we’re telling her no and she says she was told yes. In the future, it’s important to direct all reporter inquiries to the White House. It’ll be easier for you to stay out of the middle of these conversations if you send them directly to us without responding. Is there anything inherently wrong with the White House’s intense efforts to shield Kagan from media scrutiny? Not necessarily. Spiro Agnew would probably approve. But America was promised transparency and accountability . It’s still waiting. As Ed Morrissey writes , It doesn’t seem like a big problem for a reporter from the New York Times to audit a constitutional law class taught by Kagan’s brother.  Nor, of course, is it an issue if the White House wants to request that Irving Kagan allow them to handle media requests.  But the patronizing tone, as well as Earnest’s quick intercession to block the Times from Kagan’s classroom, look like a White House determined to quash legitimate media review of high-profile appointees, especially to a lifetime appointment for the highest court in the nation. Is this a scandal?  It certainly doesn’t meet the standards Barack Obama himself promised of delivering the most transparent administration in history, but there are far more scandalous examples than this.  This does make the White House look defensive and petty, especially considering Otterman’s education beat; it seems rather clear that Otterman was looking for human-interest background relating Kagan’s nomination to education. As Glenn Reynolds might say : they told me if I voted for McCain the press would be prevented from checking the executive. And they were right!

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White House Takes Media Blackouts to New Level, Bars Reporter from Kagan Brother’s High School Class

Network Morning Shows Laud the Comedy of ‘Lively,’ SNL-worthy Kagan

All three morning shows on Wednesday made sure to tout the “lively” sense of humor of Supreme Court nominee Elena Kagan, this as ABC continued to ignore the hearings. Over two days, Good Morning America has devoted a scant 67 seconds to Barack Obama’s nominee. After a news brief featuring Kagan cracking jokes at her hearings, former Democratic operative George Stephanopoulos gushed, “… If this Supreme Court thing doesn’t work out, she’s got another career in stand-up .” [Audio available here .]  Guest host Elizabeth Vargas hyperbolically asserted that Saturday Night Live couldn’t “be as funny as Elena Kagan was!” Today’s Kelly O’Donnell prefaced clips of Kagan’s humor by fawning, “But the real surprise has been that both Democrats and Republicans found something to smile about.” She added, “And there were actually a number of other of those kinds of personable, humorous exchanges and maybe some of that came out because it was such a grind, more than 10 hours.” Over on CBS’s Early Show, reporter Jan Crawford warned that “aggressive” Republicans were on the “attack.” She observed, “But Kagan was blunt and didn’t hide her background.” Crawford, too, highlighted Kagan’s comedy: “And while the day was dominated by tough questions, there were moments of levity.” The journalist enthused, “On one point, both sides agreed.” She then played a clip of Senator Arlen Specter touting the nominee’s “admirable sense of humor.” Crawford did note that Kagan wasn’t entirely forthcoming. Referencing the fact that the potential judge has previously called such hearings a charade, the reporter concluded, “…So she really did that dance that we’ve seen from nominees year after year after year up here.” Due to the almost non-existent nature of ABC’s coverage, the program skipped any mention of Kagan’s testimony on Don’t Ask/Don’t Tell. The Early Show reported her statement of opposition to it. Today’s O’Donnell featured this exchange: KELLY O’DONNELL: In the most intense exchange, the committee’s top Republican, Jeff Sessions, pounded Kagan for restricting where on campus where the military could recruit when she was dean at Harvard Law. SEN. JEFF SESSIONS: You were punishing the military. O’DONNELL: Kagan insisted recruiters had access to students. She said the military ban on gays serving openly conflicted with Harvard’s anti-discrimination policy. KAGAN: I have repeatedly said that I believe that the Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell policy is unwise and unjust. I believed it then and I believe it now. SESSIONS: I know you were an outspoken leader against the military policy. For a recap of Tuesday’s morning show coverage of Kagan, see an earlier NewsBusters post. A transcript of ABC’s brief segment, which aired at 7:14am, follows: JUJU CHANG: Supreme Court nominee Elena Kagan faces what is likely her final round of questioning from senators today. Her first day of confirmation testimony was long and, at times, tense. But, Kagan proves she has a lively sense of humor. SENATOR LINDSEY GRAHAM: Where are you at on Christmas day? ELENA KAGAN: You know, like all Jews, I was probably in a Chinese restaurant. SENATOR ARLEN SPECTER: You’ve already said you’re in favor of televising the court. KAGAN: It means I would have to get my hair done more often, Senator Specter. SENATOR ORRIN HATCH: We have to have a back and forth every once in a while. Or this place would be boring as hell, I’ll tell you. KAGAN: And it gets the spotlight off me. CHANG [Laughs]: That’s the news at 7:15. Excellent ad-libs. But the real question, George and Elizabeth, is who is going to play her in the SNL skit? ELIZABETH VARGAS: Oh, it’s ripe for it, isn’t it? Although, I don’t think they could be as funny as Elena Kagan was! GEORGE STEPHANOPOULOS: Yeah, if this Supreme Court thing doesn’t work out, she’s got another career in stand-up. VARGAS: Absolutely.

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Network Morning Shows Laud the Comedy of ‘Lively,’ SNL-worthy Kagan

Chicago Tribune: Supreme Court ‘Extends Gun Rights’

“Supreme Court extends gun rights” a headline on the Web site for the Chicago Tribune erroneously claims today. The link on the page brought readers to a story entitled “Supreme Court extends gun rights in Chicago case.” Here’s the opening paragraph: WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court reversed a ruling upholding Chicago ‘s ban today and extended the reach of the 2nd Amendment as a nationwide protection against laws that infringe the “right to keep and bear arms.” But that language suggests that the Court invented a right out of whole cloth rather than grounded its decision in the Constitution itself. In truth, what the Supreme Court found in McDonald v. City of Chicago was that the 2nd Amendment’s guarantee of the individual’s right to firearm ownership is incorporated to the states via the 14th Amendment’s Due Process Clause. “The right to keep and bear arms must be regarded as a substantive guarantee, not a prohibition that could be ignored so long as the States legislated in an even handed manner,” Justice Alito wrote for the Court.  The bottom line: The Supreme Court recognized that the City of Chicago was in violation of the the 2nd and 14th Amendments to the federal Constitution. A more accurate headline would have been “Supreme Court finds Chicago gun ban violates Constitution.” Of course, that presupposes the liberal media in Chicago are interested in shooting straight when it comes to reporting developments with which they have an ideological disagreement.

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Chicago Tribune: Supreme Court ‘Extends Gun Rights’

USA Today Frets Obama Unable to ‘Infuse Courts with Women and Minorities’ – i.e. Liberals

The “deeply polarized confirmation process in the Senate” has “undercut Obama’s effort to significantly infuse the federal courts with more women and minorities,” USA Today’s Joan Biskupic fretted in a Wednesday front page article in which she refused to identify Obama’s nominees as liberals as she attached the positive “diversity” patina to Obama’s agenda without any regard for the irony such “diversity” is ideologically uniform. She led her June 16 story, “ Push for court diversity hits snag: Partisan rancor ties up action on Obama nominees ,” however, by noting the ideology supposedly pushed by President George W. Bush: “President Obama came into office determined to stop the rightward shift of the federal courts — after eight years of appointments by President Bush — and to add more diversity to the bench.” She then outlined Obama’s achievement: So far he is setting records for the number of women and minorities nominated to lifetime appointments. Nearly half of the 73 candidates he has tapped for the bench have been women. In all, 25% have been African Americans, 10% Hispanics and 11% Asian Americans. But, his noble quest has been thwarted: Yet as Obama tries to make gains in diversity among judges, he faces a deeply polarized confirmation process in the Senate. During his first 18 months in office, his administration has been thwarted by unprecedented delays. The situation, which has received little notice against the backdrop of a pending Supreme Court nomination and the administration’s complex legislative agenda, could undercut Obama’s effort to significantly infuse the federal courts with more women and minorities. Deep in her article, Biskupic at least acknowledged how Democrats had blocked a “diverse” nominee who happened to be conservative: This is a long-building situation. Senators on both sides recall old grievances and try to settle scores. The senior Judiciary Committee Republican, Jeff Sessions of Alabama, often invokes President George W. Bush’s nominee Miguel Estrada, whose nomination to the influential Washington, D.C.-based appeals court was filibustered by Democrats. Estrada, who would have been the first Hispanic on that court, withdrew in 2003, after two years of delays. From April: “ USA Today’s Biskupic Sees SCOTUS of ‘Ideological…Conservatives’ and ‘Pragmatic Liberals ‘”

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USA Today Frets Obama Unable to ‘Infuse Courts with Women and Minorities’ – i.e. Liberals

Fancy restaurants and Olympic-size swim pools: what the media won’t report about Gaza

http://www.tomgrossmedia.com/mideastdispatches/archives/001114.html THE LIES THE MEDIA AND NGOS TELL ABOUT GAZA * While prominent Western media continue to lead their viewers and readers astray with accounts of a non-existent “mass humanitarian catastrophe” in Gaza, fancy restaurants (video below) and an Olympic-size swimming pool open there * Most Israeli towns don’t have Olympic-size swimming pools * Many Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza live a middle class (and in some cases an upper class) lifestyle that Western journalists refuse to report on because it doesn’t fit with the simplistic story they were sent to write * If you drop into the Roots Club in Gaza, according to the Lonely Planet guidebook, you can “dine on steak au poivre and chicken cordon bleu” http://www.rootsclub.ps/index.php In recent days, the international media, particularly in Europe and the Mideast, has been full of stories about “activist boats sailing to Gaza carrying desperately-needed humanitarian aid and building materials.” The BBC World Service even led its world news broadcasts with this story at one point over the weekend. (The BBC yesterday boasted that its global news audience has now risen to 220 million persons a week, making it by far the biggest news broadcaster in the world.) Yet the BBC and other media fail to report on the fancy new restaurants and swimming pools of Gaza, or about the wind surfing competitions on Gaza beaches, or the Strip’s crowded shops and markets. No, this would spoil their agenda. Playing the manipulative game of the BBC is easy. If we had their vast taxpayer funded resources, we too could produce reports about parts of London, Manchester and Glasgow and make it look as though there is a humanitarian catastrophe throughout the UK. We could produce the same effect by selectively filming seedy parts of Paris and Rome and New York and Los Angeles too. Of course there is poverty in Gaza. There is poverty in parts of Israel too. (When was the last time a foreign journalist based in Israel left the pampered lounge bars and restaurants of the King David and American Colony hotels in Jerusalem and went to check out the slum-like areas of southern Tel Aviv? Or the hard-hit Negev towns of Netivot or Rahat?) But the way the BBC and other prominent Western news media are deliberately misleading global audiences and systematically creating the false impression that people are somehow starving in Gaza, and that it is all Israel’s fault, can only serve to increase hatred for the Jewish state – which one suspects was the goal of many of the editors and reporters involved in the first place. STEAK AU POIVRE AND CHICKEN CORDON BLEU If you drop by the Roots Club in Gaza, according to the Lonely Planet guidebook for Gaza and the West Bank, you can “dine on steak au poivre and chicken cordon bleu”. The restaurant’s website in Arabic gives a window into middle class dining and the lifestyle of Hamas officials in Gaza. And here it is in English, for all the journalists, UN types and NGO staff who regularly frequent this and other nice Gaza restaurants (but don’t tell their readers about them). Please take a look at the pictures on the above website. They are not the kind of things you see in The New York Times or CNN or in Newsweek, whose international edition last week had one of the most disgracefully misleading stories about Gaza I have ever seen, portraying it in terms which were virtually reminiscent of Hiroshima after a nuclear blast. added by: crystalman

Environmentalists try to ban release of synthetic life forms into the wild

Environmentalists have begun a concerted campaign to ensure that new forms of “artificial life” are never released into the wider environment because of fears that the life-forms will hasten the extinction of wild species. A Canadian environmental group has already claimed partial victory in trying to impose a global moratorium on scientists such as Craig Venter, the controversial genome entrepreneur who last week claimed that he had made a synthetic cell in at test-tube controlled by a chromosome created from scratch. The Etc Group, based in Ottawa, said it had helped to formulate a “de facto moratorium” on synthetic biology at a side meeting of the UN Conventional on Biological Diversity, which ended at the weekend in the Kenyan capital, Nairobi. A scientific body attached to the convention, called the Subsidiary Body on Scientific, Technical and Technological Advice, drew up a proposal on synthetic biology that is likely to result in any release experiments into the wild being banned if adopted by a meeting of environment ministers in Japan this year, the Etc Group said. “The draft adopted by the meeting amounts to a de facto moratorium on the release of synthetic life forms. But the text will remain in 'square brackets', meaning that it has not achieved unanimous agreement among the Biological Convention's 193 member countries at this time,” a spokesman said. The moratorium on any release of synthetic life-forms is likened to the earlier moratoria on “terminator technology”, a suicide gene that prevents GM seeds from being fertile after they are harvested, and ocean fertilisation, an attempt to spread iron into the sea to stimulate the absorption of carbon dioxide from the air. added by: JanforGore

Real ID Act of 2005 – Yesterday’s Law, Today’s Problem

By David P Shirk A third of the people seem to be indifferent to the laws and simply think of them as a mere annoyance. These people mostly accept the idea of laws as a necessary evil. Another third wholeheartedly support the laws, and constantly seek to make new ones to fit their idea of how the world should be. The last third are people who are sick of the restrictive laws as their daily lives continue to get more and more difficult to live in a legal manner. Depending on how observant and researched the people are typically determines which side they take. An example of this is found in an act of legislation called the REAL ID ACT of 2005. Originally passed through congress as HR 418, it never made it past the Committee on the Judiciary. So it was merely scaled down, placed into the more popular HR 1268 under division II, and viola – it became the law. Under Title I of the law, it removed exclusive power from the Attorney General in regards to granting asylum, and granted joint power to the Secretary of Homeland Securi……. http://www.peacefreedomprosperity.com/?p=3535 Image url: http://blog.case.edu/james.chang/2007/07/29/real_id_pic.jpg added by: shanklinmike

Sen. Al Franken (D-MN) humbles Hudson Institute dilettante over health care bankruptcies

Sen. Al Franken (D-MN) humbles Hudson Institute dilettante over health care bankruptcies This during a senate Judiciary sub-committee hearing on bankruptcies driven by catastrophic medical expenses added by: pjacobs51 7 comments

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Sen. Al Franken (D-MN) humbles Hudson Institute dilettante over health care bankruptcies