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Off Hot Seat, Alito Cools His Jets
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Republican_Man
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PostThu Jan 12, 2006 4:02 pm    Off Hot Seat, Alito Cools His Jets

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Off Hot Seat, Alito Cools His Jets
Thursday, January 12, 2006
By Liza Porteus

Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Arlen Specter excused Samuel Alito in early afternoon Thursday, wrapping up two-and-a-half days of questions for the Supreme Court nominee about everything from abortion and presidential powers to his association to a controversial Princeton alumni group and a failure to recuse himself on one case.

"I know the judge probably thinks he's doing nothing here but being on the hot seat but we're talking about a lifetime appointment," the committee's ranking Democrat, Sen. Patrick Leahy of Vermont, said Thursday at the start of the hearing.

� Click here to watch the hearing live on FOXNews.com.

After questioning ended Thursday, committee members went into the routine, closed session to review the FBI file of the nominee. Witnesses in support and opposition to the nominee later appeared before the panel.

Democratic Sens. Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts and Charles Schumer of New York indicated that they did not hear enough from Alito this week to convince them he should be confirmed. Leahy also said he continues to be "worried" that Alito would protect all Americans' fundamental rights if confirmed.

"We started these hearings seeking answers. We've come with even more questions about Judge Alito's commitment to the fairness and equality for all," Kennedy said. "We're not expecting judges to produce particular results in their decisions, but we do expect fairness for understanding the real-world impact of their decisions. Frankly, it would be more comforting if Judge Alito gave individuals the same benefit of the doubt in his courtroom that he's asking from this committee on Vanguard, CAP, the unitary executive and women's privacy."

"I am very troubled, not so much about your personal history," Schumer added, but that the judge's record "contains evidence that does not protect the women's right to choose" and defers too much to an increasingly powerful executive branch.

Alito's answers also haven't illuminated how he thinks, Schumer said.

Leahy said in a stakeout during a committee break, "I'm wondering what is the real Judge Alito."

"On almost no issue did Judge Alito distance himself from past opinions ... I think that hearings have presented an opportunity for Judge Alito to meet a burden of proof but he has shied away from that. ... I remain disappointed."

But Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, said Democrats are grasping at straws as Alito's confirmation appears to be a sure thing.

"We see same old repeated questions and attacks. I think it's the last dying gasp of an attempt to defeat this nominee," he said.

Sen. Jeff Sessions noted that the American Bar Association has interviewed more than 300 of Alito's colleagues, who both support and oppose the nominee.

"They rate you the highest possible rating. They don't see you as an extremist, out of the mainstream or otherwise," said the Alabama Republican, adding that it's unfair for lawmakers to press Alito on the constitutionality of issues relating to separation of powers and wiretapping, when Congress itself has not yet clarified its position on them.

"These are momentous issues, these are difficult issues -- they've just come to the surface in the last couple of weeks," Alito said, adding that it would be the "height of irresponsibility" for him, as a judge and nominee, to opine on issues that have not yet been sufficiently addressed.

Lessons of Terri Schiavo

Saying that he is still "troubled" by some of the nominee's answers, Leahy early in the day began questioning Alito on his willingness to hear death penalty cases when last-minute DNA or other evidence may surface and on authority given to individuals in end-of-life issues.

On end-of-life issues, Leahy cited the case of Terri Schiavo, the severely brain-damaged Florida woman who was at the center of a fierce fight last year between her husband and family over whether she should live or die. That fight involved the courts, Congress and even President Bush.

Leahy asked: If a person has a living will, could he designate someone to decide whether to use extraordinary measures to keep him alive?

"Yes, that's an extension of the traditional right that I was talking about that existed under common law, and it's been developed by state legislatures and in some instances state courts to deal with the living will situation," Alito said.

In Schiavo case, however, the patient had no formal living will; her husband and some friends claimed she told them in passing that she would not want to be kept artificially alive. But Schiavo's family would not accept that.

Leahy and committee Chairman Arlen Specter, R-Pa., also said they wanted to make sure Alito didn't think Congress could take away jurisdiction over the federal courts on First Amendment issues � issues that were the underpinning of the Schiavo case.

In answering questions relating to the death penalty, Alito told Leahy the Constitution prevents the conviction and death sentence of the innocent and if DNA evidence or other information surfaces at the 11th hour to cast doubt on one's conviction, the case should be reviewed.

Leahy then asked whether Alito would agree with the "Rule of Four." It takes five Supreme Court justices to agree to hear a last-minute death penalty case; the rule says that if only four agree, a fifth justice will join in out of courtesy to bring about a stay of execution.

"It seems to me to be a very sensible procedure because I think we all want to avoid the tragedy of having an innocent person executed or having anyone executed whose constitutional rights have been violated," Alito said.

Alito on Thursday was answering a last round of questions from senators before witness panels in support and opposition of the nominee are called before the committee.

"You have been patient. People may not like your answers but they're your answers ... nobody's said they've been misleading, they just don't like them," Specter said in closing the hearing Wednesday.

Alito has continuously stressed to senators his commitment to upholding the Constitution and principle of "stare decisis" � or established precedent � when considering hot-button issues like abortion. At other times, he sat silently while some Senate Judiciary Committee members squabbled with each other.

Democrats have complained that Alito was not answering questions fully enough and are defending their right to probe him on answers they may not like.

Schumer, one of several senators who have repeatedly questioned Alito on his membership in the Concerned Alumni of Princeton, said he thinks the questions have been fair, particularly since Alito is up for a position on the highest court of the land.

"You have to ask the questions that have to be asked because remember, it's a lifetime appointment, someone who has enormous, enormous power. This is the only shot where you get to see who they are, what their judicial philosophy is. They have an obligation to answer," the New York Democrat told FOX News. "It doesn't mean you jump to conclusions but it's why you ask the questions and you explore them."

Specter opened the Thursday session by announcing that an examination of four boxes of hundreds of documents at the Library of Congress from William Rusher, the founder of CAP, found no mention of Alito. Specter said that according to Rusher, Alito didn't attend CAP meetings nor was he heavily involved � if at all involved � in the organization. The nominee's involvement in the group, which discouraged the admission of women and minorities at the Ivy League school, has been a source of much contention during this week's hearing.

"The files contain dozens of articles, including investigative exposes written at the height of the organization's prominence, but Sam Alito's name is nowhere to be found in any of them," Specter said.

Alito claims he does not recall his involvement in the CAP, a conservative group formed in 1972 to, in part, challenge Princeton University's decision to admit women and minorities and protest the school's treatment of the ROTC program. He also said he "deplores" the Prospect articles that exude racist or elitist sentiment.

"I have to say, Judge Alito's explanations about his membership in this seemingly radical group ... are troubling and I don't think they add up," Kennedy said Wednesday.

Democrats kept at Alito on the CAP issue, asking why he would ever pick CAP to put on his 1985 job application for a position in the Reagan administration; it was not on a job application he filled out in 1990.

After two days of accusations about the judge's relationship to CAP, whose magazine has frequently printed what some say are racist and elitist articles, Martha Alito, the nominee's wife who has been sitting steadfastly behind her husband for the last three days, broke into tears Wednesday.

The crying gave way about six hours into the questioning. It was set off not by a critic, but by Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., who apologized to the nominee for having to listen to what he says are baseless accusations and linkages.

"Let me tell you, this guilt by association is going to drive good men and women away from trying to sit where you're sitting. ... Judge Alito, I am sorry you've had to go through this. I am sorry that you're family has had to listen to this," Graham said.

Beating a 'Dead Horse?'

Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, on Wednesday assailed left-wing interest groups who have taken to the airwaves and Internet to blast Alito on every issue they can, often distorting his views on topics in an effort to torpedo his nomination.

Outside the hearing room, Vice President Dick Cheney also accused liberal groups of trying to undermine the nomination.

"What I see happening now, unfortunately, is some of the groups on the other side trying hard to find some way to shoot him down. And so far I don't think they've been successful at doing that," Cheney told FOX News Radio's "Tony Snow Show."

Republicans argue that Democrats' insistence on dogging Alito over the CAP and Vanguard issues are nothing more than an attempt to smear a nominee they can find no real legal quarrel with. Democrats, in turn, say the reasoning behind Alito's actions on these issues is central to how he acts as a judge.

On Vanguard, Democrats have voiced concern about what they consider to be inconsistencies with Alito's answers about the investment company, in which he owns six-figure investments. Alito promised the Judiciary Committee at his 1990 confirmation hearing as an appellate judge that he would remove himself from cases involving the company but he didn't until more than 12 years and one decision in favor of the company later.

Alito has said his participation in the 2002 Vanguard case was an oversight but both he and the American Bar Association have said he didn't do anything wrong nor did he gain anything from his participation.

But Kennedy again went after Alito on Thursday, asking why he never recused himself from those cases when he promised the committee he would. Kennedy referred to Republicans who find it "shocking" that Democrats would continue questioning Alito on this, but he said, "the real shock is Judge Alito failed to take his sworn promise to this committee more seriously."

Alito again said he did recuse himself from the only Vanguard case that came before him. "I am one of those judges who takes recusals very, very seriously," Alito said. "I have not been giving conflicting answers but I have been asked different questions. ... What is going on here is an attempt to make a big deal out of nothing."

"I really think bringing up the Vanguard or Princeton matter really goes beyond the pale at this point," Hatch shot back, adding that Alito did more than he needed to to later rectify the situation. "Certainly no law said you had to recuse yourself from that case. ... My gosh, how many times do we have to beat that dead horse?

Alito: 'I Am My Own Person'

Sen. Herbert Kohl, D-Wis., wanted to know if Alito will emulate retiring Associate Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, who was often a swing vote on an otherwise divided court.

"I would try to emulate her dedication and her integrity and her dedication to the case-by-case process of adjudication, which is what I think the Supreme Court and other courts should carry out. That is a central feature of the best traditions of our judicial system," Alito responded by saying.

But no judge should ever try to duplicate someone they are trying to replace, Alito added.

"We all have to proceed in accordance with our own abilities and our own outlook. We all have to be who we are but I think we can emulate the great jurists of the past � "I'd be the same sort of justice on the Supreme Court as I've been a judge on the court of appeals. I am my own person."

Alito also said the courts should not sway according to public opinion.

"I think the courts are structured the way they are so they're cases are not decided by public opinion," Alito said. If that were meant to be the case, the founders would have made judges federal officials like they are in many states. "They gave them lifetime tenure because they thought there was a critical difference between deciding cases under the constitution and the laws and responding to public opinion."

Alito has consistently said that precedent would be the first thing to take into account when considering a case.

In the eminent domain case of Kelo v. City of New London, Ct., the Supreme Court said private property can be taken by government for public use, whether it be a park or a shopping mall. The ruling had both Democrats and Republicans up in arms.

O'Connor dissented in this ruling, basically saying now nothing prevents any home from being replaced with a Motel 6. When asked his opinion on this case by Kohl, Alito still said precedent would be his first consideration, but added that he would look at other merits of the case.

"I know that it touches some very sensitive nerves. When someone's home is being taken away using the power of eminent domain, that is a blow to a lot of people, even if they're going to get compensated at fair-market value for their home. The home often means more to people than dollars and cents," Alito said.

"Kelo was a decision of the court � should that issue come up again, then obviously, the stare decisis factors would have to be considered."

Source


Firstly, Alito's great. He's the most qualified candidate for this position in years and has a track record of proven quality performance. He should get approved.
But wait.
There are some who, even before the hearings, came to an instant oppositional judgment against Mr. Alito, and I must say that the display in these hearings by Ted Kennedy and Charles Schumer and a few others was nothing more than appauling. They know they have nothing honest to say about this man, in opposition to them, so they, in retaliation, get up there and have the audacity to go after and assassinate this man's character--especially Ted Kennedy. (Speaking of whom, there are some questions many would like answered from him *coughs* car crash *cough* 1969 *cough*)
But anyways, for Alito to stand there and take this ridicule in a fashion I don't think I could ever do, and to sit there so stern and so adamently is just rather amazing. I don't know how anyone could be so devoted into public office as this man. He has a proven track record of fantastic performance and is highly qualified in MANY respects. And yet the democrats are reduced to such a level against this man it's not even funny. It is appauling and disgusting, particularly what Ted Kennedy's said.
And Alito's wife crying there just tells you something about their relationship, and what kind of a person he is. You know, you could just tell that he sensed something wrong was going on behind him...Touching.
Yeah, Ted Kennedy: I'd like you to answer some questions for us, alright? Yeah, Ted Kennedy, you're just pulling another Robert Borke, when you attacked him relentlessly on the first day.
One of the Democrats asking only 5 questions in 30 minutes, Schumer's instant judgments, Kennedy's character assassination--why does this need to happen, and why can't we get beyond this?
I, for one, would be appauled to be a democrat right now, what with their display and all.
But that's just me.
I don't know how anyone can defend what Kennedy said. Well, I'll hear a debate over it between Hannity and Paul Begala in a bit, so I'll see what ridiculous reason people have for condoning what Kennedy said.

Confirm Judge Alito!



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TrekkieMage
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PostThu Jan 12, 2006 5:12 pm    

Alito is a brilliant man. There is no denying that. And he does have a proven track record. Brilliant, but too conservative.

First of all, Senate confirmation hearings are brutal. No matter who is in the seat. I appreciate Mrs. Alito's concern for her husband, but didn't someone tell her what would be going on? For four days whoever sits in that chair is a punching bag. And only 30 - 40% get approved. They are appointed for life. The Senate is going to be as thorough as possible.

As for Kennedy, he may be a jerk (as most politicians are), but what he did was a tactic. He did send Schumer a letter asking for a supeona on those documents, Schumer admitted that. Kennedy was using a tactic bringing this up in front of the cameras, public attention. I personally want to know just how involved Alito was with PAC - which is a sickening organization. If his involvement was minimal -fine. Anything more, he shouldn't be confirmed.

The problem with Alito is not his credentials or his intellegance, it's how conservative he'll be. Too liberal is bad - they'll let things slide to much, too conservative is bad - they will not do enough. I was reading an article in the Washington Post where Alito was quoted (I believe) to have said that the interpretation of the Constitution should be rigid and viewed as it was when it was written. If that is the case, why is it considered a living document? How can it adapt to fit us if it refuses to change? How can it protect the freedom of the people if it denies things like 'One Man, One Vote' and the social reforms of the 60's (the ones that made it to the Court).

According to Alito's logic, Brown v. Board shouldn't have happened because it outstripped the power of the Court. And yet the Executive office should have more power.

Alito's smart. There is no avoiding that. But he's too conservative.

I don't want him confirmed.


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Republican_Man
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PostThu Jan 12, 2006 7:44 pm    

Warning: The following post is quite long.
I�ve spent a loooong amount of time and thought on this post. It�s just over five pages, size 12 font in Word, so, uh, yeah�If there are any holes in it, please let me know, and I�ll be glad to expand upon them. I don�t really want to read through EVERYTHING a second time, so anyways�Read on�

Have you not seen what Kennedy's asking? They're quite similar to when he said in the 80s, "Robert Bork's America is an America where women will be forced to get back alley abortions; blacks will be segregated in the back of the bus and lunch counters. Rogue police will storm into your house in the dark of night to do it." Slander. What Kennedy's asking AREN'T intelligent questions. What Schumer's asking AREN'T intelligent questions. What Biden's asking AREN'T intelligent questions.
We expect intelligent questions. Those are fine. What we DON'T expect smear merchants falsely accusing a man of being a liar and a racist. The hearings should be tough, but NOT like these liberals are doing there.
To go over and over these questions like he's a liar and a bigot and a racist is just wrong. They're not treating him with respect, not at all. Ask him about his judicial philosophy, fine. Ask him about a few issues that MIGHT come before the court (although he could, like Ginsberg, not answer the questions). But to continually attack him is just wrong. Why don't the Republicans do this? Why don't the Republicans attack and brutalize and mischaracterized and character assassinate and all that like Kennedy does? Maybe because we still have some dignity? Kennedy�s been assassinating the character of conservative nominees for YEARS, yet almost all Republicans didn�t do that when liberals were nominated. Just goes to show you the differences in character between both sides.


Qualifications: let's look at Ginsberg. Constitutional right to polygamy. DEFINITELY pro-abortion (which Alito IS NOT NECESSARILY). Former chief counsel to the ACLU. Look, she was RADICAL. FAR LEFT. MUCH farther left than Alito�a good judge who will do his job fairly�is right. And yet she was qualified. Did the Republicans attack her like the democrats are doing? No. I mean, come on! Do you REALLY condone the extent to which some of the questions�and continuous, as well�and insinuations of Kennedy and Schumer and Biden went?
The Republicans let her through. The Republicans didn�t brutalize her. And yet look at what her record is. Far left. Alito, on the other hand, doesn�t actually have that conservative of a record. He chose the side that put forth the best argument in all these cases, and has been nothing but fair. There is no reason to say otherwise.
Same with Clinton nominee Stephen Breyer. He�s a liberal too, and yet the Republicans let him slip by and didn�t do these kinds of things to him in the hearings.
To quote Fred Barnes on this, whom I think put it very nicely: �Let�s compare these two nominations with the two Clinton nominations�both highly credentialed liberals. Now, what happened then? Did we have articles from some magazine thrown up trying to identify them as racist and bigots? Did we have anything like that? No. Republicans, by and large, the majority of them, voted�they were very proper hearings�and they voted for him because a Republican ought to be able to name a credentialed conservative to the court, and the Democrats ought to be able to name a credentialed liberal to the court. Republicans did that. They did not have hearings like this.�

On Ted Kennedy, LIBERAL Mort Kondracke said, after Barnes, �I would observe that Ted Kennedy has been character assassinating judges, ever since Clement Haynsworth back in the Nixon administration�a distinguished man who had nothing wrong with him and was represented as being a racist and anti-labor and all the rest of that. He was merely a conservative, and Kennedy�s been doing it over and over again. He�s got a whole gang of people�who do that.�

Now, to go over that Princeton group over and over was just ridiculous. He didn't remember being in the group, and that's understandable. If you put it into context, they were trying to get the military off the campus. Perhaps he joined the organization in order to have his name somewhere with an organization that said that what was going on with regards to the military there was wrong. He doesn't remember. Seriously--why wouldn't he have said something like, "I was part of that organization, the extent to which they went was unknown to me" or whatever good answer he would have given.
If you're not a prominent member of a group, or really much active at all, then why would you not remember such a thing? I mean, somehow, also, I don't think he would have lied to the committee as well--under oath
He answered more questions than Roberts did, too, and more thoroughly.

As Senator Hatch, on the Committee, said on Hannity�s radio show, he could do anything he wants. He has that status and credibility and ability to do whatever. But he chooses to sit in front of that committee and be brutalized and accused and criticized in a way not done since Bork, and not done in any other instance that I've heard of.
As I said, intelligent questions are fine. Tough questions are fine. But to ask some of the things Kennedy and Schumer and Biden are asking...that just goes to far.

Now, what I believe he means by talking about the Constitution not being a living document or whatever is that he is ORIGINALIST, which is so, and which is what he SHOULD be and what ALL justices on the court should be, as opposed to activist. It�s not merely a conservative view to have originalist justices�but those justices are what we need, especially in this day and age.
To your argument that by his logic Brown v. Education wouldn�t have ruled the way it did, that�s false, because no where in the Constitution does it say ANYTHING about segregation. Instead it talks about Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness. It wasn�t in the Constitution, so I fail to see your argument here.
The Constitution isn�t a living document, nor should it be treated that way. Yes, there are some things that might need to be interpreted differently, but overall, justices need to rule the way the Founders intended, and that is Alito�s position, just as it was Roberts and just as, coincidentally, it happens to be virtually every conservative�s idea�even though it�s not strictly a conservative principal.

With regards to being a conservative, particularly on abortion, I�m going to give a direct quote of Sean Hannity to Paul Begala just a bit ago:
�He did, in the New Jersey case, clearly go against his viewpoint�he went with Planned Parenthood�s position on the issue of partial birth abortion and the ban that was set in New Jersey. He followed the law, and he followed precedent. In the Nebraska case, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States. What else do you want from a guy?...I am proud that there are people like Judge Alito who want to serve this country, that will put up with the crap that we saw this week and sit through the sanctimony of (your pal and your hero) Ted Kennedy because he has a better goal and a higher purpose in life, that he wants to serve other people�Everyone�s a liar in your world because he doesn�t remember something from 25 years ago? Paul, you supported the biggest liar in the history of this country, Bill Clinton [Clinton imitation].�


Now, will you not have the moral conviction to denounce the things that Ted Kennedy has been saying and insinuating? Will you not do that?

He�s getting good marks, you know. Let�s tally some of them down:

CLINTON appointee Maryanne Trump Berry (Donald Trump�s sister): �His commitment to doing the right thing�never playing fast and lose with a record, never taking a fast cut��
JOHNSON appointee Ruggero Aldisert, appointed 45 years ago: �Judge Alito has to be included among the FIRST rank of the 44 judges with whom I have served on the 3rd circuit.�
A retired judge on the 3rd circuit, who says he�s �very pro-choice,� Timothy Lewis, said �I cannot recall one instance where he exhibited anything remotely resembling an ideological bent��
He said he disagreed on most issues with Judge Alito, but thought he was an honest man, a man who struggled to find the right answers, who was not an ideologue.

To quote FOX News: �The committee also heard from the panel of the American Bar Association, which said it interviewed more than 300 people, including 130 judges, about Alito,� saying, ��who almost uniformly talked in terms of his even-handedness, of his open-mindedness, of his willingness to be fair. He�s called �A Judge�s Judge� more than once in those interviews.
Democrats and Democratic judges have even testified in his defense in these hearings, so I really don�t see what you�re so worried about.
SEVEN co-justices on the 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals came to the committee and gave him praise, including at least 2 Democrats.

Next, the charges that Alito was against women and minorities were what made his wife cry�and justifiably so. Somehow I don�t think that what the democrats are doing here is something that would be taught in school�
To once again quote the news, �The [American Bar Association] panel interviewed many women and minorities who worked with him, and said that they saw no evidence of prejudice. ��and they said, that is not the Sam Alito we know. And we heard that time and time again.�� (Marna Tucker)
To now quote Chairman Specter on the Princeton issue, with regards to those documents Kennedy threatened to bring the committee to a standstill over yesterday, �The files contained dozens of articles, including investigative expos written at the height of the organization�s prominence, but Samuel Alito�s name is no where to be found in any of them.�

They�re only arguments now are abortion, which I see him, judging from his past cases and opinions of others (and I�m talking about the people he knows and has worked with), as being quite fair and open-minded (something Ann Coulter�s not too happy about), and powers of the executive branch, especially now that this Princeton thing has been laid to rest.

If you�re a Roe v. Wade advocate and think that it shouldn�t be overturned, you know, Alito gave NO hints that he would do such a thing, and there is NO reason to think such a way.

Now, legal analyst (and reporter) over at FOX, Megyn Kendall, said this:
First she talked about a study discussing the LARGE number of questions Alito was asked. He was asked 759 questions, answered 716 (94%), and didn�t answer 43 (a mere 6%). Now, Roberts was asked 574 questions, answered 510 (89%), and declined to answer 64 (11%). So, assuming that the study is true, Alito was asked a great deal of questions.
Now when Alito declined, however, those were issues that he said were live issues that might come before the court, that he couldn�t pre-judge those cases. Brit Hume felt, watching this, that when he did answer questions, Kennedy and Schumer and Biden considered him �unresponsive.� I quote Kendall�s response here:
�I actually personally thought that he was forthcoming on a number of issues that I didn�t expect him to be. That�s not to say that he answered everything that they wanted answers to�The reason he was able to [answer] much moreso than any other recent nominees is that he has so many opinions that he has authored. More than 300 cases, and [he] decided more than 300 cases. So he was able, in virtually every question, to refer to a case or go back and explain his analysis of that issue, or he would at least say, �I haven�t written on that issue, but here�s how I would analyze it, and he would walk the Democrats through the steps.�
But of course the Democrats didn�t want that. They wanted�they needed�to know how he would judge on a case�to force him to pre-judge it. They weren�t looking for how he would analyze cases, but how he would decide on them.
Now, to quote her one final time, �His response [to questions about what he would decide] was, �I can�t get into specific predictions,� and nor has any other nominee in the past.� And nor, might I add, IMO, should he. NO justice should pre-judge a case. I really don�t think that wise. But analysis�how one would analyze a case�is reasonable. So is your judicial philosophy, but specific cases? Not only is it prerogative not to, but it�s also unwise, IMO, to judge a case before it comes before you. You can see that, I�m sure.

I agree with Fred Barnes when he says, �The only reason to vote against him is because you are a partisan ideologue, and you don�t think someone who is a moderate conservative like Sam Alito ought to be on the court.�

And here�s what LIBERAL Mort Kondracke said, sharing his opinion after Fred Barnes: �I think�my fundamental principle in this�that a Republican president has the right to nominate a conservative, and if the person is of good character, and smart, and learned, and judicious, then he ought to be confirmed, and the same thing for a democratic nominee. And by that standard he ought to be confirmed.�


And notice how it seems as though no one else was added to the number of people who were already opposed to him. I think it�s safe to say that this is so because of the fantastic way he handled himself in the hearings, despite his wife�s outburst and the harsh criticism he got, and of the praise he got from the judges and ABA officials, if you will, that came before the committee. Senators Graham and Hatch�no conservatives�praised him as well for all his credentials and everything else, rightfully so too. Lindsey(sp?) Graham was the one who was defending Alito�comments which resulted in Mrs. Alito�s tears�and he clearly likes him.
He�s not an outrageously conservative judge, and is a lot more open minded than almost everyone I know.

And keep in mind that Alito, finally, said that he would, if successful, try to emulate what he calls Justice Sandra Day O�Connor�s dedication and integrity.

One last comment from me on Alito: There�s no reason not to approve him. He�s the President�s choice, and it�s the President�s prerogative to nominate whomever he wants. Clinton did it�twice in �93 and �94. And what ideology did his nominees have? Left�and farther left than Alito is right (at least in Ginsberg�s case; all I know about Breyer is that he�s a pretty liberal guy). Ginsberg, for instance, had a radical record prior to nomination, as I stated before�and what did the Republicans do? They not only gave her a fair shake in the hearings and the Senate, but by and large the majority of Republicans APPROVED her, even though they disagreed with her ideology.
It�s alright to ask good, quality, intelligent questions. But it�s not to character assassinate and ask and insinuate the things that Mr. Kennedy and Schumer (Kennedy especially) have.
It�s alright to get a feel for the nominee�s judicial philosophy and take that into consideration.
But to take a litmus test on abortion, or so, �Oh my gosh, this guy�s a conservative! We can�t vote for him!� is just ridiculous and, IMO, wrong. If you look at this man�s history, he has a history of being a fair judge�as SO MANY have attested to, in evidence I�ve put forth in this post. He has absolutely impeccable credentials�both education- and service-wise�and has a track record of proven quality performance. So he�s a bit of a conservative. Okay, so what?
Is he originalist? Yes.
Has he been highly praised by those he�s served with? Yes.
Has he gotten high marks from the American Bar Association? Yes.
Has he judged previous cases fairly? Yes.
Is he learned and astute? Yes.
Is he qualified? Yes.

Okay�so what�s the problem? I sure as heck don�t see it. All I see is a well-qualified, honest, mild-mannered judge who has a proven record of outstanding performance. I see a man with impeccable credentials who�s well qualified for the position�even more so than Chief Justice Roberts�who should get approved. There is absolutely no reason why the President�s choice should be confirmed. It�s the President�s prerogative, and he�s the ideal choice.
I say, cut the crap, Ted Kennedy, Charles Schumer, Joe Biden, Patrick Lehi, and Confirm Judge Samuel Alito, perhaps the most qualified nominee in YEARS.


And just a little thing from me, on a related issue: Where is the part of the Constitution that says �A woman shall have the right to have an abortion� or �A woman shall have the right to determine whether or not her unborn child is given birth� anyways. I don't seem to see it, so I don't get why Schumer keeps badgering Alito over it.

Now how�s THAT for a rebuttal, 5 pages of size 12 font?



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PostThu Jan 12, 2006 8:18 pm    

I wanted to set this off from that post, but on the SMEAR campaign of Durbin and Kennedy--as O'Reilly put it, "intentionally trying to inflict pain on the nominee and the nominee's family"--I really advise you check out O'Reilly's interview with Senator Graham whenever it gets onto FoxNews.com. It is a VERY good interview, very serious.
If you have questions about that, please take a look at that.
But I've drawn the conclusion that there is absolutely no reason for this smear campaign that Kennedy and some others are leading on Alito.
I agree with O'Reilly here when he talks about the Senate supposed to be the body that is revered and of higher status and RESPECTFUL. But this display that Kennedy and Durbin especially (on this issue; Kennedy, Schumer, Biden, and Lehi on others) is just appauling, and I wouldn't be surprised if they lost a chunk fo support because of it. It was wrong and there is NO justification for it.
After yesterday's proceedings, I'm starting to like Senator Graham.



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PostThu Jan 12, 2006 9:11 pm    

Republican_Man wrote:
I wanted to set this off from that post, but on the SMEAR campaign of Durbin and Kennedy--as O'Reilly put it, "intentionally trying to inflict pain on the nominee and the nominee's family"--I really advise you check out O'Reilly's interview with Senator Graham whenever it gets onto FoxNews.com. It is a VERY good interview, very serious.
If you have questions about that, please take a look at that.
But I've drawn the conclusion that there is absolutely no reason for this smear campaign that Kennedy and some others are leading on Alito.
I agree with O'Reilly here when he talks about the Senate supposed to be the body that is revered and of higher status and RESPECTFUL. But this display that Kennedy and Durbin especially (on this issue; Kennedy, Schumer, Biden, and Lehi on others) is just appauling, and I wouldn't be surprised if they lost a chunk fo support because of it. It was wrong and there is NO justification for it.

After yesterday's proceedings, I'm starting to like Senator Graham.


Although I am not a Republican, I absolutely adore Senator Graham for having a compassionate and warm heart toward Mrs. Alito. We need more people like her, people who care about the vociferous nature of the 'hot seat'.

RM, you know that I have a great deal of respect for you, and I agree with nearly 100% of what you stated in your extremely long post. This 'tactic', as TM so mildly put it? It's more than that, it's a smear tactic. As much as the Dems want answers on where Alito stands, it's safe to say that he, just as other men of power in the past, is going to want to look to the past for guidance in those matters which he feels warrant the stare decisis.

I mean, if there's a precedent....why not consider maintaining a status quo, unless, by conscience, one in such a high and respected state of power is unable to do so (say, Alito, if he is confirmed).

To ream a man over and over again for his actions in college? Even if he was affiliated with CAP, it does not necessarily mean that he still holds those convictions---although the odds of a 'change of heart' are slim---over a span of ten or more years.

He is quite qualified to hold the title of Chief Justice of the Supreme Court.

Whenever a nominee is selected, we have to expect that he will face extreme questioning as well as smearing by the opposition.

In many ways, he reminds me of Sandra Day O'Connor in that when she was in the 'hot seat' for the position.....everyone was up in arms over the responses she gave concerning her beliefs about abortion, etc. All people kept saying was how out of her mind she was and how cryptic she was in many of her responses during her hearing(s). That's how I saw it, anyway, not to say that I am 100% accurate there...

The Dems, in this case, seem to want to really shoot him down.....if they'd simply ask the right questions and treat him with the level of respect that he deserves...I mean, it can't possibly be easy for this man to sit there and have to listen to men like Kennedy and Schumer just deface his responses to their utterly ridiculous questions.......I agree with the Right on this one......the Dems are really out to see that he doesn't get confirmed. The more they push forward with pinning him for CAP, which I doubt he was ever involved in, the more the Right will pull together to back and support him.

I'm honestly tired of hearing about his 'alleged' affiliation with that totally and downright appalling CAP organization. A man like him, with the amount of prestige and presence he maintains? HA, I'd really be shocked if he actually admitted to having anything to do with it whatsoever.

Whether we like it or not, RM, it wouldn't really matter who is sitting in that chair. He/She would still receive the slanderous, accusing gossip of petty and POLITICALLY-motivated provincials.

The American people are depending on Sam Alito to not be swayed by the attempts of his opponents to rob him of his potential to show this nation what it means to be a true Patriot of freedom. Such behavior is not conducive to the dignity of Kennedy's position.

Alito is a man of integrity, and I support him.



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PostThu Jan 12, 2006 9:33 pm    

I agree with everything you say except this:
Quote:
Whether we like it or not, RM, it wouldn't really matter who is sitting in that chair. He/She would still receive the slanderous, accusing gossip of petty and POLITICALLY-motivated provincials.


Reason being, the Republicans--at least in the numbers like the Democrats this time around--have never used such slanderous and smearing tactics as Kennedy and others are doing now. Now, what I mean by that is NOT those conservative pundits or anyone like that, but I'm talking the people in the committee, when questioning this man. Republicans haven't come near this far, and I haven't heard anything being this bad. Maybe Bork, with his comments then, and Nixon's nominee, but I haven't heard of anything like this. Not in the body that's supposed to be the "upper house."
I think that the Republicans wouldn't be so dumb as, say, Kennedy, to incessently smear and diminish this man's integrity, credibility, and everything else. And for Alito to sit through his wife's crying behind him and still go...that tells us something. And I think it also shows--her wife's crying--how close their relationship is, and how much a good family they have.

But anyways, I would think the Republicans MIGHT do something political in these things--although they did not for Breyer and Ginsberg--but they would NEVER even consider going this far--of being like Kennedy or the others. This is outrageous.
Would they go hard on a nominee? That's likely. Maybe one Republican might say something. But like this? No. No way. There are few instances that I can recall, whether it be in my own short memory or hearing about, in which Republicans in the Senate did such a thing.
Now, did pundits? Oh, more than likely that was the case. But in the Senate? Never happened, and never will. They've never sunk as low as this--ever. It's sad, really.

Btw. If Alito was part of CAP, it was in retailiation against the assault on the ROTC, not for anything else, I would figure. And yeah, his college years. Not very important. If we want to go THAT far back, let's go back and examine Senator Kennedy one night in 1969, when there was a certain car crash into a certain body of water in which a certain man got out but a certain woman did not--and there was a house right near by. Hmmm...
If Kennedy wants to play down and dirty here, I say let's hit him there (not serious, but...).



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PostFri Jan 13, 2006 12:26 am    

Republican_Man wrote:
I agree with everything you say except this:
Quote:
Whether we like it or not, RM, it wouldn't really matter who is sitting in that chair. He/She would still receive the slanderous, accusing gossip of petty and POLITICALLY-motivated provincials.


Reason being, the Republicans--at least in the numbers like the Democrats this time around--have never used such slanderous and smearing tactics as Kennedy and others are doing now. Now, what I mean by that is NOT those conservative pundits or anyone like that, but I'm talking the people in the committee, when questioning this man. Republicans haven't come near this far, and I haven't heard anything being this bad. Maybe Bork, with his comments then, and Nixon's nominee, but I haven't heard of anything like this. Not in the body that's supposed to be the "upper house."
I think that the Republicans wouldn't be so dumb as, say, Kennedy, to incessently smear and diminish this man's integrity, credibility, and everything else. And for Alito to sit through his wife's crying behind him and still go...that tells us something. And I think it also shows--her wife's crying--how close their relationship is, and how much a good family they have.

But anyways, I would think the Republicans MIGHT do something political in these things--although they did not for Breyer and Ginsberg--but they would NEVER even consider going this far--of being like Kennedy or the others. This is outrageous.
Would they go hard on a nominee? That's likely. Maybe one Republican might say something. But like this? No. No way. There are few instances that I can recall, whether it be in my own short memory or hearing about, in which Republicans in the Senate did such a thing.
Now, did pundits? Oh, more than likely that was the case. But in the Senate? Never happened, and never will. They've never sunk as low as this--ever. It's sad, really.

Btw. If Alito was part of CAP, it was in retailiation against the assault on the ROTC, not for anything else, I would figure. And yeah, his college years. Not very important. If we want to go THAT far back, let's go back and examine Senator Kennedy one night in 1969, when there was a certain car crash into a certain body of water in which a certain man got out but a certain woman did not--and there was a house right near by. Hmmm...
If Kennedy wants to play down and dirty here, I say let's hit him there (not serious, but...).


Everyone has their skeletons, I'm sure.

I wasn't making a reference to the Republicans specifically with that comment. What I meant to say is:

If the nominee were any other Republican, the Dems would still have at him/her, which is what I was referring to with the whole petty politically-motivated provincials comment. If the nominee were a Democrat with any hint of what Alito's got in him when it comes to conservativeness, they'd still sweat him out.

I don't mean to say that if the nominee were a Democrat, that the Republicans would behave in the same abominable manner.

If the man/woman in question hasn't the slightest inkling of Left-thinking in them, it's like Bastille Day all over again.

Apologies for any confusion!


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PostFri Jan 13, 2006 12:51 am    

Okay, thanks. Then I agree with you. Yes, it didn't matter who the President replaced O'Connor with, I agree with you. They would have done everything to get at that nominee as well--save for Miers, but that was a different situation (although, mind you, I would have given her a chance).
Here we have a judge with all the perfect credentials and yet, alas, he's seen to be a conservative, and so we can't have him. Period, end of story.
I think part of it is now that they're so desperate over the fact that it's an O'Connor replacement, and she's the swing vote, so that's why I think they're going after Alito more than Roberts, who replaced another conservative.
But regardless of reasons, it's not justified. It's disgusting how these hearings were being used for purely partisan purposes. It was like something out of a hack-job smear merchant web site or a Michael Moore movie.



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PostFri Jan 13, 2006 6:12 pm    

Republican_Man wrote:
Okay, thanks. Then I agree with you. Yes, it didn't matter who the President replaced O'Connor with, I agree with you. They would have done everything to get at that nominee as well--save for Miers, but that was a different situation (although, mind you, I would have given her a chance).
Here we have a judge with all the perfect credentials and yet, alas, he's seen to be a conservative, and so we can't have him. Period, end of story.
I think part of it is now that they're so desperate over the fact that it's an O'Connor replacement, and she's the swing vote, so that's why I think they're going after Alito more than Roberts, who replaced another conservative.
But regardless of reasons, it's not justified. It's disgusting how these hearings were being used for purely partisan purposes. It was like something out of a hack-job smear merchant web site or a Michael Moore movie.


Yes, it was absolutely appalling to watch those hearings....

The Dems will always use the "we have the right to probe him on anything we like because he's up for the highest position in the Court for a whole lifetime" excuse, and I know that they want to be thorough....

But there's a fine line between being thorough, and downright spiteful.

No one ever said politics was pretty.....but....where do we draw the line?


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PostFri Jan 13, 2006 6:40 pm    

Agreed. And you know, they pretty much know everything. They should know almost everything already, so for them to do this in that context as well...It's maddening, really.


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PostFri Jan 13, 2006 6:53 pm    

Republican_Man wrote:
Agreed. And you know, they pretty much know everything. They should know almost everything already, so for them to do this in that context as well...It's maddening, really.


I just feel like they're trying to inflame old topics about his past, rather than focus on his opinions about the present...as well as the future.....

I wanted to slap Kennedy for some or most of his comments.....such infantile behavior.....


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PostFri Jan 13, 2006 6:54 pm    

yES, a supreme court justice serves for Life. A very long time to serve as a judge in the highest court.

People have a right to grill him for everything he's worth over and over again on the subjects they think are important. And if they dont like his answers or his track record, then they have a right to deny him that lifetime position.


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PostFri Jan 13, 2006 7:01 pm    

Link, the Hero of Time wrote:
yES, a supreme court justice serves for Life. A very long time to serve as a judge in the highest court.

People have a right to grill him for everything he's worth over and over again on the subjects they think are important. And if they dont like his answers or his track record, then they have a right to deny him that lifetime position.


Then perhaps they aren't aware of the order in which they've placed their priorities. They don't even have a single shred of evidence, not one, which proves he was ever affiliated with the CAP organization.

And if they're going to go into someone's closet for skeletons, let us not forget about Kennedy. Fortunately for him, he's not the one up for a lifetime posting as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States of America. Long title.......long term...

Of course they have every right to question him and 'grill' him, but not to smear and, as I said before, deface his character. It's not their place to do so. They went about the whole issue in an extremely distasteful manner.



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PostFri Jan 13, 2006 7:09 pm    

Exactly as I've been saying, Cathexis, and exactly as I stand. Only you said it very elegantly and in a far shorter when then I did (referring to my 5-page MS Word post ). But yes, exactly. They have the right to grill him, fine. But to lie, slander, defame, and accuse him of being a racist and anything else you could think of (maybe not flat-out, but through insinuations) is just WRONG. The Republicans didn't do such a thing for far-left liberal Ginsberg, or Liberal Breyer, during the Clinton years. What gives the Democrats the right to do such things now? Why aren't they holding themselves to the same standard the Republicans did back in '93 and '94?
It's wrong, distasteful, and shows some of these Democrats for the true savages, if I may, that they really are--particularly Kennedy, and Durbin. They're playing so much to their radical edge that it's gone too far. Kennedy's outdone himself now. But if you're old enough, remember Robert Bork, and what Kennedy said during his hearings? This is just a replay.
It's horrible. Now, as you said, and as I've been saying, there's a certain night in 1969 in which a certain man left a certain car in a certain body of water with a certain woman dying that we don't have good answers for. So, yes, if Kennedy wants to dig so far back for Alito, why not look back at Kennedy? I wonder how he would respond to being questioned about Chapequitic(sp?). Or what about questions about HIS Princeton group--the one that was all men and didn't allow woman?



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PostFri Jan 13, 2006 10:07 pm    

Admittedly I did skim over most of these past posts because I am very tired (it took me about six tried to write 'because' ). While I can see what you all are saying, I do believe you are missing one critical point.

Senate confirmation hearings are brutal. No matter who you are. For four days the nominee serves as a punching bag for the Senators, the media, and the public. If they can stand that and come out clean on paper, they're acceptable for the job.

This is a life appointment. It isn't going to be a courtious walk in the park. It doesn't matter who is sitting in that chair. Liberal, conservative, independant, ANYONE. It's brutal. They aren't just picking on Alito. Really. This isn't some special treatment.

As for the CAP thing. Here's what happened. They didn't have access to some documents. They had a resume citing it. This made them suspicious. Kennedy sent a letter to ...I forget his name, sorry...but he didn't respond. When this happened Kennedy saw an opening. So he brought it up, where it would get the most attention. It worked. He got access to the papers they needed. They did not prove anything about Alito's connections with CAP. So it was dropped.

It may have been a 'smear' tactic, but it is one that has been used and it was perfectly legit. Mean, yes. Wrong, not necessarily.

Republican_Man wrote:
So, yes, if Kennedy wants to dig so far back for Alito, why not look back at Kennedy? I wonder how he would respond to being questioned about Chapequitic(sp?). Or what about questions about HIS Princeton group--the one that was all men and didn't allow woman?


Kennedy isn't serving a life term as a swing vote. Alito might be. Big difference. I'd be willing to bet that a good chunk of Congressmen/women and Senators have some big skeletons in their closets.

[edit] I'm not saying that Alito will be a bad Justice, I just feel that you all are missing the point on the whole culture of the confirmation hearings.


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PostSat Jan 14, 2006 4:11 pm    

TrekkieMage wrote:
Admittedly I did skim over most of these past posts because I am very tired (it took me about six tried to write 'because' ). While I can see what you all are saying, I do believe you are missing one critical point.

Senate confirmation hearings are brutal. No matter who you are. For four days the nominee serves as a punching bag for the Senators, the media, and the public. If they can stand that and come out clean on paper, they're acceptable for the job.

This is a life appointment. It isn't going to be a courtious walk in the park. It doesn't matter who is sitting in that chair. Liberal, conservative, independant, ANYONE. It's brutal. They aren't just picking on Alito. Really. This isn't some special treatment.

As for the CAP thing. Here's what happened. They didn't have access to some documents. They had a resume citing it. This made them suspicious. Kennedy sent a letter to ...I forget his name, sorry...but he didn't respond. When this happened Kennedy saw an opening. So he brought it up, where it would get the most attention. It worked. He got access to the papers they needed. They did not prove anything about Alito's connections with CAP. So it was dropped.

It may have been a 'smear' tactic, but it is one that has been used and it was perfectly legit. Mean, yes. Wrong, not necessarily.

Republican_Man wrote:
So, yes, if Kennedy wants to dig so far back for Alito, why not look back at Kennedy? I wonder how he would respond to being questioned about Chapequitic(sp?). Or what about questions about HIS Princeton group--the one that was all men and didn't allow woman?


Kennedy isn't serving a life term as a swing vote. Alito might be. Big difference. I'd be willing to bet that a good chunk of Congressmen/women and Senators have some big skeletons in their closets.

[edit] I'm not saying that Alito will be a bad Justice, I just feel that you all are missing the point on the whole culture of the confirmation hearings.



Actually, I understand the culture of confirmation hearing just fine.

I think what we're trying to say is that....yes, the hearings are designed to probe whoever is lucky or unlucky enough to sit in the chair. However, as RM and I both said before.......there is a difference between asking legitmate questions about the nominee's past affiliations in pursuit of the truth, and using those affiliations as a purposeful means of stripping the nominee of his dignity.

And, when you say 'if they can stand that and come out clean on paper, they're acceptable for the job', you're right. Although, if certain men of the Senate, etcetera are determined enough to see this man brought down simply because he may/may not be the swing vote of the Court (and not see things the way they do), they can and will do everything to do so. It's not a question of whether or not he can stand it.....he HAS proved that he will not be hammered at like a piece of marble. It's a question of whether or not the Dems who criticized and basically ripped his character apart (and when I say that I don't mean that they just probed him to find out what kind of man he is, I mean that they intentionally attempted to make him out to be untrustworthy and unworthy of the title) succeeded in their motives to the point where he will not be confirmed simply because of their slanderous behavior.

Now, of course I understand that anyone who is up for a lifetime appointment should be place under rigorous questioning and probing. It is a necessity upon which we depend as a people in order to validate the goodwill and character of anyone who sits waiting for possible confirmation as the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court.

Yes, the Democrats had legitimate questions about that resum�. And they did drop it....but in the time it took them to finally turn away from that one matter, when it was apparent that Alito was not a member of CAP at all and perhaps made an error in judgement by putting the organization down on a resum�, they could have been focusing more on where he stands TODAY on the issues that we face TODAY.


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PostSat Jan 14, 2006 5:55 pm    

Very eloquently spoken.
Yet they did ask him some questions relevant to today, but with the expectation that he would tell them how, exactly, he would rule, to give them a reason not to confirm him.
However, the good judge just didn't play into that game. Instead, he said he wouldn't pre-judge the case before he had the arguments layed out before him. He then, however, discussed how he would analyze a case, and went into step-by-step detail, walking the Democrats through his process.
And yet, that wasn't what they wanted. They wanted a direct answer, for their own political rulings. Would he always vote towards the anti-Roe side? Would he always do this and that?
Well, they didn't get what they wanted. He was too smart to give them it. So, he gave them his process of analysis--what he should have gotten.
But of course the Democrats take that and say, "He didn't answer the questions." Well, he did. And he answered 94% of them, too. Just not the way they wanted them answered.
Oh, and about the Democrats...they hardly even asked questions less than 12 minutes...Ever Alan Colmes aknowledged this.



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PostSat Jan 14, 2006 5:59 pm    

Ah, yes....quite true! Thank you, RM, for correcting my oversight.


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PostSat Jan 14, 2006 6:39 pm    

I belive it was Senator Mike DeWine of Ohio (R) who didnt ask a Question for 12 minutes. The longest of all the senators. The hearing serve no purpose anymore. They should just scrap them, as Sen. Biden suggested.

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PostSat Jan 14, 2006 6:56 pm    

Biden asked a 20+ minute question of his own, which took Alito only 4 minutes to answer. Most of the Democrats kept saying what they wanted, and STUDIES of it show that Alito got a SIGNIFICANTLY SMALLER amount of time to speak than the Senators. The questions, as liberal Alan Colmes recognized, were almost ALL 12 minutes or so, or 3000 words, as Michael Reagan put it.
I think I am leaning towards agreement with Biden--which I'm surprised that he suggested it--in that it should be scrapt. It serves no purpose any longer.
Now that it's on TV, it's nothing more than a media circus.
No wonder why only 14% of Americans watched or listened to it, as stats show. The nominee hardly got to speak! It was all Democrats, and sometimes Republicans!



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PostSat Jan 14, 2006 10:39 pm    

Republican_Man wrote:
Biden asked a 20+ minute question of his own, which took Alito only 4 minutes to answer. Most of the Democrats kept saying what they wanted, and STUDIES of it show that Alito got a SIGNIFICANTLY SMALLER amount of time to speak than the Senators. The questions, as liberal Alan Colmes recognized, were almost ALL 12 minutes or so, or 3000 words, as Michael Reagan put it.
I think I am leaning towards agreement with Biden--which I'm surprised that he suggested it--in that it should be scrapt. It serves no purpose any longer.
Now that it's on TV, it's nothing more than a media circus.
No wonder why only 14% of Americans watched or listened to it, as stats show. The nominee hardly got to speak! It was all Democrats, and sometimes Republicans!



I find it quite saddening to know that only 14% of Americans actually watched or listened to the Hearings.

Alito was more on trial here than in the hot seat of a confirmation hearing.
It's dispicable that he only had a few moments (relatively speaking) to put in a response.


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Theresa
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PostSat Jan 14, 2006 10:45 pm    

Maybe the other 86% were working, providing for their families? Just because they weren't watching, doesn't mean that they are uninformed. Another example of a stupid stat.


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CJ Cregg
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PostSat Jan 14, 2006 10:49 pm    

No one watched because they were BORING! My god I've never seen anything more boring Even the most political of us must of found them boring

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Cathexis
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PostSat Jan 14, 2006 10:50 pm    

Theresa wrote:
Maybe the other 86% were working, providing for their families? Just because they weren't watching, doesn't mean that they are uninformed. Another example of a stupid stat.


That's not what I'm saying, T.

And just because I watched doesn't mean that I wasn't working and providing for my family.....actually, they had the hearings on TV at the school.


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Theresa
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PostSat Jan 14, 2006 10:59 pm    

Who was talking to you, Cathexis? I was referencing the stat, as I said in my post.
Please don't take a general statement and try and turn it like I'm attacking you. Thank you.


(BTW, like I've said a zillion times before, if I'm directly speaking to you, I'll say your name, or quote you. Got it now? Good, )



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