Seeing his popularity diminishing before his eyes, Barack Obama sought comfort in the steely arms of Big Labor yesterday. The most criticism-averse president in history whined that it was "special interests" who opposed his agenda -- and these people were not very nice. Looking deliberately into the camera, he tried out a down-home phrase to show solidarity with the union rabble. "They talk about … [Read more...]
Memo to Obama: Why They Talk About You “Like a Dog”
September 7, 2010 By Ben Johnson
Filed Under: Blogging, Constitution, Floyd Reports, Obama administration, Radical Left, Socialized medicine, United Nations/globalism Tagged With: Aharon Barak, Arizona, Arizona Immigration Law, Barack Obama, Ben Johnson, Bil Clinton, Black Panthers, Cass Sunstein, Code Pink, conservative, Constitution, disproportionate impact, editor, Elena Kagan, Eric Holder, felon disenfranchisement, foreign law, FrontPage Magazine, FrontPageMag.com, Government Propaganda, Jodie Evans, John Holdren, John P. Holdren, journalist, Marc Rich, Michelle Obama, New Black Panther Party (NBPP), News, Office of Public Engagement (OPE), Politics, Propaganda, Radical Left, Saul Alinsky, Sonia Sotomayor, Thurgood Marshall, United Nations, United Nations (UN), Valerie Jarrett
Sotomayor’s Racialist Judicial Activism
June 26, 2009 By Ben Johnson
This article originally appeared as the weekend lead for Friday, June 26, 2009. Five months later, it was chosen for inclusion in Opposing Viewpoints, America's Prisons, vol. 2. The inclusion is a special honor for me. Not only is the Opposing Viewpoints series in nearly every high school library in the country, but it provides an invaluable service: fairly representing conflicting views on an … [Read more...]
Filed Under: Affirmative Action/Race, Bill Clinton, Constitution, FrontPage Magazine, History, Obama administration, Obama appointees Tagged With: Affirmative Action, Barack Obama, Bill Clinton, BlackLetter Law Journal, California, capital punishment, Civil Rights, Constitution, cultural bias, death penalty, Department of Justice, disparate impact, disproportionate impact, felon disenfranchisement, Founding Fathers, Fourteenth Amendment, FrontPage Magazine, Harry Blackmun, Harvard, Hayden v. Pataki, Institutional Racism, Jason Schall, Jeffrey Reimen, John Roberts, Joseph “Jazz” Hayden, judicial activism, LatinoJustice, Legal Left, Maine, meritocracy, Minnesota, minority racism, negative liberties, NYPD, Obama appointees, Ohio, Opposing Viewpoints, Oregon, Pericles, Princeton, Puerto Rican Legal Defense and Education Fund, Reagan administration, Rep. Ephraim R. Eckley, reparations, reverse discrimination, Ricci v. Stefano, Richardson v. Ramirez, Sonia Sotomayor, stare decisis, Supreme Court, testing bias, The Rich Get Richer and the Poor Get Prison, Vermont, Voting Rights Act, Warren Burger, wealth redistribution, William Rehnquist, Yale Law School