Do you mean committee’s chief counsel, Blake Chisam?Its not what I said , its a quote from the guy who ran the entire investigation panel.
Now why cant you people figure that one out?
Desh, if I'd "quoted" a republican hack like this on an "investigation" of another republican you'd rightly be all over that. Follow the money rather than your emotions and consider that the team you are on just passed on doing the right thing. Stop defending this kind of crap, it is exactly what creates the rift in politics you see still growing today...Its not what I said , its a quote from the guy who ran the entire investigation panel.
Now why cant you people figure that one out?
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/17/nyregion/17rangel.html?_r=1
committee’s chief counsel, Blake Chisam, that there was no evidence of corruption or personal gain in his findings.”
No, I'm not. He's worked only for Democratic Committees, and has gained over $500,000 from them over the past three years.So on what basis do you determine this guy is a hack?
He has far greater access to the facts in the case than you do.
You are the one being the hack damo.
No, I contend that anybody who is paid to come to a conclusion and has performed that function in the past is a partisan slave, like you.http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/15/nyregion/15chisam.html?_r=1
So you contend anyone who has is a democrat is a criminal?
How very fucking unpartisan of you.
Again, I surmise you'd be the first to point out what we have if the "tables" were turned, of course only after you found a story about it on mediamatters or one of the other liberal hack "news" sources.Mr. Chisam was an unusual pick for staff director, a post he assumed in April 2009 after it had been vacant eight months. Though he had worked for Ms. Lofgren, it was actually Representative Jo Bonner of Alabama, the ranking Republican member, who suggested Mr. Chisam for the job. Mr. Chisam himself said he was surprised by the selection.
http://ethics.house.gov/Media/PDF/RangelStatementChairRankingMember.pdfSadly, Madam Chair, it is my unwavering view that the actions, decisions and behavior of our colleague from New York can no longer reflect either honor or integrity.As I noted earlier, I can’t speak for the people in Mr. Rangel’s district.
But I do know this: for the tenants who qualified for a rent-stabilized apartment in some American city but couldn’t get one because a powerful man had four… there is something wrong.
For the small businesswoman who didn’t pay her taxes for 17 years and had the IRS breathing down her back, I can only imagine how she would have liked to have had a chance to make the tax code simpler – and less burdensome – for everyone else.
And for the still relatively new member of Congress from California who some time ago questioned whether or not it was appropriate to be building a “monument to me,” I will never forget the arrogance of the response: “I would have a problem if you did it,” Mr. Rangel said to Mr. Campbell on the House floor on July 19, 2007, “because I don’t think that you’ve been around long enough to have your name on something to inspire a building like this.”
Madam Chair, it is painful for me to say this but Mr. Rangel can no longer blame anyone other than himself for the place he now finds himself… not this committee, not his staff or
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family, not his accountants or lawyers, not the press… Mr. Rangel should only look into the mirror when he wants to know who to blame.
While I am not an attorney – as are most of the Members of this Committee, as well as the respondent himself – I know – we all know – that it should not take either a law degree or a legal Dictionary to tell us the difference between right and wrong.
It is now up to each one of us to determine the appropriate measure of punishment for the discredit Mr. Rangel has brought to this House.
The ethics committee also ordered Rangel to pay thousands of dollars in unpaid taxes from rental income on a villa he owns in the Dominican Republic.
This is a chance you or I (or war hero, Duke Cunningham) wouldn't get....tax evasion=jail...except for Democrats
Being a war hero has nothing to do with his guilty plea....why even ask such a stupid question....how could it possibly be connected to his plea?What does being a war hero have to do with Cunningham pleading guilty to conspiracy, mail fraud, wire fraud and tax evasion?
Being a war hero has nothing to do with his guilty plea....why even ask such a stupid question....how could it possibly be connected to his plea?
I certainly didn't say it did, even remotely....
Reading comprehension problem again...or hallucination.???
Rangle is a decorated vet of the Korean War, too.....which, by the way, also has nothing to do with Duke's guilty plea...........in case you're wondering.
Being a war hero has nothing to do with his guilty plea....why even ask such a stupid question....how could it possibly be connected to his plea?
I certainly didn't say it did, even remotely....
Reading comprehension problem again...or hallucination.???
Rangle is a decorated vet of the Korean War, too.....which, by the way, also has nothing to do with Duke's guilty plea...........in case you're wondering.
christie is niether the sharpest tool in the shed, nor the brightest bulb in a landfill full of dead light bulbs![]()