Ziua Logo
  20:24, sambata, 6 iulie 2024
 Cauta:  
  Detalii »

Actualitate

2009-04-30
NormanFinkel5 din Te$uland (...@mailforce.net, IP: 95.128.242...)
2009-05-04 15:08
Interesant, cum apare jidanimea lui ROY cum incepe si CENZURA jidaneasca la Ziua.

Iar ati inceput cu propaganda pregatitoare a razboiului contra Iranului.
Asa ati facut si in 1991 cu Irakul si apoi cu desenele animate ale generalului american Colin Powells la ONU in 2003.

Asta a omorat pe careva si avocatii ei doar n-o sa spuna ca-i o criminala.
Si Bush a refuzat s-o ierte in TEXAS pe una Karla Faye Tucker inainte de instalarea lui la Casa-Alba. Ce-i zmiorcaiala asta ipocrita djidoweasca?

George W. Bush during his six years as governor of Texas presided over 152 executions, more than any other governor in the recent history of the United States. Bush has said: "I take every death penalty case seriously and review each case carefully.... Each case is major because each case is life or death." In his autobiography, A Charge to Keep (1999), he wrote, "For every death penalty case, [legal counsel] brief[s] me thoroughly, reviews the arguments made by the prosecution and the defense, raises any doubts or problems or questions." Bush called this a "fail-safe" method for ensuring "due process" and certainty of guilt.

He might have succeeded in bequeathing to history this image of himself as a scrupulously fair-minded governor if the journalist Alan Berlow had not used the Public Information Act to gain access to fifty-seven confidential death penalty memos that Bush's legal counsel, Alberto R. Gonzales, whom President Bush has recently nominated to be attorney general of the United States, presented to him, usually on the very day of execution.[1] The reports Gonzales presented could not be more cursory. Take, for example, the case of Terry Washington, a mentally retarded man of thirty-three with the communication skills of a seven-year-old. Washington's plea for clemency came before Governor Bush on the morning of May 6, 1997. After a thirty-minute briefing by Gonzales, Bush checked "Deny"—just as he had denied twenty-nine other pleas for clemency in his first twenty-eight months as governor.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Death in Texas
http://www.nybooks.com/articles/17670

Volume 52, Number 1 · January 13, 2005 By Sister Helen Prejean

When Berlow asked Gonzales directly whether Bush ever read the clemency petitions, he replied that he did so "from time to time."
Asa ca gura, terminati cu zmiorcaielile propagandistice.


« Rezultatele cautarii

     « Comentariu anterior

     « Toate comentariile


Cauta comentariul care contine:   in   
 Top afisari / comentarii 
Valid HTML 4.01 Transitional  Valid CSS!  This website is ACAP-enabled   
ISSN 1583-8021, © 1998-2024 ziua "ziua srl", toate drepturile rezervate. Procesare 0.00677 sec.