Sometimes I like to slip into my Walter Mitty persona and imagine myself to be someone
important … like a U.S. Senator sitting on the Judiciary Committee interviewing
Loretta Lynch for her new position as Attorney General. My questioning might go
something like this:
Me: Ms. Lynch, your predecessor, Eric Holder is your
personal friend and confident and, I understand, he has sought your advice on
many of his more controversial legal positions. Now I consider Mr. Holder to be
the worst Attorney General since John Mitchell and he was the first Attorney General
ever held in contempt of Congress. Because of this nexus, I would like to have
you give us what you advised Mr. Holder on a number of his more contentious poses:
Me: Do you agree that we should be holding a trial for that enemy
combatant, Abu Hamza al-Masn, in New York City, when, according to administrative
precedent he should have been sent to Guantanamo?
Ms. Lynch: those noises that Charlie Brown’s teacher makes
when talking to him.
Me: Would you have prosecuted those New Black Panthers for
their intimidation activities at the Philadelphia polling places in 2008?
Ms. Lynch: a convoluted legal argument full of “whereas”s,
“whatfor”s, and stare decisis
Me: Do you agree with the Attorney General that we are a nation of cowards for not discussing race relations more?
Ms. Lynch: yada, yada, yada
Me: Do you concur that Mr. Holder should have been held in
contempt of Congress for withholding critical documents in the “Fast and
Furious” scandal?
Ms. Lynch: Now you are asking me to violate the
confidentiality between a client and his lawyer.
Me: Is President Obama within Constitutional bounds if he
chooses to use an executive action to give green cards to millions of illegal immigrants?
Ms. Lynch: Senator Mitty, I think your questioning time has
expired …
Pukata … pukata …
Afterward: For some more question topics see: ABC News Story.
After Afterward: More thoughts on this from the Powerline blog: Powerline Opinion.
Afterward: For some more question topics see: ABC News Story.
After Afterward: More thoughts on this from the Powerline blog: Powerline Opinion.
No comments:
Post a Comment