Thursday, December 4, 2008
MSNBC's Olberman Touches on Donofrio Case
Tonight's Countdown with Keith Olberman on MSNBC featured a small exchange between George Washington University law professor Jonathan Turley and Olberman concerning the case being conferenced tomorrow by the U.S Supreme Court, which was filed by retired New Jersey attorney Leo Donofrio questioning the natural born citizenship status of President Elect Barack Hussein Obama. Olberman utilizes an extremely biased interviewing technique continually bashing George Bush and the conservative right, insinuating that supporters and plaintiffs involved in any of the "certificate-gate" cases are "crackpots". During the interview, Professor Turley claimed that these cases had little chance of being heard by the Supreme Court primarily due to their lack of legal standing, regardless of merit.
After the interview, I the inquisitive reporter investigated the somewhat smug, Jonathan Turley, and suprisingly discovered this excerpt from his own website's bio:
Among his current cases, Professor Turley represents Dr. Ali Al-Timimi, who was convicted in Virginia in 2005 of violent speech against the United States. He also represents Dr. Sami Al-Arian, accused of being the American leader of a terrorist organization while he was a university professor in Florida.
Jonathan Turley has made a career of protecting known terrorists from having their constitutional rights "violated". It serves as no wonder that Olberman and Turley colluded to protect the "One".
Olberman consistently attempted to steer the conversation toward the insanity of people claiming that Obama may have been born somewhere other than Honolulu rather than addressing the real subtance of the Donofrio case which is the aspect of divided loyaties and the tri-citizenship with Kenya and Great Britain, as well as the United States. Donofrio claims that according to the Constitution, those born under divided loyaties cannot, by law, be declared natural born citizens.
Regardless of the bias displayed by the liberal Keith Olberman, good luck, Mr. Donofrio, during the Supreme Court conference tomorrow, and God bless!
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1 comment:
"Regardless of the bias displayed by the liberal Keith Olberman"
Truth, regardless of party affliation, is still the truth.
"good luck, Mr. Donofrio, during the Supreme Court conference tomorrow"
Luck has no effect on laws.
"and God bless!"
Where was God when Donofrio's case was DENIED?
Don't tell me.. God had trouble finding that pesky liberal Supreme Court, right?
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