Ponderable

I think she got elected partially for being black.
She sure as hell didnt get elected for her intelligence.
I doubt she got elected because she's a woman, and I dont believe she got elected on her moral fortitude.
That being said, I also doubt she would have been elected had she been a conservative. (this would also have made her more intelligent)
 
She sure as hell didnt get elected for her intelligence.
I doubt she got elected because she's a woman, and I dont believe she got elected on her moral fortitude.
That being said, I also doubt she would have been elected had she been a conservative. (this would also have made her more intelligent)
Well that kinda narrows it down.
 
Resist we mutch,
Can cops get a fair trial in America?

By Michelle Malkin • May 9, 2017 10:22 PM
Screen-Shot-2017-05-09-at-11.21.31-PM-300x193.png

Search instead for resist we mutch








Al Sharpton's Hilarious Teleprompter Flub On MSNBC Show - YouTube
 
FTW? Must be upside down day.
Way to represent.
Baltimore prosecutor who botched Freddie Gray trials still thinks she won



The professional standing of Baltimore State’s Attorney Marilyn Mosby should, in any rational world, be in tatters. Her history of working with former Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake during the Freddie Gray riots and her subsequent, disastrous attempts to prosecute their own police force left her with more egg on her face than a character in a Charlie Chaplin film. But for some reason she wound up speaking at Jessie Jackson’s Rainbow PUSH Coalition in Chicago this weekend and to hear her version of events she was single-handedly responsible for saving the city and causing the “reforms” to the police force which must surely be at the root of all their problems. Some of the quotes from her remarks, as reported at Western Journalism, are enough to make one question her grip on reality. (Emphasis added)

In a speech before Rev. Jessie Jackson’s Rainbow PUSH Coalition in Chicago on Saturday, Mosby said, “Had I not been in that position as state’s attorney, had I not had a seat at the table to make the unprecedented decisions that I was forced to make, had there been no accountability, there’d be no exposure, there’d be no reform, and the systemic discriminatory police practices in one of the largest police departments would’ve persisted.”

The state attorney, who is up for re-election next year if she chooses to run, said the exposure she brought to the Baltimore Police Department helped usher reforms such as body cameras for the officers, as well as additional training on how to treat suspects once they are taken in custody.
 
Back
Top