Dirty arabs Gang-Raping Asians + Whites + Blacks!!!!
Agence France-Presse. "8 men rape Filipina maid in Kuwait."
2004/06/24.
KUWAIT CITY -- Kuwaiti police are hunting for eight men for abducting
and gang raping a Filipina domestic helper at a desert camp, a
newspaper reported Thursday.
Al-Seyassah quoted a security source as saying four of the men
kidnapped two Filipina housemaids who had escaped from their
employer's house in Fahaheel district, 50 kilometers (30 miles) south
of Kuwait City.
They took them to a desert camp on Tuesday where they repeatedly raped
one of them.
They later invited four of their friends who also were reported to
have raped the victim until she started to bleed severely. They then
dumped the women in a remote area.
The raped maid was admitted to the intensive care unit of a local
hospital.
Three Kuwaiti policemen were sentenced Sunday to between 10 and 15
years in prison for raping an 18-year-old housemaid from the
Philippines at a police station last November.
Veronica Uy. Philippine Daily Inquirer Inc. "RP embassy in Kuwait
probes rape of Filipina domestic." 2003/11/19.
THE PHILIPPINE embassy in Kuwait is investigating the reported rape of
a Filipina domestic helper by Kuwaitis whose identities are still
being determined, an official of the Department of Foreign Affairs
said
Wednesday.
Foreign Service Officer Jojo Somera, who is in charge of the
investigation, said charges were filed initially against three
policemen amid reports on Tuesday that nine Kuwaiti teenagers were
involved in the rape of the Filipina domestic who has been placed in
the safekeeping of the Philippine embassy in Kuwait.
Embassy officials have not identified the victim.
Somera said it was Consul Alimathar Garangan who informed him Tuesday
night that the case against the three Kuwaiti policemen were filed in
what could be considered as the equivalent of a prosecutor's office in
the Philippines and that the suspects were in jail.
Somera said his staff were trying to determine whether the rape of the
Filipina domestic by the lawmen and one reportedly committed by the
nine teenagers were the same incident.
"Consul Mangibin promised to give us a comprehensive report of the
case. But it is nighttime there now. We are not sure if this is the
same case as the reported gang rape of a Filipina domestic helper by
nine
teenagers.
Quoting Garangan, Somera said the victim was all right but that she
would have to undergo some medical tests within the week.
Asian-Americans for Bush/Cheney
Racist Demon-KKK-Rats always talk about wimpy Old European French
"Surrender" Frogs, whilst insulting our brave New European, Latino and
Asian allies that have joined Iraqi Operation Freeedom.
See: http://www.cjtf7.army.mil/the-coalition/coalition-forces.htm
Racist Demon-KKK-Rats have not only attacked African-American
California Supreme Court Justice Janice Rogers Brown and
Honduran-American Miguel Estrada, but also other model minorities such
as Filipina-American Michelle Malkin, Chinese-American John Choon Yoo,
and Vietnamese-American Viet Dinh.
Michelle Malkin
http://www.pbs.org/tuckercarlson/
http://www.pbs.org/tuckercarlson/thisweek/
Michelle Malkin is a nationally syndicated columnist for Creators
Syndicate. Her wide-ranging and news-breaking - commentary has been
honored by several national organizations.
Her twice-weekly column is published by the Atlanta
Journal-Constitution, Miami Herald, St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Detroit
News, Washington Times, Rocky Mountain News, Philadelphia Daily News,
Houston Chronicle, Chicago Sun-Times, and New York Post, among a
rapidly growing number of newspapers across the country. She also
appears weekly in Jewish World Review.
Malkin began her career in newspaper journalism with the Los Angeles
Daily News, where she worked as an editorial writer and weekly
columnist from 1992-94. In 1995, she was named Warren Brookes Fellow
at the Competitive Enterprise Institute in Washington, D.C. In 1996,
she joined the editorial board of the Seattle Times, where she penned
editorials and weekly columns for three and a half years.
Malkin, the daughter of Filipino immigrants, was born in Philadelphia,
Pa. in 1970 and raised in southern New Jersey. She worked as a press
inserter, tax preparation aide, and network news librarian; she is
also
a lapsed classical pianist.
Malkin is a graduate of Oberlin College.
John Choon Yoo
John Yoo received his B.A., summa cum laude, in American history from
Harvard University. Between college and law school, he worked as a
newspaper reporter in Washington, D.C. He received his J.D. from Yale
Law School, where he was an articles editor of the Yale Law Journal.
He then clerked for Judge Laurence H. Silberman of the U.S. Court of
Appeals of the D.C. Circuit.
Professor Yoo joined the Boalt faculty in 1993, then clerked for
Justice Clarence Thomas of the U.S. Supreme Court. He served as
general counsel of the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee from 1995-96.
From 2001 to 2003, he served as a deputy assistant attorney general in
the Office of Legal Counsel at the U.S. Department of Justice, where
he worked on issues involving foreign affairs, national security and
the separation of powers.
He has been a visiting professor at the University of Chicago and the
Free University of Amsterdam. He has received research fellowships
from the University of California, Berkeley, the Olin Foundation and
the
Rockefeller Foundation, and is a visiting scholar at the American
Enterprise Institute. Professor Yoo also has received the Paul M.
Bator Award for excellence in legal scholarship and teaching from the
Federalist Society for Law and Public Policy. He has testified before
the judiciary committees of the U.S. Senate and House of
Representatives, and has advised the State of California on
constitutional issues.
Professor Yoo has published articles about foreign affairs,
international law and constitutional law in a number of the nationÕs
leading law journals, including the law reviews of Boalt Hall,
Chicago,
Columbia, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Texas. He is the author of War,
Peace, and the Constitution (University of Chicago Press, forthcoming
2005).
Education:
A.B., Harvard University (1989)
J.D., Yale University (1992)
Viet Dinh
http://www.asianam.org/viet%20dinh.htm
Loretto, PA. -- Viet Dinh is working the room. Viet Dinh, it seems, is
always working a room.
The room itself isn't much, at least not by the standards of one of
the rising stars of the Bush administration. A hundred or so faculty
members and supporters at Saint Francis University in rural
Pennsylvania are
lunching in a nondescript student center to hear Dinh, advisor to U.S.
Atty. Gen. John Ashcroft and a point man in the war on terrorism,
philosophize about how liberty and freedom can thrive even in a time
of national crisis.
But look closer, and the Vietnamese-born, Southern California-bred
Dinh has a more immediate agenda. Seated at lunch next to him is a
local district judge, D. Brooks Smith, whose promotion to a federal
appellate court has been imperiled by protests over his civil rights
record. Literally and figuratively, Dinh is at Smith's side.
Amid Dinh's broad legal colloquies and historical references to Nathan
Hale and William Penn, he delivers an impassioned endorsement of
Smith. He steps up the drumbeat for local television reporters after
his
speech, decrying the "liberal activists" who have threatened to derail
President Bush's nominee.
The scene is typical of Dinh and his remarkable ascent to power: Part
law school professor, part political pit bull, Dinh has navigated
seamlessly between the worlds of Ivory Tower academia and
sharp-elbowed
Washington politics to leave his imprint on a wide array of policy
decisions.
If Ashcroft and Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld are the face of
the Bush administration's anti-terrorism campaign, Dinh and a small
cadre of other behind-the-scenes advisors have emerged as its brain
trust.
At age 34, he already has filled a resume befitting a man twice his
age: boat refugee from Vietnam, Oregon fruit picker, Orange County
burger-flipper, Harvard Law School graduate, U.S. Supreme Court clerk,
Georgetown Law School professor, constitutional scholar, lawyer to a
high-powered congressional committee. His is "a spectacular American
story," Sen. Pete V. Domenici (R-N.M.) said in introducing Dinh to the
Senate during his confirmation hearings 16 months ago.
Dinh's current role as an assistant attorney general clearly has given
him his most important platform yet. At first a somewhat obscure
player in Ashcroft's Justice Department, his prominence in recent
months has
made him both a darling of the conservative movement and a lightning
rod for criticism from liberal-leaning politicians and civil rights
activists who assert that his views run roughshod over the
Constitution.
On topics as far-ranging as gun control, cyber pornography, human
trafficking and the selection of new federal judges, Dinh has played
an increasingly critical role in shaping federal law enforcement
policy.
But nowhere has his impact been felt more keenly than in the Bush
administration's highest priority: its aggressive war on terrorism.
Crafted Patriot Act
Dinh was the chief architect of the USA Patriot Act, the legislation
approved by Congress in the wake of the Sept. 11 attacks that gives
law enforcement agencies vastly expanded powers to track terror
suspects. He has been the official responsible for crafting a series
of anti-terrorism initiatives that would, among other things, require
the fingerprinting of potentially tens of thousands of visiting
foreigners from Middle East countries and would put foreign students
on a much tighter leash.
He revamped the law enforcement guidelines that Ashcroft announced in
May to give FBI agents new powers to snoop in mosques and surf the
Internet. And he is now working on a plan to promote better
coordination within the Justice Department and with agencies such as
the CIA, a task aimed at preventing the communication breakdowns that
preceded Sept. 11.
"I did not sign up for a war," Dinh said in an interview. "But it's a
privilege, a profound honor really, to serve your country in a time of
crisis. I can't imagine a better place for me to be right now."
What is perhaps most surprising to Justice Department observers is
that Dinh has achieved such influence as one of 11 assistant attorneys
general in charge of the Justice Department's Office of Legal Policy.
The office was once a low-profile, somewhat nebulous operation chiefly
concerned with federal judicial nominations--"a backwater," one former
employee, who worked for the department during Janet Reno's tenure,
called it. But with Ashcroft's blessing, Dinh has expanded the
office's reach into areas once considered far outside its domain.
Ashcroft's a Fan
Dinh, a wiry, energetic man who spews out ideas and legal theory at a
furious staccato clip, has turned his boss into one of his biggest
fans.
"It's hard to point to a part of this department," Ashcroft said in an
interview, "that isn't related to sound legal policy, so [Dinh] has
become an integral part of virtually every decision we make.... He
operates on a gold-medal level."
Dinh recalls the instructions Ashcroft gave him when he took over the
job last year.
"He told me: 'The art of leadership is the redefinition of the
possible. I want you to be the think tank to help me redefine the
possible for the Department of Justice.' That was a great charge for
an academic," Dinh said.
Some Republicans even speculate that Dinh could someday be a candidate
for the first Asian American justice on the Supreme Court. But with
success and visibility have come a growing chorus of critics who
attack his policies and politics.
Democrats on Capitol Hill have publicly chastised Dinh for
disregarding the privacy rights of law-abiding Americans. An irritated
former Secretary of State Warren Christopher challenged him at a law
conference
last summer by suggesting that the administration's refusal to
identify terrorist detainees reminded him of Argentina's notorious
practice of simply making prisoners "disappear." And gun control
advocates accuse
Dinh of serving as Ashcroft's buffer on 2nd Amendment issues, helping
to scale back regulations for enforcing gun laws.
"John Ashcroft has put together the most right-wing legal team in
modern Justice Department history, and Viet Dinh is, by all accounts,
a principal player. His impact has been felt across the department,"
said
Ralph Neas, president of People for the American Way, a liberal civil
rights group.
Where Bush administration loyalists see an aggressive counterattack on
terrorism, civil rights activists see an infringement on American
liberties. Where supporters see well-crafted public policy, critics
see far-reaching edicts made under a veil of secrecy.
"When you start acting by executive fiat, that's what leads to
governmental abuses," Neas said, "and that's why I'm so worried about
what Viet Dinh and John Ashcroft have been doing in the last year."
Emotional Memory
Nearly a quarter-century later, Dinh still becomes emotional when
remembering one scene: his mother in a Malaysian port, wielding an ax
that seemed bigger than she was, whacking holes in the side of the
vessel so she and five of her children would not be sent back out to
sea.
It was 1978. Dinh was 10. His father was being held as a political
prisoner in the family's war-ravaged homeland, when his mother, Nga
Thu Nguyen, tried to escape by sea with Viet and the other children.
They
were among 85 people crammed on a 15-foot-long boat, but as Dinh's
mother recalled in a recent telephone interview from her Garden Grove
home, "after three days, the boat was broken. After seven days, there
was no more food or water."
After 12 days, she had lost nearly all hope. But they came upon a Thai
fishing crew who gave them food and gas, helped fix the boat and
pointed them toward land. They reached Malaysia--only to be met by
gunshots from a patrol boat. The Malaysians didn't want them. Their
boat managed to dock, but Nguyen realized that the port police would
force them to leave the next morning, so she crept back out to the
boat alone that night with an ax, she said. "I just hit it and hit it
and made holes everywhere," she said.
Dinh, recounting the events last year before the Senate Judiciary
Committee as his nomination was considered, said it demonstrated for
him the "incredible courage" of his mother and the "incredible
lengths" to which people will go in search of freedom.
The administration's critics now find it ironic that Dinh, a refugee
himself and an inspiration to many Asian Americans in Southern
California, would advance policies that civil libertarians say place
many Arabs and Arab Americans under a cloud of suspicion. But Dinh
counters that his experience has given him a "special sensitivity to
what it means to be an American" and how important it is to apply the
law equally, regardless of race or ethnicity.
After six months as refugees in Malaysia, Dinh's family made it to
Oregon for Thanksgiving of 1978. They picked strawberries for menial
wages, sending money back to Dinh's father and a sibling hiding out in
Vietnam. After Mt. St. Helens erupted in 1980, the crop damage forced
his family to relocate to Fullerton.
In Orange County, the teenager worked with his mother in a sewing shop
and put in time at fast-food restaurants after school. The family's
persistence paid off in 1983 when Dinh's father finally made it to
America. Dinh's parents wanted him to be a doctor. But politics was
his passion, an interest fueled by his mother.
"He had a hatred of the Communists because I made him understand it
was the Communists who had taken his father away from the house and
put him in prison," Nguyen said. "I instilled that in him early on."
Like many Vietnamese immigrants, Dinh's emotional experience in his
homeland steered him toward the Republican Party because of the GOP's
hard-line stance against communism.
Youthful Volunteer
Garden Grove Councilman Van Tran remembers Dinh, just out of Fullerton
High School, volunteering to work the phone banks at an Asian American
voter registration center set up by then-Rep. Robert K. Dornan.
"He used to call me anh, or 'elder brother.' He stood out even then as
a lanky 18-year-old because he was someone who was very quick and very
witty," Tran said.
Dinh's reputation as affable, bright and politically astute would
follow him through Harvard University and Harvard Law School, which he
attended with the aid of scholarships and graduated magna cum laude,
and to the U.S. Supreme Court, where he clerked for Justice Sandra Day
O'Connor.
"He was a wonderful law clerk," O'Connor recalled recently. "I was so
fascinated by his background and the fact that he had arrived on our
shores with nothing but the clothes on his back, yet somehow he had
persevered."
By 1999, Dinh had firmly established his Republican credentials as a
lawyer for two of the most bitterly partisan initiatives in
Washington, working first for Sen. Alfonse M. D'Amato (R-N.Y.) in the
Senate
investigation into President Clinton's Whitewater dealings in the
mid-1990s, and later for Domenici during Clinton's impeachment trial.
When the 2000 presidential election led to a landmark lawsuit, Dinh
was there to write a friend-of-the-court brief before the U.S. Supreme
Court on behalf of a group of Florida voters who backed Bush's
position.
When Ashcroft's nomination as attorney general ran into widespread
opposition in January 2001 over his record on civil rights and other
issues, Dinh wrote an op-ed piece in the Washington Post extolling
Ashcroft's "deep compassion" for minorities.
And when Dinh was nominated a few months after that article to become
one of Ashcroft's top deputies, he contacted Tran and asked him to
call Rep. Loretta Sanchez (D-Garden Grove) to see whether she would be
willing to introduce him at his Senate confirmation hearings, even
though he was a Republican nominee, Tran said. Dinh's nomination was
confirmed by a 96-1 vote in the Senate.
Dinh was feted as a returning hero at a Vietnamese American festival
in Orange County last year.
"Sanchez understood right away the political significance of such a
gesture, and Viet got a bipartisan introduction" before the Senate,
Tran said. "I thought it was a brilliant move on his part."
Too brilliant, some of his Democratic detractors on Capitol Hill say.
While demanding anonymity because of frayed relations with Ashcroft's
office, several Democratic officials describe Dinh in terms such as
"rawly political," and have even coined a derisive nickname to
describe his aggressive politicking: "Viet Spin."
Democrats whisper that during his days on the Whitewater
investigation, Dinh was suspected of leaking confidential information
to the news media in order to hurt Clinton.
Dinh vehemently denies the charge, but Democrats say lingering
resentments over his Whitewater days--Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton
(D-N.Y) was the only senator to vote against his confirmation--have
hurt
his relations on Capitol Hill and caused tensions as the Ashcroft
administration has pushed to expand its law enforcement powers.
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,128301,00.html
Vietnamese-Americans Back Bush
Saturday, August 07, 2004
LOS ANGELES The John Kerry many Vietnamese-Americans remember is not
the hero promoted by the Democratic Party, but the ex-soldier who
returned to the United States to denounce the Vietnam War.
"His close association and anti-war activity make him known as Mr.
Jane Fonda," said Frank Jao, who fought in the South Vietnamese army
against the communist North.
Jao emigrated to California, and now is the Donald Trump of Orange
County's Little Saigon, the largest Vietnamese community outside of
Vietnam. In this area, 58 percent of the residents are registered
Republicans.
While older Vietnamese-Americans may see Kerry as a turncoat, many
younger voters are more open-minded, said Christian Collet, a pollster
with Pacific Opinions Research.
"There is definitely a handful ... that wants to put war behind them
and move forward with a constructive dialogue with Vietnam. And to
that extent, John Kerry will get a handful of votes from those
people,"
Collet said.
Another reason Vietnamese-Americans criticize Kerry is that he has
worked to block a bill forcing communist Vietnam to clean up its human
rights abuses. The bill passed 410 to 1 in the House, but Kerry
blocked it in the Senate. Kerry has claimed that the best way to
improve abuses in Vietnam is to engage the communists, not punish
them.
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Liberals Hate America!