Slartibartfast wrote:
At the risk of incurring the wrath from high upon the thing, I'm returning to take another whack at the dead horse...
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Well, first, congrats on getting your renewal of this particular dead-horse beating past the moderators. I was not so sure I should go on. Oft as I have advanced the anti-birther position, and been lauded here for doing so, in this particular case I dared disagree with allies.
Slartibartfast wrote:
brygenon wrote:
Take, for example, the comment, "Granting the motion to add Laurie Roth was a gratuitous slap in Jablonski's face. Nothing more. It was a one-fingered salute." I don't see a lot of speculation there. I see an implication that a judge ruled based on personal animosity, so that's what I wrote.
Do you have a better explanation of why Judge Malihi granted the motion?
Yes, as I had given. But back to what was actually the issue there: I had written, "Sadly, people did imply that a judge ruled based on personal animosity." You seemed to disagree, calling what you saw "speculation", so I provided a specific example of someone implying that the judge ruled based on personal animosity.
Slartibartfast wrote:
Plus, I don't think I ever got a straight answer on how, were the personal-history thing real, Jablonski would fail to protect his client from it. I thought that in this case Jablonski fell far short of his reputation, but I never implied he was that bad.
[size=130][color=#0000BF][font=Garamond]Because Jablonski should have known what the ALJ was going to do?
No, not because of clairvoyance. Because of competence, and that it would be his job.
Slartibartfast wrote:
Again, the ALJ may have been playing partisan games rather than personal ones
What a bizarre theory. The ALJ issued the order of our dreams, the most comprehensive judicial debunking of birtherism yet. In Pennsylvania, Lavelle provided it as an exhibit.
Slartibartfast wrote:
[size=130][color=#0000BF][font=Garamond]No, you say something along the lines of "you people aren't as bad as birthers, but..." after which you go on to suggest that the boogle is behaving similarly to birthers in some way. To me, this seems to be damning with faint praise followed by a passive-aggressive attack.
"You people"? I've been a Fogbower and birther debunker for years. A couple times I've found some approaches distasteful, so I say so.
Slartibartfast wrote:
Quote:
Especially considering that you repeatedly maligned Mr. Jablonski for not showing up when you were repeatedly told that the decision wasn't his--it was his client's.
I don't believe you know what legal advice Jablonski decided to give.
Okay, you're the one pulling out birther tactics here--namely a straw man. I never said anything about what legal advice Jablonski gave"
So you've no grounds for your attacks on what I write. I never said Jablonski did not have his client's consent. You act lime I'm reasoning by pretension to see behind privilege, but that's what your argument requires, not mine.
Slartibartfast wrote:
How many games has team Obama pitched? Three or four? Maybe a half dozen or so? Why do you think that the catcher called the pitches for the others but Jablonski waved off the sign? And the question is not "what would lose?", the question is "would showing up have resulted in a better outcome?".
I grant that we could scarcely dream of a better result than the ALJ's decision. How one can credit that to Jablonski and hold on to the smears of the Judge is baffling. Malihi could have written a default order without going near the ludicrous birther arguments.
Slartibartfast wrote:
Furthermore, you are comparing apples to oranges as those cases were dismissed before they got this far (as this one should have been--at least according to Judge Wright). In the few previous cases where "Team Obama" was prepared to pitch, the opponents were disqualified before the start--that didn't happen here.
Who's job was it to get it dismissed? I myself am not so sure the ALC was in position to dismiss, operating as it was at the direction of the Secretary of State. Some here expected a motion for summary judgement.
Slartibartfast wrote:
If Malihi was wrong not to dismiss the case before his recommendation (not an order), then he was still wrong not to have done it afterwards. It boggles my mind that you think the standard should change--it seems fundamental to me that one shouldn't use double standards.
I don't follow your argument there, but I'm glad to see you disavow double-standards.
When Barry Ragsdale was on Reality Check's show, he commented that judges "are uniquely unable to defend themselves". The comment drew positive response. He went on, "and I believe that it is the responsibility of lawyers to defend judges when they are unfairly attacked."
http://www.blogtalkradio.com/rcr/2012/01/18/rc-radio @~ 31:40
Edit: Revised ambiguous wording; added link; fixed typo.