HE IS OUR ONLY HOPE!
"You either embrace the constitution or shed the constitution"
THIS!
None of this wishy-washy BULLSHIT!
As a nation, we are in a death-spiral. We've lost our national identity and are a fucking collection of special interest groups clamoring for turds and shit-water at the public trough.......and those shitbag politicians are only too willing to encourage this.
Either we stand as "Americans" and "support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic" or we shitcan it all and remake ourselves into something else. GET IT FUCKING OVER WITH! Let the shit fall where it will, I'm sick of this bullshit.
and this is why i am getting a BIG FUCKING GUN SOON. (and a blonde once i get the gun--like this guy!)
She thinks your choice of rifle is a bit unwieldy :p
that's why i get teh blonde... to carry the ammo!
Judge is an interesting choice
Andrew Napolitano
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Andrew Napolitano
Andrew Napolitano at CPAC in February 2010.
Judge of the
New Jersey Superior Court
In office
1987–1995
Appointed by Thomas Kean
Personal details
Born Andrew Paolo Napolitano
June 6, 1950 (age 61)
Newark, New Jersey, United States
Alma mater Princeton University
Notre Dame Law School
Occupation Judge
Attorney
Media Personality
Religion Roman Catholic
Website Biography on FoxNews.com
Andrew Paolo Napolitano (born June 6, 1950) is a former New Jersey Superior Court Judge. He is a political and legal analyst for Fox News Channel, commenting on legal news and trials. Napolitano started on the channel in 1998.
Contents
[hide]
1 Early life, judicial and academic career
2 Media career
3 Writing career
4 Politics
5 Personal
6 References
7 External links
[edit] Early life, judicial and academic career
Napolitano was born in Newark, New Jersey. He is a graduate of Princeton University (he was a founding member of the Concerned Alumni of Princeton[1]) and Notre Dame Law School. Napolitano sat on the New Jersey bench from 1987 to 1995, becoming the state's youngest then-sitting Superior Court judge. He also served as an adjunct professor at Seton Hall University School of Law for 11 years. Napolitano resigned his judgeship in 1995 to pursue his writing and television career.
[edit] Media career
Prior to joining Fox as a news analyst, Napolitano was the presiding judge on the television show, Power of Attorney, in which people brought small-claims disputes to a televised courtroom. Differing from similar formats, the plaintiffs and defendants were represented "pro bono" by famous attorneys. The show ran in syndication during the 2000–2001 season.
From 2006 to 2010, Napolitano co-hosted a talk radio show on Fox News Radio with Brian Kilmeade titled Brian and the Judge.
Napolitano hosted a libertarian talk show called Freedom Watch that aired daily, with new episodes on weekdays, on Fox Business Channel.[2] Frequent guests on Freedom Watch were Congressman Ron Paul, economist Peter Schiff, and Lew Rockwell. Napolitano has called himself the "Ayn Rand of Fox News" and has also promoted the works of Friedrich Hayek, Milton Friedman and Ludwig von Mises on his program. The show originally aired once a week on Wednesdays at 2:00 pm on Fox News' Strategy Room. On September 14, 2009 it became a show that airs three to four times a week. On June 12, 2010 it debuted as a weekly show on Fox Business.
Napolitano regularly substituted for television host Glenn Beck when Beck was absent from his program. After Beck announced he would be leaving Fox News, he asked Napolitano to replace him.[3]
He also hosted the talk show Freedom Watch on Fox Business Channel, from 2009 until it was dropped along with several programs in February 2012 when FBC revamped its entire primetime lineup.[4]
[edit] Writing career
In 2004, Napolitano wrote the book, Constitutional Chaos: What Happens When the Government Breaks its Own Laws, a criticism of the American justice system. In the National Review, former federal prosecutor and senior fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies[5] Andrew McCarthy noted that Napolitano had been a mid-level state judge and questioned Napolitano's knowledge of the federal Constitution, citing what according to McCarthy were numerous errors in Napolitano's writing on the subject.[6]
In 2006, his second book, The Constitution in Exile: How the Federal Government Has Seized Power by Rewriting the Supreme Law of the Land was published.
A third book, A Nation of Sheep, was released in October 2007.
In April 2009, Napolitano's fourth book, Dred Scott's Revenge: A Legal History of Race and Freedom in America, was released.
In March, 2010, Napolitano's fifth book was released: Lies the Government Told You: Myth, Power, and Deception in American History.
In October, 2011, Napolitano's sixth book was released: It is Dangerous to be Right When the Government is Wrong: The Case for Personal Freedom.
[edit] Politics
Napolitano is a pro-life libertarian, more commonly known as libertarian conservatism.[7]
Napolitano has called consumer advocate and frequent presidential candidate Ralph Nader a hero of his.[8]
Napolitano believes that the 9/11 incidents including the subsequent collapse of the World Trade Tower buildings in New York City did not take place as the US government has publicly communicated. "It's "hard for me to believe that" World Trade Center building 7 "came down by itself," said Napolitano, "twenty years from now, people will look at 9-11 the way we look at the assassination of JFK today. It couldn't possibly have been done the way the government told us."[9]
[edit] Personal
Napolitano splits his time living in Manhattan and Sussex County, New Jersey where he owns a farm that produces maple syrup.[10]
Napolitano is not related to U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano, whom he sometimes jokingly calls "Cousin Janet."[citation needed]
[edit]
If anyone else wins, I may just go on a killing spree to jump start the revolution. Be gentle with my epitaph.