![](http://library.vu.edu.pk/cgi-bin/nph-proxy.cgi/000100A/http/upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/e/e1/John_Ashcroft.jpg/200px-John_Ashcroft.jpg)
When it is so easy to rush to judgment and to be horribly wrong, how do judges do it?
This is where I share the wisdom that a granny, as an elder of the tribe, accumulates in her journey through life. The reach of my mind is wide, and sometimes even a little deep. Sometimes, like Whitman, I contradict myself. Sometimes I wax eloquent. Sometimes I fall on my face. Why not do it in public?
You are a Social Justice Crusader, also known as a rights activist. You believe in equality, fairness, and preventing neo-Confederate conservative troglodytes from rolling back fifty years of civil rights gains.
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7 comments:
I felt the same way when I heard that yesterday. So easy to misjudge a person but we had limited information to go by also. Still it made me feel good to know there are those in government who are defending the law, not just trying to get power. Amazing sometimes how jaded we can get.
Funny! It is a sad statement on how low our government is gone when we can see Ashcroft as one of the good guys. Still, we should give credit where credit is due.
I think judges are like us...human... and they clearly make mistakes.
You weren't wrong about Ashcroft. He was almost comatose on his sick bed and didn't realize what he was doing. Be thankful he wasn't himself. (There I go, being cynical, again.)
In retrospect, Ashcroft was a heck of a lot better at Attorney General than the little weasel. Gonzales. IMHO
I still don't like everything he did, and he isn't my favorite person, but he clearly does understand the Constitution better than anyone else in this administration has. And so, I would no longer condemn him to suffer.
like this post...the entire episode falls into my "you just never know" box.
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