English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

Is this going to be like the deal against the democrat and the Horten deal?

2007-12-07 07:39:44 · 6 answers · asked by R J 7 in Politics & Government Elections

Micheal Romney also, a time frame, Mass?

2007-12-08 15:36:26 · update #1

skai that is a great answer. The link prvided prvides all the information needed. Duh! I'll use it in the future, had no idea they had that much and type info on the site. The Executive session gives me the answer. Thanks again.

2007-12-08 15:47:15 · update #2

6 answers

The best way in the world to get your dirty Deeds made public is to run for office...That is the time everything is aired. I feel in the Huckabee story that the true story involves all parties to some degree, history will tell the real story,,

2007-12-07 07:55:57 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

In the future, please be more clear and concise with your questions. The phrase "This deal" could have been construed as meaning that some kind of "deal" was being agreed upon, which certainly isn't the case, here. Furthermore, your question is vague, at best.

However, for the uninitiated, go to the link below, then read the following:

There isn't a lawyer or judge or politician who hasn't had at least one "client" who was freed or released prematurely and did something bad, afterwards.

Was it done on purpose, and should that person have known better?

A lawyer's job is to protect his client, innocent or not, so, in that regard, no one can possibly be expected to be at fault. The felon was given a second chance and blew it. Hardly anyone else's fault, as tragic as it may be for the victim(s) and their families and friends.

In the case of any politician or community leader, a potential early-release candidate is vetted by aides, so, in that regard, it's the fault of the aide, not the politician (yes, a leader should always accept responsibility for his underlings actions, but no leader can be expected to know everything about a given situation, and must trust his underlings to provide quality information).

That is all I can say; next time, ask a more proprely phrased question.

2007-12-07 16:07:22 · answer #2 · answered by skaizun 6 · 1 0

God, is Willie Horton still haunting us? How many decades do people hope to get milleage out of one case?

2007-12-07 16:00:14 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

This same type of issue has plagued Romney as well.

2007-12-07 15:45:37 · answer #4 · answered by Michael M 6 · 1 1

it shows very poor judgment that he's made, strictly due to political pressures. he chose to tow the party line then to do the right thing. he should get grief for it.

2007-12-07 15:47:24 · answer #5 · answered by jack spicer 5 · 1 1

it was a bad move on his part. But it shouldn't be an issue

2007-12-07 15:54:16 · answer #6 · answered by J 1 5 · 1 1

fedest.com, questions and answers