One week after America’s birthday, happy anniversary to Karen Bass.
Thirty-three years ago this morning, she entertained her most recent independent thought.
Identifying Ms. Bass (D-Culver City) as a member of the House of Representatives is the equivalent of calling me the Postmaster General of Tanzania.
I assure you I have done as much for Tanzania in the past week as Ms. Bass has for Culver City the last five years.
Her seeing eye dog must have been on an extended holiday. If there is a more useless member of Congress, she does not have a name.
[img]1876|right|Ms. Mitchell||no_popup[/img]Just before the black and white liberal racists across America break out their riot gear or in jubilation as the nonsensical George Zimmerman trial nears the finish line, I took a closer look at the phony reactions of Ms. Bass and state Assemblymember Holly Mitchell (D-Culver City) after last month’s Supreme Court ruling softening the Voting Rights Act.
Hardline and hardheaded liberals, they are allowed/encouraged to make inflammatory racist statements, escaping untouched because they are politically insulated.
Both politically/professionally useless ladies are at their ignorant best when racism is the headline of the day.
Why, oh why, did they quit their better-suited housewifely chores? Give them a match, and they will ask which end to strike.
[img]1895|right|Ms. Bass||no_popup[/img]The appalling wisecracks Ms. Bass and the equally unenlightened Ms. Mitchell obligatorily made after the Supreme Court adjusted the Voting Rights Act stamp them as unfit to catch a cold much less pursue legislation.
Neither creaking lady seems to get outdoors much.
Have they heard Alaska joined the union? That we put a man on the moon?
Only liberal racists – possibly a redundancy – would nakedly argue the country has failed to make magnificent advances the past 48 years in race relations.
But Ms. Bass and Ms. Mitchell surely don’t read the newspapers, and their antique black and white television sets blithely are stuck on MSNBC.
Stubbornly, the ladies stand in cement. They talk racial mouthwash when racism is the ginned-up topic.
Said Ms. Bass after the Voting Rights Act decision:
“The ruling ignores significant evidence of continuing racial discrimination and efforts to interfere with the rights of minority voters. Congress must now act and pass legislation to ensure the right to vote is protected for every American.”
Ms. Bass could not enlarge on her garbled reasoning statement or remotely explain it. She probably did not understand it.
Ms. Mitchell’s profile differs minimally. Said she after the Court spoke: “The door to nefarious and biased voting requirements, such as the use of driver’s licenses as mandatory voting ID cards, has been swung wide open.”
Blather is a girl’s best friend when she will say anything to perpetuate herself in office. Sure beats returning to housewifely drudgery.
If Ms. Bass or Ms. Mitchell were forced to acknowledge the truth about racial progress and penalized for their clumsy avoidance of truth, they would lose the sympathy vote that seems to keep them underemployed in office.