From Jennifer Rubin in the Washington Post:
…The statements indicate several points: 1) the New Black Panther Party case brought by career Justice Department employees was meritorious on the law and the facts; 2) there is voluminous evidence of the Obama administration’s political interference in the prosecution of the New Black Panther Party case; 3) there is ample evidence that the Obama administration directed Justice Department employees not to bring cases against minority defendants who violated voting rights laws or to enforce a provision requiring that states and localities clean up their voting rolls to prevent fraud; 4) the Justice Department stonewalled efforts to investigate the case; and 5) vice chairman Abigail Thernstrom has, for reasons not entirely clear, ignored the evidence and tried to undermine the commission’s work…
Here is a link to the US Commission on Civil Right’s investigation of the NBPP case. As noted above, it is clear that the Obama Administration has decided not to enforce voting rights laws when violated by minorities – in other words, if you have a certain skin color, you are free to violate whatever laws you wish…race-based law enforcement, otherwise known as racism. Just as once upon a time a white man could get away with violating a black man’s rights, now a non-white person can do the same.
You cannot get justice by applications of injustice. No matter how much racism was directed against minorities in the past it does not justify applications of racism now or in the future. A wrong deed is a wrong deed – it stands alone and must be condemned and not repeated. Obama’s Administration seems determined to carry out the liberal ideal that two wrongs do make a right.
The House must investigate this and bring all the principals in to testify under oath – we must expose to the American people that our Executive branch has decided that some laws shall not be enforced because the latest liberal fads are more important than justice. We dare not allow liberals to impose a new racism upon the United States – “and justice for all” isn’t just a set of words, it is a requirement for America.