Friday, July 19, 2013

Plástico bolha é mais legal que muita gente.



Almost immediately after the "not-guilty" verdict for George Zimmerman, race-baiters like Al Sharpton and others began stirring up the media and agitating low-information masses -- demanding a perceived wrong be made right.

Their efforts might be paying off.

This week, Attorney General Eric Holder "officially" got involved when he called the shooting of Trayvon Martin, "tragic and unnecessary." In speeches to African-American groups on back-to-back days, Holder vowed that the Department of Justice (DOJ) would "follow the facts and the law," as they reviewed evidence to determine whether or not to file federal charges against Zimmerman.

With the Leftist media leading what some have called a "witch hunt" against the former neighborhood watchman, National Liberty Federation asks: "What role, if any, should Holder and the DOJ have in the case? Should they press for hate-crime and federal charges? Should they be using tax dollars to further investigate a man already found innocent?"

+ + Tell Congress & The Justice Department What You Think!

Patriot, National Liberty Federation has created a unique platform for our team members to express their thoughts, concerns and suggestions directly to Congress & the Justice Department.


National Liberty Federation will collect your comments and suggestions and deliver to Congress & Justice Department on Monday. Don't miss this unique opportunity to share your unfettered and uncensored thoughts -- completely free of liberal-media bias -- with Holder and the DOJ.





I don't usually write emails like this, and we don't usually send messages like this to this list. But I just finished reading the draft of a speech the President plans to deliver on Wednesday, and I want to explain why it's one worth checking out.
Eight years ago, not long after he was elected to the United States Senate, President Obama went to Knox College in his home state of Illinois where he laid out his economic vision for the country. It's a vision that says America is strongest when everybody's got a shot at opportunity -- not when our economy is winner-take-all, but when we're all in this together.
Revisiting that speech, it's clear that it sowed the seeds of a consistent vision for the middle class he's followed ever since. It's a vision he carried through his first campaign in 2008, it's a vision he carried through speeches like the one he gave at Georgetown University shortly after taking office that imagined a new foundation for our economy, and one in Osawatomie, Kansas on economic inequality in 2011 -- and it's a vision he carried through his last campaign in 2012.
All of these speeches -- Knox College, Georgetown, Osawatomie -- make clear that since day one, the President has had one clear economic philosophy: The American economy works best when it grows from the middle-out, not the top-down.
This Wednesday, almost five years after the financial crisis fueled a devastating recession, and two years after a debate over whether or not America would pay its bills that harmed our recovery, the President will return to Knox College to kick off a series of speeches that will lay out his vision for rebuilding an economy that puts the middle class and those fighting to join it front and center. He'll talk about the progress we've made together, the challenges that remain, and the path forward.
And over the next several weeks, the President will deliver speeches that touch on the cornerstones of what it means to be middle class in America: job security, a good education, a home to call your own, affordable health care when you get sick, and the chance to save for a secure, dignified retirement. They will include new ideas and new pushes for ideas he has discussed before. They'll outline steps Congress can take, steps he'll take on his own, and steps the private sector can take that benefit us all.
The point is to chart a course for where America needs to go -- not just in the next three months or even the next three years, but a steady, persistent effort over the long term to restore this country's basic bargain for the middle class.
Why now? Well, we've made important progress with the Senate passing comprehensive immigration reform and will continue to work with the House to push to get that enacted into law. But the President thinks Washington has largely taken its eye off the ball on the most important issue facing the country. Instead of talking about how to help the middle class, too many in Congress are trying to score political points, refight old battles, and trump up phony scandals. And in a couple of months, we will face some more critical budget deadlines that require Congressional action, not showdowns that only serve to harm families and businesses -- and the President wants to talk about the issues that should be at the core of that debate.
As I was reading through his draft, I was reminded what drives this President to work so hard. I hope you'll watch this video showing the context of the last eight years and then tune in on Wednesday to find out. I don't think you'll be disappointed.
Thank you,
Dan
Dan Pfeiffer
Senior Advisor to the President
The White House
Visit WhiteHouse.gov



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