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View Full Version : Palin Nominee Angers Feminists, Tied to WN


Mike Parker
April 16th, 2009, 06:17 AM
[She's a worthless moronic cunt, but I'd like to hear more about this guy.]

Palin's New Disaster

by Max Blumenthal

http://www.tdbimg.com/files/2009/04/13/img-bs-top---blumenthal-palin-ross-174_095905395963.jpg
Rick Bowmer/AP Photo The governor is reeling after nominating for attorney general a man who allegedly defended the right of men to rape their wives. Now, Max Blumenthal reports, she may dump him to save herself.

While priming her political machine for a likely 2012 presidential primary run, Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin has fomented a scandal that threatens to further erode her reputation in the Last Frontier. In March, Palin nominated Wayne Anthony Ross for attorney general. Ross, a colorful far-right lawyer and longtime Palin ally who sports his initials, W.A.R., on his Hummer’s vanity plates, was once considered a shoo-in for confirmation. However, his nomination was thrown into grave peril when his opponents presented evidence that he called homosexuals “degenerates,” leveled invective against an African-American student offended by a statue of a Klansman, vowed to undermine the sovereignty of Native American tribes, and allegedly defended men who rape their wives. According to two sources close to the confirmation hearings, Palin may ask Ross to withdraw before his appointment comes to a vote.

Palin’s hopes for a swift confirmation process were dashed April 10 when Leah Burton, a veteran lobbyist on children’s issues and domestic violence, submitted a letter to the Alaska State Judiciary Committee claiming that Ross publicly defended spousal rape. According to Burton, who detailed the allegations for me, Ross allegedly declared during a speech before a 1991 gathering of the “father’s rights” group Dads Against Discrimination, “If a guy can’t rape his wife, who’s he gonna rape?” (In a subsequent letter, Ross denied the remark and claimed, “I don’t talk like that!”)

Burton said Ross’s statement was consistent with his overarching attitude toward women’s issues. She claimed that he once said during a debate on the Equal Rights Amendment, “If a woman would keep her mouth shut, there wouldn’t be an issue with domestic violence.” Burton also maintained she has been in touch with “a number” of domestic-violence victims who witnessed Ross make “horrible” statements, but are too intimidated to speak out. “Alaska is a very small state and it’s terrifying for these victims to come forward because they’re afraid of retribution,” Burton told me.

Since Burton’s testimony, her father, former Alaska Public Safety Commissioner Richard Burton, wrote a letter of his own demanding to Ross that he withdraw his nomination. “You sir, speak and act like the kind of bully I met many times when responding to domestic-violence calls, some of the most dangerous situations police officers are often in,” Burton wrote. Ross reacted with characteristic fury to the Burtons’ broadsides, barking to reporters that if “anybody said that to me, we'd have a little confrontation because that's a bunch of crap.” At the same time, a grassroots group raising support for Palin's presidential bid called Conservatives4Palin attacked Leah Burton as an anti-Christian "fringe nutcase."

But as pro-Palin forces attempted to push back against Ross’s critics, dozens of op-eds Ross authored during the 1980s and 1990s surfaced as key exhibits in the case against his confirmation. Among them is a 1993 piece entitled, “KKK ‘art’ project gets ‘A’ for courage,” in which Ross defended a local college student who had offended an African-American classmate by creating a statue of a Klansman with a cross in one hand and a flag in the other. “It might have been fun to see [the African-American student] try to remove the display,” Ross wrote. “Then she could have been arrested and her future as a student of the university could have been resolved through the university disciplinary proceedings.”

During the early 1980s, while Anchorage residents grappled over renaming the city’s 15th Street as Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard, and state legislators mulled establishing a state holiday honoring the assassinated civil-rights leader, Ross wrote several manifestoes attacking King as a communist subversive, according to University of Alaska-Anchorage music professor and local progressive activist Phil Munger. Munger also told me Ross has routinely appeared at public events beside his friend, Don Tanner, a white nationalist who moved to South Africa for a period during the 1980s to support its apartheid government, and who reveled crowds of conservatives with anti-black “South African jokes” upon his return to Alaska.

A glance at Ross’s published archive shows he never limited his resentment to minorities. He taunted environmentalists (“It is time we quit crying over the oil spill” was the title of an editorial he wrote in the wake of the Exxon Valdez disaster); he denounced homosexuals as “degenerates” during a 1993 legal fight over a local gay-rights ordinance; and announced that his final wish before dying was to overturn Roe v. Wade. While rising through the ranks of the NRA’s national leadership in the 1980s, Ross published a piece in the mercenary magazine Soldier of Fortune, defending the right to form antigovernment militias.

“Ross’s profile fits where Palin wants to go after the current legislative session ends,” Munger remarked to me. “She seems to be planning some behind-the-scenes movement to stir up the crazies, especially by convincing them the federal government is going take their guns away. So nobody here is surprised by this selection.”

While Ross sustained withering criticism for his views on social issues, Native American tribes denounced his vociferous opposition to their subsistence rights. The tribes were especially disturbed by his vow during a 2002 gubernatorial debate to “hire a band of junkyard dog” attorneys to gut federal laws guaranteeing natives subsistence preferences. “It almost looked like she was rubbing our face in Anthony Ross’s appointment,” said Tim Towarak, co-chairman of the Alaska Federation of Natives, told The Bristol Bay Times. “Like rubbing our face on the ground, saying ‘Here, take this.’” With increasingly powerful tribal groups mobilizing a united front against Ross, Palin was compelled to defend her own record, pleading, “Obviously I am not anti-Native and would never appoint anyone who is.”

If Palin withdraws Ross’s nomination, she could end another embarrassing political spectacle before it registers on the national press corps’ radar. Alternatively, if she manages to ram his appointment through, Palin can begin implementing a hard-right legal agenda that will appeal to the elements she is cultivating as the base of her likely 2012 presidential campaign. However Palin decides to proceed with W.A.R., by nominating him, she has staked out the culture war as the fuel for her national ambitions.

Max Blumenthal is a senior writer for The Daily Beast and writing fellow at The Nation Institute, whose book, Republican Gomorrah (Basic/Nation Books), is forthcoming in Spring 2009. Contact him at maxblumenthal3000@yahoo.com.

http://www.thedailybeast.com/blogs-and-stories/2009-04-13/palins-new-disaster

John in Woodbridge
April 16th, 2009, 06:34 AM
“If a guy can’t rape his wife, who’s he gonna rape?”

Not that I agree with this statement in the literal sense, but that's a pretty damn funny statement.

Nate Richards
April 16th, 2009, 08:03 AM
Well, the guy claims he didn't say that. Without audio, who knows?

It's hard to imagine a man standing up in front of a crowd, even a pro-male group like his, and using that term.

Between that, and knowing how leftists are, I suspect he said something like "If a man can't have sex with his wife" etc.

He might have even been crude enough to use the word "fuck", but I doubt it. This is a politician type and he's not going to do that, at least not in front of a big crowd.

Leftists in general, and feminists in particular, love to expand the definition of the word "rape". Consent isn't enough. They encourage women to imagine themselves as rape victims, if they were ever involved in any heterosexual activity that they were less than 100% enthusiastic about. Even if a woman feels unhappy about it LATER ON, that somehow makes it a rape.

Men and women do things for each other that they'd rather not, all the time. You pretty much have to, if it's anything more than a one-night stand.

I myself have many a time been coerced, through verbal abuse, into painful and demeaning acts. This one time, she supposedly had a big work deadline, and she belittled my need for "me time" on the computer. She made me feel lazy and inconsiderate. So I did it. I cleaned the litter box. I felt so... dirty. I took a hot shower, but just couldn't get clean.

The Barrenness
April 16th, 2009, 04:06 PM
I would like to see his kkk article that is referenced. It may be really nothing more than this guy defending free speech and expression. Those who oppose him are the kind of people who are also generally insane and might find that idea unaccepable. His other comments might also be just as taken out of context and blown out of proportion. He sounds like an interesting character to be sure but remember the sources of information here.

Anchorage Activist
April 16th, 2009, 05:18 PM
Bad news! We've been overtaken by events. Wayne Anthony Ross has just been rejected as the nominee by a joint session of the Alaska State Legislature:

http://www.adn.com/front/story/762037.html

Lawmakers reject Ross as attorney general

Anchorage Daily News

Published: April 16th, 2009 01:24 PM
Last Modified: April 16th, 2009 02:03 PM

JUNEAU -- The Alaska Legislature today rejected Wayne Anthony Ross as attorney general. Meeting in joint session, the House and Senate voted 35-23 against confirming the Anchorage attorney. Ross was nominated by Gov. Sarah Palin to replace Talis Colberg, who resigned earlier this year. The vote followed more than an hour of debate that crossed party lines.

Among the Republicans who voted against Ross were House Speaker Mike Chenault of Nikiski and Senate President Gary Stevens of Kodiak.

The nomination of Ross, an outspoken gun-rights advocate, proved controversial on multiple fronts. Alaska Natives criticized his past opposition to tribal sovereignty and subsistence hunting and fishing rights for rural residents. He drew fire for past characterization of gays as "immoral" and "degenerate."

This week he ran into trouble with some lawmakers when he waded into the fray between Palin and Senate Democrats over filling Juneau's vacant state Senate seat. He said Democrats should fill the seat without arguing about whether the process was legal or illegal.

The Anchorage Daily News helped administer the coup de grace by this hit piece (http://www.adn.com/opinion/view/story/761069.html) on Ross.

Mike Chenault's opposition is a surprise. Chenault is a hard-line paleoconservative who's pushing to restore the death penalty in Alaska. Wayne Anthony Ross is obviously not a WN, but he has taken a number of positions neutral and even favorable to our Cause. Strong Second Amendment supporter, opposes the promotion of faggotry, supports states' rights. Has run twice for Governor unsuccessfully. More background on Ross posted HERE (http://alaskapride.blogspot.com/2009/03/alaska-governor-sarah-palin-makes-best.html).

Anchorage Activist
April 16th, 2009, 05:25 PM
A radical feminist author named Leah Burton also participated in the hit job against Wayne Anthony Ross. She accused him of making "offensive" remarks at some meeting at Denny's over 15 years ago. Details, including Ross' response, posted HERE (http://alaskapride.blogspot.com/2009/04/radical-feminist-author-and-so-called.html).

Anchorage Activist
April 16th, 2009, 08:57 PM
I would like to see his kkk article that is referenced. It may be really nothing more than this guy defending free speech and expression. Those who oppose him are the kind of people who are also generally insane and might find that idea unaccepable. His other comments might also be just as taken out of context and blown out of proportion. He sounds like an interesting character to be sure but remember the sources of information here.

A part of the KKK article referenced can be found on this blog (http://ohcrapihaveacrushonsarahpalin.blogspot.com/2009/04/kkk-art-project-gets-for-courage.html). It's an excerpt from a December 1991 opinion column by Ross published in the now-defunct Anchorage Times:

Art professor Ken Gray proclaimed it "a tragedy" to be forced by threat of violence Friday into removing the larger-than-life replica of a Ku Klux Klansman that one of his students put on exhibit at the University of Alaska Anchorage on Wednesday. The hooded and robed giant stick figure, bearing a cross in one hand and a flag in the other, was supposed to stay up until next week. But late Friday afternoon, Gray disassembled the sculpture after two of its most vocal critics threatened to tear it down themselves.

UAA's student government president, Michelle Parks, said she is happy the sculpture has been removed. Like many other students who were puzzled by the lack of any written message or title to explain the sculpture's intent, Parks said she believes it could too easily be interpreted as sending a hate message.

"But I hope when they took it down they did it right, because it could have just as easily been my statue that someone else didn't agree with," she said.

Parks, who is black, said the controversy underscores the complaint that minority students have been voicing lately in ever-louder tones that there is not enough sensitivity on campus to the concerns of ethnic and racial minority students.

"I don't think it was the intent of the professor to offend anyone," she said. "I just don't think he was aware of how we felt."

I had only been in Alaska for two months when this story broke, so I don't remember it. But it sounds like anti-racist "terrorism". Wayne Anthony Ross was taking issue with hypersensitive non-whites. Too bad Ross wasn't confirmed; I could have tried to spin this in his favor.