merica's head-long rush into multiculturalism was pushed into high gear with President Barack Obama's nomination of an openly anti-white Judge Sonia Sotomayor to the U.S. Supreme Court. America's embrace of mulitculuralist ideology appears to be so complete that Republicans who expressed concern about her ethnic chauvinism were denouced for alleged "racial rhetoric."
The Hispanic Sotomayor publicly describes herself as an "affirmative action baby" and is a staunch supporter of suppressing whites to advance Hispanic interests. Her sojourn to fame and power in America began when Princeton University and Yale Law School, salivating over her ethnicity, overlooked her lower test scores to admit her, displacing higher-scoring white students who were thereby blocked from admission.
"If we had gone through the traditional numbers route of those institutions, it would have been highly questionable if I would have been accepted... My test scores were not comparable to that of my classmates," Sotomayor boasted.
She believes that merit alone should not be used as selection critera, and openly advocates favoring non-whites over whites. "Since I have difficulty defining merit and what merit alone means, and ... whether it's judicial or otherwise, I accept that different experiences, in and of itself, bring merit to the system," she said, adding, "I think it brings to the system more of a sense of fairness when these litigants see people like myself on the bench."
She told Hispanic law students in a 1996 speech that "the Latina in me is an ember that blazes forever," and in 2001 told another university audience that a wise Latina judge would make better decisions than a white man.
"I would hope that a wise Latina woman with the richness of her experiences would more often than not reach a better conclusion than a white male hasn't lived that life," she said.
President Obama dismissed that remark, saying she didn't mean what she said, and that she would have chosen different words. But a review of her speeches reveals that she has expressed the same sentiment several times. For example, in a 1999 speech to the Women's Bar Association in New York, she called for "sister power!" and brazenly asserted, "I would hope that a wise woman with the richness of her experience would, more often than not, reach a better conclusion."
She made the same remarks again in a 2003 speech delivered at Seton Hall University.
After former House Speaker Republican Newt Gingrich criticized her remarks as "racist," the Washington Post described his comments as "racially tinged rhetoric," and CNN described GOP criticism of Sotomayor as "racially charged." But none of America's corporate journalists used those phrases to describe Sotomayor's own brazenly racist remarks.
Stung by the media, Gingrich, who is eyeing a possible presidential run in 2012, withdrew his comments. But many in the GOP agree with the original observation he posted on his Internet page, which read, "Imagine if a judicial nominee had said, my experience as a white man makes me better than a Latina woman.' Wouldn't he have to withdraw?"
Sotomayor has a long history of anti-white racism, including membership in the openly racist National Council of la Raza, whose multi-million dollar operation hires only Hispanic workers, has taken federal money to help only Hispanics buy houses, and publicly advocates suppressing whites to advance Hispanics in positions of power and authority.
Sotomayor currently sits on the appellate court that decided against Frank Ricci, a white firemen in New Haven, Connecticut, who was turned down for a promotion because none of the blacks who took the same promotion exam were able to pass it. Ricci and other white firefighters who passed the test went to court seeking fairness but were turned down.
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