Posted on 09/11/2017 4:07:53 PM PDT by Liberty7732
I wrote here about how Rep. Luis Gutierrez called John Kelly, President Trumps chief of staff, a hypocrite and a disgrace to the uniform he used to wear. Kelly served in the military for more than 40 years.
Gutierrez never served a day. However, he became hysterical over Trumps decision to phase out the DACA program, while giving Congress the opportunity to implement its protections. Gutierrez claimed that Trumps action violated a promise Kelly had made. As I demonstrated here, though, there is no inconsistency between what Gutierrez says Kelly promised no mass deportations of dreamers and the winding down of a program that granted them secure status plus benefits.
Kelly has now responded to Gutierrez. He said:
As far as the congressman and other irresponsible members of congress are concerned, they have the luxury of saying what they want as they do nothing and have almost no responsibility. They can call people liars but it would be inappropriate for me to say the same thing back at them. As my blessed mother used to say empty barrels make the most noise.
(Excerpt) Read more at powerlineblog.com ...
Luis Gutierrez’ face has been stuck in that same expression since he was a kid and scared by a clown.
Same thing happened to Chuck Schumer.
Someone please fill me in on Mr. Gutierrez’s service in the armed forces. I knew some fine Puerto Rican soldiers in my time in.
Gutterez is no American. This turd should be ashamed of himself, yet he isn’t.
Did you serve Gutterboy? I don’t think so. Did you lose a child fighting for America, Gutterboy? I don’t think so.
I’d like to wipe that smirk off of this alien’s ugly face.
Really! He’s a sour faced anti-American.
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There was a time when American terrorists moved to a Latin beat. Puerto Rican Independence was the song, and it had been pulsing in the background for decades.
On Friday, Jan. 24, 1975, it exploded onto center stage.
The place was Fraunces Tavern, the historic red- and yellow-brick restaurant on Pearl St. where, as any tour book will tell you, that most famous of American freedom fighters, George Washington, said farewell to his officers in 1783.
History would again be made at the tavern on a mild winter day 192 years later.
A lively crowd of Wall Streeters and business executives were having lunch in the Anglers and Tarpon Club, in a second floor dining room adjacent to the main building. Among them were Harold H. Sherburne, 66, whose career on Wall Street spanned four decades, and a young banker, Frank Connor, 33, who had worked his way up over 15 years from clerk to assistant vice president at Morgan Guaranty Trust. Two executives, James Gezork, 32, of Wilmington, Del., and Alejandro Berger, 28, who worked for a Philadelphia-based chemical company, had traveled to New York for business meetings.
It would be their last meal.
At 1:29 p.m., a tremendous explosion rocked the building, sending shivers up to the 60th floor cafeteria of the nearby Chase Manhattan Bank building. Firefighters found a scene of utter havoc, with blood- and dust-covered men and women, many in business attire, writhing in agony in the streets, or shrieking under piles of rubble, or wandering about with stunned, blank eyes.
Sherburne, Connor and Berger died on the spot. Gezork lost his fight for life later at the hospital.
Within 15 minutes even as, the News noted, dazed and screaming victims, one of them with an arm torn off, were being carried away the Associated Press received a phone call. The caller boasted that the bomb was the handiwork of the FALN, the Armed Forces of Puerto Rican National Liberation, radicals devoted to using violence to free the island from the grips of the United States.
In a note police found in a phone booth nearby, the FALN wrote, we take full responsibility for the especially detornated (sic) bomb that exploded today at Fraunces Tavern, with reactionary corporate executives inside.
The note explained that the bomb roughly 10 pounds of dynamite that had been crammed into an attaché case and slipped into the taverns entrance hallway was retaliation for the CIA ordered bomb that killed three and injured 11, one a child, in a restaurant in Puerto Rico.
You have unleashed a storm from which you comfortable Yankis (sic) cannot escape, the writers warned.
Few Americans had heard of the group or its gripes before, even though the question of Puerto Rican independence had been long debated. FALN saw violence as the only path to freedom, despite the views of Puerto Rican voters, who consistently favored maintaining U.S. ties.
Witnesses said they saw two Hispanic men running from the scene just before the explosion, but police could not find them, and the investigation stalled.
More bombings followed here, including one in the Mobil Building on 42nd St. that killed an attorney, and in Chicago, Washington, D.C., Newark and Miami. Over the next nine years, FALN would take credit for more than 130 bombings that killed six, and maimed and injured scores of victims.
Each time the terrorists evaded capture.
Investigators had nothing until July 12, 1978, when another explosion uncovered an FALN bomb factory, in a two-room apartment in Queens.
William Morales, an FALN explosives expert, had been building a pipe bomb when something went wrong. Three-quarters of his face, six teeth, his right eye, and all but one of his fingers, a thumb, were blown off.
No firm evidence could be found to link Morales to the Fraunces Tavern attack, but his possession of the explosives including 70 sticks of dynamite earned him a jail sentence of 89 years.
He did not serve much time. Although he had no fingers and just one eye, Morales somehow managed to escape from Bellevue Hospitals prison ward by using an ACE bandage to lower himself 40 feet to the ground. He fled to Mexico, and then to Cuba, where he remains, free, to this day.
No one was ever tried for planting the Fraunces Tavern bomb, although in the early 1980s, 16 FALN members, including one of the leaders, Oscar Lopez-Rivera, were arrested and convicted of plotting to overthrow the government, weapons possession, and other charges. In 1999, President Bill Clinton made the highly controversial decision, which was opposed by the FBI and other law-enforcement agencies and Clintons own wife, to offer clemency for FALN prisoners. His rationale: The punishments, long prison sentences of 70 or more years, did not fit the crimes.
Lopez-Rivera, who turned down Clintons offer, is the last FALN member still behind bars. Attending his January 2011 parole hearing was a small group of victims of FALN terrorists, led by Joseph Connor. He was 9 years old when his father died over lunch at Fraunces Tavern.
Lopez-Riveras bid for parole was denied and he will not be eligible again until 2021. Finally, Connor said in a presentation at the National Press Club in June, some justice for our father, Frank Connor, and other victims of the FALN.
Bump! And Louie LaRaza didn’t serve.
‘As my blessed mother used to say empty barrels make the most noise.’
Unfortunately Kelly is wrong. Gut is not an empty barrel. He’s a barrel of sh$t.
petulant puto
In 1999 Gutierrez collaborated with fellow Progressive Caucus members Jose Serrano and Nydia Velazquez to pressure President Bill Clinton (through Deputy Attorney General Eric Holder) to free 16 convicted terrorists belonging to the FALN, a Marxist-Leninist paramilitary organization that had carried out 146 bombings during a 25-year period, killing 9 people while injuring and maiming dozens of others.
Indeed, Gutierrez was the FALN's chief spokesman and advocate during the campaign to release its incarcerated members.
As attorney Deborah Burlingame wrote in 2013: "Rep. Gutierrez, against all evidence, including FBI undercover videotapes of these people making bombs, called them political prisoners and threatened to marshal the Puerto Rican community against the Clintons [and] Vice President [Al] Gore, [who was] then preparing a presidential run as well."
For additional details about the FALN case and the Clinton pardons, click here.
http://www.discoverthenetworks.org/individualProfile.asp?indid=1265
On January 17, 2017, as one of the final acts of his presidency, Barack Obama commuted the sentence of 74-year-old Oscar Lopez Rivera, the Puerto Rican nationalist who had served 35 years of a 55-year conviction for the crime of seditious conspiracy, as well as attempted robbery, explosives and vehicle-theft charges. Thanks to Obamas intercession, Lopez will be freed in May.
In some quarters, Obamas decision was greeted with elation. Spontaneous celebrations broke out in San Juan. Luis Gutiérrez, a Democratic congressman from Illinois who represents the West Side Chicago neighborhood in which Lopez grew up, said in a statement that he was overjoyed and overwhelmed by Lopezs release. Oscar is a friend, a mentor, and family to me, wrote Gutierrez. According to the New York Daily News, Melissa Mark-Viverito, the speaker of the New York City Council and a rising Democratic Party star, cried when she heard the news, calling Lopezs release incredible and a morale boost for Puerto Rico. Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders, who lobbied hard for Lopezs commutation, and New York Mayor Bill de Blasio both offered Obama their thanks. And Lin Manuel Miranda, who has been a vocal proponent for Lopez, tweeted that he was sobbing with gratitude. (He furthermore added that he would reprise his role in Hamilton for one night in Chicago in Lopezs honor.)
http://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2017/01/oscar-lopez-commutation-barack-obama-214685
From 1984-86 Gutierrez, a Democrat, served as an advisor to Mayor Harold Washington of Chicago.
In 1986 Gutierrez was elected alderman of that city's mostly-Hispanic 26th Ward.
At the time, he was a member of the Puerto Rican Socialist Party, a Marxist-Leninist entity.
http://www.discoverthenetworks.org/individualProfile.asp?indid=1265
In 2005 Gutierrez joined the Out of Iraq Congressional Caucus.
Also in 2005, Gutierrez joined Xavier Becerra and Raul Grijalva in backing the efforts of Latinos for Peace, an anti-Iraq War front group for the Communist Party USA.
http://www.discoverthenetworks.org/individualProfile.asp?indid=1265
PING
I thought Kelly’s job was administrative, not policy making.
I knew Little Luis growing up in Chicago near Humboldt Park.
He was a cowardly little Gang Banger in the Latin Kings.
Big man in his sweater with his buddies. Ran like a chicken one on one.
Come to think of it, Gutierrez does kind of look, sound, and act like some big dude’s punk.
I guess he must have gotten something busted inside while he was being used.
The US needs to reciprocate with action of other countries law concerning immigration
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