The Ghost of John Edwards
Mike Adams
6/16/2014 12:01:00 AM - Mike Adams
John Edwards' old campaign manager, Josh Stein, is the current
North Carolina Senator in District 16. He's also among the most extreme and
dangerous politicians in the state. Among the reasons he is dangerous are a)
his assertion that killing unborn children is a fundamental constitutional
right and b) his suggestion that Senate Republicans are more dangerous than
Islamic extremists.
It is bad enough that this former disciple of John Edwards is
serving in our state senate. To make matters worse, he also wants to be the
next attorney general of the Tar Heel State. If you aren't concerned about that
then take the time to familiarize yourself with what Stein had to say about
anti-Sharia and anti-abortion legislation that was previously proposed in the
North Carolina legislature.
According to a far left website, ForwardProgressives.com, which
reports favorably on Stein, he said in part, “We had this anti-Sharia bill on
the calendar this morning. It was a one or two page bill. Then that meeting
gets canceled. Alright, fine. Then we get notice immediately before, that
bill’s coming back up. We’ve seen that bill before, we’re ready to go in there
and debate it. We go in there and (now) it has five or six new provisions on
abortion. What is the relationship between Sharia law and abortion?"
Before Senator Stein answers that question for us, let us make
sure that we understand what he is implying. With a straight face, Stein is
suggesting that those who would ban Sharia law and then try to restrict
abortion are hypocrites. Why? It's simple, at least in the mind of Josh Stein:
Muslim extremists support Sharia and support banning abortion. So, again, in
the mind of Josh Stein, when Republicans try to ban Sharia law they undo their
actions by also restricting abortions. Why? Because restricting abortion is
really the same thing as imposing Sharia law.
This is the reasoning of John Stein, and this is the man who wants
to be North Carolina's attorney general. Let us continue with Stein's own
words:
"The irony is, if you look at the anti-Sharia law provision,
what it says is, 'The general assembly hereby declares it to be the public
policy of this state to protect its citizens from the application of law that
would result in the violation of the fundamental Constitutional rights of a
natural person.' That’s rich… The reason I am opposing this legislation is
because its intent is to eliminate a woman’s Constitutional right to have
access to healthcare procedures for her pregnancy.”
It is important to note that, "healthcare procedures for her
pregnancy" is a reference to only one procedure: dismembering an unborn
child in the womb. The so-called right of a mother to dismember her child is
the only "fundamental Constitution right of a natural person" to which
he refers.
If you disagree with Stein and assert the fundamental right of the
unborn to be free from dismemberment then you're simply trying to impose Sharia
law. Trying to reason with Stein and trying to point out his smug hypocrisy
will only earn you an adolescent comeback like "that's rich."
Of course, in reality, there is nothing rich about Josh Stein's
moral reasoning. It is sheer moral bankruptcy. This bankruptcy is most evident
when he tries to compare Republican Senators to Islamic extremists. Here are
his own words:
“We don’t have anything to fear from the Sharia types, what we
have to fear is from the North Carolina General Assembly Republican Senate
impinging on people’s fundamental Constitutional rights.”
The people of North Carolina need to be concerned about the fact
that far left publications consider Josh Stein to be a political hero. But they
should be far more concerned that Stein takes far left publications into senate
meetings and uses these extreme news sources in his questioning of fellow
senators and committee members.
Just last week, Josh Stein entered a senate commerce committee
meeting armed with an article published in the far left Indy Weekly. The
bizarre article makes a series of accusations against Charlton Allen who was
recently appointed to the North Carolina Industrial Commission.
One of the truly paranoid and bizarre claims in the Indy Weekly
article involves accusations of anti-Semitism. Specifically, Allen is accused
of anti-Semitism for running an article almost twenty years ago in a college
newspaper in which he criticized a student government association (SGA)
presidential candidate, Aaron Nelson. Allen was critical of Nelson for opposing
funding for Christian and Muslim groups at UNC. Part of Allen's criticism of
Nelson's candidacy included publishing a caricature of him with a pitchfork and
sporting devil horns.
Anyone who ever attended UNC understands the pitchfork and horns
as a reference to the much-hated Duke Blue Devils. But the radical Leftists at
the Indy Weekly attributed the caricature to anti-Semitism – simply because
Nelson happens to be Jewish. And everyone should know Nelson is Jewish. The
name is a dead give-away, isn’t it?
The Indy Weekly article also claimed that swastikas were later
found in books in the UNC library. Unbelievably, the article concluded that
Allen was responsible for a breakout of campus anti-Semitism - simply for
making Aaron Nelson look like a Duke Blue Devil fan.
Anyone who reads the Indy Weekly knows that it is utter garbage.
It reads like a bad tabloid written by radical Leftists experiencing a bad acid
trip. No member of decent, educated society takes it seriously, except for Josh
Stein. In fact, Josh Stein uses the Indy Weekly to prepare for senate committee
hearings.
Last week, when Josh Stein took the Indy Weekly into the Senate
Commerce Committee meeting (for the purpose of confronting Charlton Allen) a
series of truly bizarre questions ensued. For example, Stein asked Allen
whether he had read the article and whether it was accurate in reporting that
Allen had once dressed "in Muslim garb" and thrown water balloons at
Operation Desert Storm protestors back in 1991 (This was when Allen was an
undergraduate). Allen responded appropriately by requesting clarification of the
definition of "Muslim garb."
When Stein's questioning over alleged insensitivity to Muslims
went nowhere, he then questioned Allen about published accusations of promoting
insensitive speech towards homosexuals - also using the radical Indy Weekly
article as his sole source of information.
Stein's purpose in raising these issues was to question Allen's
fitness to serve on the North Carolina Industrial Commission. Of course, none
of this was relevant to Allen's fitness to serve on the commission. But the
exchange did speak volumes about Stein's fitness to serve as North Carolina
Attorney General.
Consider the following: Josh Stein considers it to be hypocrisy if
someone opposes Sharia Law and also opposes abortion on demand. But he sees no
hypocrisy in opposing anti-Sharia legislation while simultaneously fighting for
the rights of homosexuals to be free from offensive speech. To top it off,
while he's fighting anti-Semitism, Josh Stein is fighting anti-Sharia
legislation, too!
Josh Stein's indifference to the unborn reveals that he is morally
bankrupt – just like his mentor, John Edwards. Yet his smug hypocrisy is
"richer" than any Senate Republican.
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