About us Login Get email updates
Research
Print

Fox News-Wash. Times witch hunt takes aim at new target: judicial nominee Edward Chen

October 28, 2009 12:07 pm ET — 38 Comments

Fox News and The Washington Times have used a series of comments reportedly made by Edward Chen -- one of President Obama's judicial nominees -- to smear him as a "radical leftist" who "doesn't appear to love America," and as a "biased radical" when, in fact, the quotes in question establish nothing of the sort. These attacks on Chen follow months of a Fox News-led witch hunt against other Obama advisers and appointees, as well as race-baiting attacks on then-Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor.

Fox News, Wash. Times smear Chen as "radical"

Wash. Times smear: Comments indicate Chen "doesn't appear to love America." An October 25 Washington Times editorial charged that Chen was "another Obama nominee who doesn't appear to love America." The Times continued:

Judge Chen's words speak for themselves. When the congregation sang "America the Beautiful" at a funeral, Judge Chen told the audience of his "feelings of ambivalence and cynicism when confronted with appeals to patriotism -- sometimes I cannot help but feel that there are too much [sic] injustice and too many inequalities that prevent far too many Americans from enjoying the beauty extolled in that anthem."

In a speech on Sept. 22, 2001, he said that among his first responses to the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks on America was a "sickening feeling in my stomach about what might happen to race relations and religious tolerance on our own soil. ... One has to wonder whether the seemingly irresistible forces of racism, nativism and scapegoating which has [sic] recurred so often in our history can be effectively restrained."

And talking about the role of judges, he in effect embraced the "empathy standard" that Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor was forced to denounce in her own confirmation hearings: "Simply put, a judge's life experiences affect the willingness to credit testimony or understand the human impact of legal rules upon which the judge must decide. These determinations require a judge to draw upon something that is not found in the case reports that line the walls of our chambers. Rather judges draw upon the breadth and depth of their own life experience. ... Inevitably, one's ethnic and racial background contributes to those life experiences."

You get the picture. To quote and paraphrase Sen. Charles E. Schumer from another occasion, this man's attitude "doesn't even whisper 'judge.' " Instead, it yells out that he is a biased radical willing to impose his own politics from the bench. Judge Chen should not be confirmed. [The Washington Times, 10/25/09]

O'Reilly smear: Comments show that "you can't get more radical than Judge Chen." During his October 27 Fox News show, O'Reilly aired transcript of the purportedly offensive comments "radical leftist" Chen reportedly made and claimed that "you can't get more radical than Chen," and that Chen was wrong in his September 2001 comments. [The O'Reilly Factor, 10/27/09]

Hannity smear: Comments prove Chen should not be confirmed. During his Fox News show, Sean Hannity asserted that Chen's "comments over the years have been so controversial that The Washington Times recently called him, quote, 'another Obama nominee who doesn't appear to love America.' For example, he's no fan of the song 'America the Beautiful.' " Hannity concluded, "Judge Chen should not be confirmed by the U.S. Senate." [Hannity, 10/27/09]

Chen's reported comments do not indicate that he is a "radical leftist" who doesn't "love America"

Chen's 2001 reported comments warning of possible "racism, nativism and scapegoating" following the September 11 attacks are supported by rise in anti-Muslim hate crimes. As Fox News' Alan Colmes stated in discussing Chen's comments on The O'Reilly Factor, "We have seen nativism; we have seen racism." A 2002 FBI hate crimes analysis reported that the distribution of hate crimes based on national origin changed in 2001, "presumably as a result of the heinous incidents that occurred on September 11." The FBI further noted, "Anti-Islamic religion incidents were previously the second least reported, but in 2001, they became the second highest reported among religious-bias incidents (anti-Jewish religion incidents were the highest), growing by more than 1,600 percent over the 2000 volume. In 2001, reported data showed there were 481 incidents made up of 546 offenses having 554 victims of crimes motivated by bias toward the Islamic religion." A November 26, 2002, San Francisco Chronicle article reported, "Hate crimes against Muslims soared after Sept. 11, according to an FBI report released Monday that also shows that most hate offenses in 2001 were committed against African Americans."

Justice Department Inspector General found numerous problems with DOJ's treatment of "aliens" after 9-11. Further supporting Chen's reported comments, in 2003, the Justice Department's Office of Inspector General released a report about the treatment of "aliens following the 9-11 attacks and the inspector general stated: ""While our review recognized the enormous challenges and difficult circumstances confronting the Department in responding to the terrorist attacks, we found significant problems in the way the detainees were handled." The IG report found that "762 aliens were detained in connection with the FBI terrorism investigation," but that "The FBI in New York City made little attempt to distinguish between aliens who were subjects of the FBI terrorism investigation (called "PENTTBOM") and those encountered coincidentally to a PENTTBOM lead." Additionally, some detainees did not receive charging documents "for more than a month after being arrested. This delay affected the detainees' ability to understand why they were being held, obtain legal counsel, and request a bond hearing." The report also found problems with the conditions in which detainees were held.

Lawsuit alleges misuse of federal law to detain Muslims. Additionally, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit has allowed a lawsuit to go forward by former detainee Abdullah Al-Kidd against then-Attorney General John Ashcroft and others alleging that al-Kidd was unlawfully detained because he was the target of "surveillance as part of a broad anti-terrorism investigation allegedly aimed at Arab and Muslim men"

Chen's comments do not support charge that he is a "biased radical"

Chen explicitly advocated for judges to "administer the law equally." In the speech in which Chen said "a judge's life experiences affect the willingness to credit testimony or understand the human impact of legal rules upon which the judge must decide," Chen explicitly advocated for equal administration of the law. From a law review article reprinting Chen's speech: "The case for diversity is especially compelling for the judiciary. It is the business of the courts, after all, to dispense justice fairly and administer the laws equally. It is the branch of government ultimately charged with safeguarding constitutional rights, particularly protecting the rights of vulnerable and disadvantaged minorities against encroachment by the majority." ["The Judiciary, Diversity, and Justice for All, reprinted in the California Law Review, July 2003 (obtained via Nexis)]

Chen's comments -- like Sotomayor's -- echo similar comments about personal experience made and celebrated by conservatives. Also undermining The Washington Times' suggestion that Chen's remarks about "a judge's life experiences" mark him as "a biased radical," numerous conservatives have previously cited empathy and personal experience as important qualities in a judge -- including Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito. Conservatives including Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, President George H.W. Bush, Sen. Strom Thurmond, Sen. Kit Bond, and John Yoo have cited personal experience or empathy as an important quality in a judge.

Chen gave specific examples of how "a judge's life experiences affect" credibility determinations

Chen: Different cultures view eye contact differently. The Times attack on Chen ignores the concrete examples Chen gave to back up his assertion that "a judge's life experiences affect the willingness to credit testimony." For instance, Chen stated that different cultures view avoidance of eye contact differently when deciding credibility issues. From Chen's law review article:

For example, it is commonly assumed within the legal profession that if a witness will not look you in the eye, he or she is untrustworthy. But such an assumption may be blind to cultural differences. In some cultures, meeting the eyes of another is a sign of disrespect under certain circumstances. Averting eye contact in some cultures may thus be a sign of  respect rather than untruthfulness. Diversity among those who must make these types of evaluations can significantly reduce occasions of cross-cultural misunderstanding.

Chen: White judge and African-American judge viewed testimony about racial harassment in locker room differently. From Chen's law review article:

Another time, an African American judge recalled for me an instance in which a White colleague of his presided over a racial harassment trial. The White judge apparently expressed incredulity as to the plaintiff's testimony regarding racist graffiti found on a locker, considering the plaintiff's descriptions of a drawing of a hangman's noose around a baboon inherently hard to believe, even though the plaintiff was otherwise credible. While his colleague found the allegations unbelievable, the African American judge recounted how members of his own family had experienced precisely the kinds of harassment described by the plaintiff.

Chen, like Alito, stated that judges are affected by personal experience. In his law review article, Chen wrote:

I have heard more than one judge remark about how a particular witness or litigant reminds them of a friend or relative, causing them to perhaps listen a bit more carefully or give pause before passing judgment on that person. It should not be surprising that one might tend to have an initial visceral, perhaps unconscious, sympathetic reaction to someone who strikes a chord of familiarity.

Similarly, Justice Samuel Alito stated during his confirmation hearing in 2006, "When I get a case about discrimination, I have to think about people in my own family who suffered discrimination because of their ethnic background or because of religion or because of gender. And I do take that into account."

American Bar Association gave Chen its highest rating

ABA unanimously rated Chen "well qualified." The American Bar Association's standing committee on the federal judiciary unanimously rated Chen "well qualified," its highest rating.

Conservative attacks on Chen follow race-baited smears of Sotomayor

Conservatives compared Sotomayor to David Duke and labeled her an "affirmative action pick" and a "racist" who is "not that bright." Among the numerous outrageous smears of Sotomayor, Fox News' Glenn Beck referred to her as a "racist" who is "not that bright" and said that those who nominated her addressed her by saying, "Hey, Hispanic chick lady"; Rush Limbaugh compared her nomination to nominating David Duke and called her "a bigot" and "a racist"; and MSNBC's Pat Buchanan said she was an "affirmative action pick."

Expand All Expand 1st Level Collapse All Add Comment
    • Author by right ON (October 28, 2009 12:20 pm ET)
      1 8
      Well, since MMfA doesn't take issue with, or say it didn't happen, why would anyone after hearing "America the Beautiful" be cynical or ambivalent about patriotism? Because we are not some perfect country? Ridiculous. Chen is entitled to his opinion, but so are those who don't like the buy. I hardly think anything he has said disqualifies him, but it's not a witch hunt either in this editorial. More hyperbole and thin skinned response from the left.
      Report Abuse
      • Author by right ON (October 28, 2009 12:21 pm ET)
        1 4
        not "buy", guy.
        Report Abuse
      • Author by SMTDL (October 28, 2009 12:48 pm ET)
        4  
        I guess the same guys that don't like Chen ,liked Alito!! Chen has said the same thing as Alito but used some real world examples to better show how it affects a judges reasoning while applying/interpreting the law.
        I once had a work colleague who thought I had made up a comment about using old text books from white schools that I walked by on the way to my segregated ("separate but equal")Black school where I grew up in the south during the 50's and 60's. He couldn't believe that I could know which schools were black and which were white and must be exaggerating the situation!!
        Chen's example of cultural differences and other experiences(like the locker room grafitti) having impact on assumed credibility is spot on.I have seen that in the Business world for decades.
        If You had an ancestor that was lynched in America, you might not feel the same level of patriotic zeal when you hear America the Beautiful.How about a Native American citizen?
        The sudden trashing of empathy as a positive attribute is to me "Un-American!!!
        Report Abuse
        • Author by pilotx (October 28, 2009 2:03 pm ET)
          3  
          Exactly. It takes a person who can understand complex issues to understand why I don't feel the same way about the 4th of July as some of my fellow countrymen. David Gergen on CNN once told his story of understanding while teaching history a Black student told him that she didn't like Independence Day and he actually understood the reasons. In this day and age and in such a diverse country we require a new level of adult conversation and introspection that Fox and certain conservatives are unable to grasp. Patriotism is not a one size fits all proposition. And they wonder why they only have a 20% approval rating.
          Report Abuse
          • Author by ttariku20046974 (October 28, 2009 9:29 pm ET)
            2  
            Very well explained, particularly I liked the phrase "patriotism is not a one size fits all proposition".
            Report Abuse
          • Author by bluestate69 (October 29, 2009 7:45 am ET)
            2  
            i like the " patriotism is not a one size fits all" proposition as well. there are many things that i love about this country. someone like sean hannity might hate the things i love about this country. there was no " appropriate " reaction to 911. i felt a lot of things on that morning, like fear and loss. i think it's good for a judge to empathize with another person's life experience, especially when that judge's ruling directly effect that person.
            Report Abuse
        • Author by daakaa828 (October 29, 2009 11:05 am ET)
             
          After navigating through the maze of links and being told no less than three times prior to any quotes "numerous conservatives have previously cited empathy and personal experience as important qualities in a judge", I began wondering if we were talking apples to apples or invoking another standard entirely. Personally, I think all judges need some sense of empathy, else no court would ever show mercy. I can't think of anyone who would want that. In Thomas's case, he clearly stated that he could walk in the shoes of people affected by the court's decision. He didn't say, "Because I'm a black man, I can better understand the plight of underprivileged minorities." He didn't cite his own race as a factor that gave him any special insight at all, a striking contrast to Sotomayor's "wise Hispanic woman" quote which intimated both racism and gender bias. It is not in having empathy, but what predisposed ideas color that empathy. A white male judge in LA recently refused to marry a biracial couple. I have no doubt he was empathizing with what he believed would be a backlash against their children. Judicially, he was wrong--but in his own corrupted, racial, short-sighted way, he brought his own empathy and life experiences to the courts.
          Report Abuse
          • Author by bluestate69 (October 30, 2009 6:10 am ET)
               
            daakaa, i think you said it best with, "personally, i think all judges need some sense of empathy, elso no court would ever show mercy". then you went on to equate empathy with the judge in LA refusing to marry a biracial couple!?!? i don't follow your logic, and i have a feeling you don't either.
            Report Abuse
      • Author by ReasonAndResolve (October 28, 2009 12:48 pm ET)
        6  
        So, it is thin-skinned for the Left to point out inaccurate characterizations? maybe if the Right wasn't so prone to smearing people based upon factual misrepresentations, the Left wouldn't have to defend so many innocent people being slagged.

        That isn't thin-skinned, that is standing up for the truth. And when you say "ridiculous", you must be referring to the notion that it is some patriotic imperative that we always feel jingoistic pride in everything our country or its citizens do. I prefer judges who recognize that there is always room for improvement and who take seriously the notion that we are all (including judges) entitled to speak up when we recognize injustice.
        Report Abuse
        • Author by right ON (October 28, 2009 1:08 pm ET)
          1 7
          Because every little time a liberal gets criticized it's a witch hunt or an attack of some sort, so yes, thin skinned is appropriate. And I have never been cynical of patriotism simply after hearing a song sung at a funeral. It's weird.
          Report Abuse
          • Author by all your eyes (October 28, 2009 2:37 pm ET)
            3 1
            If you've never been cynical of patriotic songs, especially in the God-Bless-America-crazed post-9/11 era, your critical thinking skills must be called into question. Of course, if you support the current wacko right-wing cesspool, your critical thinking skills have already proved themselves.
            Report Abuse
            • Author by right ON (October 28, 2009 2:58 pm ET)
                3
              I am far more cynical of liberals than innocuous and inoffensive patriotic songs. But then the God-Bless-America craziness has infected me as it has you, obviously.
              Report Abuse
          • Author by bobklahn (October 29, 2009 1:02 am ET)
            2  
            You have never been cynical...? And you are the arbiter of all?

            I'd bet you have never in your life discussed anything like this with a black friend.
            Report Abuse
      • Author by NiceguyEddie (October 28, 2009 2:26 pm ET)
        6  
        Just like fox you missed the point by a hillbilly mile.

        He's not ambivalent about PATRIOTISM. He's ambivalent about the FAUX-PARTTRIOTISM that your lot practices and uses to justify all the blatantly un-American stuff it does.

        You wave the flag and sing the songs, but do not respect the values for which they stand. If there were one true patriot among you, you'd know exactly what he meant.

        ---------------------------------------------------------------------
        Is your ignorance here intentional or genetic?
        Report Abuse
        • Author by right ON (October 28, 2009 2:28 pm ET)
          1 4
          So "America the Beautiful" elicits "FAUX-PARTTRIOTISM"? After all these years of hearing that song, I never knew.
          Report Abuse
          • Author by Easy to refute wingnuts (October 28, 2009 2:42 pm ET)
            2 1
            Nice straw man. At least I can believe that "you never knew."

            That's true of you, no matter what the subject.
            Report Abuse
          • Author by NiceguyEddie (October 28, 2009 3:51 pm ET)
            2 1
            When people like YOU sing the song, it sickens me; knowing what a perverse and profoundly UN-American vision you have for America. The song itself is far less importnat that the intentions of the singer. You say you love your country, but "your country" doesn't resemble the one I see, the one I live in, the one I studied and learned about in school, the one described by the Constitution, the one that inspires me, the one I sing about, the one I'm proud to be a part of and the one I would fight kill and die for. And what you people are and have been willing to do to turn the America that IS and WAS into the America the you would have there be is disgusting. So yes, when YOU sing the song it's entirely despicable.

            --------------------------------------------------------------
            Add "deep thinker" right after "real patriot" to the list of people who, if you had a single one of them amoungst you, would cause you to understand.
            Report Abuse
            • Author by right ON (October 28, 2009 4:22 pm ET)
                3
              Chen never said it was the singer at all, he said it was the song, at a funeral much less. So get off your pedestal, it's a phony lift.
              Report Abuse
            • Author by DellDolly (October 28, 2009 4:36 pm ET)
              2  
              And this is why I called RightON a traitor the other day, and disloyal and unpatriotic. And he flipped out because he didn't want his true intentions to be exposed like that.

              Chen clearly meant that it was the motives of the persons singing the song. He was, and is, concerned about the "racism, nativism and scapegoating" by some people who claim to be patriotic and who sing songs like this but don't really behave in a way that honors the lyrics.
              Report Abuse
              • Author by right ON (October 28, 2009 5:15 pm ET)
                  3
                I have yet to flip out over anything you post Sue. You generate nothing but indifference to me, and pity. I bet you, watch your temper because that is always your undoing, and it will be soon, one day. It has before, it will again.
                Report Abuse
                • Author by DellDolly (October 28, 2009 7:44 pm ET)
                  2  
                  Yeah, actually you did flip out, and so did one of your sidekicks.

                  This happens on a regular basis when you or they are trying to be dishonest and you/they get exposed.

                  You aren't fooling anyone.

                  And you are the one who has exposed your temper repeatedly recently.
                  Report Abuse
                • Author by DellDolly (October 28, 2009 7:47 pm ET)
                  2  
                  And yeah, everyone noticed that you didn't address the point that you've been purposely missing - that the intent, the motive of the person singing can make them a hypocrite when they sing that song. Racism, nativism and scapegoating don't apply to the song - they apply to the person singing the song.

                  But you failed to address that at all. That's a clear sign, and another one was when you felt the need to attack someone personally - not me, but some former foe I guess.
                  Report Abuse
      • Author by carlileb5935 (October 28, 2009 10:14 pm ET)
        2  
        Well, since MMfA doesn't take issue with, or say it didn't happen, why would anyone after hearing "America the Beautiful" be cynical or ambivalent about patriotism?

        Because they'd be worried about jingoism and Reaction, and demagogic politicians exploiting the sentiment.

        And by the way, this IS a witch hunt. They want him gone.
        Report Abuse
    • Author by hoosier (October 28, 2009 1:04 pm ET)
        7
      Why is Obama so comfortable with radicals?

      It's perplexing.

      Alan Grayson calling the female lobbyist a whore and Obama calling Grayson an outstanding member of Congress being just the latest example.
      Report Abuse
      • Author by Koyaanisqatsi (October 28, 2009 1:38 pm ET)
        4  
        Why are Republicans so comfortable with misanthropes and sociopaths?
        Has Obama started a war based on lies lately?
        Did he deliberately ignore over fifty warnings and allow terrorists to attack us?
        Just askin'
        Report Abuse
      • Author by srichardson (October 28, 2009 1:48 pm ET)
        4  
        Why is this judge a radical? Because he brought up the fact that there has been injustices in this world? Because he worried after 9-11 there may be some racial profiling? I work with some right wing so called christians and they want to round up all the Middle Eastern Americans and put them in camps until we can weed out the terrorists. I guess that's not racist though, huh. We have some Pakistanians that own a gas station in our small town and I know many people who won't walk in the doors bc they think they would be supporting terrorists. But that's probably not racist either, huh?
        It is a fact that in this country some cultures have been mistreated by others. People who have experienced racism, or whatever you people want to call it, are going to have different views of different events. I'm sorry you can't feel empathy for others.
        Report Abuse
        • Author by daakaa828 (October 29, 2009 11:50 am ET)
            1
          I want to totally agree about the whole profiling thing. As a white male, it happens to me all the time. When I taught school, white males couldn't do certain things or go certain places that other female teachers could just in case we might be pedophiles (because anyone who watches Lifetime knows that most of us are). Worse, I'm a white man from the south who is politically active, which public figures like Janeane Garofalo will tell you makes any stand I take all about "hating a black man in the white house." Who took her racism and collective bias to task? Affirmative action tells me I don't deserve a job I've earned the right to have because my skin is the wrong color, and I've been told straight up by people of other races what they "knew" the evil things I was thinking and feeling about them before they ever got to know what I really thought and felt. Being a non-prejudiced, white male in today's America is a pretty lonely place, and I've not heard very many in the media call out such racial and stereotypical behavior as wrong. Go figure.
          Report Abuse
      • Author by bobklahn (October 29, 2009 1:07 am ET)
        1  
        In an unjust society the place for a just man is in prison.

        That's a radical thing to say. It was by Henry David Thoreau.

        The entire continental congress was made up of radicals.

        I would like to think I was comfortable among such radicals.
        Report Abuse
    • Author by antihannity2009 (October 28, 2009 2:42 pm ET)
      3  
      Does it really surprise anyone that within an hour of Obama nominating someone, Fox spits something out to make the person be a radical? Don't they have anything better to do?
      Report Abuse
      • Author by sleepy joe (October 28, 2009 3:03 pm ET)
        2  
        No, they don't have anything better to do. This is what they're paid to do. They'll keep doing it as long as it keeps working.
        Report Abuse
        • Author by pilotx (October 28, 2009 8:23 pm ET)
          2  
          It's not going to work for long if t even worked in the past, Kinda the boy who cried wolf situation. After a while even the true believers will yawn and get to the point of yeah yeah yeah commie radical blah blah blah, are we gonna do this for three more years?
          Report Abuse
    • Author by williamward (October 28, 2009 4:13 pm ET)
      2  
      It took me a while, but at last I've figured it out. Hannity, El-Rushbo, Levin, Schmidt, Beck...All of them sound exactly form a person who my Father has told me so many stories about. She was such a passionate speaker, and so incredibly convincing. These men should be so proud to be able to placed in comparrison to her.
      Who do I speak of: TOKYO ROSE.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by carlileb5935 (October 28, 2009 10:11 pm ET)
      2  
      Chen's comments -- like Sotomayor's -- echo similar comments about personal experience made and celebrated by conservatives.

      Ah, but of course, those are different experiences...
      Report Abuse
      • Author by daakaa828 (October 29, 2009 11:25 am ET)
          2
        Empathy, subject to the rule of law, is a desired characteristic in any person, judge or not. When a person states, however, his predisposed empathy concerns me, as a white male (i.e. "the majority"), perverting justice by encroaching on minorities and the underprivileged, he assumes that my race and gender is part of some collective, and that I (I mean, "we") have a calculated agenda, motive or value system that works to disenfranchise minorities and the disadvantaged. I abhor such preconceptions, especially from one who is being considered to sit as judge over me. How could any white man whose case is being decided by Chen not be thinking in the back of his mind that, even if his case has stronger merit, it might still be more "fair" to award in favor of the weaker and more disadvantaged to bring about greater social justice for all Americans. I want no part of that kind of "empathy".
        Report Abuse
    • Author by egb (October 29, 2009 1:20 am ET)
         
      Is the right trying to "Bork" Chen?
      Report Abuse
    • Author by daakaa828 (October 29, 2009 10:53 am ET)
         
      Let's talk for a minute about words that bias a reader before he has digested the first paragraph, namely "witch hunt"--those two words paint a portrait of a unified conspiracy, that 400 conservatives jammed up in a room and said, "Let's go after Chen. Let's burn him at the stake" (such an act, of course, any witch hunt historian will tell you never happened in America). Before I ever read to decide how Chen was being treated in the media, someone was screaming in my ear that it was a witch hunt. Now, I'm thick-skinned enough to know that this wasn't news--it was barely journalism--but one man's opinion shouted louder for emphasis. But, hey, if you're listening--I want the facts before you color them. Give me details so I can compare apples to apples, not donkeys to elephants.
      Report Abuse
      • Author by SMTDL (October 29, 2009 12:54 pm ET)
        1  
        I believe you when you say you are unbiased. When Samuel Alito said a very similar thing as Chen no one came out and called him a "radical right winger" or "biased conservative".He was challenged(during confirmation) on his college membership in a group that sought to limit minority and women admissions.Shouldn't that be of concern as potential bias for a Supreme Court Justice?..Conservatives characterized Democrats as "calling him a racist" just for asking about it.He was never attacked by Dems just for his personal empathy comments like Chen and Sotomayor have been. Republicans were calling Sotomayor a racist based on just part of a quote which is far less significant than being a member of an organization for years!! The Washington Times,Bill O'reilly and Sean Hannity are already calling Chen a"radical leftist"and "biased radical"so witch hunt isn't much of an exaggeration.In any event, it seems that with some people empathy is fine in a judge as long as its for whites and especially white males..the most highly represented group in every type of authority position anywhere!Glad you agree that what Fox does is not News!That is in part what this MM article was saying!
        I hope Conservatives/Republicans continue with what they are doing because they will surely alienate another minority group(Asians) as they have already done with Hispanics and Blacks.
        Report Abuse

my.MediaMatters.org

Login  Sign Up

Push Back

Phone calls, emails and letters from the public do make a difference. Remember that to be effective you must be polite, and professional. Express your specific concerns regarding that particular news report or commentary, and indicate what you would like the media outlet to do differently in the future.