The Journal story claimed Pfeffer supported a New Mexico Minuteman Project, similar to what exists in Arizona. (It's like Deliverance in the desert, where xenophobic hillbillies track down illegal immigrants). Pfeffer's letter insisted any claim that he supported such a project was “completely false.”
From that day forward, Huddy's byline was conspicuously absent from the paper. When the Santa Fe Reporter contacted Journal North's editor, Mark Oswald, to inquire about the situation, Oswald explained that Huddy no longer worked at the Journal as of April 7, adding: “I can tell you it had nothing to do with that story. As far as we're concerned, the story was accurate.”
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With our president making these kinds of boneheaded statements, is it any wonder the U.S. dollar continues to collapse overseas? And if that isn't bad enough, a lawyer friend e-mailed me suggesting Bush's photo-op might actually be an impeachable offense. According to U.S. Constitution amendment XIV(4): “The validity of the public debt of the United States, authorized by law, including debts incurred for payment of pensions and bounties for services in suppressing insurrection or rebellion, shall not be questioned.” The amendment intended to punish any elected official who disparaged the credit of the United States. And the president swore an oath to uphold the Constitution, didn't he?
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