Zitat des Tages von Fred Thompson:
And I believe in the 13 years Judge Roberts was there, he never turned down a request to give some assistance on a pro-bono case, and this was no different.
Sometimes you have to, as I say, build bridges where you can - but draw lines where you must.
So if you look back over the long history of China, they've never tried to take over the world, but they've been quite aggressive in their own neighborhood... in carrying out their own purposes and interests in their sphere of the world.
Superfund was passed with the good intention of cleaning up America's toxic waste sites.
We've made some mistakes in this country in times past - the Korean conflict proceeding that, some say proceeding the Persian Gulf War, where we were ambiguous as to what we would do.
Let's not overlook, though, what we do know about the campaign finance scandal, and the fact the Chinese were involved in our presidential campaign and our congressional campaigns.
Clearly, the Chinese know that we want a good relationship with them.
While we believe there are fruitful opportunities to update and improve old rules, we do not want to set up a review process that could create a litigation morass.
And it's difficult for the average American to understand why something like that could be so important and why a little small place like Taiwan would be so important to the PRC.
And when we draw lines in the sand with regard to certain basic things that are vital to our interest and to the interest of democracy and our friends around the world, we have to be willing to back that up.
But obviously, we can't afford to make some bad long-term decisions with regard to basic commitments our country has - trade those away for some short-term assistance that may or may not be there a month from now.
We have some real political differences among us, but we all share the same goals: clean air and water, injury free workplaces, safe transportation systems, to name a few of the good things that can come from regulation.
The problem is that agencies sometimes lose sight of common sense as they create regulations.
Hopefully, we can build bridges, but we also have to draw lines.
We're hoping for the best, but we need to prepare for the worst.
That is, while we believe that cost-benefit analysis is an important tool to inform agency decision making, the results of the cost-benefit analysis do not trump existing law.
I think that the justices were totally answering the way that they should. I think that the senators, as best I could tell, for the most part, Democrat and Republican, respected that.
You can't substitute promise after promise with known violators of prior promises at the expense of protecting ourselves or setting an example.
Some people think that our planet is suffering from a fever. Now scientists are telling us that Mars is experiencing its own planetary warming: Martian warming. This has led some people, not necessarily scientists, to wonder if Mars and Jupiter, non signatories to the Kyoto Treaty, are actually inhabited by alien SUV-driving industrialists.
But if the Chinese mainland, the PRC, attacked Taiwan, we'd be obligated to come to their aid.
China is one of the world's greatest proliferators of weapons of mass destruction to these rogue nations.
For a long time in American history, people didn't even come up before the Senate. They didn't come before the Judiciary Committee, and up until about 1923, something like that.
I think that there is a relatively small number of people who are pushing for independence in Taiwan.
There's a lot more to competence than a law degree and a modicum of courtroom skill.
For example, lead paint in old houses can be a greater threat to children's health than lead that may be under some industrial site where there are no children.
Nobody wants to open a business near a Superfund site and risk being sued.
We just ask the agency to make reasonable and honest decisions, and the public deserves no less.
We also have to ask if we focusing on the most important priorities.