The Libby Precedent
It is going to be interesting to see how this Gooding makes out (no pun intended.)
My immediate response was that, since she graduated from Quacky University, she was simply applying her trade in that special, convoluted style that we have come to know as "faiith-based."
With the faith-based people, I am sure that they think that the scope and the intent of the law should bend to any pew pilot who smells something 'satanic.'
Any day I expect faith-based science to issue forth a reversal on the green cheese thing.
What I really hope for is an inevitability in the course of her taking the Fifth, wherein she eventually moves around the legal board until she ends in a corner and chooses to remain adamant, taking a position of 'right over legal.'
'Right over legal' is no cheap-shot exaggeration--if you don't believe me, watch how Rove's Nuts discuss legalities on faith-based TV shows. Alberto Gonzales, that bespeckled, ever happy teddy bear beaner who has, I promise you, no clue, was recently touring the faith-based camps urging them to sue, sue, sue. And here people thought his only error was thinking George W. Bush and not America was his clienct.
Nor is 'right over legal' covered by the Fifth.
But think not that, just because their legal profile is . . . unique . . ., they do not have an active involvement with the law. They are suing--or rather using law-suits against any critic that comes along; after the scientologists, they are suers supreme.
When I get to Judgement, I'm asking . . . hey, what do you think about the faith-based calling 'suing critics' turning the other cheek. I am sure that Number One will tell me that, in order to talk to a lawyer, I need to go to hell.
There are a lot of double-binds in fundamentalism. That is why you see 900 people drinking kool-aid, enduring the flames of righteousness outside Waco, etc. etc etc. You will see more.