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Review of Politics, Economics, Constitution, Law and World Affairs by Attorney and Doctor Orly Taitz


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When the people fear their government, there is tyranny.
When the government fears the people, there is liberty.

-- Thomas Jefferson

During times of universal deceit, telling the truth
becomes a revolutionary act.
 -- George Orwell

First they ignore you, then they ridicule you, then they
fight you, then you win.
 -- Mahatma Gandhi


This was recorded by Democast TV two days before the primary

Posted on | September 5, 2010 | 6 Comments

Comments

6 Responses to “This was recorded by Democast TV two days before the primary”

  1. tina
    September 5th, 2010 @ 7:09 pm

    Orly,can you send this video to Sean Hannity,I was mad as hell when he had Damon Dunn on his show here a couple weeks ago,and boy did I let him have it.

  2. sk1951
    September 6th, 2010 @ 3:19 pm

    I love you Orly…

  3. Phil
    September 7th, 2010 @ 12:38 pm

    Orly:…after viewing this video you posted on Dunn, there’s no doubt in my mind who should have won!

    This has been a travesty. And I hope that Dunn, Bowen, Brown, and anyone else connected to the June primary goes down!

    Are you going to run: 1) as a “write-in”? or 2) as an “Independent”? Cause we all know that Dunn will be either taken out of the race, at the last minute? or the (d)’s will do that AFTER the election…so that Bowen will just “go back to work” as usual!!!

    One way or the other, Orly, I think you would have a “great chance” to take both of them down, if you start some kind of a “campaign” to be on the ballot this Nov.! Cause you had lots of support among the people of Ca.! And the public there has had time to “wake up” to see what Dunn and Bowen are all about!

    My prayer is that you will “TRY” to be on that ballot!

    Your friend, Davey Crockett…

  4. James K
    September 7th, 2010 @ 10:29 pm

    I agree that the clip should/must be given as wide of circulation as possible and used in court to impeach Dunn’s election because of fraud. corruption, etc. I would also encourage getting on the ballot as an independent if practical.

  5. news
    September 8th, 2010 @ 7:59 am

    from a comment on https://citizenwells.wordpress.com/

    Jonah | September 8, 2010 at 10:35 am |

    Lucas Smith could be a fraud but there is a recent news article that tweaked my interest. It’s about the daughter of Dr. James Ang’awa, the attending doctor who signed the alleged Kenyan BC………..

    https://allafrica.com/stories/201002010485.html

    Kenya: You Are Forgiven, Judge Tells Her Father’s Killer
    Kenneth Ogosia
    30 January 2010

    Nairobi — She is a judge who tempers her opinions with mercy, even when it affects her personally.

    Her father was brutally killed when she was a teenager more than 40 years ago, but Lady Justice Mary Ang’awa has opted to forgive his killer. During her reflection at a recent meeting to plan the 40th anniversary of the death of her father, she had no qualms about offering a pardon. “I have forgiven you,” she says is the message she has for the killer of Dr James Ang’awa.

    One of the pioneer medical specialists in the country, Dr Ang’awa was hit on the head with a blunt object on Tom Mboya Street by an unknown assailant.

    A police inquest cleared a suspect who had been arrested although Justice Ang’awa is not convinced the decision was the right one. “My father died a painful death. Investigations and inquests were concluded. I and my brothers–Antony, Hillary, Charles and William– have climbed a steep path to success with the guidance of our mother Perez. So the best thing to do is to forgive the killer,” she told the Sunday Nation.

    At the time of her father’s death, Justice Ang’awa was a Form One student at Limuru Girls’ high school. Her family enjoyed a comfortable life; her father was establishing a reputation for his research into treatment of tuberculosis.

    The family lived in high-class government quarters in Upper Hill. Among their neighbours were Dr Njoroge Mungai, former President Kenyatta’s personal physician, President Kibaki, who was then minister for Finance and the late Barack Obama Sr, father of American President Barack Obama.

    The family was evicted from the house three months after Dr Ang’awa’s death.

    “I had no idea under what circumstances my father died, and many people in my generation do not know who he was. They even imagine streets named after Ang’awa in various cities are in my honour,” she said.

    The interview was conducted on the sidelines of a meeting to plan the 40th anniversary of Dr Ang’awa’s death to be held February 8 at the All Saints’ Cathedral in Nairobi and on February 14 at the family’s home in Gem District.

    Justice Ang’awa offered an emotional recounting of the challenge of coping with the loss of the head of the family. At one point, she almost dropped out of school for lack of school fees as the burden of educating the children overwhelmed their mother.

    The February 8, 1970, incident was the most shocking news to her as she had just joined high school. The principal called her out of class without a word of explanation and told her to pack very few clothes. She was too young and shy to ask questions. She just complied and was escorted to the gate where her uncle, Henry Odhiambo, was waiting.

    She got in the car, and it was then that he broke the news of her father’s death. Dr Ang’awa was the director of the national anti-tuberculosis unit at the ministry of Health. He had traversed the country as a medical officer after graduating from Makerere University in the late 1940s and after obtaining post-graduate degrees in Canada and Britain.

    Dr Ang’awa had worked in Embu, Kiambu, Kilifi, Mombasa, Kakamega and Bungoma and was one of the best known members of the medical profession in the country.

    During the 40th anniversary celebrations, the National TB Association will honour Dr Ang’awa. It will also be an emotional moment for Justice Ang’awa, who overcame the shock of the loss of her father to become a distinguished member of the Judiciary where she has served for 30 years.

    She says her commitment to Christian values, which abhor corruption, revenge and immorality, explain her success in the Judiciary. It is on that basis that while serving as a judge in Busia, she escaped the “radical surgery” led by retired Justice Aaron Ringera to purge the bench of corrupt elements.

    Relevant Links
    East Africa
    Kenya
    Legal Affairs
    “It has been tough since I was appointed a magistrate in 1980. I was posted to Kibera where the courtroom was a filthy building without water, power and facilities. The idea was to discourage me to resign like Foreign Affairs minister Moses Wetang’ula did. He used to be transferred every two weeks,” she said.

    She nearly resigned in 1981, but her bosses got wind of her plan and convinced her to stay. Although her salary was not enough to make ends meet, she had to live with her mother in Otiende Estate.

    Justice Ang’awa joined the bench at a time when only three women were employed as magistrates. In 1980, no woman had been appointed to the High Court of Kenya or to the Court of Appeal. Today, a good portion of magistrates are women. There are 18 female judges and one Court of Appeal judge. Justice Ang’awa is chairperson of the Kenya Women Judges Association.

    With such success, she affirms that forgiveness has made the Ang’awas to forge ahead.

  6. dr_taitz@yahoo.com
    September 8th, 2010 @ 9:16 am

    what are you thinking?
    what about the untimely death of Leah?

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