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Jax Beach Art Walk celebrates first anniversary

Better Jacksonville Beach adds monthly car cruise to lineup

Posted: August 8, 2014 - 1:40pm



Michele Gillis for Shorelines

A collection of works displayed by Amy Michelle Gregory of AMEJ Art during last month's Jax Beach Art Walk.

Photos

Back Photo: 1 of 3 Next

Michele Gillis for Shorelines

Jon McGowan, president of Better Jacksonville Beach, organized and oversees the Jax Beach Art Walk.

Back Photo: 2 of 3 Next

Michele Gills for Shorelines

Artists Dino Baron and Jo Marie Carter from the L'Arche Rainbow Workshop show off their designs during the Jax Beach Art Walk.

Back Photo: 3 of 3 Next

Michele Gills for Shorelines

Amy Michelle Gregory of AMEJ Art paints a table during the Jax Beach Art Walk in July.

By Michele Gillis

As families and couples stroll by storefronts in downtown Jacksonville Beach, artist Amy Michelle Gregory puts the finishing touches on her latest piece of art.

“I like to paint live,” said Gregory of AMEJ Custom Artwork, one of approximately 70 artists featured in the Jax Beach Art Walk. “I love it. Sometimes it gets a little windy out here while painting, but I really enjoy creating art in front of the people walking by.”

Jacksonville Beach’s Art Walk celebrates its first anniversary this month. Held the second Tuesday of each month from 5-9 p.m., the event is staged along First Street between Beach Boulevard and Fifth Avenue North.

Gregory said the Art Walk is popular with both tourists and locals, allowing her an opportunity for marketing and networking while she paints. The free event is also free for the artists who participate; the only requirement is that all of the goods have to be handmade and the artists need to provide their display tables. The event, founded in August 2013 by Better Jacksonville Beach in an effort to bring families back to the downtown district, typically draws 500 to 1,000 people.

“We needed more family-friendly events at the beach,” said Jon McGowan, president of Better Jacksonville Beach and owner of McGowan Firearms in Atlantic Beach. “The real base of the program is the Art Walk, and last month we started a Classic Car Cruise.”

After a highly publicized fight in Jacksonville Beach on Memorial Day 2013, McGowan said he formed the nonprofit Better Jacksonville Beach by reaching out to business owners in the downtown area.

BJB now has five business owners on its board and about 20 other local business owners as members of the association.

“We wanted to get the business owners all together to work together to improve the area,” he said.

McGowan said he knew of the success of Art Walks in neighboring communities, and started by doing his homework, reaching out to organizers of other area art events and asking questions.

“It’s not just about the art, it’s about building the community and getting families to feel like they can come back down here again,” said McGowan. “They can bring their family and walk around, get reintroduced to the area and get familiar with all the neat restaurants.”

McGowan chose a Tuesday night to hold the walk because he believed the area is already overwhelmed on the weekends.

“We were trying to get families down here, and the best way is to start with a clean palate,” he said. “We started on a Tuesday night when there is no one in Jacksonville Beach.”

McGowan said his hope was that families would then start coming out other nights of the week and eventually rowdier crowds would stay away as families come back in.

“Families have abandoned it,” he said. “They felt it wasn’t theirs. It was just a place where college kids came to get drunk and party. If [families] went out to dinner, they’d go along Third Street or to Atlantic Beach. We have to let them know that this is their downtown again.”

McGowan said he didn’t struggle getting the event off the ground once word got out, noting that the City of Jacksonville Beach was helpful in the process. All he needed was a permit and insurance, which was paid for by the businesses involved in BJB.

“I threw the first one together in about three weeks and had 45 artists,” he said.

Delcher Carter of Delcher’s Leather, which specializes in customer leatherwork in Neptune Beach, has been a part of the Art Walk since its inception.

“I’ve been here for nine years, and I think it’s really great for the community,” Delcher said.

Print and floral artist and Jacksonville Beach resident Tiffany Turner has been selling her hand-painted cards, prints and framed art in the Art Walk since the event’s beginning. She said she enjoys the sense of community that the local artists help create.

“The whole idea of the Art Walk is to let people know this is not a bad place; it’s a wonderful place,” said Turner. “That’s one of the reasons the Art Walk is great because more and more people are coming, including families with kids.”

Capitalizing on the weekday family-friendly event, Better Jacksonville Beach introduced a Classic Car Cruise every third Tuesday of the month from 6 to 8:30 p.m. More than 40 cars owners took part in the first event two months ago, but there were visibility and organizational problems that needed tweaking. The City of Jacksonville Beach has since partnered with BJB to improve the event. Now, about 30 vehicles are selected to park in Latham Plaza and the Sea Walk Pavilion. Other cruisers are encouraged to start parking in the northwest corner of the city parking lot between Latham Plaza and Sneakers. At 8:30 p.m., participants are joined by attendees for an organized cruise along First Street.

“... It is becoming a fixture in the community,” McGowan said. “I hope over the next year we’ll see more people start to show up, and we can continue to help make families feel the downtown is their area.”

Those interested in the Art Walk or the Classic Car Cruise can contact McGowan at info@betterjaxbeach.com.

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Read more at Jacksonville.com: http://jacksonville.com/community/shorelines/2014-08-08/story/jax-beach-art-walk-celebrates-first-anniversary#ixzz39zUDfZ00


Faces of the Forest
Meet Jennifer H. Barnhart
Office of Communication
Tuesday, August 12, 2014 - 15:30

Jennifer Heisey Barnhart has always loved the outdoors so it is only logical that all of her jobs have been working outdoors. Jennifer currently works for the Andrew Pickens Ranger District on the Sumter National Forest in South Carolina. She is a fairly new employee of four years for the U.S. Forest Service, but the experience she brings to her natural resources specialist job in recreation is many years strong.

Jennifer Heisey BarnhartHow did you get started with your natural resource career?
I started working for state parks in Pennsylvania at a young age and that’s where I learned to appreciate the outdoors. I was involved in my high school’s environmental club competing in envirothons. In college, I decided to pursue a bachelor’s degree in natural resources recreation with a minor in forestry and then went on for a master’s degree in natural resources management for recreation. I also continued to work while pursuing both degrees.

After graduate school, I took a job with the Green Mountain Club

External Links icon
, a non-profit partner with the Green Mountain National Forest in Vermont, as a backcountry caretaker. I was living in the woods solo for four months out of the year. I would be out for five days straight, only to come out for 48 hours and then go back. I was performing trail maintenance and educating hikers on Leave No Trace
External Links icon
when they would come through on the Long Trail which is co-aligned with the Appalachian Trail. That was the only interaction I had with the outside world until I went out to restock on food and shower. It is one of my favorite jobs ever.

I’ve also worked for the Appalachian Mountain Club as an outdoor recreation planner and with Virginia State Parks as a district resource specialist. The U.S. Forest Service hired me as a full-time permanent employee on the Calcasieu Ranger District as their natural resources specialist for recreation. I had been applying for years and years because it was my ultimate goal to get in with the Forest Service. I am really excited to be working for the agency and very thankful to the Calcasieu Ranger District who gave me my start. I recently took the same position with the Andrew Pickens Ranger District on the Sumter National Forest in South Carolina, which includes the management of the Chattooga Wild and Scenic River and the Ellicott Rock Wilderness.

What or who has had the greatest influence on your life?
I wouldn’t say one person, but instead will focus on what gave me the drive to work hard. I came from a blue-collar family and was the first person in my family to go to college. I was very driven to get a degree and somehow I ended up getting my master’s degree – which was awesome. I was determined to keep working hard and moving up, always trying to set goals and be able to accomplish them. So, I think my biggest influence is coming from a hard working blue-collar family.

As a child, did you know what you wanted to be when you grew up?
I started working as a teenager for Pennsylvania State Parks. I knew I was into the environment, enjoyed the outdoors and always wanted to help protect it. Once I figured out I could go to school and get a degree in forestry, wildlife or recreation, I finally narrowed it down to natural resources recreation. So yes, I knew early where I was headed.

I based my answer on where I grew up which was close to the Appalachian Trail, surrounded by state forests and state parks, not national forests. But I had an upbringing in a beautiful area and that really influenced me.

Jennifer Heisey Barnhart If you could be or do anything else, what would it be?
I would run a non-profit organization related to promoting outdoor recreation amongst youth and families.

Since you’ve only been working on a forest for about four years, have you had any opportunity to tackle a big project dealing with a recreation area?
There are all kinds of major repairs and daily crises. We did have a major event happen just before Thanksgiving several years ago that I was involved in. Our Louisiana campgrounds are very popular in the state because our developed campgrounds have water and electric. We generally fill our 41 sites completely each year at Thanksgiving. It was close to the end of the day when the water pump completely shut down. I had to immediately figure out who I could get before a holiday to repair or put in a new pump. I was desperate, but I was able to call our local town’s water system and they gave me a contact.

Thankfully, a repair person was able to come out on short notice and actually fix the pump. I had to get approvals on very short notice and we all worked on Thanksgiving trying to repair the site for campers to have water to cook their turkeys. That was a big deal for me, being fairly new in the agency, trying to communicate with the campground hosts and campers while keeping them calm and informed of all of the developments.

Another big accomplishment was increasing the volunteer program on the Calcasieu District. I was able to partner with a lot of different organizations such as the Kisatchie Bicycle Club and our mountain biking community to do trail work for us. The mountain bikers re-blazed an entire tail system. The trail system was re-marked in the hopes of becoming more user-friendly. I also co-coordinated National Get Outdoors Day in June 2013. We were able to have local organizations donate their time and materials to lead mountain bike rides, yoga demonstrations, kayaking, and hikes to an awesome eagles’ nest. Everything was free for the community to come and enjoy.

If you could meet and greet some famous people in history, who would they be?
I guess one person would be John Muir. I learned about him in my conservation classes and he seemed interesting, traveling all over the country trying to preserve different natural public lands that we have today. In late 2013, Gifford Pinchot’s home, Grey Towers celebrated its 50th anniversary. Both Muir and Pinchot were great conservationists in the Roosevelt era.

Another person folks may not know is “Molly Pitcher” from Carlisle, Pennsylvania. She was the first woman to set foot on the battle ground in the Revolutionary War. She would give pitchers of water to the men and when one of the men went down, she actually took over the cannon. She was very interesting and I learned about her when I was in the fourth or fifth grade. She is actually buried in my hometown. Revolutionary War buffs might have heard of her.

Do you have any hobbies?
I’m super into outdoor recreation. I’m a mountain biker, runner, cyclist and a swimmer. In the past two years, I’ve competed in triathlons. In the summer of 2012, I competed in my first Ironman competition at Lake Placid up in the Adirondacks. It took me about 14 hours to complete the whole race – a mere 140.6 miles! I was actually able to train on the Calcasieu Ranger District’s trails in the winter and on the roads around the Kisatchie National Forest in the summer. It’s a great hobby for me, but also beneficial to work on the forest, be outdoors and to be able to easily do that right outside your office.

What do you like about working for the Forest Service?
I love that I’m able to do what I’m obviously passionate about in my personal life: being outdoors and loving recreation, having access to public land and being able to be a manager in that area. I’m happy that I can make positive contributions to the community by making sure the recreation areas and trails are managed to meet high standards and tax payers can directly see and experience these benefits.

I say this to my employees because a lot of them don’t realize that their shoulders are holding up the weight of the public’s image of the national forests. Recreation areas and trails are what the public directly experience regularly and that reflects back on our image. The public doesn’t necessarily directly see the positives of what’s going on in the timber, wildlife and fire programs. So we’re the ones holding it on our shoulders to make sure that the public views what the Forest Service does as beneficial and important.
Tags
faces of the forest

Faces of the Forest
Meet Jennifer H. Barnhart
Office of Communication
Tuesday, August 12, 2014 - 15:30

Jennifer Heisey Barnhart has always loved the outdoors so it is only logical that all of her jobs have been working outdoors. Jennifer currently works for the Andrew Pickens Ranger District on the Sumter National Forest in South Carolina. She is a fairly new employee of four years for the U.S. Forest Service, but the experience she brings to her natural resources specialist job in recreation is many years strong.

Jennifer Heisey BarnhartHow did you get started with your natural resource career?
I started working for state parks in Pennsylvania at a young age and that’s where I learned to appreciate the outdoors. I was involved in my high school’s environmental club competing in envirothons. In college, I decided to pursue a bachelor’s degree in natural resources recreation with a minor in forestry and then went on for a master’s degree in natural resources management for recreation. I also continued to work while pursuing both degrees.

After graduate school, I took a job with the Green Mountain Club

External Links icon
, a non-profit partner with the Green Mountain National Forest in Vermont, as a backcountry caretaker. I was living in the woods solo for four months out of the year. I would be out for five days straight, only to come out for 48 hours and then go back. I was performing trail maintenance and educating hikers on Leave No Trace
External Links icon
when they would come through on the Long Trail which is co-aligned with the Appalachian Trail. That was the only interaction I had with the outside world until I went out to restock on food and shower. It is one of my favorite jobs ever.

I’ve also worked for the Appalachian Mountain Club as an outdoor recreation planner and with Virginia State Parks as a district resource specialist. The U.S. Forest Service hired me as a full-time permanent employee on the Calcasieu Ranger District as their natural resources specialist for recreation. I had been applying for years and years because it was my ultimate goal to get in with the Forest Service. I am really excited to be working for the agency and very thankful to the Calcasieu Ranger District who gave me my start. I recently took the same position with the Andrew Pickens Ranger District on the Sumter National Forest in South Carolina, which includes the management of the Chattooga Wild and Scenic River and the Ellicott Rock Wilderness.

What or who has had the greatest influence on your life?
I wouldn’t say one person, but instead will focus on what gave me the drive to work hard. I came from a blue-collar family and was the first person in my family to go to college. I was very driven to get a degree and somehow I ended up getting my master’s degree – which was awesome. I was determined to keep working hard and moving up, always trying to set goals and be able to accomplish them. So, I think my biggest influence is coming from a hard working blue-collar family.

As a child, did you know what you wanted to be when you grew up?
I started working as a teenager for Pennsylvania State Parks. I knew I was into the environment, enjoyed the outdoors and always wanted to help protect it. Once I figured out I could go to school and get a degree in forestry, wildlife or recreation, I finally narrowed it down to natural resources recreation. So yes, I knew early where I was headed.

I based my answer on where I grew up which was close to the Appalachian Trail, surrounded by state forests and state parks, not national forests. But I had an upbringing in a beautiful area and that really influenced me.

Jennifer Heisey Barnhart If you could be or do anything else, what would it be?
I would run a non-profit organization related to promoting outdoor recreation amongst youth and families.

Since you’ve only been working on a forest for about four years, have you had any opportunity to tackle a big project dealing with a recreation area?
There are all kinds of major repairs and daily crises. We did have a major event happen just before Thanksgiving several years ago that I was involved in. Our Louisiana campgrounds are very popular in the state because our developed campgrounds have water and electric. We generally fill our 41 sites completely each year at Thanksgiving. It was close to the end of the day when the water pump completely shut down. I had to immediately figure out who I could get before a holiday to repair or put in a new pump. I was desperate, but I was able to call our local town’s water system and they gave me a contact.

Thankfully, a repair person was able to come out on short notice and actually fix the pump. I had to get approvals on very short notice and we all worked on Thanksgiving trying to repair the site for campers to have water to cook their turkeys. That was a big deal for me, being fairly new in the agency, trying to communicate with the campground hosts and campers while keeping them calm and informed of all of the developments.

Another big accomplishment was increasing the volunteer program on the Calcasieu District. I was able to partner with a lot of different organizations such as the Kisatchie Bicycle Club and our mountain biking community to do trail work for us. The mountain bikers re-blazed an entire tail system. The trail system was re-marked in the hopes of becoming more user-friendly. I also co-coordinated National Get Outdoors Day in June 2013. We were able to have local organizations donate their time and materials to lead mountain bike rides, yoga demonstrations, kayaking, and hikes to an awesome eagles’ nest. Everything was free for the community to come and enjoy.

If you could meet and greet some famous people in history, who would they be?
I guess one person would be John Muir. I learned about him in my conservation classes and he seemed interesting, traveling all over the country trying to preserve different natural public lands that we have today. In late 2013, Gifford Pinchot’s home, Grey Towers celebrated its 50th anniversary. Both Muir and Pinchot were great conservationists in the Roosevelt era.

Another person folks may not know is “Molly Pitcher” from Carlisle, Pennsylvania. She was the first woman to set foot on the battle ground in the Revolutionary War. She would give pitchers of water to the men and when one of the men went down, she actually took over the cannon. She was very interesting and I learned about her when I was in the fourth or fifth grade. She is actually buried in my hometown. Revolutionary War buffs might have heard of her.

Do you have any hobbies?
I’m super into outdoor recreation. I’m a mountain biker, runner, cyclist and a swimmer. In the past two years, I’ve competed in triathlons. In the summer of 2012, I competed in my first Ironman competition at Lake Placid up in the Adirondacks. It took me about 14 hours to complete the whole race – a mere 140.6 miles! I was actually able to train on the Calcasieu Ranger District’s trails in the winter and on the roads around the Kisatchie National Forest in the summer. It’s a great hobby for me, but also beneficial to work on the forest, be outdoors and to be able to easily do that right outside your office.

What do you like about working for the Forest Service?
I love that I’m able to do what I’m obviously passionate about in my personal life: being outdoors and loving recreation, having access to public land and being able to be a manager in that area. I’m happy that I can make positive contributions to the community by making sure the recreation areas and trails are managed to meet high standards and tax payers can directly see and experience these benefits.

I say this to my employees because a lot of them don’t realize that their shoulders are holding up the weight of the public’s image of the national forests. Recreation areas and trails are what the public directly experience regularly and that reflects back on our image. The public doesn’t necessarily directly see the positives of what’s going on in the timber, wildlife and fire programs. So we’re the ones holding it on our shoulders to make sure that the public views what the Forest Service does as beneficial and important.
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By Pittsburgh Tribune-Review (PA)
The Justice Department's decision to secretly subpoena months of reporters' phone records is drawing comparisons with Nixon-era tactics and raising anew questions about the aggression with which the Obama administration has cracked down on unauthorized leaks of information.
Two of the Justice Department's top officials, including Attorney General Eric Holder, defended the subpoenas of two months of Associated Press reporters' phone records.
Gary Pruitt, Associated Press CEO, called it "a massive and unprecedented intrusion" that violated the department's guidelines.
Federal investigators snagged records for more than 20 telephone lines in AP bureaus in New York, Washington, Hartford, Conn., and the House of Representatives. The dragnet almost certainly captured information about reporter-source conversations that had nothing to do with the leak investigation, Pruitt said. More than 100 reporters had access to the lines.
Holder supported the action -- while making clear he didn't sign off on it -- during a news conference on Tuesday. The subpoenas are part of an investigation into the leak of classified information, possibly regarding a May 7, 2012, story about a foiled terror plot. Holder called the leak one of the worst he's seen. The tactics remind some of an earlier era.
"You really have to go back to the Nixon administration," said Jane Kirtley, media ethics and law professor at the University of Minnesota and executive director of the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press from 1985-99.
Holder said the leak "put the American people at risk, and that is not hyperbole."
He didn't explain how, which is the crux of debates over the boundary between national security secrets and the right of the public to oversee its government.
Advocates for public oversight argue the government hid embarrassing facts behind national security claims, from the Pentagon Papers case in the Vietnam War era to the secret surveillance program of George W. Bush's administration.
Obama, who won office in 2008 partly by capitalizing on public fatigue with the Bush era, promised to be better. On his first day in office, Jan. 21, 2009, he issued a memo to department and agency heads saying that his administration "is committed to creating an unprecedented level of openness in government."
His administration brought more prosecutions under the World War I-era Espionage Act than all other presidents combined, the watchdog journalism group Pro Publica said.
In the 92 years between the Espionage Act's enactment and Obama's inauguration, it was used to indict three people, according to Pro Publica's investigation. Obama's Department of Justice used it to indict five people and the Army used it to charge one -- Bradley Manning, a private accused of leaking a trove of classified documents.
"I'm aghast to see how relentlessly this administration and the Justice Department have been pursuing" leaks, Kirtley said.
Department guidelines for subpoenaing reporters' phone records require "the express authorization of the attorney general."
Holder said he recused himself from the investigation after being interviewed by the FBI, so his deputy made the decision.
The guidelines were written in response to secret subpoenas of reporters' phone records by the Nixon administration in the early 1970s, Kirtley said, adding, "Those guidelines have been intact for a long time, and the world has not collapsed."
Investigators must try to get the information from other sources and, if it won't compromise an investigation, negotiate with the media outlet before seeking the subpoenas, the guidelines state.
"This plainly did not happen," Pruitt said in a letter to Holder on Monday.
Deputy Attorney General James Cole, in a letter to Pruitt on Tuesday, said he complied with the guidelines. The leak investigation included "conducting over 550 interviews and reviewing tens of thousands of documents before seeking the (telephone) toll records at issue."
The subpoenas probably didn't violate law, but their disclosure exposed an uncomfortable truth: Freedom of the press often depends upon respect for the spirit of the law more than the letter of it, said Mary-Rose Papandrea, a law professor who focuses on media law and national security at Boston College.
"I think this revelation undermines our confidence that the Department of Justice will respect these First Amendment principles," Papandrea said.
Mike Wereschagin is a staff writer for Trib Total Media.
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17 Comments

  1. inluminatuoComment by inluminatuo
    May 15, 2013 @ 9:04 am
    Just how stupid is that, Tap the phone lines of the very media people that cover your own smelly political undergarments? Yes folks Liberalism IS a form of insanity. The proof is in the pudding, just how tasty has that pot of Progressive porridge become. Even Goldilocks would turn her nose up on this pot of poop that Obama and Holder have stirred and this one will NOT crust over soon. Can anyone in the Press start using the “I” word on a regular basis? First they blame Bush for all their failures, Now it is the underlings in the administration, Then they go after the Press corps,,,,Just ask yourself America, when do these feckless leader children in adult bodies EVER grow up and take responsibility for their own failures? Everyone now knows who screwed it up but the Denier-in-Chief. This makes for a dangerous time in America when people of delusions run our country. Just watch the Nixonian mental breakdown repeat itself in a sea of self-denial. Witness how a spineless finger pointing President makes Hunchbacks out of a once great American People of purpose and cobbles a once upright standing nation now bent low in corruption that turns a once pristine Whitehouse into a political Outhouse.
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    • jimbogolfComment by jimbogolf
      May 15, 2013 @ 9:54 am
      You always have the best comments. Kudos
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      Rating: 4.0/5 (17 votes cast)
  2. pistol packing mamaComment by txgoatlady
    May 15, 2013 @ 9:07 am
    “Holder said he recused himself from the investigation after being interviewed by the FBI, so his deputy made the decision.”
    Not to sound like a complete moron, but exactly what does that mean? He recused himself because he had been interviewed by the FBI. About the leak? About the investigation into the leak?
    They really messed up by ticking off the AP. Obama may not be able to get them and the rest of the MSM to carry their water any longer.
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    • sirodComment by sirod
      May 15, 2013 @ 9:33 am
      I sure do hope the MSM wise up.
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      Rating: 4.7/5 (13 votes cast)
    • sumitchComment by sumitch
      May 15, 2013 @ 11:04 am
      I wonder how they like it when it’s their ox being gored? Maybe congress will listen to the press when they start shouting foul. They sure don’t listen to their constituents or pay any attention to this administration abusing the constitution.
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      Rating: 4.5/5 (8 votes cast)
  3. bna42Comment by bna42
    May 15, 2013 @ 9:09 am
    “. . .the aggression with which the Obama administration has cracked down on unauthorized leaks of information.”
    This has been done specifically to intimidate the people who are exposing his administration’s corruption. Take a loo at the people who were prosecuted and what leaks they were accused of releasing.
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    Rating: 4.8/5 (18 votes cast)
    • sirodComment by sirod
      May 15, 2013 @ 9:35 am
      Their lies just don’t pass the smell test. What a sorry bunch!
      They are trying to make the people afraid of them by using the IRS and the media circus. They are shutting people up by intimidation.
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      Rating: 4.5/5 (17 votes cast)
  4. librabobComment by librabob
    May 15, 2013 @ 9:15 am
    Eric Holder; “It wasn’t me, my deputy authorized those subpoenas”. It seems like a pattern is developing here with Obama, Clinton and Holder… I saw nothing, I heard nothing, I know nothing, it’s not my fault, some lower level person made that decision without my knowledge or approval.
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    • thedoveComment by thedove
      May 15, 2013 @ 1:42 pm
      The point all Obama’s sycophants overlook is if, in truth, Obama, Holder, etal really didn’t know what was happening, why in Hell not? Too busy golfing and going on vacation to pay attention? Or … dare I suggest it … lying about that as well? Oh, wait, it can’t be that, because this is a transparent government, I forgot.
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    • sumitchComment by sumitch
      May 15, 2013 @ 1:57 pm
      I wonder if Holders deputy was a Bush?
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  5. wypatriotComment by wypatriot
    May 15, 2013 @ 9:42 am
    “the Obama administration has cracked down on unauthorized leaks of information.” Don’t think for one instance even the Justice Department can find the answers. Since No One wants the Truth Out to Show How Corrupt this Administration IS !
    NOT Even a law professor who focuses on media law and national security at Boston College.
    i Wonder Who did She vote for in the Last 2 elections? And She probably Has No Idea BO wasn’t eligible for the Office ! Do any of “them” care the man is a Total Fraud !
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  6. AMVoterComment by AMVoter
    May 15, 2013 @ 10:34 am
    Nixon is a saint next to Obama.
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    Rating: 4.3/5 (14 votes cast)
  7. paladin63Comment by paladin63
    May 15, 2013 @ 10:51 am
    If they dont respect tbe Second amendment why should they respect the First.
    This is the fundamental change that Obama mentions in his speeches and the American people twice elected.him.
    I wonder what the demo-libs think.of him now.
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    Rating: 3.9/5 (8 votes cast)
  8. eagle525Comment by eagle525
    May 15, 2013 @ 11:29 am
    It is time to clean up the federal government by reducing its insatiable appetite for power.
    Obama needs to be IMPEACHED, as was Nixon. Obamas mandates and the democrats AHCA, and other coercive legislation needs to be repealed. This is no longer a “government by the people for the people”. It has become the elite ruling class dictating how the rest of us will live.
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    Rating: 4.4/5 (8 votes cast)
  9. sacheveraljames42Comment by sacheveraljames42
    May 15, 2013 @ 11:58 am
    Hey, AP..how do you like the violation of your First Amendment rights? When you were lapdogi-ing for the administration and this cardboard president against the 2nd Amendment you were all in. Now that you’re being targeted, you scream a violation of your constitutional rights. If you are really offended, then I expect to see your association press releases reveal the numerous violations this president and members of his administration have committed against the citizens of this nation. Try to commit a random act of real journalism to prove your displeasure.
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  10. poppoComment by poppo
    May 15, 2013 @ 12:06 pm
    Isn’t this kinda like Nixon excusing Agnew’s indiscretions by pointing out that Eisenhower had a lying, cheating, crooked Vice President too?
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  11. sumitchComment by sumitch
    May 15, 2013 @ 2:01 pm
    I wonder if he told him mommy that Eric jumped off the roof, would she tell him to follow?
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    Rating: 3.0/5 (2 votes cast)
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