Author Topic: Why Is Marco Rubio Co-Sponsoring A Left Wing Bill That Strips College Students Of Their Rights?  (Read 1738 times)

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Online Millee

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Last year, left wing nut bar, Democrat Senator Claire McCaskill, offered one of those bills with an utterly Orwellian title that enables the left to cover their malicious acts with virtuous words. This bill was titled the Campus Accountability and Safety Act. The bill was a direct response to the whole “campus rape” hysteria that led to a pathological liar being able to make a career of accusing an innocent man of rape and the tarring of an entire university and fraternity system for condoning rape.

This bill is evil. Period. Full stop. There are no redeeming features in it.

Early last month, the National Review did a review of the bill by two guys who are not Republicans (one Democrat and one independent) but at least one of them was involved in defending the Duke lacrosse team.

    When it comes to due process on campus, Republicans in Congress, who campaigned on vows to rein in the Obama administration’s abuses of executive power, have largely acquiesced in its bureaucratic imposition of quasi-judicial tyranny. For more than four years, the White House and the Education Department’s Office for Civil Rights (OCR) have used an implausible reinterpretation of a 1972 civil-rights law to impose mandates unimagined by the law’s sponsors. It has forced almost all of the nation’s universities and colleges to disregard due process in disciplinary proceedings when they involve allegations of sexual assault. Enforced by officials far outside the mainstream, these mandates are having a devastating impact on the nation’s universities and on the lives of dozens — almost certainly soon to be hundreds or thousands — of falsely accused students.

    One might have expected an aggressive response by House Republicans to such gross abuses of power — including subpoenas, tough oversight hearings, and corrective legislation. Instead, most of them have been mute. In the Senate, meanwhile, presidential candidate Marco Rubio of Florida, Judiciary Committee chairman Charles Grassley of Iowa, and rising star Kelly Ayotte of New Hampshire have teamed with Democratic demagogues Kirsten Gillibrand of New York and Claire McCaskill of Missouri in co-sponsoring a bill that would make matters even worse.

What the bill does is make campus rape an offense that is not investigated by police and adjudicated in court but rather an administrative offense that does not allow the accused to defend themselves, sets the standard of proof at “whatever”, and subjects the schools to fines if they do not convict enough of the accused.

    The hearing’s climate was captured by Representative Jared Polis (D., Colo.), who asserted: “If there are ten people who have been accused, and under a reasonable-likelihood standard maybe one or two did it, it seems better to get rid of all ten people.” In a scene that would have made the framers of the Constitution weep, campus-rape activists in the hearing room applauded this effusion.

But for his bill to move in a Congress dominated by Republicans, McCaskill and her kkklique had to get Republicans on board.

    Meanwhile, powerful Senate Republicans have jumped onto Obama’s anti-due-process bandwagon. Six of them, led by Rubio, Grassley, and Ayotte, joined Gillibrand, McCaskill, and four other Democrats in co-sponsoring the benign-sounding but dangerous Campus Accountability and Safety Act (CASA).

    With key Republicans along for the ride, McCaskill and Gillibrand produced a bill designed to advance the administration’s agenda. Its language presumes the guilt of all students accused of sexual assault by repeatedly calling accusers who have not yet substantiated their claims “victims,” without the critical qualifier “alleged.” CASA would also order colleges to provide a “confidential advisor” for these “victims,” with no comparable help for the accused. And it would require universities to publish data on the outcomes of their campus sexual-assault cases (which only Yale does now), apparently in the hope that doing so will invite Title IX complaints against any college that finds an insufficient number of accused students guilty.

    Further, McCaskill has said that CASA, by making adjudication processes uniform for all institutions, is designed to help “remove the underpinning of . . . lawsuits” by accused students who say they were railroaded. No wonder McCaskill believes that “victims” might see themselves as “better off doing the Title IX process” than going through the criminal-justice system.

A full list of co-sponsors is here.

Sadly, this is not some bill that Rubio was snookered on.

    The Washington Examiner’s Ashe Schow asked each sponsoring senator’s office how CASA would ensure due process for accused students. An Ayotte spokesperson declined to answer Schow’s questions, justifying the senator’s co-sponsorship by repeating the canard that one in five college women is sexually assaulted.

    A Rubio spokesperson replied, “This bill does not address this issue.” When asked whether college officials or law enforcement would have the most authority to investigate allegations, the spokesperson responded: “The victim will have the most authority.” This reflected (at best) an astonishing misunderstanding both of the need for impartial adjudication of such serious charges and of the fact that at the investigative stage there is no “victim”; there are an accuser and an accused.

Senator Rubio owes us an answer on this. Why did he co-sponsor a bill that establishes a Star Chamber for prosecuting the very ill-defined crime of sexual abuse? Why does he want our sons held hostage to the whim of anyone who wishes to accuse them of assault? Why is the accused not allowed to confront the accuser? Why is the accused not allowed counsel? Why are colleges given a quota of convictions in order to avoid sanction?

Supporting this bill is not the act of a man that believes in either the Constitution or civil liberties.

http://www.redstate.com/2016/01/05/marco-rubio-co-sponsoring-left-wing-bill-strips-college-students-rights/

Offline katzenjammer

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Why Is Marco Rubio Co-Sponsoring A Left Wing Bill That Strips College Students Of Their Rights?

Most likely because he is a politician.  In other words, first and foremost an actor playing a role in a corrupt high stakes game of power and greed.  Like virtually all politicians, he has no principles; what drives his behavior is two-fold:

1.  the desires of his largest donors, and,
2.  the advice of his consultants that are paid to strategize on how to win the election at hand.

Anyone believing the words of these politicians when they wax poetic on country, values, and principles, is pretty much a gullible fool at this point.

Offline libertybele

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It's not the first time Rubio has stood with the left nor will it be the last.  Quite frankly, he is doing more damage to the party and to this country than good.
Romans 12:16-21

Live in harmony with one another; do not be haughty, but associate with the lowly, do not claim to be wiser than you are.  Do not repay anyone evil for evil, but take thought for what is noble in the sight of all.  If it is possible, so far as it depends on you, live peaceably with all…do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good.

Offline alicewonders

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Rubio is not to be trusted.  He is all over the place.  Talks a good game, though.

A Rubio/Ayotte team sounds likely.



Don't tread on me.   8888madkitty

We told you Trump would win - bigly!

Offline libertybele

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Rubio is not to be trusted.  He is all over the place.  Talks a good game, though.

A Rubio/Ayotte team sounds likely.

Agreed. :beer:   Rubio picks sides depending on which way the wind is blowing that day and if he can benefit.
Romans 12:16-21

Live in harmony with one another; do not be haughty, but associate with the lowly, do not claim to be wiser than you are.  Do not repay anyone evil for evil, but take thought for what is noble in the sight of all.  If it is possible, so far as it depends on you, live peaceably with all…do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good.

Offline katzenjammer

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Agreed. :beer:   Rubio picks sides depending on which way the wind is blowing that day and if he can benefit.

Hey, it is one of the tangible side benefits of the 2016 presidential race, we get relieved of having Rubio as one of our senators!

(As an aside, what do you know about DeSantis?  I see that he has an 89% rating from CR, but don't know all that much about him.  Also, do you know anything about the non-pol Todd Wilcox?)

Offline katzenjammer

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Rubio is not to be trusted.  He is all over the place.  Talks a good game, though.

A Rubio/Ayotte team sounds likely.

Ayotte?


You think that she will be able to break away from McCain & Graham long enough to be a VP candidate?   :silly:

Actually, when I saw that Haley has been tapped to give the SoTU response, I figured that someone wants to position her for the VP slot.

Offline ArneFufkin

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Marco Rubio has a 94% rating from the Heritage Foundation.  He has a 100% rating from the American Conservative Union. 

One can prefer Cruz or Trump or whomever but it is counter-productive to pretend that a Marco Rubio Presidency would be anything but exponentially preferable to a Hillary Clinton Presidency.


Offline libertybele

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Hey, it is one of the tangible side benefits of the 2016 presidential race, we get relieved of having Rubio as one of our senators!

(As an aside, what do you know about DeSantis?  I see that he has an 89% rating from CR, but don't know all that much about him.  Also, do you know anything about the non-pol Todd Wilcox?)

At this point in time, I know absolutely nothing about DeSantis -- I have not done any research nor made any inquiries about him -- same with Wilcox.  Getting rid of Rubio from the Senate will be a good thing; but I'm not so sure that the alternative will be any better. 
Romans 12:16-21

Live in harmony with one another; do not be haughty, but associate with the lowly, do not claim to be wiser than you are.  Do not repay anyone evil for evil, but take thought for what is noble in the sight of all.  If it is possible, so far as it depends on you, live peaceably with all…do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good.

Offline flowers

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Rubio is dead to me. ***cool cat***


Offline katzenjammer

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At this point in time, I know absolutely nothing about DeSantis -- I have not done any research nor made any inquiries about him -- same with Wilcox.  Getting rid of Rubio from the Senate will be a good thing; but I'm not so sure that the alternative will be any better.

OK, I haven't yet either.  (I have already told David Jolly (my current Representative) that I won't be supporting him in the Senate Primary.)

Offline Formerly Once-Ler

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Gosh, I wonder why Rubio would want to be super anti-rape during the resurrection of the Clinton sex scandals?  Conservatives who were against him last week are really against him now!