Showing posts with label Holder. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Holder. Show all posts

Saturday, January 24, 2015

PHOTO: "Holder" and wiser

West Indies bowler Jason Holder (left) celebrates after taking the wicket of South African batsman and captain Hashim Amla (right) during the third day of the third Test at Newlands cricket stadium in Cape Town, South Africa, yesterday.

(PHOTO: AFP)


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PHOTO: "Holder" and wiser

Tuesday, January 6, 2015

Breaking Amla, de Villiers partnership vital, says Holder

CAPE TOWN, South Africa (CMC) — Jason Holder says today’s third day will be key for West Indies if they are to get anything out of the final Test, and says his fellow bowlers will need to deliver a much more clinical performance in order to limit South Africa.

The Proteas ended the second day at Newlands on 227 for three, only 102 runs behind West Indies’ first innings total of 329.

Captain Hashim Amla was unbeaten on 55 and partnered by AB de Villiers on 32, and Holder said breaking the fourth wicket partnership already worth 70 runs, would be top on the priority list.

“We probably let them score a little bit too freely. The scoring rate was a little bit too high. Having said that, I thought we batted decently in the early morning but lost quick wickets,” Holder told reporters here yesterday.

“I think tomorrow (Sunday) it is very important for us to start well, come and get some early wickets and try to get de Villiers and Amla out and break that partnership.”

He continued: “We are 13 or so overs shy of the new ball but it’s important that we don’t leak runs early in the morning and just try to break the partnership. These two guys have held us up the entire series so it’s just about breaking this partnership as quickly as possible tomorrow morning and getting (Stiaan) van Zyl and the other guy (Temba Bavuma) in.”

Resuming the day on 276 for six, West Indies lost their last four wickets for 53 runs with Jermaine Blackwood converting his overnight 45 into 56 and Holder extending his five not out to 24.

In reply, the Proteas batted well in partnerships. Alviro Petersen hit 42 and posted 48 for the first wicket with Dean Elgar (8) before adding a further 56 for the second wicket with Faf du Plessis, who top scored with 68.

Du Plessis and Amla then put on 53 for the third wicket to make the Windies toil.

Holder said West Indies had created pressure for themselves by falling short of the par score when they batted.

“I think we were about 70 runs short … we should have probably got 400. We needed to take it in stages but we obviously lost wickets quickly this morning. However, we did score pretty quickly, too, but 400 was probably a par score on this track,” he pointed out.

He added: “We have to wait and see what tomorrow brings for us but it’s all about being a little more consistent and getting the ball in better areas than we did today.”

West Indies trail 0-1 in the three-match series after going down by an innings and 220-runs in the Centurion Test and drawing the second in Port Elizabeth.


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Breaking Amla, de Villiers partnership vital, says Holder

Sunday, October 19, 2014

Deadly confrontation with licensed firearm holder

Saturday, October 18, 2014 | 10:34 AM    

KINGSTON, Jamaica – An unidentified man was fatally shot during a confrontation with a licensed firearm holder in Bushy Park, St Catherine Friday afternoon.

The man is said to be of dark complexion, slim-build and about 5 feet 9 inches tall.

The police say that one Taurus PT 9mm pistol with a magazine containing four 9mm rounds was seized during the incident.?

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Deadly confrontation with licensed firearm holder

Tuesday, September 30, 2014

All talk, no action - Blindness prevents master"s degree holder Wilbert Harvey from gaining employment

Contributed

Wilbert Harvey was born blind.

Social worker Wilbert Harvey may have been born blind, but he has a clear vision of a future of equal rights for persons with special needs in Jamaica.

With both a bachelor’s and master’s degree in social work, he is qualified to take on corporate Jamaica. However, according to the 30-year-old, his biggest difficulty has not been living with his disability, but the inability of others to offer equal opportunities.

Since his graduation from the master’s programme at the University of the West Indies, Harvey has not been able to obtain a full-time job.

Gap between the rhetoric and action

He said: “One of the biggest challenges has been the barriers created by society in terms of discrimination, based on ignorance. My story is not an individualistic one either. Various stakeholders, the Government and business entities, in keeping with the global inclusive approach, say they are on board with special needs – that they welcome people like me – but there is a significant gap between the rhetoric and action.”

Harvey said persons with special needs are increasingly ensuring that they are qualified to compete in the corporate world and yet their skills are being underutilised. “I know of one colleague who has been job hunting for more than 20 years and has resorted to other studies as a means of keeping occupied,” he said. “We all have obligations in this society and I just want to highlight this situation and to make an appeal for people like myself not to be boxed into a corner.”

Harvey is considering participating in the upcoming Digicel Foundation 5K Run/Walk which is geared at generating contributions for various special-needs institutions across the island. Taking place on October 11, the 5K Run/Walk is one of the many platforms that Digicel Foundation has utilised to assist those with special needs. Persons interested in participating may register at www.runningeventsja.com.


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All talk, no action - Blindness prevents master"s degree holder Wilbert Harvey from gaining employment

Saturday, September 27, 2014

JUAN WILLIAMS: DOJ now "absolute pit" of modern politics - Speculation abounds over Holder replacement - VIDEO: Who will replace Holder? - VIDEO: Breaking down Holder"s legacy

When Richard Nixon made a show of quitting politics in 1962 he famously taunted his liberal critics in the media saying “you won’t have Nixon to kick around anymore.”

The question on my mind today is: what are conservatives going to do now that they don’t have Eric Holder to kick around anymore?

Holder announced Thursday that he will step down as the Attorney General of the United States as soon as his successor is confirmed. Given the poisonous politics in Congress these days and the prospect of a Republican takeover of the Senate next year, finding a successor who can win confirmation could take quite a while.

To my eyes Holder’s tenure is the latest episode of a much bigger political nightmare that has been going on for decades under both Republican and Democratic administrations.

Here’s how the first line of The New York Times story about the Holder resignation read: “Replacing Mr. Holder, who provoked the ire of Republicans as President Obama’s chief liberal warrior, could be a political nightmare.”

To my eyes Holder’s tenure is the latest episode of a much bigger political nightmare that has been going on for decades under both Republican and Democratic administrations.

The Justice Department has devolved into the heart of Washington darkness, the absolute pit of modern political polarization in my lifetime.

In the last 20 years there is a direct line of partisan political attacks on the Justice Department from Waco to “Torture Memos” to the “Fast and Furious” episode. The GOP House hit bottom with its historically sad decision to hold this attorney general in contempt of Congress.

The truth is that Holder deserves to be celebrated as the attorney general who rebuilt a broken federal agency and restored its reputation.

Recall that it was the Bush Justice Department that gave us the U.S. Attorney scandals where federal prosecutors were encouraged to go after Democratic officials and political opponents of the president. It was also the Bush-era DOJ that gutted the Civil Rights Division which historically policed violations of civil rights and voting rights.

Holder, with the help of Thomas Perez, the former head of the civil right division and currently the labor secretary, restored that division’s integrity from the wreckage they inherited.

For Holder, civil rights issues were deeply personal. He is the brother-in-law of the late Vivian Malone, one of the African American students blocked from entering the University of Alabama by Governor George Wallace.

Unlike his predecessors, he aggressively pursued violations of Americans’ voting rights and asserted the Department’s power under the preclearance provision of Section 5 of the 1965 Voting Rights Act.

When GOP governors and state legislatures tried to disenfranchise, young people, the poor and especially minority voters – central components of the Democratic coalition —  by ending early voting, purging voter rolls and requiring photo identification, Holder pushed back. That was not a political act. He stood up because anyone representing the Constitution has an obligation to defend every American’s right to vote.

As the nation’s first African American Attorney General, Holder gave conservatives heartburn when he said that in many respects, the U.S. had been “a nation of cowards” when it came to race. Holder’s words are important to maintaining trust in the nation’s system of justice among people of all races as the nation reaches new heights of racial diversity.

And note that he won support from conservatives like Senator Rand Paul , R-Ky. and Texas Governor Rick Perry in pushing for changes to mandatory minimums for low-level drug offenses that contribute to high rates of jail time for people of color.

Instead of supporting Holder in those efforts, the Republican House of Representatives took the unprecedented step of voting to hold him in contempt of Congress over the “Fast and Furious” operation. What the Republicans conveniently forgot is that the Justice Department’s first duty is as a law enforcement agency. Republican and Democratic prosecutors agree the documents supposedly being “withheld” were required for prosecution of criminals and would have been useless in court if they became political fodder.

Also, the GOP scandal mongers conveniently forgot that the “gun-walking” program started under the Bush administration and it was Holder who ended the program.

As with so many of the “controversies” Republicans attacked Holder over, the criticism said more about the critics than it did Holder.

But the larger problem for our government – politicization of the attorney general’s role – neither began nor ended with Eric Holder.

Democrat President John F. Kennedy famously raised eyebrows by appointing his brother Bobby Kennedy as the nation’s top law enforcement officer. This put RFK in a position to cover JFK’s political back as the two brothers worked to advance what was, at the time, a very progressive agenda – especially on civil rights.   

Republican Richard Nixon appointed one of his closest friends and campaign advisors, John Mitchell as Attorney General. Mitchell is widely regarded as the most corrupt Attorney General in U.S. history because of his involvement in the Watergate scandal and CREEP (the Committee to Re-elect the President). Mitchell served 19 months in prison because of the crimes he committed as Nixon’s A.G.

Republican Ronald Reagan was similarly criticized for appointed Edwin Meese as his attorney general. Meese had been one of Reagan’s closest friends and political advisers, having served as his chief of staff when he was governor of California. Meese was said to be instrumental in protecting Reagan from the political fallout of the Iran Contra Affair. Meese resigned as attorney general when he came under investigation from a special prosecutor.

In the modern era, President Clinton’s Attorney General Janet Reno became a lightning rod for controversy and criticism for Republicans in Congress. Reno is best remembered for botched federal raid of the Branch Davidian compound in Waco, Texas in 1993 and the return of Elian Gonzalez to Cuba in 1999.

President George W. Bush appointed John Ashcroft as attorney general, a fierce right-wing partisan who had served as a U.S. Senator from Missouri. Ashcroft and his successor Alberto Gonzalez were instrumental in providing the legal justification for the most extreme anti-terrorism actions of the Bush administration. For Ashcroft, it was the USA PATRIOT ACT. For Gonzalez, it was the so-called “Torture Memos” which the Bush administration relied on for its coerced interrogations and waterboarding of terror suspects.

My point in relaying this abridged history of the recent attorneys generals is to show that the Justice Department was deeply politicized before Holder ever arrived.

It used to be that being an experienced, skilled legal mind was enough for that job. Now, nominees have to be a good politician as well.

Have we forgotten that the attorney general is supposed to be an independent, non-partisan law enforcement officer?

You can bet that the next attorney general – whether he or she is appointed by President Hillary Clinton or President Ted Cruz – will be another lightning rod for all the political hate and division in our country.

History will soon write that Holder’s tenure was a light of hope during a dreadful era of political games at the Department of Justice.

Juan Williams is a co-host of FNC’s “The Five,” where he is one of seven rotating Fox personalities. Additionally, he serves as FNC’s political analyst, a regular panelist on “Fox News Sunday” and “Special Report with Bret Baier” and is a regular substitute host for “The O’Reilly Factor.” He joined Fox News Channel (FNC) in 1997 as a contributor. Click here for more information on Juan Williams. 

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JUAN WILLIAMS: DOJ now "absolute pit" of modern politics - Speculation abounds over Holder replacement - VIDEO: Who will replace Holder? - VIDEO: Breaking down Holder"s legacy