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October 2, 2010

Gov. vetoes Holocaust bill

California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger has vetoed a bill that would have required companies bidding for a piece of the state’s lucrative high-speed rail contract to disclose their roles in transporting Jews to Nazi concentration camps.
The legislation, which overwhelmingly passed the state’s assembly and senate, did not name a specific company. However, the bill’s chief sponsor, Democratic Assemblyman Bob Blumenfield, made it clear that the main target was the French national railway SNCF, or Societe Nationale du Chemins de Fer Francais.
In vetoing the Holocaust Survivors Responsibility Act on Thursday night (9/30), Schwarzenegger said he sympathized with victims of the Nazi deportations, but that the legislation “needlessly places the state in a position of acknowledging the activities of companies during that time.”
SNCF is now expected to bid for a major role in the $45 billion project, which is expected to zip passengers by 2020 from Los Angeles to San Francisco and Sacramento at speeds of 220 miles per hour.
Blumenfield had charged earlier that SNCF had profited from its wartime collaboration, had never admitted its actions, disclosed its record, or be held accountable to victims.
In their defense, SNCF officials asserted that the French railway system was under German control during most of the war and that the Nazis executed about 800 railroad workers and deported another 1,200 for disobeying orders.
Following Schwarzenegger’s veto, the railroad company released a statement that “The atrocities committed by Nazi Germany during WWII were so horrific that we can never forget, nor should we. That’s why SCNF will continue its commitment to complete transparency of its WWII history, and will voluntarily comply , and even exceed, the requirements [the bill] would have mandated.”
Blumenfield pledged that he would hold SCNF officials to their promise.
(end)
(10/2/10)

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The Rick Sanchez anti-Semitic fallout

More from the you-can’t-say-that-on-television (or in polite society) files. This time courtesy of (former) CNN anchor Rick Sanchez. Here’s how the Huffington Post summarized his remarks:

Discussing Stewart with radio host Pete Dominick, Sanchez said that the “Daily Show” host has a limited worldview, and called him a “bigot.”

The conversation began with Sanchez decrying “elite, Northeast establishment liberals” who “deep down, when they look at a guy like me, they see a guy automatically who belongs in the second tier, and not the top tier.

“I think to some extent Jon Stewart and [Stephen] Colbert are the same way. I think Jon Stewart’s a bigot,” he said. “I think he looks at the world through, his mom, who was a school teacher, and his dad, who was a physicist or something like that. Great, I’m so happy that he grew up in a suburban middle class New Jersey home with everything you could ever imagine.”

Sanchez then went on to claim that CNN and the rest of the media are run by Jews—like Stewart.

You can hear the whole conversation in the above video. As I’ve discussed before, the Jewish-media conspiracy is a myth. An enduring one that is reinforced by the likes of folks who see a Jew everywhere they look in the MSM—repeat: Rupert Murdoch is not Jewish.

Anyway, Sanchez got canned at CNN for his comments. Probably by those Jews running the place.

The remarks and fallout have attracted attention around the globe—here’s the Tehran Times coverage—and even brought a much-needed ratings boost to Sanchez’s CNN program, according to Gawker:

Rick’s List was the most-watched program on CNN yesterday. Too bad Sanchez wasn’t hosting because he’d been fired for his anti-semitic rant.

Sanchez has yet to comment. He’s gone ghost, even on Twitter.

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