Friday, 16 December 2011

Perry defends Joe Arpaio

Two-hundred twenty years ago today, Virginia became the eleventh state to ratify the Bill of Rights to the Constitution. Those amendments were insisted on by the anti-Federalists as their price for supporting the Constitution. They feared that without a guarantee of rights, a strong federal government might devolve into tyranny.


The Bill of Rights represents something extraordinary and new in the history of government. Democracy was nothing new. The Greeks had it almost 3,000 years ago, but Athenian democracy in Athens' golden age was often as tyrannical as monarchies. In Greece, in Rome, and in Carthage, democracy was often brutal and regularly corrupted, paving the way either for collapse or for empire.


What happened 220 years ago for the first time in the world was that basic rights were enshrined as a foundation of government. It wasn't perfect - those rights didn't extend to black slaves, Indians and women - but it was a start, and it was an idea that has exploded, fizzled, and exploded again across the nations of the world.


Justice's Civil Rights Division alleged that Arpaio's office has committed a wide range of violations, including following a pattern of racial profiling and discrimination, and carrying out heavy-handed immigration patrols based on racially charged citizen complaints.


"I would suggest to you that these people are out after Sheriff Joe," Perry said, though he acknowledged he didn't know the details of the charges. "He is tough. And again, when I'm the president of the United States, you're not going to see me going after states like Arizona or Alabama, suing sovereign states for making decisions."


Perry also told Neil Cavuto of Fox News that he has no plans to get out of the race, even if he should wind up with a fourth-place finish in Iowa. Most Hawkeye State polls show him well behind Newt Gingrich, Mitt Romney, and Rep. Ron Paul.


Although the goal is to get one of the proverbial three tickets out of the state, Perry said, "You'll still see me in New Hampshire and South Carolina and Florida."


He predicted that he will have a good showing in the state, bolstered by a bus tour he just began that will take him across over 40 Iowa cities. Perry said that Iowa voters "want to touch you, feel you, and sniff on you.

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