Robert Redford makes 'Pinhead' of the week list | Fox News Video
We're arrived at a strange point in time, when people, about a half a generation to a generation older than me, who embraced radical ideals and undertook criminal actions in support of them in the past, have suddenly found themselves pardoned, forgiven, empowered, and at the pinnacle of their influence.
Take the case of Weather Underground radical Kathy Boudin. She was the getaway driver in a 1981 armored car heist in Rockland County, NY, in which two cops and a security guard were killed, for which she did 22 years. Her specific contribution to the crime? She convinced responding police to lower their weapons, allowing her accomplices to get the drop on them. Real nice, lady. Now, she's suddenly rehabilitated, and an adjunct professor of social work at Columbia, as well as a Scholar-in-residence at NYU's School of Law. Check out her sparkly CU web page: Kathy Boudin | Columbia University School of Social Work
We need this like we need a hole in the head. Time marches on, and we need the current crop of patchouli-smelling, Constitution-trampling dinosaurs to keep on marching forward with it into the boneyard, but quickly.
We're arrived at a strange point in time, when people, about a half a generation to a generation older than me, who embraced radical ideals and undertook criminal actions in support of them in the past, have suddenly found themselves pardoned, forgiven, empowered, and at the pinnacle of their influence.
Take the case of Weather Underground radical Kathy Boudin. She was the getaway driver in a 1981 armored car heist in Rockland County, NY, in which two cops and a security guard were killed, for which she did 22 years. Her specific contribution to the crime? She convinced responding police to lower their weapons, allowing her accomplices to get the drop on them. Real nice, lady. Now, she's suddenly rehabilitated, and an adjunct professor of social work at Columbia, as well as a Scholar-in-residence at NYU's School of Law. Check out her sparkly CU web page: Kathy Boudin | Columbia University School of Social Work
We need this like we need a hole in the head. Time marches on, and we need the current crop of patchouli-smelling, Constitution-trampling dinosaurs to keep on marching forward with it into the boneyard, but quickly.