Frickin Wicked!

It is just so frickin wicked!

Tell me your wicked thoughts!

Things are just so frickin wicked, dude.

We all know the President is “the decider” – wouldn’t it be nice if he decided to actually do something useful?

Via Jesus’ General

Clarence Aaron was a college student in 1992 when he introduced two dealers to each other. They paid him $1,500. Nine kilograms of cocaine were traded. A second deal didn’t happen. Yet when the feds arrested the group, they charged Aaron with dealing 24 kilograms of crack cocaine, because one dealer was going to turn the cocaine into crack and the second deal had been set up. Aaron failed to cut a deal by pleading guilty and testifying against others. Aaron’s sentence? Life without parole. That’s right, Aaron wasn’t in charge, he wasn’t a professional dealer, he had been charged with a first-time nonviolent drug offense and he’s serving the same sentence as the treasonous FBI-agent-turned-spy Robert Hanssen.

You might expect that sort of over-the-top sentence in the Middle Ages or some hellhole dictatorship that does not value human life. An enlightened nation, however, has no business locking up a kid and throwing away the key for life — because he did something both criminal and stupid when he was, as Bush once described his early years, “young and irresponsible.” I can’t help but believe that if a white college kid had screwed up like this, unlike the African-American Aaron, he would have received a more fitting sentence.

Bush should commute Aaron’s sentence this year, because it is the right thing to do. He also should work with the U.S. pardon attorney to release other prisoners serving sentences that far exceed their crimes. While in office, Bush has issued 97 pardons and two commutations. Two commutations are too few. Julie Stewart, the president of Families Against Mandatory Minimums, hears that the Bushies don’t want to commute sentences that comply with guidelines, no matter how barbaric they are. “Why have a pardon attorney’s office?” she asked rhetorically. “The Founding Fathers gave (the pardon) to the president for the very purpose of exercising it when the punishment doesn’t fit the crime.”

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