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Friday, June 24, 2011

OC Board of Directors Unanimously Renews Funding for OC Human Relations Commission



OC Supervisor John Moorlach looking to see which way the wind is blowing
"What happened, John?"


Several days ago, the Orange County Board of Supervisors unanimously voted to fund the OC Human Relations Commission for next year in spite of a steady stream of calls to cut off funding for this useless and biased outfit that sucks up about $300,000 annually from the local tax-payers. That includes a six-figure salary for their empty suit CEO Rusty Kennedy.

http://egov.ocgov.com/ocgov/Info%20OC/Departments%20&%20Agencies/OC%20Human%20Relations

Here is what is interesting. By our estimates, out of the 5 supervisors, we figured a couple were in favor of cutting off funding. (Three were needed.) What is surprising is that Supervisor John Moorlach also voted for renewed funding. Why is that surprising? On April 19, I spoke at the Board of Supervisors meeting along with two other activists and called for a stop to OCHRC funding. Afterward, all three of us were joined in the hallway by Moorlach's chief assistant, who encouraged us and assured us that his boss was against continued funding.

So what happened, Mr Moorlach?

Was it political pressure from CAIR that changed your vote? It is a fact that CAIR supported renewed funding when it came under serious attack. They like the OCHRC, and well they should. It does their bidding and ignores complaints of anti-Semitism at places like UC Irvine. In addition, Kennedy just gave one of his precious "Rusty Awards" to Muzammil Siddiqi.

Now that this white elephant is funded for another year, we can all look forward to the OCHRC's next annual publication with all those nice charts and graphs showing how many ethnic groups were victimized by other groups in hate crimes during the year in OC (not very many). And of course, more deserving liberals will receive this next year.....

The Rusty Award

1 comment:

fullerton taxpayer said...

it is more humiliating to win a victory only to be exposed afterwards. It may be a long, hot summer that ripens the fruit of our labor.