Categories
- Arts & Entertainment
- Business
- Communications
- Computers
- Culture & Society
- Disease & Illness
- Fashion
- Finance
- Food & Beverage
- Health & Fitness
- Hobbies
- Home & Family
- Home Based Business
- Internet Business
- Legal
- Pets & Animals
- Politics
- Product Reviews
- Recreation & Sports
- Reference & Education
- Religion
- Self Improvement
- Shopping
- Travel & Leisure
- Vehicles
- Writing & Speaking
Information
Government Lawyers Vacation on Taxpayers Dollars
Submitted: 2007-01-17 16:24:14
Print this article | Tell a friend | For publisher |
Some of the greatest abuses in government with regards to taxpayers dollars come from the lawyers and government. They cannot make it in the real world in law and therefore join the government to sponge off the American taxpayer. We know we cannot trust lawyers in the real world and it appears we cannot trust government lawyers either. In fact, government lawyers set up a conference and hotel rooms at an exclusive golf and tennis resort at; St. Simons Island in Georgia. How are they able to do this?
Using government credit cards of course. Lawyers always tell us that they can keep their profession honest and police their own. However, this is not the case and the lawyers in government are probably the worst lawyers of all judging by this abuse of government credit cards using taxpayers money.
It must be nice to go on vacation as a government lawyer to any golf and tennis resort that you feel like using taxpayers money and government credit cards? Eventually these government lawyers will graduate and move into private practice where they will be just as dishonest and it makes you wonder how come we don't have more rules and regulations for government lawyers and attorneys in the private sector.
It is clear that they believe they are above the law. I have personally met government lawyers working in a few agencies in Washington, DC and I could tell by their body language that they were not only lying but they had something to hide.
Why is it that government federal lawyers believe they can go to a golf and tennis club resort to do ongoing training and when they could just as well use a Federal law Enforcement training Center; in fact there is one nearby in Georgia along the coast. This is a complete waste of taxpayers money and of the use of government credit cards and we should all be appalled that these things go on every single day in our government.
We need to put embedded RFID chips in each government lawyer because we cannot trust them as far as we can throw them. And when they leave the government we should not allow them to go into private practice without a lie detector test. Please consider this in 2006.
Lance Winslow
Article source: Expert Articles
Most Recent Articles in Politics category
- A Race Hanging By a Thread - By: Bobby Miller s
I have never spoken a kind word about the Israelis in my life, but it's simply impossible to deal with these hate-consumed Arabs. - The Politics of a Great Headline - By: Colleen Davis
Election time is just around the corner and candidate's are out in full force pushing their campaigns with posters and signs on every other corner. Add this to the regular influx of ads hitting the streets every week - President Searching With a Fine Tooth Comb - By: Ajeet Khurana
The US Presidential elections are due in 2008. Intelligent voters always weigh their options before choosing someone as President. - The Insurgency in Southern Thailand - By: Matt Crook
Thai premier Surayud Chulanont has reacted to escalating violence in Thailand’s southernmost regions by traveling to the area and making his latest move towards ending decades of violence.The insurgency in southern Thailand has received major media attention in the wake of a series of violent incidents centered in the three southern provinces of Yala, Pattani and Narathiwat.The history of this separatist movement can be traced back to the early twentieth century when in 1902 Patani was annexed by Thailand (then known as Siam). - John Kerry, Republicans, & Our Military: So Irate Together - By: Stephen Oakes
What do John Kerry, Republicans, and now the U.S. military have in common? - Fighting Dem's, Hiding Dem's, and All Things in Between - By: Greg Reeson
The latest television campaign ad in the Virginia Senate race features two of the primary election approaches engineered by Democratic strategists for this November's mid-term contest: attacking the President's judgment and competence and appealing to the patriotism and dedication to service of current and former military members. These two campaign tactics, along with a third, newer strategy that just emerged in recent weeks, form the core of Howard Dean's plan for winning back the House and Senate after twelve years of Republican control.The first part of the campaign strategy centers on attacking the Republican candidate, Senator George Allen, by framing him as "guilty through association" for his support of the President and his policies. - American Government's Chief Cornerstone and Indissoluble Bond - By: Paul Davis
Our Founding Fathers pledged their lives, fortunes and sacred honor for the freedoms we now possess and so casually take for granted.Samuel Adams, the Father of the American Revolution, the patriot and leader who brought about our famous saying, “No taxation without representation” he said:“The right to freedom being the gift of the Almighty… The rights of the colonists as Christians…may be best understood by reading and carefully studying the institution of The Great Law Giver and Head of the Christian Church, which are to be found clearly written and promulgated in the New Testament.”On September 6, 1774, the second day of he Continental Congress, Samuel Adams proposed that one session be opened with prayer. - Will Europe Go Left Or Right - By: Eric Sutherland
With Merkal in West Germany being pragmatic by pushing through benefit reforms and the big German companies pushing the unions to agree new conditions in exchange for jobs to remain in Germany and respond to Globalisation by moving production to low cost Eastern European or Asian countries. These conditions covered both working practices and redundancy benefits payable. In Germany it appears to be working, with the increase in output and the only country in socialist Europe. - New Era in the UN - By: Ziv Maor
Does the appointment of Ban Ki-moon as UN Secretary General bode well for UN-US relations? What challenges does Ki-moon face? A quick sketch of the pre-eminent diplomat On September 13 2006, the UN Security Council approved the appointment of Ban Ki-moon as the next UN Secretary General. - Creating Righteous U.S. Government - By: Ed Howes
In truth, I am more than a little surprised nuclear regime change has not yet happened in America. Whatever has prevented it is certainly not the Department of Homeland Security. Far more likely millions of sincere prayers for mercy on these miserable offenders have delayed what may be inevitable.
