This is the part I found the most ignorant and downright stupid.
Montgomery (AP) - About 50 people lined up along the steps of the state Capitol to sign a petition calling for the impeachment U-S. District Judge Myron Thompson, who ordered Alabama Supreme Court Chief Justice Roy Moore to remove the Ten Commandments monument from the state judicial building's rotunda.
Judge Thompson is a federal judge duly appointed by the President and confirmed by the Senate. He is an Article III judge, meaning he shall serve during "good behaviour," which means for life, or until he commits a felony or misdemeanor involving dishonesty.
He cannot be impeached for political reasons, which is precisely what the idiots in the newspaper article are calling for. The framers of the constitution very deliberately made the judicial branch of the United States insulated from politics. They answer to no one so they cannot be subject to the same political accountability that our elected officials are. It is one of the checks and balances designed into our government.
The rally was organized by the Reverend Frank Raddish, of the Washington-based Capitol Hill Independent Baptist Ministries, who says Thompson does not represent the majority of Alabamans on the Ten Commandments debate.
Duh. Thompson is not an elected official of the State of Alabama. He does not represent Alabamians. He is an appointed federal judge, who happens to hold a seat on the bench located within the Middle District of Alabama for venue purposes only. Judge Thompson is part of the federal judiciary, Raddish. The only federal officials who represent Alabama are congressmen from Alabama districts and Alabama's two senators in Washington.
Raddish can collect 100 million signatures of petitions if he wants. There is absolutely nothing Congress can do to Thompson. He is 100% insulated from politics.
I would add that Roy Moore's idiotic 10 Commandments campaign does not represent the majority of Alabamians' views or desires either.
I think it's notable that an "outside agitator"--Raddish is from Washington, DC--has to come in and tell Alabamians what they want.
AS