united we stand

Check this out: [via WIL WHEATON DOT NET]

In 1968, Richard Nixon won the White House. He did it in a shameful way–by dividing Americans against one another, stirring up racial prejudices, and bringing out the worst in people.

They called it the “Southern Strategy,” and the Republicans have been using it ever since. Nixon pioneered it, and Ronald Reagan perfected it, using phrases like “racial quotas” and “welfare queens” to convince white Americans that minorities were to blame for all of America’s problems.

The Republican Party would never win elections if they came out and said their core agenda was about selling America piece by piece to their campaign contributors and making sure that wealth and power is concentrated in the hands of a few. To distract people from their real agenda, they run elections based on race, dividing us, instead of uniting us….

In America, there is nothing black or white about having to live from one paycheck to the next. It’s time we had a new politics in America–a politics that refuses to pander to our lowest prejudices. Because when white people and black people and brown people vote together, that’s when we make true progress in this country.

(actually, Bush is using the gay marriage issue, not race to divide us and distract us from the real issues)

Tate Case Inspires Bill To Keep Juveniles Out Of Prisons

[Justice for Juveniles]
The court case of Lionel Tate has inspired a South Florida legislator to push a measure that would keep juveniles out of prisons.

Tate is now nearly 17. He was 12 when he killed Tiffany Eunick back in July of 1999. He was tried as ‘an’ ‘adult’ and given a life prison term. But an appeals court has overturned the conviction, and Tate is now considering a plea bargain.

State Sen. Frederica Wilson of Miami said she’ll push legislation requiring anyone under age 18 who is convicted of a crime to be turned over to the Department of Juvenile Justice. But Tallahassee child advocate Jack Levine said a more likely scenario is for legislators to give judges more discretion when sentencing a younger offender.

A little over 6 percent of the state prison population is made up of inmates who committed their crimes while under 18.

Is It Right To Be A Lefty? Or Is That The Wrong Question?

Plastic::Politics::Ideas: “What exactly is your definition of left, or of right? Is it as simple as Democrat or Republican?” [Plastic]

My Political Compass score is Economic Left/Right: -1.38, Social Libertarian/Authoritarian: -6.62. I’m strongly opposed to religion in government, yet I also object to high taxes and big government spending. As a gay man, I’m disgusted by the constant attacks on us by the Right, so I’m forced to vote against them even if I don’t fully agree with the other side.

Gay marriage issue reminiscent of Brown vs. Board of Education

Great letter in the Hampshire Gazette:

Last Friday I was listening to the radio when I heard someone complaining that the court had overstepped its bounds , making social policy against the better judgement of the citizenry and subverting the legislature. I assumed at first that this was the now familiar lament of those who disagree with the SJC ruling on civil marriage for gay citizens. However, it turned out to be a voice from 1953 reacting against the landmark Brown v. Board of Education decision, a major milestone in the still ongoing fight for civil rights for African American people.

Martin Luther King wrote ” it is an historical fact that privileged groups rarely give up their privileges voluntarily. Individuals may see the moral light and voluntarily give up their unjust posture, but, as Reinhold Niebuhr has reminded us, groups tend to be more immoral than individuals” For this reason civil rights have historically been ensured first by the courts, and only later accepted by society at large. The courts’ mission, to make sure that constitutions are upheld, is different from that of the Legislature, which must, as an elected body, reflect the popular view.

Just as Brown v. Board of Education has come to seem like an obvious truth, so shall the SJC decision granting gay and lesbian people equality in the realm of civil marriage. We can only hope this happens sooner rather than later.

The Express Top 10 Friends and Foes of 2003

From Express Gay News, normally known for sleazy, sensationalist, minimally-researched and non-proofread journalism, finally something worth reading.

HALL OF FAME

  • Commissioner Dean Trantalis Co-author of Broward County’s domestic partnership law, Trantalis was elected Fort Lauderdale’s first openly gay city commissioner in March.
  • The Florida Marlins In August, the Marlins became the first professional sports franchise to sign and long-term advertising contract with a gay newspaper, The Express.
  • Justice Anthony Kennedy A Reagan appointee, Kennedy surprised many high court observers with the progressiveness of his opinion in Lawrence v. Texas.
  • Bill Rettinger and Derrick Hankerson For their persistent efforts in fighting to save the Medicaid Medically Needy Share of Cost program from the budget ax.
  • Connie Hines For her courage in speaking out against anti-gay hate crimes after being named Teacher of the Year.
  • Jeffrey Woodard The Jupiter Christian School student who was expelled after a teacher found out he was gay. Woodard and his family have shown courage by showing up at the Gay and Lesbian Foundation of South Florida’s Recognition Dinner and by suing the school.
  • Vicky Keller For fighting with Rettinger and Hankerson to save the Medically Needy program.
  • Nadine Smith For her tireless efforts in leading Equality Florida in the fight for dignity and respect for GLBT students throughout the state. The Dignity for All Students Act has still not been passed, but it received a reading this year in the Republican-controlled state Senate, a first for such a bill.
  • Sen. Mandy Dawson For fighting in the state legislature to save the Medicaid Medically Needy program.
  • Wilton Manors Mayor Jim Stork for his high-profile leadership and for making sure gay businesses are included in the Main Street Program.

HALL OF SHAME

  • Sen. Anna Cowin For her snide and mean-spirited efforts to kill the Dignity for All Students Act. Cowin introduced amendments referring to bestiality, necrophilia and phone sex as part of a devious strategy to block debate the bill.
  • Sen. Rick Santorum “Man on dog.” Need we say more?
  • Michael Savage Fired from his job at MSNBC after telling a caller to “get AIDS and die,” Savage is the most extremist person to ever be given his own show on a major U.S. network. Shame on MSNBC.
  • Judge Roy Moore The mainstream media ignored Moore’s virulent homophobia when reporting on his Ten Commandments crusade, but The Express did not. In a court opinion denying a lesbian mother custody of her children in February 2002, Moore went as far as to suggest that gays and lesbians should be confined and executed to protect children. Thou shalt not use the judicial bench as a political pulpit. Good riddance.
  • Gov. Jeb Bush For his lack of compassion in eliminating funding for the Medicaid Medically Needy program in his state budget proposal without even warning anyone that he was going to do it.
  • President George W. Bush The most anti-gay and right-wing president in history, he jumped into bed with the radical right with his support for the anti-gay “Marriage Protection Week.”
  • Rep. Mark Foley (R-Fla.) Not only for not having the courage to disclose his sexual orientation during his campaign for the U.S. Senate but for posting a statement on his Web site praising rabidly anti-gay Judge Roy Moore. Shame on you Congressman.
  • James Dobson the “co-host” of Larry King Live has declared the hurricanes are caused by sin and gay marriage will destroy Western Civilization.
  • The Rev. James Kennedy For inviting some of the most extremist, anti-American, anti-democratic ideologues to his “Reclaiming America for Christ” conference in Coral Ridge.
  • Rep. Marilyn Musgrave (R-Colo.) For being the chief sponsor of a proposed constitutional amendment declaring that marriage is reserved for one man and one woman.

Marriage Poll Results

I just got the following email from AFA:

Participation in America’s Poll on Homosexual Marriage at marriagepoll.com continues at a steady pace. As of noon Saturday, December 28, the results were as follows:

  • I oppose legalization of homosexual marriage and “civil unions” total votes: 201914
  • I favor legalization of homosexual marriage total votes: 378691
  • I favor a “civil union” with the full benefits of marriage except for the name: 52238

Only votes that have a valid email address associated with them will be counted. We will be purging those with invalid email addresses, which may cause poll results to change somewhat. (my emphasis added)

I’m sure they’ll come up with some excuse because the results didn’t go the way they want.

With a whisper, not a bang

On December 13, when U.S. forces captured Saddam Hussein, President George W. Bush not only celebrated with his national security team, but also pulled out his pen and signed into law a bill that grants the FBI sweeping new powers. A White House spokesperson explained the curious timing of the signing – on a Saturday – as “the President signs bills seven days a week.” But the last time Bush signed a bill into law on a Saturday happened more than a year ago – on a spending bill that the President needed to sign, to prevent shuttng down the federal government the following Monday.

By signing the bill on the day of Hussein’s capture, Bush effectively consigned a dramatic expansion of the USA Patriot Act to a mere footnote. Consequently, while most Americans watched as Hussein was probed for head lice, few were aware that the FBI had just obtained the power to probe their financial records, even if the feds don’t suspect their involvement in crime or terrorism.

The Bush Administration and its Congressional allies tucked away these new executive powers in the Intelligence Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2004, a legislative behemoth that funds all the intelligence activities of the federal government. The Act included a simple, yet insidious, redefinition of “financial institution,” which previously referred to banks, but now includes stockbrokers, car dealerships, casinos, credit card companies, insurance agencies, jewelers, airlines, the U.S. Post Office, and any other business “whose cash transactions have a high degree of usefulness in criminal, tax, or regulatory matters.”

Supporters of expanding the Patriot Act claim that the new law is necessary to prevent future terrorist attacks on the U.S. The FBI needs these new powers to be “expeditious and efficient” in its response to these new threats. Robert Summers, professor of international law and director of the new Center for Terrorism Law at St. Mary’s University, explains, “We don’t go to war with the terrorists as we went to war with the Germans or the North Vietnamese. If we apply old methods of following the money, we will not be successful. We need to meet them on an even playing field to avoid another disaster.”

Opponents of the PATRIOT Act and its expansion claim that safeguards like judicial oversight and the Fourth Amendment, which prohibits unreasonable search and seizure, are essential to prevent abuses of power. “There’s a reason these protections were put into place,” says Chip Berlet, senior analyst at Political Research Associates, and a historian of U.S. political repression. “It has been shown that if you give [these agencies] this power they will abuse it. For any investigative agency, once you tell them that they must make sure that they protect the country from subversives, it inevitably gets translated into a program to silence dissent.”

Opponents claim the FBI already has all the tools to stop crime and terrorism. Moreover, explains Patrick Filyk, an attorney and vice president of the local chapter of the ACLU, “The only thing the act accomplishes is the removal of judicial oversight and the transfer of more power to law enforcements agents.”

This broadening of the Patriot Act represents a political victory for the Bush Administration’s stealth legislative strategy to increase executive power. Last February, shortly before Bush launched the war on Iraq, the Center for Public Integrity obtained a draft of a comprehensive expansion of the Patriot Act, nicknamed Patriot Act II, written by Attorney General John Ashcroft’s staff. Again, the timing was suspicious; it appeared that the Bush Administration was waiting for the start of the Iraq war to introduce Patriot Act II, and then exploit the crisis to ram it through Congress with little public debate.

The leak and ensuing public backlash frustrated the Bush administration’s strategy, so Ashcroft and Co. disassembled Patriot Act II, then reassembled its parts into other legislation. By attaching the redefinition of “financial institution” to an Intelligence Authorization Act, the Bush Administration and its Congressional allies avoided public hearings and floor debates for the expansion of the Patriot Act.

Even proponents of this expansion have expressed concern about these legislative tactics. “It’s a problem that some of these riders that are added on may not receive the scrutiny that we would like to see,” says St. Mary’s Professor Robert Summers.

The Bush Administration has yet to answer pivotal questions about its latest constitutional coup: If these new executive powers are necessary to protect United States citizens, then why would the legislation not withstand the test of public debate? If the new act’s provisions are in the public interest, why use stealth in ramming them through the legislative process?

[San Antonio Current]

Insurance

Shut Up, Joe

Lieberman needs to shut the fuck up and drop out of the race already. He’s deluded if he thinks he can win the nomination. All he’s doing is hurting the other candidates and helping Bush. He’s not even a real Democrat – he sounds more like a Republican and would probably be happier switching parties.

If by some miracle he gets nominated, I wouldn’t vote for him because he’s just as bad as Bush.

AFA Marriage Poll

afa_poll.jpg

Here are the results of the AFA Marriage Poll as of 10:25 PM. It looks like it isn’t going the way they want. I wonder if they’ll still present it to congress.

Update: at 10:30 AM on Friday, it’s now 45.66% (139529 votes) against, 46.66% (142555 votes) for, and 7.68% (23466 votes) supporting civil unions. You can monitor the results here.

Update #2: At 6PM it’s now 41.89% (151217 votes) against, 49.98% (180416 votes) for, and 8.14% (29373 votes) for civil unions.