Obama had the votes...
Labels: election2008
"Copia" is Latin for "abundance," and this blog explores my belief that abundance is all around us. We live in a world of infinite possibilities,
and we have the ability to choose our own paths.
I write about a wide range of topics, and common themes are politics, civil liberties, health, the environment, and science.
Who am I? I'm Torq Anvil...
Labels: election2008
Labels: election2008
Florida DNC member Allan Katz, an Obama supporter, just made two great points:There’s a lot of bad blood. And what’s really "baddening" that blood for Clinton supporters is the idea that she’s being cheated out of the nomination.
And that’s where Clinton herself comes in. Her supporters will follow her lead. If she acknowledges that her defeat was legitimate (regardless of how much she actually campaigns), then I think the party will unite. If, by contrast, she spends the next few days (or god forbid, months) alleging that it was illegitimate, then that reaction will leave lasting damage. Not just among pro-Clinton bloggers, but among her core supporters, particularly older liberal women.
The perception of legitimacy is essential to party unity. Accordingly, her reaction to tomorrow’s outcome will likely determine how her supporters will perceive her defeat. If she has no intention of going to Denver, then there’s a way of signaling that. She shouldn’t stir up Zimbabwe and all this other garbage strictly to gain leverage to pay off loans or to receive chits. The time for negotiations is over — there’s too much at stake now. The initial reaction is what the supporters will look to. If things have to get settled by superdelegates two weeks from now, or on appeal to a DNC committee, the damage — the irreversible damage — will have already been done.
My momma taught me to play by the rules and respect those rules. My mother taught me, and I'm sure your mother taught you, that when you decide to change the rules, middle of the game, end of the game, that is referred to as cheatin'.She went on to say that when you try to change the rules in the middle of the game, it's considered cheating. She is invoking LBJ and the civil rights movement as the foundation for what the RBC is trying to do: act in good faith to make and enforce rules that support full Democratic participation.
Labels: election2008
Labels: being human, biology
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Labels: climate change, environment, health
Labels: election2008
The Bush administration has argued that using corn to make ethanol is only responsible for 2 to 3% of the rise in global food prices.The expected causes of higher-than-average prices during the next decade include a doubling of biofuel production, higher fuel costs that increase the cost of producing crops and transporting food, and greater demand for food and animal feed in richer developing countries where incomes are rising, the report says.
Prices for vegetable oils are expected to remain the highest, 80 percent above the average from 1998 to 2007; wheat, corn and skim milk powder are anticipated to be 40 to 60 percent higher; sugar, 30 percent; and beef and pork, about 20 percent. Biofuel production should account for about a third of the expected increases in prices for vegetable oils and grains. [emphasis added]
Labels: election2008
Labels: biology
Labels: economy, national security
Labels: election2008
"We're going to fight as hard as we can in these states. We want to send the message now that we're going to go after them, and I expect to win them," Sen. Obama said Monday.
Sen. McCain responded Monday that Obama "has no experience, no knowledge or background" on Western issues. "I believe as a Western senator I understand the issues, the challenges of the future for these ... states," the Arizona senator told The Associated Press.
Unstated in all this is the way such mathematics bear out the wisdom of the Founding Fathers in establishing the Electoral College, in the first place.
If presidents were elected "at large" by a straight majority of the national popular vote, it's unlikely the concerns of a few thousand Westerners would draw much more than the occasional bulk-mailed flier.
The real electoral battle would be for major population centers in California and east of the Mississippi, where the campaigns -- even more than is already the case -- would likely turn into huge potlatches, the candidates viewing the rural states as little more than cash drawers, suffering silently as the parties poured their looted largess into the vote-heavy cities.
Make no mistake, the candidates are here, asking what concerns residents of the rural West, only because Americans cast their presidential ballots state by state.
Labels: election2008, history
Labels: climate change, environment
Labels: climate change, food
The 2007 AIDS LifeCycle is over! This year's 2300 riders set a new record by raising $11 million for HIV/AIDS services and prevention in California.
What an experience... it's hard to explain succinctly. From the first morning I could tell it was going to be one of the craziest trips I've ever had. It was also the most physically challenging thing I've ever taken on.
I rode every one of the 545 miles from San Francisco to Los Angeles, and the biggest mechanical problem I had was needing some minor adjustments to my rear derailleur. No flats! As far as my body, my biggest ache was my butt. A lot of the time I rode as fast as I could, partially to push my limits but largely to maximize my time off the bike seat at the rest stops. Altogether, I spent 31 hours and 20 minutes in the saddle.
The days varied in length from 42 miles (day 5, the day when most participants wear red dresses) to 105 miles (day 2). Some how I thought after that long day 2 that all of the remaining days would be significantly shorter, but there were two more 90+ mile days.
A typical day began at 5am. My alarm would go off before dawn, and my tent mate Justin and I would rise, throw on some clothes, and crawl out of our dew-soaked tent to head to the dining tent. A lot of the mornings were cold with temperatures in the low 40s.
Huddling in our hoodies, we'd snarf down huge breakfasts before heading back to get dressed for the day, pack up our tent and gear, and head to our bikes. We were typically on the road by 7:30am.
On most days there were four to five rest stops plus a lunch. I'm guessing I ate about 6000 calories a day, and I lost four pounds during the week. The rest stops were my favorite part of the ride. Each one had a different theme: the seven deadly sins, Dreamgirls, the DMV, spa treatment, etc. The roadies who hosted the rest stops did an amazing job of feeding, hydrating, and entertaining us, and they did all of the decorations and costumes out of their own pocket. I loved catching up with friends and meeting new people while giving my body a rest.
The people on the ride came from a broad cross-section of society. There were many gay men in great shape, but there were also plenty of people who were overweight, dressed in street clothes, or otherwise appearing to be ill-suited for the challenge of the California hills and Central Valley winds.
This aspect of the ride amazed me more than anything else. The ride was hard for me. Yes, I was definitely pushing myself and enjoying going beyond what I thought I could do. But here was a woman in her 60s making her way up the same hill. Many people were "sagged" each day, catching a ride to the next rest stop or back to camp on a bus. Yet there they were back again the next day, pushing their own limits.
One day at lunch, Justin and I talked about the disconnect between how people appear and what they are physically capable of. To get to the ride, it's a safe bet that every rider had done some level of training. And there we were: people looking like athletes, people looking like couch potatoes. It was humbling to share the road with so many people who were going so far beyond what anyone might guess they were capable of. My guess is that many of the people who looked like the natural athletes were in their own way having as difficult a time as those who were carrying an extra 60 pounds.
What spurred us all on? For me, it was mostly a competitive spirit and a desire to see how far I could push myself. But others on the ride had experienced the loss of loved ones: lovers, sons, daughters, friends who they memorialized with pictures on their bikes. Over ten percent of the riders were HIV positive.
There were many highlights. One unforgettable one was a candlelight vigil on a southern California beach... a moment to remember loved ones lost to AIDS and to renew our faith to press on until there is a cure, a vaccine, or both.
It just leaves me wondering: how did these folks sleep while they were still working at the White House???McClellan stops short of saying that Bush purposely lied about his reasons for invading Iraq, writing that he and his subordinates were not "employing out-and-out deception" to make their case for war in 2002.
But in a chapter titled "Selling the War," he alleges that the administration repeatedly shaded the truth and that Bush "managed the crisis in a way that almost guaranteed that the use of force would become the only feasible option."
"Over that summer of 2002," he writes, "top Bush aides had outlined a strategy for carefully orchestrating the coming campaign to aggressively sell the war. . . . In the permanent campaign era, it was all about manipulating sources of public opinion to the president's advantage."
McClellan, once a staunch defender of the war from the podium, comes to a stark conclusion, writing, "What I do know is that war should only be waged when necessary, and the Iraq war was not necessary."
Labels: Iraq
Labels: election2008
This Sunday, voters in Puerto Rico will go to the polls and make their voices heard -- the first time the island has played such a vital role in selecting our party's nominee. At this critical moment, I am depending on you to help me make sure they have a choice. We are depending on the voters of Puerto Rico in our fight to secure the nomination. [original emphasis]The voters of Puerto Rico are U.S. citizens but aren't allowed to vote in presidential elections. So while they do get to participate in the Democratic nominating process, it's seems a little odd to stake your hopes for becoming president on voters who can't vote in November.
Labels: election2008
Under the bill, the Federal Housing Administration would back as much as $300 billion in new mortgages, allowing lenders to refinance the most threatened home loans. The cost of failed loans would be covered not by taxpayers but by fees paid by mortgage originators to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the federally chartered companies that buy mortgages from banks and other lenders.For more on Obama's plan for addressing the mortgage crisis, see his website.
Lenders would have to refinance the loans at less than the home's current value, taking significant losses. Borrowers would be required to split any profits on the eventual sale of the house with the government.
Labels: election2008, Las Vegas
Labels: vacation
http://mobile.nytimes.com/article;jsessionid=8F36D98BAC17CCB7C88FA82D3B96F054.w5?a=169155&f=77
Labels: election2008
The problem with the Clinton strategy--and I don't mean in political terms--is not that it shows her willingness to change positions in the name of political expediency. Rather, it's that if the popular vote had been the metric all along, Obama would have used a different strategy that did not rely so heavily on caucus states and their (generally) small populations.2008 is not a case of a repeat of 2000. Al Gore lost to George W. Bush because the re-count of the votes in Florida was suspended before it was completed, and the count at that time had Bush ahead. He consequently won the necessary electoral votes to become president.
Labels: election2008
Each of you will have the chance to make your own discovery in the years to come. And I say “chance” because you won’t have to take it. There’s no community service requirement in the real world; no one forcing you to care. You can take your diploma, walk off this stage, and chase only after the big house and the nice suits and all the other things that our money culture says you should by. You can choose to narrow your concerns and live your life in a way that tries to keep your story separate from America’s.
But I hope you don’t. Not because you have an obligation to those who are less fortunate, though you do have that obligation. Not because you have a debt to all those who helped you get here, though you do have that debt.
It’s because you have an obligation to yourself. Because our individual salvation depends on collective salvation. Because thinking only about yourself, fulfilling your immediate wants and needs, betrays a poverty of ambition. Because it’s only when you hitch your wagon to something larger than yourself that you realize your true potential and discover the role you’ll play in writing the next great chapter in America’s story.
Video here.
Labels: election2008, video
http://obsidianwings.blogs.com/obsidian_wings/2008/05/clinton-campaig.html
Labels: election2008
Labels: healthcare
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http://andrewsullivan.theatlantic.com/the_daily_dish/2008/05/team-of-rival-3.html
Labels: election2008
Labels: biology
Labels: climate change, energy, peak oil
Labels: election2008
More details on how each scenario affects the delegate counts here.
Labels: election2008
Shun organic milk. It takes 25 organic cows to make as much milk as 23 industrial ones, Joanna Pearlstein reports: “More cows, more cow emissions. But that’s just the beginning. A single organically raised cow puts out 16 percent more greenhouse gases than its counterpart. That double whammy — more cows and more emissions per cow — makes organic dairies a cog in the global warming machine.”
Definitely a case of juggling priorities... sometimes what may be best for the planet may not be best for one's health. But what they don't talk about here is how all the pesticides, hormones, etc. used for the conventionally-raised dairy cows affect the environment. They also ignore the benefits, including higher yields, from intensive multiple crop agriculture as compared with the standard monoculture model used on most American farms. And key to this discussion, as they mention, is whether agricultural products are consumed locally or shipped long distances.
Farm forests. Rapidly growing young trees suck up carbon dioxide, but mature trees absorb much less, and when they’re allowed to die and rot, their carbon is released — which means that an old-growth forest can be a net contributor of CO2 to the atmosphere. Matt Power suggests clearing out the oldest trees to make room for seedlings, landfilling the scrap, and turning the usable wood into furniture and houses that will lock in the carbon. “It won’t make a glossy photo for the Sierra Club’s annual report,” he writes, “but it will take huge amounts of carbon out of the atmosphere.”
Again, they ignore the benefits of old growth forests for maintaining biodiversity. Smarter forest management has to be part of the solution here, mixing old-growth and new growth in a way that produces a net positive effect on reducing CO2 release into the atmosphere.
Don’t sweat the A/C. While Thoreau’s spiritual descendants in New England may deplore the “wasteful” air conditioners in the Sun Belt, the Yankees are the ones with the big carbon footprints. Heating a typical house in the Northeast with fuel oil produces 13,000 pounds of CO2 annually, Mr. Power notes, while cooling a similar house in Phoenix produces only 900. Nationally, heating American’s homes produces eight times more CO2 than cooling homes.
Wow, this one surprised me, but I feel a little better about living in Vegas now! (Except for the water (lack of) part...)
Don’t go back to nature. A cabin in the woods isn’t as green as an apartment in the city. “Urban living is kinder to the planet, and Manhattan is perhaps the greenest place in the U.S.,” Mr. Power writes. “A Manhattanite’s carbon footprint is 30 percent smaller than the average American’s.”
Not sure about the cabin in the woods, but urban living definitely trumps suburban living (on many counts :-).
Accept genetic engineering. “California-based Arcadia Biosciences is already peddling genes for nitrogen-efficient rice that the company reckons could save the equivalent of 50 million tons of carbon dioxide a year,” Spencer Resiss writes, and adds, “What some greens deride as Frankencrops are also the only serious hope for biofuels.”
Again, there is a price here. Our choice to depend on a few, human-engineered crop varieties is not a smart long-term strategy for avoiding famine. Mother Nature will kick us in the rump hard at some point...
Embrace nuclear power. “Every serious effort at carbon accounting reaches the same conclusion: Nukes win,” Mr. Resiss writes. “Only wind comes close — and that’s when it’s blowing.” He also notes, “One of the Kyoto Protocol’s worst features is a sop to greens that denies carbon credits to power-starved developing countries that build nukes — thereby ensuring they’ll continue to depend on filthy coal.”
I have to agree with this one. One article I read reached this conclusion: storing or disposing of nuclear waste is a manageable problem given the relatively small amount that is produced by nuclear power plants. Climate change is a problem that is multiple orders of magnitude more challenging.
Labels: climate change, environment, food
McCain is distorting history when he suggests that Barack Obama is bucking American presidential tradition in expressing a willingness to meet with the leaders of countries hostile to the United States. Hitler apart, U.S. presidents have held meetings with some of the greatest mass murderers in history. It is also incorrect to suggest, as both McCain and President Bush have done, that the mere willingness to meet or negotiate with foreign dictators constitutes "appeasement," a term used to describe actions such as the surrender of the Czech Sudetenland to Nazi Germany in a desperate bid to avoid World War II.
Labels: election2008, McCain
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... Biologists and botanists are warning that they, too, may bring serious unintended consequences. Most of these newer crops are what scientists label invasive species — that is, weeds — that have an extraordinarily high potential to escape biofuel plantations, overrun adjacent farms and natural land, and create economic and ecological havoc in the process, they now say....
“With biofuels, there’s always a hurry,” said Geoffrey Howard, an invasive species expert with the International Union for Conservation of Nature. “Plantations are started by investors, often from the U.S. or Europe, so they are eager to generate biofuels within a couple of years and also, as you might guess, they don’t want a negative assessment.”
Labels: election2008, Iran
Labels: election2008
Here's a link to Obama's remarks earlier tonight in Iowa... where it all began!
The road here has been long, and that is partly because we’ve traveled it with one of the most formidable candidates to ever run for this office. In her thirty-five years of public service, Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton has never given up on her fight for the American people, and tonight I congratulate her on her victory in Kentucky. We have had our disagreements during this campaign, but we all admire her courage, her commitment and her perseverance. No matter how this primary ends, Senator Clinton has shattered myths and broken barriers and changed the America in which my daughters and yours will come of age.
Some may see the millions upon millions of votes cast for each of us as evidence that our party is divided, but I see it as proof that we have never been more energized and united in our desire to take this country in a new direction. More than anything, we need this unity and this energy in the months to come, because while our primary has been long and hard-fought, the hardest and most important part of our journey still lies ahead.
We face an opponent, John McCain, who arrived in Washington nearly three decades ago as a Vietnam War hero, and earned an admirable reputation for straight talk and occasional independence from his party.
But this year’s Republican primary was a contest to see which candidate could out-Bush the other, and that is the contest John McCain won. The Bush tax cuts for the wealthiest 2% of Americans that once bothered Senator McCain’s conscience are now his only economic policy. The Bush health care plan that only helps those who are already healthy and wealthy is now John McCain’s answer to the 47 million Americans without insurance and the millions more who can’t pay their medical bills. The Bush Iraq policy that asks everything of our troops and nothing of Iraqi politicians is John McCain’s policy too, and so is the fear of tough and aggressive diplomacy that has left this country more isolated and less secure than at any time in recent history. The lobbyists who ruled George Bush’s Washington are now running John McCain’s campaign, and they actually had the nerve to say that the American people won’t care about this. Talk about out of touch!
I will leave it up to Senator McCain to explain to the American people whether his policies and positions represent long-held convictions or Washington calculations, but the one thing they don’t represent is change.
Labels: election2008
CNN has just reported that, by their count, Obama has won a majority of the pledged delegates awarded by Democratic primaries and caucuses. And despite getting blown out by Hillary in Kentucky, it was the bluegrass state that put him over the top.
Now, on to Oregon... and the convention!
From the Obama campaign:
The polls are closed in Kentucky and votes are being counted in Oregon, and it's clear that tonight we have reached a major milestone on this journey.
We have won an absolute majority of all the delegates chosen by the people in this Democratic primary process.
From the beginning, this journey wasn't about me or the other candidates. It was about a simple choice -- will we continue down the same road with the same leadership that has failed us for so long, or will we take a different path?
Too many of us have been disappointed by politics and politicians more times than you can count. We've seen promises broken and good ideas drowned in a sea of influence, point-scoring, and petty bickering that has consumed Washington.
Yet, in spite of all the doubt and disappointment -- or perhaps because of it -- people have stood for change.
Unfortunately, our opponents in the other party continue to embrace yesterday's policies and they will continue to employ yesterday's tactics -- they will try to change the subject, and they will play on fears and divisions to distract us from what matters to you and your future.
But those tactics will not work in this election. They won't work because you won't let them.
Not this time. Not this year.
We still have work to do to in the remaining states, where we will compete for every delegate available.
But tonight, I want to thank you for everything you have done to take us this far -- farther than anyone predicted, expected, or even believed possible.
And I want to remind you that you will make all the difference in the epic challenge ahead.
Thank you,
Barack Obama
Labels: election2008
Here's the truth: the Soviet Union had thousands of nuclear weapons, and Iran doesn't have a single one. But when the world was on the brink of nuclear holocaust, Kennedy talked to Khrushchev and he got those missiles out of Cuba. Why shouldn't we have the same courage and the confidence to talk to our enemies? That's what strong countries do, that's what strong presidents do, that's what I'll do when I'm president of the United States of America.
Labels: election2008, Iran, quotes
Labels: civil liberties
The utility also installed three solar panels at the same power plant. And given the amount of sun we get, we're perfectly positioned here in Vegas to take advantage of improved solar plants coming to market soon. Nevada already has the third largest solar plant in the world, SolarOne, in Boulder City.Over the past year the power company has demolished old gas-burning units capable of providing enough power for 130,000 homes and replaced them with 600 megawatts of state-of-the-art gas “peakers” that can generate enough electricity for 450,000 homes. They’re called peakers because they are intended to kick in and provide a boost of electricity during peak use times — on the hottest days of the year, for example.
Although they will provide more than three times the electricity of the old units, they will emit less pollution, according to the company.
Instead of running constantly in a sort of stand-by mode, the peakers will shut down when they’re not needed, saving on fuel costs, which are passed on to consumers. The new units take only 10 minutes to turn on, compared with half a day for the old plant, which was unable to start up in a hurry if demand suddenly spiked on a spring day....
Overall, between the new construction and upgrades, air pollution from the plant will be reduced by 46 percent and its energy production will increase by 65 percent, officials said. Before upgrades and new construction, the plant coughed out about 15,000 tons of federally regulated pollutants each year. Once all three sets of peakers are online at the end of this year, the plant will release 8,100 tons a year of those pollutants, including nitrogen oxides and tiny dust particles.
Labels: energy, environment, Las Vegas, peak oil
-- Daniel Patrick Moynihan
Labels: quotes
Labels: history
The era of American politics that has been dying before our eyes was born in 1966. That January, a twenty-seven-year-old editorial writer for the St. Louis Globe-Democrat named Patrick Buchanan went to work for Richard Nixon, who was just beginning the most improbable political comeback in American history.Perhaps this reading of history helps to explain my strong attachment to Obama's candidacy and it what it represents.
Labels: election2008
... Cuts in agricultural research continue. The United States is in the midst of slashing, by as much as 75 percent, its $59.5 million annual support for a global research network that focuses on improving crops vital to agriculture in poor countries. That network includes the rice institute.But a big risk is that we'll respond with a strategy that actually reduces the long-term resiliency and viability of our own food chain. Planting a few varieties of a only few crops and transferring genes between species are approaches to the problem which endanger the biodiversity that we've historically depended on to feed ourselves.
Labels: food
was back in March of 2003: a peace rally before the Iraq War. Which seems very fitting.
Labels: election2008, Iraq
Labels: election2008, Nevada politics
"What Hillary has done — win, lose or draw — has permanently changed the picture," says Marie Wilson, president of the White House Project, which trains women to run for office. "Next time, we're not going to have to prove that the public will vote for a woman. We won't have to prove competency. She has succeeded at that level."
Labels: election2008
It sort of leaves you wondering, though, why she was pushing the gas tax holiday idea. It's just another short term fix.Hillary Clinton ratcheted up her criticism of President Bush today, mocking him for simply “begging” Saudi Arabia to increase oil supplies rather than having a real plan to deal with the energy crisis.
“I don’t think it is a good energy policy to depend upon the kindness of the Saudis … while businesses and individuals are trying to figure out how they’re going to afford nearly $4 a gallon gas and nearly $5 a gallon diesel,” she said. “The impact is really beginning to ripple dramatically through the economy.”
Clinton’s comments came during a roundtable discussion with local residents about a host of problems facing the country today, primarily economic ones.
“I think it’s very important that we do something more dramatic than going to have tea with the Saudis,” she said. “The Saudis may decide, well we better do something to help out President Bush, but that’s a short term fix. It is not going to have any long-term consequences. And we just have to take a different approach if we’re going to begin to get serious.
Seven hundred and three million barrels... and we'd go through it in 58 days. Think about that. If stacked one upon the other, they'd reach to the moon... and half way back again.The Strategic Petroleum Reserve, located underground at four sites in the salt caverns bordering the Gulf of Mexico, was built in the 1970s after the first oil embargo to protect the country against a sudden drop in oil supplies.
The Bush administration has been filling the reserve since 2001, boosting the reserve from about 540 million barrels to 702.7 million, enough to protect against a disruption in imports for about 58 days, said Barnett.
Labels: election2008, energy, peak oil
Labels: election2008, video
And while McCain tried to give a "big" speech yesterday, it was overshadowed by Bush's cheap comments about Democratic "appeasement." Joe Klein at Time magazine comments on McCain's address.But given his own position on Hamas, McCain is the last politician who should be attacking Obama. Two years ago, just after Hamas won the Palestinian parliamentary elections, I interviewed McCain for the British network Sky News's "World News Tonight" program. Here is the crucial part of our exchange:
I asked: "Do you think that American diplomats should be operating the way they have in the past, working with the Palestinian government if Hamas is now in charge?"
McCain answered: "They're the government; sooner or later we are going to have to deal with them, one way or another, and I understand why this administration and previous administrations had such antipathy towards Hamas because of their dedication to violence and the things that they not only espouse but practice, so... but it's a new reality in the Middle East. I think the lesson is people want security and a decent life and decent future, that they want democracy. Fatah was not giving them that."
For some Europeans in Davos, Switzerland, where the interview took place, that's a perfectly reasonable answer. But it is an unusual if not unique response for an American politician from either party. And it is most certainly not how the newly conservative presumptive Republican nominee would reply today.
Given that exchange, the new John McCain might say that Hamas should be rooting for the old John McCain to win the presidential election. The old John McCain, it appears, was ready to do business with a Hamas-led government, while both Clinton and Obama have said that Hamas must change its policies toward Israel and terrorism before it can have diplomatic relations with the United States.
Labels: election2008, McCain
More from the New York Times.
My only concern is that this is once again used as a wedge issue to energize the Republican's conservative base with unfortunate results this November. One glimmer of hope: John McCain today said that he respected the right of the state of California, like all states, to find its own path on this issue. Potential Libertarian challenger Bob Barr concurred.
Time has passed. Let's see if Americans, starting with Californians, are ready to offer their gay and lesbian brothers, sisters, sons, daughters, parents, friends, co-workers, and strangers the same rights and blessings that their straight counterparts enjoy.
Labels: LGBT
Labels: election2008, Las Vegas, LGBT
UPDATEThe state high court's ruling was unlikely to end the debate over gay matrimony in California. A group has circulated petitions for a November ballot initiative that would amend the state Constitution to block same-sex marriage, and the Legislature has twice passed bills to authorize gay marriage. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger vetoed both.
The long-awaited court decision stemmed from San Francisco's highly publicized same-sex weddings, which in 2004 helped spur a conservative backlash in a presidential election year and a national dialogue over gay rights....
Today's ruling by the Republican-dominated court affects more than 100,000 same-sex couples in the state, about a quarter of whom have children, according to U.S. census figures. It came after high courts in New York, Washington and New Jersey refused to extend marriage rights to gay couples. Only Massachusetts' top court has ruled in favor of permitting gays to wed.
Labels: LGBT
I have some very exciting news.
My good friend John Edwards is endorsing our campaign and joining our movement for change.
We're here in Grand Rapids, Michigan -- and if you receive this message in time, you can probably turn on your TV and be part of the moment.
I'm deeply honored by John's support. He is a true leader who dedicated his career to improving the lives of ordinary Americans.
John ran a strong, principled campaign for president, focusing on a number of important issues where we share common ground -- universal health care, bringing our troops home from Iraq, and eliminating poverty in America.
The way he ran his campaign was also important. He ran in a way that reflected our shared conviction that we need to fundamentally change politics.
Like our campaign, John's campaign never accepted donations from Washington lobbyists or special interest PACs.
Let's welcome John Edwards to the campaign with an outpouring of the kind of grassroots support that is bringing our political process back to the people.
Make a donation of whatever you can afford now, and if you choose, include your own note to Senator Edwards. I'll make sure he gets them:
https://donate.barackobama.com/edwards
Thank you for all that you're doing,
Barack
Labels: election2008
Short video clip here, full endorsement here.
Labels: election2008, video
Labels: election2008
"Anybody who has ever voted for me or voted for Barack has much more in common in terms of what we want to see happen in our country and in the world with the other than they do with John McCain," Clinton said on CNN's "The Situation Room."
"I'm going to work my heart out for whoever our nominee is -- obviously I'm still hoping to be that nominee, but I'm going to do everything I can to make sure that anyone who supported me ... understands what a grave error it would be not to vote for Sen. Obama."
Labels: election2008
I've got one teenage niece and one who'll be there soon... and, incidentally, it's their mother's birthday. Happy Birthday, Molly!Women who were physically active as teens and young adults were 23 percent less likely to develop premenopausal breast cancer than women who grew up sedentary, researchers report Wednesday in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
The biggest impact was regular exercise from ages 12 to 22.
"This is not the extreme athlete," Colditz cautioned.
The women at lowest risk reported doing 3 hours and 15 minutes of running or other vigorous activity a week or, for the less athletic, 13 hours a week of walking. Typically, the teens reported more strenuous exercise while during adulthood, walking was most common.
Why would it help? A big point of exercise in middle age and beyond is to keep off the pounds. After menopause, fat tissue is a chief source of estrogen.
In youth, however, the theory is that physical activity itself lowers estrogen levels. Studies of teen athletes show that very intense exercise can delay onset of menstrual cycles and cause irregular periods.
The moderate exercise reported in this study was nowhere near enough for those big changes. But it probably was enough to cause slight yet still helpful hormone changes, said Dr. Alpa Patel, a cancer prevention specialist at the American Cancer Society, who praised the new research.
Labels: health
Labels: LGBT
NEW YORK (AP) - Democrat Barack Obama has won the endorsement of NARAL Pro-Choice America. The leading abortion rights advocacy organization has supported rival Hillary Rodham Clinton throughout her political career.
The organization was set to announce the endorsement of its political action committee Wednesday.
NARAL president Nancy Keenan said in a statement: "Today, we are proud to put our organization's grassroots and political support behind the pro-choice candidate whom we believe will secure the Democratic nomination and advance to the general election. That candidate is Senator Obama."
Officials said NARAL's political committee board was about evenly divided among Clinton and Obama supporters and that the decision to endorse was hard fought. Ultimately, the board voted unanimously Friday to support the Illinois senator.
Labels: election2008
And the counties where Hillary has won big (65% or greater) coincide quite well with the Appalachian region. From Marshall's post:
For Marshall's analysis of why Obama has trouble in this region, read his full post here.There's been a lot of talk in this campaign about Barack Obama's problem with working class white voters or rural voters. But these claims are both inaccurate because they are incomplete. You can look at states like Virginia, Ohio, Pennsylvania and other states and see the different numbers and they are all explained by one basic fact. Obama's problem isn't with white working class voters or rural voters. It's Appalachia. That explains why Obama had a difficult time in Ohio and Pennsylvania and why he's getting crushed in West Virginia and Kentucky.
If it were just a matter of rural voters or the white working class, the pattern would show up in other regions. But by and large it does not.
In so many words, Pennsylvania and Ohio have big chunks of Appalachia within their borders. But those regions are heavily offset by non-Appalachian sections that are cultural and demographically distinct. West Virginia is 100% Appalachian. If you look at southeastern Ohio or the middle chunk of Pennsylvania, Obama did about the same as he's doing tonight in West Virginia.
Labels: election2008