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| | From: moklemoke (Original Message) | Sent: 3/18/2008 3:48 AM |
Gonna set up if our managers dont mind just a daily news page for people to look at and hopefully comment on. Michael |
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Facing drug charges and in partially supervised rehab to kick a crystal meth addiction, porn star Michael Brandon told San Francisco Weekly that if all goes well, he could be back to porn as early as next year. Brandon -- born Michael Phillips -- had been arrested by police and bailed out twice by fellow porn star boyfriend Marcos Monzon when he was court-ordered to rehab in October. Brandon says he first kicked a meth habit in the '90s before rising to fame both in front of and behind the cameras at Raging Stallion Studios. Earlier this year, Brandon headlined a San Francisco citywide campaign: "Hot Sex Without Crystal? Hell Yes!!!" "I was miserable -- I was all caught up in it, and I couldn't find my way out," he told S.F. Weekly about his 10-month tweaking binge, during which he says he moved from motel to motel to avoid being seen. "I'm just really happy for the cycle to have stopped." Since entering treatment, Brandon says he’s gained more than 30 pounds. He says he thinks he relapsed in part out of resentment toward his Narcotics Anonymous group; he says stories he shared privately turned into street gossip. "There's no anonymity for me," he said. Brandon says in spite of everything, he can’t wait to get back to work. "I spent the better part of 10 years creating my name, and I love my fans." (Advocate.com) |
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(Charleston, West Virginia) The West Virginia Supreme Court has agreed to hear a case involving a lesbian couple's appeal of a lower court ruling that removed a child they had reared from birth because the judge wanted the child placed with a married opposite-sex couple. Fayette Circuit Judge Paul Blake originally agreed to allow Kathyrn Kutil and Cheryl Hess to be foster parents for the infant girl, following a positive assessment by the Department of Health and Human Resources. Court records show that the little girl was born to a drug addicted mother and the baby had had cocaine, opiates and benzodiazepines in her system. Shortly after birth the baby went through drug withdrawal. The father was unknown. The Department placed the child with Kutil and Hess, who had been approved as foster parents, when it could not find any blood relatives of the mother. But nearly a year later when the couple applied to adopt the little girl both the Department and Judge Blake balked. In his ruling Blake ordered the child removed saying the baby should be permanently placed in a home where the parents would be a married opposite-sex couple. The ruling said that he had agreed to allow the women to foster the child because it was the best option at the time. But he never intended it to be permanent. "I think I've indicated time and time again, this court's opinion is that the best interest of a child is to be raised by a traditional family, mother and father," Blake's ruling said. "Now, that's this court's opinion as to what a typical West Virginian would feel and what the typical attitude is of the West Virginia Supreme Court, a traditional family." In their appeal to the state, Supreme Court the women argue that Blake exceeded his authority and violated their constitutional rights. The appeal argues that Blake is "setting a dangerous precedent" for discriminatory treatment of non-traditional families. A different judge recently approved Kutil's adoption of a 12-year-old girl whom she'd been fostering for over two years, the appeal notes. West Virginia law allows either single individuals or married couples to adopt. It says nothing about same-sex couples. In a 4-1 vote the high court agreed to take the case. Oral arguments will be held on March 11. The court had granted an emergency stay of Judge Blake's order. The little girl will be allowed to stay with the women until the Supreme Court rules. |
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http://www.financialpost.com/story.html?id=1064695The Financial Post Canada Friday, December 12, 2008 Milk yanks gay movies from closet to mainstream Van Sant grabs every opportunity to relate movie to today's reality By Katherine Monk, Canwest News Service BOX OFFICE Milk Director: Gus Van Sant Starring: Sean Penn, James Franco, Diego Luna, Emile Hirsch and Josh Brolin. Where: Odeon Parental Advisory: PG; coarse language, sexually suggestive scene, violence. Rating: **** (out of five) Milk is a message movie, but more importantly, it's an openly proud and entirely self-possessed message movie that wears its progressive rhetoric on its rainbow sleeve. The distinction is crucial, because when you get right down to the nitty-gritty nub of what director Gus Van Sant has been able to achieve with Milk, it goes beyond teaching a particularly loathsome chapter of American history. Van Sant, the openly gay film director, has created a universally accessible movie about the birth of the gay movement that is not framed by shame. Back when this movie was set, in the mid-1970s, shame was an inherent part of the entire gay experience and Van Sant quickly sketches the emotional mood in the opening credit sequence. Small, plain white titles appear over archival footage of police raids on gay bars. Slowing down the black and white footage to a surreal, dreamy pace, Van Sant sends us through the glass darkly as we watch all sorts of men being loaded into paddy wagons with their hands hiding their faces. It's mind-altering imagery because it's obvious these men are not criminals, yet truncheon-swinging police are corralling them into custody. Their only crime is hanging out with other men and being who they are, but homosexuality was seen as a legitimate reason to deprive a human being of his or her civil rights. It's a prickly issue, and it sits at the very heart of Milk because recognizing gay men and women as social equals was Harvey Milk's life mission. An insurance broker from the Big Apple who headed west in search of a life free from fear, Harvey Milk (Sean Penn) was not a born flag waver. When he and partner Scott (James Franco) arrived in San Francisco, they were looking for little more than a humble living and a happy partnership out of the closet. They weren't alone. Hundreds of gay men descended on a dilapidated Irish neighbourhood called The Castro and created a small, but tight-knit community of burgeoning activists - men who had been thrown into the paddy wagon once too often, and were ready to fight back. Van Sant carefully chronicles how Milk found himself at the centre of this nascent gay rights movement when he decided to run for city supervisor, a job he tried to win many times, but finally landed in 1977, becoming the first openly gay politician to ever win elected office in the United States. Milk and the city's mayor George Moscone were assassinated a year later by a man who offered up the famous "Twinkie defence," but there were other villains in the wings, including Anita Bryant - the perky orange juice queen who launched a campaign that would allow legal discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation. Much of the Milk story is part of the historical record, but 30 years later, we're moving through a similar cycle on the spinning wheel of morality and Van Sant doesn't miss a trick when it comes to making this story relevant for a new generation. The biggest piece of the winning recipe is Penn, the brawny brawler who hands in the best performance of his career. Penn seems to disappear behind the upright shoulders and coquettish grin of his alter ego. He not only launches into each close-up screen kiss with co-star James Franco with palpable zeal, he makes Milk a lovable hero despite his flaws and unflagging ego. The same could be said for every member of the highly talented cast that also includes another stellar turn from Josh Brolin, some gutsy swishing from Emile Hirsch and a welcome coming out party for Lucas Grabeel, the immaculately dressed twin choreographer from the High School Musical movies. Because Van Sant isn't trying to buff out the scratches, the promiscuity and the bare egotism of the characters, the movie doesn't read like a bleeding heart pamphlet on gay love. It has all the dimension of genuine human drama, and what makes it magic - as well as a highly successful message movie - is that it transcends the specifics of the politics and shows us people in real pain. Jonathan Demme pulled off a similar feat with Philadelphia, but the lack of a single kiss sucked romance from the frame. Brokeback Mountain found the romance, but steered clear of politics. Milk puts it all together and in the process, pulls gay film out of the closet. One of the best movies of the year, Milk puts Penn at the top of this year's Oscar campaign and Van Sant on the edge of movie history. |
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So - have you sent out all your Christmas cards? Forgotten anyone? |
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Two brothers were jumped by a small gang early Sunday morning in New York City, apparently because they were perceived to be a couple. The attack left one of them in critical condition at a local hospital, while the other managed to escape unharmed, the Associated Press reports. The brothers, immigrants from Ecuador, were walking with their arms clasped after a night of drinking in Brooklyn when four men in a passing SUV spotted them, according to the AP. One passenger set upon the brothers, shouting an antigay slur, followed by the other passengers, who used an aluminum baseball bat on the victim. The other brother called police, the AP reports. "We believe all of this happened simply because of who these individuals are and who these perpetrators perceived them to be," New York City council speaker Christine Quinn told the AP. "For some reason [they] didn't like the two men they believed were gay ... and felt so emboldened in their hatred that they acted it out in violence." Both the Brooklyn prosecutor's office and the NYPD's hate-crimes unit were examining the incident, according to the AP. (The Advocate) |
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<o:p></o:p> <NYT_HEADLINE type=" " version="1.0"><st1:place w:st="on">Brooklyn</st1:place> Man Dies From Beating <o:p></o:p></NYT_HEADLINE> <NYT_BYLINE type=" " version="1.0">By JACK HEALY<o:p></o:p> </NYT_BYLINE><NYT_TEXT>An Ecuadorean immigrant who was brutally beaten with a bottle and baseball bat last week by men said to be shouting anti-gay and anti-Hispanic slurs has died, a family spokesman said on Saturday night.<o:p></o:p> The victim, Jose O. Sucuzhanay, died on Friday night at <st1:PlaceName w:st="on">Elmhurst</st1:PlaceName> <st1:PlaceType w:st="on">Hospital</st1:PlaceType> <st1:PlaceType w:st="on">Center</st1:PlaceType> as his mother was traveling from <st1:country-region w:st="on"><st1:place w:st="on">Ecuador</st1:place></st1:country-region> to see him one last time, said the family spokesman, Francisco Moya. Mr. Sucuzhanay’s family had kept him on life support in anticipation of his mother’s arrival, but on Friday, his heart stopped.<o:p></o:p> In a statement on Saturday night, Mr. Sucuzhanay’s brother Diego said he was “at a loss beyond words�?at his brother’s death, which the police are investigating as a hate crime.<o:p></o:p> The police were still looking for Mr. Sucuzhanay’s assailants, but said that detectives had been investigating the attack as homicide, a law enforcement official said. <o:p></o:p> Mr. Sucuzhanay, who suffered skull fractures and massive brain damage, was declared brain-dead on Tuesday, and a death certificate was filed last week.<o:p></o:p> The attack occurred about 3:30 a.m. last Sunday as Mr. Sucuzhanay, 31, and his brother Romel were walking home from a bar, arms around each other, in the Bushwick section of <st1:place w:st="on">Brooklyn</st1:place>. Three men jumped out of a maroon or red sport utility vehicle and attacked the brothers at the corner of <st1:Street w:st="on"><st1:address w:st="on">Bushwick Avenue</st1:address></st1:Street> and <st1:Street w:st="on"><st1:address w:st="on">Kossuth Place</st1:address></st1:Street>, the police said.<o:p></o:p> Yelling anti-gay and anti-Hispanic slurs, one of the men broke a bottle over Mr. Sucuzhanay’s head and, when he fell to the ground, another began beating him with a baseball bat, the police said. The men kicked and punched Mr. Sucuzhanay until his brother told them that he was calling the police on his cellphone, the authorities said, and the attackers piled into the S.U.V. and drove away. Romel Sucuzhanay was not seriously injured in the attack. <o:p></o:p> On Tuesday, the police released a description of one of the men, saying that he is 6 feet tall and thin and that he wore a black leather jacket, boots, dark jeans and a dark baseball cap during the attack. The reward for information was set at $22,000.<o:p></o:p> Mr. Sucuzhanay, the father of two children who live with their grandparents in <st1:country-region w:st="on">Ecuador</st1:country-region>, came to the <st1:country-region w:st="on"><st1:place w:st="on">United States</st1:place></st1:country-region> a decade ago in search of work, family members said. He was a waiter for seven years before he got a real estate license three years ago and started his own agency, Open Realty International, in Bushwick. <o:p></o:p> Mr. Sucuzhanay was co-owner of the family-run company, and people in the neighborhood praised him for doing whatever he could to help clients find affordable housing. <o:p></o:p> On Saturday night, a dozen family members gathered outside the Sucuzhanay’s home in <st1:place w:st="on">Brooklyn</st1:place>, a block away from where the brothers were attacked. They hugged one another and said Mr. Sucuzhanay’s mother, identified in Ecuadorean newspapers as Julia Quintuña, had landed in the <st1:country-region w:st="on"><st1:place w:st="on">United States</st1:place></st1:country-region> but was still at the airport.<o:p></o:p> “It’s a very difficult moment for my mother,�?Diego Sucuzhanay said outside their home.<o:p></o:p> The family was planning to hold a news conference at 1 p.m. Sunday at <st1:place w:st="on"><st1:PlaceName w:st="on">Elmhurst</st1:PlaceName> <st1:PlaceType w:st="on">Hospital</st1:PlaceType> <st1:PlaceType w:st="on">Center</st1:PlaceType></st1:place>, Mr. Moya said. <o:p></o:p> “We’re going on now a week with no news about his attackers or his killers,�?Mr. Moya said. “It’s deeply disturbing.�?lt;o:p></o:p> The brutal attack on Mr. Sucuzhanay outraged Ecuadoreans in New York and Ecuador, and came four weeks after an Ecuadorean immigrant on Long Island was fatally stabbed by a group of teenagers who, the police have said, had set out to attack a Hispanic.<o:p></o:p> City Council members, civil rights groups and state officials condemned the assault on Mr. Sucuzhanay, calling it an attack on all New Yorkers.<o:p></o:p> On Saturday night, Christine C. Quinn, the City Council speaker, released a statement expressing “deep regret�?about Mr. Sucuzhanay’s death. <o:p></o:p> “These cowardly acts are outrageous and will not be tolerated,�?she said. “We will not let the behavior of these individuals who committed this horrible, senseless crime go unchecked.�?lt;o:p></o:p> <NYT_AUTHOR_ID> <o:p> </o:p> |
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The Universal Declaration of Human Rights Turns 60 The United States was a driving force in the creation of the UDHR. But our practices have too often fallen short of the ideals for which it stands. Born of a need to recognize "the inherent dignity and �?the equal and inalienable rights of all members of the human family," the Universal Declaration of Human Rights came into being 60 years ago today. Its passage brought a worldwide awareness of the basic rights and protections to be enjoyed by all human beings everywhere and established the modern human rights system that provides the legal and moral authority for governments, advocates and attorneys to take action anywhere human rights are threatened. Sadly, as a result of eight years o f disastrous policies by the Bush administration, one place where those rights are in jeopardy is right here at home.
Under the guidance of Eleanor Roosevelt, the United States was a driving force in the creation of the UDHR, and the document was clearly influenced by our nation's own Bill of Rights. But, like the Bill of Rights, the UDHR has suffered as our policies and practices have not always lived up to the ideals for which it stands. In the last eight years in particular, the U.S. has fallen behind in its commitment to recognize and protect human rights at home and abroad. It is remarkable to think that the UDHR's admonition that "disregard and contempt for human rights have resulted in barbarous acts which have outraged the conscience of mankind," would one day apply to our own government.
We are hopeful that the new administration under President-elect Obama will recommit to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and use it as a guidepost for setting policy at home and abroad. This means protecting the rights to life, liberty and security of individuals; the right of persecuted individuals to seek asylum on our safe shores; the right to freedom of expression even when one's views are in disagreement with that of the president; the right of all children to an equal education; the right to be treated equally regardless of race, religion, gender, national origin, disability or sexual orientation; and the right to be free from torture, abuse and inhumane treatment, among othe rs. The shameful practices of the Bush administration have trampled those freedoms, but it is not too late to fix them.
To begin with, President-elect Obama should fulfill his pledge to restore America's moral leadership by shutting down the prison at Guantánamo Bay and the military commissions that take place there on Day One of his presidency, by executive order. He should also issue an executive order on his first day in office that instructs all agencies to take immediate steps to end torture and abuse. And he should prohibit the rendition or transfer of any person to another country where there is a reasonable possibility the person would be subject to torture or abuse or detained without charge. Article 5 of the UDHR states that "no one shall be subjected to torture or to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment." Closing Gitmo and the military commissions and ending torture, abuse and rendition is crucial to fulfilling that obligation.
By taking these steps, President-elect Obama can start to make a clean break with the past and ensure that we will once again be the country the authors of the UDHR envisioned 60 years ago today. Reaffirming our commitment to the rights and freedoms laid out in that monumental document will send a clear message to the world that the U.S. is ready to lead by example and reclaim its role as a leader in human rights. Just as importantly, it will reaffirm our promise to ensure equality and justice for all at home. Then, and on ly then, we will be on the path to reclaiming the America we believe in.
To learn more about the UDHR and sign the ACLU's petition calling on the new administration to recommit to the UDHR, go to www.udhr60.org.
Jamil Dakwar is Director of the ACLU's Human Rights Program. He has more than 10 years experience in human rights litigation and advocacy in the U.S. and abroad. He leads ACLU human rights advocacy efforts before the United Nations' Human Rights Council and treaty bodies which regularly examine U.S. compliance with ratified human rights treaties. Since November 2004, Dakwar has observed numerous proceedings of the Guantánamo military commission system and advocated for the closure of the detenti on facility. He has also worked on and supported numerous ACLU cases challenging post 9/11 torture and detention policies such as Ali v. Rumsfeld, a suit challenging U.S. interrogation and detention practices in Afghanistan and Iraq. |
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President-elect Barack Obama's choice for education secretary supported a proposal this year for a Chicago public high school that would be geared to gay students. Arne Duncan, the Chicago school superintendent, approved plans for the Pride Campus of Social Justice High School, which was set to be voted on by the school board in November, only to be pulled by organizers at the last minute after controversy. Duncan, CEO of Chicago Public Schools since 2001, was nominated by Obama for the cabinet post at a press conference Tuesday morning, CNN reports. The 44-year-old Harvard graduate helped write the president-elect's education platform and has frequently advised him on educational matters, according to The New York Times. In June, bolstered by grim statistics, a group of Chicago teachers, administrators, and education experts presented a groundbreaking proposal to the Chicago public school board: A new Pride Campus, affiliated with the existing Social Justice High School, eventually serving 400 to 600 students, would provide a safe and accepting place for LGBT kids and their allies. The public charter school would have been only the third of its kind in the country, after Milwaukee's Alliance School and New York City's Harvey Milk High School(Sean Kennedy and Jessica Reaves, Advocate.com) |
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Sioux City, Iowa, council members voted Monday to delay taking action on a resolution to publicly oppose same-sex marriage, reports The Des Moines Register. Before moving forward on the proposal, Mayor Mike Hobart said he first wanted counsel from the state attorney general "on whether we have the jurisdiction and authority to pass the resolution." Councilman Brent Hoffman introduced the proposal to publicly support the definition of marriage as a union between a man and a woman. Though the city has no legal authority over defining marriage, Hoffman said the symbolic move would have been instructive for city departments, boards, and commissions. The resolution also requests a statewide vote on gay marriage. The Register reported that nearly 60 people attended Monday's council meeting to hear the debate, but the matter was "tabled indefinitely," according to Hobart. Gay unions are a hot topic in Iowa, where the supreme court is deliberating over whether to uphold the state's Defense of Marriage Act, which prohibits same-sex marriage, or declare the law unconstitutional. The ruling is expected to come any time in the next year and a half. (Advocate.com) |
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(Los Angeles, California) The nation's largest scholarship-granting organization for LGBT students began receiving applications Friday for the 2009-10 school year. The Point Foundation awards on average $13,200 in direct financial support. Since its inception in 2001, Point has invested over $3 million in the education of outstanding LGBT students. The organization's growth over a short period of time is noteworthy. In its first year, Point received 268 applications and granted eight scholarships. In 2008, approximately 1,344 applications were submitted and a record-breaking 27 students were granted scholarships. As of October 2008, there are 90 Point Scholars currently enrolled in school and 42 Point Alumni. Current Point Scholars attend the nation's foremost higher educational institutions such as Harvard, Princeton, Stanford, Rice, UC-Berkeley and UCLA. Point said that its selection process is highly competitive and requires demonstrated academic excellence, leadership skills, community involvement and financial need. Particular attention, it said, is paid to students who have lost the financial and social support of their families and/or communities as a result of revealing their sexual orientation, gender identity or gender expression. "A great number of LGBT youth in this country face enormous challenges simply because of their sexual orientation and/or gender identity," said Point Executive Director & CEO Jorge Valencia. "In a recession we expect a significant increase in applications this year." The selection process begins with on-line applications and concludes with face-to-face interviews with selected finalists in April. Point Scholars agree to maintain a high level of academic performance and to give back to the LGBT community through the completion of an individual community service project each year. In addition, scholars are matched with mentors from the professional world through Point's Mentoring Program. Mentors lend their professional expertise and career guidance and become important role models to scholars. The deadline for this year's scholarships is February 9, 2009. |
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Gay groups are sounding the alarm as Virginia attorney general Bob McDonnell gears up for a gubernatorial run in 2009. The Republican is the only member of his party to file paperwork by last month's deadline to campaign for the office now held by Democrat Tim Kaine, and he has a lengthy anti-gay record, the Washington Blade reports. McDonnell, a former state delegate from Virginia Beach, voted for several anti-gay measures while in the legislature, including an amendment to the Virginia constitution banning same-sex marriage and civil unions (the bill passed). He also voted for a law preventing the state from recognizing out-of-state civil unions and for a bill that would have outlawed adoption by gays. McDonnell twice voted against a bill that sought to enable the partners of gay employees to receive health insurance. McDonnell is “one of the most outspoken, homophobic elected officials in the state,�?Tom Osborne of the gay Democratic group Virginia Partisans told the Blade, adding that the attorney general has been an “enemy at every opportunity." Governor Kaine's term ends in January 2010. Several Democrats are also in the race to succeed him, including former Democratic National Committee chairman and longtime Clinton ally Terry McAuliffe. (Advocate.com) |
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British police on Wednesday arrested a soccer fan suspected of shouting racist and homophobic remarks at star player Sol Campbell. The arrest of the 28-year-old man came after police released photos of 16 fans who allegedly directed the invective at the defender for England's Portsmouth team on September 28, Agence France-Presse reports. According to the 1991 Football Offences Act, soccer fans can be fined and barred from stadiums for chanting “indecent or racist" songs, though until now perpetrators have rarely been prosecuted. A police officer on the day of the match in question managed to capture the suspects on camera. “Our inquiry is aimed at identifying and putting before the court those individuals who engaged in unacceptable behavior at this public event," Hampshire police superintendent Neil Sherrington told AFP. “We want to send a clear message that abuse of this kind will not be tolerated and that we are taking robust action." "There is no place for [abuse] in football," a spokesman for the Portsmouth team, Gary Double, told AFP. "That is the view of most people in the game and most fans." Campbell previously played for London's Arsenal and Tottenham Hotspurs teams. (Thibault Chareton, Advocate.com) |
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Carl Butcho, a 26-year-old former caterer living in New York City, is being accused of racking up $361,000 in charges on his ex-boyfriend's credit card. Spa treatments, limousines, and dog-walkers were all part of Butcho's life, reports the New York Post . Butcho's ex-boyfriend -- Jason Warner, an employee of Ernst & Young -- accuses his ex of living high on the hog courtesy of his credit card. Before breaking up, the couple lived at the Ritz-Carlton, where Butcho informed hotel staff he was heir to a large fortune and took advantage of their personal shopping service. "[Butcho] told us he had a giant fortune," the co-owner of the TriBeCa Chef, the eatery where Butcho recently worked before suddenly disappearing, told the Post. The restaurateur said Butcho told him he had intestinal cancer before he took off mysteriously. During the summer and fall of 2007, Butcho rang up thousands and thousands of dollars of charges, prosecutors say. The young man was held in lieu of a $50,000 bond at his arraignment in Manhattan criminal court on Wednesday; he's charged with two counts of grand larceny. Butcho's lawyer says Warner signed off on the credit card receipts and is now trying to blame Butcho for the charges. (Neal Broverman, Advocate.com) |
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A Time Machine to Save America By Robert Parry December 11, 2008 Looking out over the bleak landscape of economic and national security disasters that George W. Bush is leaving behind, I sometimes think the best use of the trillion-dollar bailout funds might be to invent a time machine that could take the world back eight years to the fateful decision of the U.S. Supreme Court to give Bush the White House. type=text/javascript> function urlEncode (aURL) { return aURL.replace(/&linkID=[0-9]*/,"").replace('&','%26'); } </SCRIPT> That decision �?on Dec. 12, 2000 �?may rank as one of the most destructive turning points in history, putting the United States and the world on a course so dangerous that there may be no feasible route back to the relative peace and prosperity that existed at the time. If only there were a way to return to that date and convince Justices Sandra Day O’Connor and Anthony Kennedy to follow the logic of their own legal arguments and have Florida conduct as full and fair a recount as possible �?a process that apparently would have made Al Gore, not George W. Bush, the 43rd President of the United States. Gore already had claimed a half-million-vote plurality in the national balloting and was widely viewed as the choice of most Florida voters. Even if the butterfly ballot fiasco and other irregularities were ignored, Gore still was likely to prevail narrowly if all the legally cast ballots �?those expressing the clear intent of the voters �?were counted. Instead, O’Connor and Kennedy joined with right-wing justices Antonin Scalia, Clarence Thomas and William Rehnquist in effectively delivering Florida’s 25 electoral votes and the White House to Bush. It was a matter of partisan choice, not an exercise in legal logic or democratic principles. But how that momentous decision was reached is still little understood by Americans, even eight grim years hence. The story began on Dec. 8, 2000 �?with Bush clinging to an official lead of only a few hundred votes out of six million cast in Florida �?when the Bush forces were dealt a crushing blow. A divided Florida Supreme Court ordered a statewide review of ballots that had been kicked out by counting machines. The recounting began on the morning of Dec. 9. Immediately, the canvassers began finding scores of legitimate votes that the machines had rejected. Bush’s lawyers raced to the U.S. Appeals Court in Atlanta to stop the count. Though dominated by conservatives, the court found no grounds to intervene. A frantic Bush then turned to the U.S. Supreme Court in Washington. There, in the late afternoon, the high court took the unprecedented step of stopping the counting of votes cast by American citizens. Justice Antonin Scalia made clear that the purpose of the court’s action was to prevent Bush from falling behind in the tally and thus raising questions about his legitimacy should the Supreme Court later declare him the winner. That outcome would “cast a cloud�?over the “legitimacy�?of an eventual Bush presidency, explained Scalia. “Count first, and rule upon the legality afterwards, is not a recipe for producing election results that have the public acceptance democratic stability requires,�?Scalia wrote. Trusting the Law Nevertheless, on Dec. 11, Gore and his lawyers voiced confidence that the rule of law would prevail, that the U.S. Supreme Court would rise above any partisan concerns and would insist that the votes be counted and that the will of the voters be respected. The Gore team went before Rehnquist’s court apparently still unaware that whatever they argued, the five conservative justices were determined to make Bush the next President. The evidence is now clear that Rehnquist and his four Republican colleagues decided on their ruling in Bush v. Gore first and settled on their rationale second. Indeed, their legal logic flipped from the start of their deliberations to the end, but their pro-Bush verdict remained steadfast. USA Today disclosed this inside story in an article about the strains that the Bush v. Gore ruling created within the court. Though the article was sympathetic to the pro-Bush justices, it disclosed an important fact: that the five were planning to rule for Bush after oral arguments on Dec. 11. The court even sent out for Chinese food for the clerks, so work could be completed that night. [USA Today, Jan. 22, 2001] At that point, the legal rationale for stopping the Florida recount was to have been that the Florida Supreme Court had made “new law�?when it referenced the state constitution in an initial recount decision �?rather than simply interpreting state statutes. Even though this basis for giving Bush the White House was highly technical, the rationale at least conformed with conservative principles, which are supposedly hostile to judicial “activism.�?But the Florida Supreme Court threw a wrench into the plan. On the evening of Dec. 11, the state court submitted a revised ruling that deleted the passing reference to the state constitution. The revised ruling based its reasoning entirely on state statutes, which permitted recounts in close elections. A Conservative Split This modified state ruling opened a split among the five conservatives. Justices O’Connor and Kennedy no longer felt they could agree with the “new law�?rationale for blocking the recount, though Justices Rehnquist, Scalia and Thomas were prepared to stick with the old thinking even though its foundation had been removed. The plans for finishing up the formal opinion on the evening of Dec. 11 were scrapped as O’Connor and Kennedy veered off in a very different direction. Through the day on Dec. 12, they worked on an opinion arguing that the Florida Supreme Court had failed to set consistent standards for the recount and that the disparate county-by-county standards constituted a violation of the “equal protection�?rules of the 14th Amendment. The logic of this argument was quite thin and Kennedy reportedly had trouble committing it to writing. To anyone who had followed the Florida election, it was clear that varied standards already had been applied throughout the state. Wealthier precincts benefited from optical voting machines that were simple to use and eliminated nearly all errors, while poorer precincts with many African-Americans and retired Jews were stuck with outmoded punch-card systems with far higher error rates. Some counties had conducted manual recounts, too, and those totals already were part of the tallies giving Bush a tiny lead. The statewide recount �?ordered by the Florida Supreme Court �?was designed to reduce those disparities and thus bring the results closer to equality. Applying the “equal protection�?provision, as planned by O’Connor and Kennedy, turned the 14th Amendment on its head, guaranteeing less equality than would have occurred by letting the recount go forward. Indeed, if one were to follow the “logic�?of the O’Connor-Kennedy position, the only “fair�?conclusion would have been to throw out Florida’s presidential election in total. After all, the U.S. Supreme Court was effectively judging Florida’s disparate standards to be unconstitutional. That, however, would have left Gore with a majority of the remaining electoral votes �?and wouldn’t have served the purpose of putting Bush into the White House. Perhaps even more startling than the stretched logic of the O’Connor-Kennedy faction was the readiness of Rehnquist, Scalia and Thomas to sign on to a ruling that was almost completely at odds with their original legal rationale for blocking the recount. On the night of Dec. 11, that trio was ready to bar the recount because the Florida Supreme Court had created “new law.�?On Dec. 12, the same three justices were voting to block the recount because the Florida Supreme Court had not created “new law�?�?by establishing precise statewide recount standards. The five conservatives had devised their own Catch-22. If the Florida Supreme Court set clearer standards, that would be struck down as creating “new law.�?If the state court didn’t set clearer standards, that would be struck down as violating the “equal protection�?principle. Heads Bush wins; tails Gore loses. There was one other clever twist to the conservative majority’s maneuvering. When the ruling was issued at around 10 p.m. on Dec. 12, the O’Connor-Kennedy rationale asserted that the 14th Amendment required a recount with equal standards applied statewide, but then gave Florida only two hours to complete the process before a deadline of midnight. Because this two-hour window was absurdly unrealistic, the result of the ruling was to give Bush the White House based on a 537-vote lead in the “official�?Florida results, as overseen by the state administration of his brother, Gov. Jeb Bush. Denying Politics After the court’s ruling and Gore's concession the next day, Justice Thomas told a group of high school students that partisan considerations played “zero�?part in the court's decisions. Later, asked whether Thomas's assessment was accurate, Rehnquist answered, “Absolutely.�?/FONT> In later comments about the court’s role in the case, Chief Justice Rehnquist seemed unfazed by the inconsistency of the court’s logic. His overriding rationale seemed to be that he viewed Bush’s election as good for the country �?whether most voters thought so or not. In a speech on Jan. 7, 2001, Rehnquist said sometimes the U.S. Supreme Court needed to intervene in politics to extricate the nation from a crisis. His remarks were made in the context of the Hayes-Tilden race in 1876, when another popular vote loser, Rutherford B. Hayes, was awarded the presidency after justices participated in a special election commission. “The political processes of the country had worked, admittedly in a rather unusual way, to avoid a serious crisis,�?Rehnquist said. Scholars interpreted Rehnquist’s remarks as shedding light on his thinking during the Bush v. Gore case as well. “He’s making a rather clear statement of what he thought the primary job of our governmental process was,�?said Michael Les Benedict, a history professor at Ohio State University. “That was to make sure the conflict is resolved peacefully, with no violence.�?[Washington Post, Jan. 19, 2001] But where were the threats of violence and acts of disruption in the 2000 election? Gore had reined in his supporters, urging them to avoid confrontations and to trust in the “rule of law.�?The only violence had come from the Bush side, when the Bush campaign flew protesters from Washington to Miami to put pressure on local election boards. On Nov. 22, 2000, as the Miami-Dade canvassing board was preparing to examine ballots, a well-dressed mob of Republican operatives charged the office, roughed up some Democrats and pounded on the walls. The canvassing board promptly reversed itself and decided to forego the recount. The next night, the Bush-Cheney campaign feted the rioters at a hotel party in Fort Lauderdale. Starring at the event was crooner Wayne Newton singing “Danke Schoen,�?but the highlight for the operatives was a thank-you call from George W. Bush and his running mate, Dick Cheney, both of whom joked about the Miami-Dade incident, the Wall Street Journal reported. The Journal noted that “behind the rowdy rallies in South Florida this past weekend was a well-organized effort by Republican operatives to entice supporters to South Florida,�?with House Majority Whip Tom DeLay's Capitol Hill office taking charge of the recruitment. [WSJ, Nov. 27, 2000. For more details, see Consortiumnews.com’s �?/FONT>Bush’s Conspiracy to Riot.”] In other less violent ways, Bush-Cheney operatives signaled that they would not accept an unfavorable vote total in Florida. In the chance that Gore pulled ahead, the Republican-controlled state legislature was preparing to void the results. In Washington, the Republican congressional leadership also was threatening to force a constitutional crisis if Gore prevailed in Florida. If one takes Rehnquist’s “good-for-the-country�?rationale seriously, that means the U.S. Supreme Court was ready to award the presidency to the side most willing to use violence and other anti-democratic means to overturn the will of the voters. Rehnquist’s approach suggested that since Gore and his supporters were less likely to resort to violence �?while Bush and his backers were ready to provoke a crisis if they didn’t get their way �?that the high court should give the presidency to the side most committed to disruption. A far more democratic �?and rational �?approach would have been for the Supreme Court to accept the O’Connor-Kennedy logic and simply extend the deadline for Florida to turn in its results. The court could have ordered the fullest and fairest possible recount with the winner being whichever candidate ended up with the most votes. If that had occurred, the almost certain winner would have been Gore. When a group of news organizations conducted an unofficial recount of Florida’s disputed ballots in 2001, Gore came out narrowly on top regardless of what standards were applied to the famous chads �?dimpled, hanging or punched-through. Gore’s victory would have been assured by the so-called “overvotes�?in which a voter both punched through a candidate’s name and also wrote it in. Under Florida law, such “overvotes�?are legal and they broke heavily in Gore’s favor. [See Consortiumnews.com's "So Bush Did Steal the White House" or our book, Neck Deep.] So all the world needs now is a time machine that can take us back to that moment eight years ago �?and then convince Justices O’Connor and Kennedy to do the right thing by letting the voters decide. |
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| | From: markwdc | Sent: 12/20/2008 9:08 PM |
WASTED FANTASY: "A Time Machine to Save America" PLAUSIBLE PROMISE: "A Committed Citizenry to Rebuild America" Whining about "Coulda, Woulda, Shoulda" never did a damned thing except to waste precious time!! The only place change is possible is in the future . . . and the only way make change is to get to work NOW!! |
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