I love Internet quizzes and here’s the latest from Slate, determining how red-state or blue-state you are. It turns out I’m bang in the middle – a lovely shade of lavender.
Month: July 2004
TRADITIONAL VALUES COALITION
Check out their new campaign, called “Homosexual Urban Legends.” Its banner poster shows the face of a young child, spliced with a demonic-looking, green-shaded older man with a beard. The first item in their series is called: “Exposed: Homosexual Child Molesters.” Karl Rove must be thrilled. It’s working! It’s working! Here’s the image:
THE SLIPPERY SLOPE
Maybe Stanley Kurtz is right. Only a couple of months after the Goodridge ruling came into effect in Massachusetts, even the swans are becoming lesbian. It’s the beginning of the end, I tell you. (No data yet on the rate of homosexuality among Norwegian parrots.)
STRIPPING THE COURTS
The Republican leadership, furious that courts are – shock! – upholding minority rights, are now planning to strip them of jurisdiction in such cases. That’s now the DeLay strategy:
Majority Leader Tom DeLay (R-Texas) told reporters yesterday that he plans to use “jurisdiction stripping” measures to achieve other social policy goals as well. For example, he will push legislation to stop federal courts from hearing lawsuits related to the words “under God” in the Pledge of Allegiance.
The GOP also wants to use their plantation in DC as an experiment, dictating that the district cannot recognize marriages from elsewhere, if they are between gay citizens. And this is the party that trumpets that the voters should decide. Not in DC.
QUOTE OF THE DAY
“No one lied. No one made up the intelligence. No one inserted things into the dossier against the advice of the intelligence services. Everyone genuinely tried to do their best in good faith for the country in circumstances of acute difficulty. That issue of good faith should now be at an end … But I have to accept, as the months have passed, it seems increasingly clear that at the time of invasion, Saddam did not have stockpiles of chemical or biological weapons ready to deploy … I have searched my conscience, not in the spirit of obstinacy, but in genuine reconsideration in the light of what we now know, in answer to that question. And my answer would be that the evidence of Saddam’s WMD was indeed less certain, less well-founded than was stated at the time. But I cannot go from there to the opposite extreme. On any basis he retained complete strategic intent on WMD and significant capability. The only reason he ever let the inspectors back into Iraq was that he had 180,000 US and British troops on his doorstep … Had we backed down in respect of Saddam, we would never have taken the stand we needed to take on WMD, never have got progress on Libya … and we would have left Saddam in charge of Iraq, with every malign intent and capability still in place and every dictator with the same intent everywhere immeasurably emboldened. For any mistakes made, as the report finds, in good faith, I of course take full responsibility. But I cannot honestly say I believe getting rid of Saddam was a mistake at all.” – Tony Blair, yesterday. It’s a classy, honest, intelligent and sincere rebuke to the anti-war arguments. If only the president had the character and strength to say something as candid.
THE EDWARDS BOUNCE
It may not be huge in national polls, but it does seem to have had an impact on the electoral college, according to this synthesis of new polls in eighteen states:
Was there an Edwards bounce? Yes. Kerry picked up 30 electoral votes since yesterday and now leads by 117 EV. Of the new state polls, Kerry is ahead in 12, Bush is ahead in 4, and one is an exact tie. Since all of these are battleground states, this is good news for Kerry. He is ahead in Ohio, Florida, Michigan, Wisconsin, and Missouri. There is no conceivable scenario in which Bush can lose the majority of these states and win the election. But before Kerry supporters start popping the champagne corks, note that the vice-presidential bounce is usually short lived. Two weeks from now we will find out how much real change there is, if any.
another site comes to the same conclusion: Kerry: 322; Bush: 216. On the other hand, the Iowa futures market has Bush inching ahead a little this week.
SANTORUM’S HYPERBOLE: Eugene Volokh rebuts the Senator’s hysteria about the Defense of Marriage Act.
MEL’S ENGLISH PRIEST: An old duffer who refused to say the Vatican II mass died yesterday:
A quiet, kindly man who had been a practitioner of martial arts in his younger days, on July 2 Father Oswald Baker declared: “I am ready to die” – which he then did.
A lovely obit appears here.
ALLAWI ON SADDAM: He insists that the old dictator had contacts with al Qaeda and other terrorist organizations. Someone tell the New York Times.
MARRIAGE IN CANADA: Another province, the Yukon, grants gays the right to civil marriage. CORRECTION: Yukon is a territory, not a province.
EMAIL OF THE DAY: “You write that Dean Jones ‘is known chiefly as one of Disney’s top stars in the 1960s and 1970s.’ Perhaps the highlight of his career, however, was his starring role as Robert in the Sondheim musical “Company.” There is some sad irony there.” More ironies on the Letters Page.
EMAIL OF THE DAY II
“Whoa! Wait a second! FMA collapses because of lack of REPUBLICAN support, and you label the Republican Party as exclusionary? Yes, some in the party supported it because of a heartfelt conviction that it was the right thing to do. The FMA went to honest debate within the party, and guess what? It lost. Seems to me the Republican Party is not the scary, neo-fascist entity you make it out to be. I consider myself to be pretty conservative, and a “right wing” Christian – one of your favorite whipping boys – but I did not support FMA on grounds of Federalism, and because, quite frankly, I thought it unnecessarily hostile. That being said, however, there is room for reasonable debate, and the only place where that debate could take place is the non-monolithic Republican Party. And as far as the consequences for W: Conservative Christians are not going to abandon him since, after all, he supported the amendment. He has maintained his good will with them. And I suspect that most of us out here following the debate have the intellectual integrity to understand that the point is debatable. The debate having been joined, it appears that your side won. So lighten up. Now that the light has faded from this sideshow, let’s get back to where this election should be fought – who will best prosecute the war on terror. Hint: It ain’t John Kerry.” – more feedback on the Letters Page.
SANTORUM CELEBRITIES
Wonkette has been having some fun with the celebrities Rick Santorum turned out for his alternative Hollywood endorsement of the FMA. The headliners? Drum roll, please:
• Darrell Green (Green played for the Washington Redskins for twenty years, earning seven trips to the Pro-Bowl.- Once the fastest man in the NFL, he retired as the oldest defensive back ever in the NFL) —– ——- ——-
• Dean Jones (Jones was nominated for a Golden Globe Award in 1971, and is known chiefly as one of Disney’s top stars in the 1960s and 1970s.- He is also known for his leading role in ” Herbie the Love Bug.”) —– ——- ——-
• Marvin Winans (Marvin is a member of the gospel group The Winans, who are Grammy, Dove and Stellar award-winners.- He is also pastor of a church in Detroit, Michigan.) —– ——- ——-
• Pat Boone (Boone was the second most-popular singer in the United States in the 1950s – second only to Elvis Presley.- He’s recognized by Billboard Magazine as the #10 rock recording artist in history.)
Of course, Pat Boone’s orange-chartreuse-sherbert jacket stole the show. But hey, no one can accuse the GOP of being out of touch with the 1950s, can they?
DERBYSHIRE AWARD NOMINEE
“Isn’t that the ultimate homeland security? To defend the sanctity of marriage?” – Senator Rick Santorum, equating his campaign against marriage rights for gays with the war on terror. I should have added that the 48 – 50 procedural vote greatly understates opposition to the FMA. The Santorumites were afraid to put their amendment to the vote. If they had, it might have been crushed. Here’s the Log Cabin analysis:
Senator McCain’s opposition to the amendment came just hours after Senator John Warner (R-VA) took to the floor and announced his opposition to the anti-family amendment. In addition to Senator McCain and Senator Warner’s floor statements, Senator Susan Collins (R-ME) told reporters on Tuesday that, “I see no need for a constitutional amendment … at a time when we already have a federal law on the books that protects the rights of states to define marriage as between a man and a woman.”
Log Cabin has made it clear from day one that this debate is not about protecting marriage, but is really about protecting the Constitution and protecting federalism. Over this past weekend, Senator Olympia Snowe (R-ME) added to the growing voices of Republican opposition to this unnecessary amendment by stating, “I believe that marriage should be defined as a marriage between man and woman, but I don’t think that a constitutional amendment is necessary.”
Even some of the most conservative members of the Senate expressed reservations about amending the Constitution. Senator Judd Gregg (R-NH) said, “a federal constitutional Amendment is premature at this time, as federal law already gives authority to the states in recognizing marriage.”
Senator Chuck Hagel (R-NE) made his opposition to this amendment clear. “I do not support amending the U.S. Constitution to ban same sex marriage at this time.”
Senator Arlen Specter (R-PA) courageously spoke out against the amendment in the midst of a difficult primary campaign against an anti-gay opponent. Senator Lincoln Chafee (R-RI) went as far as to circulate a letter to his colleagues asking fellow Republicans to reject this anti-family amendment.
Up to a dozen Republicans would have voted against the measure. It truly is a humiliation for the anti-gay forces in the GOP. Let’s hope they take this to heart – and leave the states to figure out how to accommodate gay families into American society.
IT’S OVER
The anti-gay forces couldn’t even muster a simple majority for their constitutional amendment. It lost 48 – 50. I concur with this editorial in the Cleveland Plain-Dealer:
No matter what one’s position is on the socially divisive questions of same-sex marriage, civil unions and other nontraditional arrangements, the Constitution is not the place to engrave social policy – as we should have learned eight decades ago with Prohibition. Some true constitutionalists of both parties, to their credit, realize that.
So the states, for now, remain in control of marriage law; the federal Defense of Marriage Act, for now, inoculates those states whose residents do not wish to recognize marriages licensed in other states. That’s a status quo that can stand while American society, in the way that it does, works out what it will – or will not – accept in relationships among its members.
Thanks to all of you who lobbied against this; thanks to the many Republicans who stood up against it; thanks to the Democrats for being so solidly opposed. This is a symbolic but important blow to the agenda of the far right. They have divided their party, and tarnished their reputation for fairness – but the Constitution remains intact and unviolated. That’s one reason to cheer.