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Swedish Meatballs
20 hours ago
...throughout our discussion, [Gary Bauer], too, seemed curiously hesitant to discuss gay marriage per se. When I ask, for instance, how two gays guys who are not married living next door to me is any different from two guys who are married living there, he responds by asking how I would feel if a man with two wives moved in.Read More......
In every hypothetical, in fact, he refers not to same-sex couples, but to polygamists.
Throughout history, he says, marriage has been "a system to guarantee that the largest number of children possible would have a mother and a father. If it's not that, it can be anything - polygamists in Utah, consensual incest. If it's not man-woman there's no constitutional way to limit it to two."
So polygamists are the real threat? "Abraham Lincoln called polygamy one of the two great evils, along with slavery. And if our society goes down this road, I guarantee it will affect your marriage. If there's polygamy allowed, monogamy will be further undermined."
I know he doesn't want to come off as homophobic, but these contortions make him seem embarrassed by the terms of the actual debate.
"Despite the rocky start of his liberal Air America radio network, political humorist Al Franken surged past conservative nemesis Bill O'Reilly in the first quarterly ratings matchup between the two in New York City."Read More......
A proposed constitutional amendment to outlaw the burning of the American flag won the approval on Tuesday of a Senate Judiciary Committee split largely along party lines.Democrats, if there are any out there in the Congress, shut the place down over this. Do what the Republicans would do. Go bonkers until the Congress passes the additional homeland security monies. Read More......
Raised by some Republicans as a mark of patriotism this election year, the measure passed on a 11-7 vote and was sent to the full Senate for final congressional approval. While the Senate has repeatedly rejected such measures in the past, both sides predict a razor-close vote this time.
- Former Howard Dean campaign manager Joe Trippi has a new book about the campaign and the way the Internet is changing everything.Read More......
- Only $1 an issue for the New Yorker, who knew?! I subscribe, it's a great mag, get it, and impress your friends with how cool you are.
- Denzel Washington's new movie, The Manchurian Candidate is out on July 30. Reuters had this to say about the new movie:"Director Jonathan Demme has risen to the challenge, delivering a 'Candidate' that simultaneously brings the original Cold War scenario bracingly up to date with a story line that pulses with a topical resonance while paying respectful homage to the late Frankenheimer's artistic vision....- Award-winning author Duane Simolke has a new gay-themed sci-fi book out, check it out.
The performances are flawless. [Meryl] Streep is clearly enjoying every screen second of one of her meatiest roles in years, while Washington and Schreiber turn in quietly powerful performances. The scenes in which they have the camera to themselves are particularly electrifying."
"Fred Snodgrass, a 76-year-old Florida retiree, says he gets so upset when he watches Rep. Henry Hyde on TV that 'I nearly jump out of my chair.' Hyde, the Illinois Republican who heads the House Judiciary Committee, is on television often these days. Hyde's committee will decide whether the adulterous affair President Clinton carried on with a White House intern, and his efforts to keep it hidden, should be referred to the House of Representatives for impeachment proceedings. 'I watched [Hyde] on TV the other night,' said Snodgrass. 'These politicians were going on about how he should have been on the Supreme Court, what a great man he is, how we're lucky to have him in Congress in charge of the impeachment case. And all I can think of is here is this man, this hypocrite who broke up my family.'Read More......
"Snodgrass says Hyde carried on a five-year sexual relationship with his then-wife, Cherie, that shattered his family. Hyde admitted to Salon Wednesday that he had been involved with Cherie Snodgrass..."
WHICH Republican Party bigwig in town to help organize the convention thinks her son tagged along so he could study ballet - but he's secretly gyrating in a G-string at gay go-go bars downtown?Ok, this inquiring mind wants to know. Come on you NYers out there, email me!
Q. If they ever put language in the U.S. Constitution forcing gay guys to marry women, who would get to be the lucky Mrs. Savage? -- JUST CURIOUS
A. Wonkette, of course, as she's the only woman I know who likes to talk about ass-fucking as much as I do (wonkette.com). If Wonkette won't have me, then I'd pop the question to Mary Cheney, Vice President Dick Cheney's lesbo daughter. Mary worked for the Bush-Cheney campaign in 2000, doing outreach to gay and lesbian voters - effective outreach, apparently, as almost 25 percent of gay and lesbian voters went for Bush. (You dumb fucks!) Mary's working for her dad again this year, despite the fact that her dad and her dad's boss want to write anti-gay bigotry into the U.S. Constitution. As Mary's husband, I would do all I could to make her absolutely miserable. I wouldn't beat her (I reserve that for people I like), but I would pee on the toilet seat every morning, fart under the covers every night, and remind her at every opportunity that she's the most despised American lesbian since Mamie Eisenhower.
Halliburton Co., the world's largest oilfield services company, said federal prosecutors subpoenaed documents related to the company's operations in Iran.Read More......
A company report prepared in October estimated 2003 revenue for its Iranian operations, run from a Cayman Island subsidiary, Halliburton Products and Services Ltd., was $39 million.
"This problem doesn't start in the waiting room," Cheney said in remarks released by the campaign. "It doesn't start in the operating room. The problem starts in the courtroom."Read More......
An analysis by the Congressional Budget Office said the malpractice bill would benefit physicians and the government but would reduce private health insurance premiums a scant 0.4 percent.
"The Bush administration largely gets it backwards," said Columbia University law professor and physician William M. Sage. "They say health care is expensive because of lawsuits. I say lawsuits are expensive because of our health care system."
"The solution that organized medicine and the White House are supporting is a fix for the doctors to some degree," said Martin J. Hatlie, president of the Chicago-based Partnership for Patient Safety, which advises hospitals on safety improvements. "It helps keep their premiums down. It does nothing to advance the quality of care, nothing to advance the safety of care, nothing to more fairly compensate claimants or address the other really significant problems in the current medical-legal system."
"The finger-pointing by Republican senators is natural. How could they lose the class-action bill when they had a clear majority? How could they fail to win a majority on the gay marriage amendment? How could they fail to pass a budget? Why did they succumb to Teddy Kennedy on the tobacco buyout? The answers revolve around the caliber of leadership."I say the Dems win the Senate back this fall, IF they can keep the Republicans in Congress and the White House in disarray. You heard it here first.
On the Senate floor July 14, Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-Tenn.) said, 'Will activist judges not elected by the American people destroy the institution of marriage, or will the people protect marriage as the best way to raise children? My vote is with the people' ['Ban on Gay Marriage Fails,' front page, July 15].Read More......
Mr. Frist should know that a majority (28) of state supreme courts are elected directly by the people. In another 11 states, judges are appointed by the governor for one term but then must be elected by the people for any successive terms. Only six state supreme courts are directly appointed by the governor, while the remaining five are elected by the legislatures.
If the senator wants to talk about a branch of government not elected by the people, see the executive: President Bush lost the popular election by more than 500,000 votes.
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