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Gay activists are urging a boycott of Virginia because of a new ban on civil unions and other marriage-like arrangements for same-sex couples.Read More......
VirginiaisforHaters.org, a Web site created by two Seattle men, urges people not to buy products or services from Virginia-based companies and suggests tourists visit states that are friendlier to gays. The name is a play on the state's tourism motto, 'Virginia is for Lovers.'
Another group, Make Love Legal, is urging a boycott of the 400th anniversary celebration of the founding of Jamestown in 2007. The state is expecting millions of visitors for the yearlong event.
'This whole idea is: Don't spend your money in a place where people hurt you,' said Diane Horvath, a Richmond attorney spearheading the Jamestown initiative. 'My family wanted to come to Jamestown and I said under no circumstances will I plan another vacation in this state until this state wants me here.'
The new law amends the state's Affirmation of Marriage Act, which prohibits civil unions and other arrangements 'purporting to bestow the privileges of marriage.' Gays and lesbians fear it may interfere with legal contracts between people of the same sex, such as powers of attorney, medical directives and wills.
Many gay rights supporters and legal scholars say it is the most restrictive anti-gay law in the nation.
Petty Officer Christopher Sherwood, a spokesman for Southern Command, noted Tuesday that an initial investigation at Guantanamo found no misconduct or negligence by any soldiers involved in the training session.Also, check out WLEX-TV's coverage of this story for a video clip of their news segment, it's in the upper left corner of the page, labeled "Army Investigating Case Of Beaten Soldier."
'Since that time, we've looked for the tape and it's probably been recorded over,' Sherwood said.
Baker's attorney, Bruce Simpson, has requested the tape from the military. He said Tuesday that the military's account of the tape 'adds another bizarre feature to this whole sad story of Sean Baker.'
'If any tape ought to be preserved, it ought to be that one,' he said.
A soldier who witnessed the incident provided a written statement that a tape was made of the training session, Simpson said.
Simpson also cited an oral statement from another soldier who tried to obtain the videotape shortly after the incident but was told that the tape was erased, destroyed or the camera had malfunctioned.
Simpson said he planned to discuss the fate of the videotape with the Army investigators on Wednesday. Simpson also has asked the Army to turn over all of Baker's medical records."
Four MPs slammed Baker to the floor, he says, then choked him and pounded his head at least three times against the floor. Gasping for breath, he managed to spit out a code word — "red" — and to croak: "I'm a U.S. soldier! I'm a U.S. soldier!"Read More......
But the beating continued, according to Baker, until the jumpsuit was yanked down in the struggle, revealing his military uniform. Only then did the MPs realize that they had been beating an American soldier — causing a traumatic brain injury, Baker alleges....
Honorably discharged with a medical retirement in April, Baker spends dreary days inside a nondescript duplex in central Kentucky, unable to work because of what he says are seizures caused by the beating. He is taking nine prescription medications for seizures and headaches, his lawyer said. He has yet to receive disability payments promised by the military.
"The way the military treated Sean is unconscionable — and the way they continue to treat him is even worse," said attorney Bruce Simpson....
The military at first said Baker's medical discharge was not related to the beating at Guantanamo. Last week, the military reversed itself, saying the incident was partly responsible for his discharge....
"I never thought my military career would end as a result of a beating which I sustained at the hands of my fellow troops," he wrote. "Someone in charge should have known better."
President Bush led the United States into an ill-planned Iraq war that weakened U.S. security, retired diplomats and military officers said on Wednesday in a challenge to one of Bush's main arguments for re-election.Read More......
'We all believe that current administration policies have failed in the primary responsibilities of preserving national security and providing world leadership,' said a statement signed by the 27 retired officials. 'We need a change.'
The rare criticism by career senior U.S. officials came from a group that included members of both major political parties, two former ambassadors to the Soviet Union and a retired chairman of the military Joint Chiefs of Staff....
"Our security has been weakened," the group said.
The former officials, some of whom said they had voted for Bush, said the Republican president manipulated intelligence on Iraq to lead the United States into an "ill-planned and costly war from which exit is uncertain."
Bush has maintained an "overbearing" approach to foreign policy that relied excessively on military power, spurned the concerns of U.S. traditional allies and disdained the United Nations, the group said.
"It justified the invasion of Iraq by manipulation of uncertain intelligence about weapons of mass destruction, and by a cynical campaign to persuade the public that Saddam Hussein (news - web sites) was linked to al Qaeda and the attacks of September 11," it said. "The evidence did not support this argument."
"Never in the two and a quarter centuries of our history has the United States been so isolated among the nations, so broadly feared and distrusted," it added.
Mr. Bush's effort to wrap himself in the Reagan legacy drew plenty of skeptics, including a number of top Reagan officials, who said, all anonymously, that the presidencies could not have been more different. Mr. Reagan was pragmatic, they said, but Mr. Bush is ideological. Mr. Reagan was a unifier, they argued, while Mr. Bush has polarized.Read More......
'Bush wants to defeat his opponents, Reagan wanted his to join him,' one former official of the Reagan White House said.
Days after Ronald Reagan was laid to rest, a conservative interest group on Tuesday unveiled a campaign ad that aligns him with President Bush and criticizes Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry.The only remaining question is when Bush plans to apologize to the Reagan family for this desecration of their father and husband only days after he was buried, and when Bush plans on publicly calling on his supporters to NOT use Reagan's image in the future out of respect to the family. Read More......
The Club for Growth's ad, which is to begin airing Wednesday, portrays both Republican presidents as leaders — Reagan on communism and Bush on terrorism, while claiming Kerry was "wrong then, wrong now" on national security.
The ad shows Kerry, a Vietnam veteran, testifying to Congress in 1971 that "we cannot fight communism all over the world and I think we should have learned that lesson by now."
Former President Reagan is then seen at the Berlin Wall in 1987, saying "Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall." That's followed by Bush telling rescue workers at the World Trade Center after the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks: "I can hear you, the rest of the world hears you, and the people who knocked these buildings down will hear all of us soon."
The Reagan family's spokeswoman said Tuesday that permission is needed for anyone to use Reagan's likeness in an ad because doing so implies that he endorsed one candidate over another.
"No one has requested the permission to use his image in an ad, nor would we feel it appropriate to give such permission at this juncture," Joanne Drake said. "We protect his image very carefully, particularly as it relates to politics."
"The president believes anyone who commits a violent act should receive swift and sure punishment, and that all violent crime is hate crime," she said. "The president believes all individuals should be treated fairly and equally under the law."Putting aside the fact that this is clear and utter BS - the president in fact believes that gays and lesbians should be treated as second-class citizens and defined as such in the US Constitution - it's pretty fascinating that he's now going all weasley on the hate crimes issue. This is particularly interesting as the religious right has been sending out action alerts for weeks claiming that adding gays to hate crimes legislation will cause the feds to arrest any preachers who quote Leviticus.
Now another election campaign has started, and Mr. Bush has dropped the pretense of moderation. He has followed up his defunding of groups that perform abortions by defunding other groups that associate with them. Last year Marie Stopes International, a British charity that had received State Department money for AIDS work among refugees, failed to win renewal of its grant; its sin was to have cooperated in China with the United Nations Population Fund, which has long been a target of Mr. Bush's right-wing supporters. This month in Washington, an annual conference on health in developing countries, which in previous years had been partially funded by the United States and had been attended by senior Bush administration officials, went ahead without U.S. government support. Again, its offense was to invite the dreaded U.N. Population Fund, along with the International Planned Parenthood Federation. Next month the biennial International AIDS Conference will convene in Bangkok, and the Bush administration will be doing less to support it than in the past: The administration's conservative supporters object that AIDS prevention strategies based on condoms will receive more emphasis in Bangkok than ones based on abstinence.Yes, let's let people die because the religious right doesn't like condoms. Read More......
Abortion will always be an agonizing issue, and the right balance between abstinence and contraception is a fair subject for debate. But the attempt to deny conference platforms to groups that oppose the administration's view is inimical both to free speech and to scientific inquiry. To attack a conference of public health specialists, canceling grants that would have been used to allow delegates from developing countries to attend, is to drag the battles over abortion and conservative values into forums where they have no place.
When Dick Durbin's hometown priest slammed the Senator's pro-choice voting record, Durbin's office did not sit idle. It compiled a scorecard ranking 24 Catholic Senators by their votes on issues of concern to the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops.Read More......
Abortion made the list, but so did the minimum wage, the death penalty and media ownership, all weighted equally. Democrats did better than Republicans, and the test's high scorer was John Kerry.
A senior Iraqi intelligence official reportedly met with bin Laden in 1994 in Sudan, the panel found, and bin Laden 'is said to have requested space to establish training camps, as well as assistance in procuring weapons, but Iraq apparently never responded.'As for quibblingt over the definition of "is," yes, there have been "contacts" between Iraqis and Al Qaida, but if simply having spoken is a "contact" worthy of war then the US has had "contacts" with all sorts of evil people and thus, necessarily, someone should invade us promptly. Read More......
'There have been reports that contacts between Iraq and al-Qaida also occurred after bin Laden had returned to Afghanistan, but they do not appear to have resulted in a collaborative relationship,' the report said. 'Two senior Bin Laden associates have adamantly denied that any ties existed between al-Qaida and Iraq.'
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