Scooped!

http://www.cnn.com/2006/POLITICS/02/27/clinton.rove.ap/index.html
awww, hillary plays cute and innocent

http://www.reason.com/0603/co.mw.old.shtml
a reason article a day keeps the totalitarianism at bay!

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/02/28/international/africa/28border.html?hp&ex=1141189200&en=c5fe635f57a6d10b&ei=5094&partner=homepage
oh, and trying to do something about Sudan in the 90s was just
“distraction” technique.

http://www.economist.com/opinion/displaystory.cfm?story_id=5548089
I said all this in Feburary 2003. Give me a gov’t position and job security.

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Death of Dworkin

So as I mentioned here, Andrea Dworkin is dead and thus there is one less radical feminist around to annoy me.


I enjoy pointing out the crazier things Dworkin has said (she claims they have been taken out of context. She’s only 90% lying) and then commenting on them in a bias manner. My bias is that I stated last night (and I have a witness) “The rape scene is the only thing that makes the Fountainhead worth reading.” However, I must amend, that on further consideration I must say that the scene where Dominique goes to see Howard Roark before she gets married and simply says “I love you, Roark,” tugged at my heartstrings a bit. Because I’m a girl, and us chicks get all emotional over romance junk like that.

But, according to Dworkin, romance is just rape embellished with meaningful looks anyway.

This is another gem: “Heterosexual intercourse is the pure, formalized expression of contempt for women’s bodies.” I mean, come on honey, you know he only tells you you’re pretty to get you into bed. Really, he hates your body.

And this is my favorite, favorite Dworkin-ism: “Seduction is often difficult to distinguish from rape. In seduction, the rapist bothers to buy a bottle of wine.”

Well,  last time I got very drunk on wine was around New Years and I had a fabulous time. My two favorite wines are rather inexpensive, so not only is it fun to get me drunk; it’s cheap too!

So, in conclusion, Andrea Dworkin is crazy, wine is good, and I am oppressed simply because men exist and “Only when manhood is dead – and it will perish when ravaged femininity no longer sustains it – only then will we know what it is to be free.”

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The Federal Government Makes Me Cranky

If I were HTML-savvy enough to start a blog right now, I would. And I would have no choice but to title it “Terri Schiavo Made Me Start A Blog” (Side Note: I think blogspot is my first choice for blogging, but I think you need some HTML knowledge just to add links and stuff. Any advice? For real this time? I have an office job now and lots of time to blog)

Anyway.

I can’t believe I’ve been sucked into this stupid case.

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What? WHAT?

It was about 2/3rd into Kerry’s concession speech that I lost it, a little. Oh, I looked it up. This made me teary eyed

But in an American election, there are no losers, because whether or not our candidates are successful, the next morning we all wake up as Americans.

I was watching it in the Government Dept lounge with Favorite Professor and a few others. She was like “Rachel, you didn’t even vote for him!”

This is true, but watching Kerry made me realize that despite my cynicism, despite saying over and over that there was no way Bush would lose there was a teeny tiny part of me that was holding out hope. I dont’ know how I would have felt about a Kerry victory because I have so little political attraction to the man, but I guess there was a piece of me that didn’t want to give in to four more years of this nonsense.

And then there was this:  And of course I get all teary again. This woman is the only writer who wrote something about September 11th that made me cry. Hell, that STILL makes me cry when I re-read it. Anyawy, for posterity’s sake, Sarah Bunting’s response to “What do we do now?” in regards to the results of Election 2004 is behind the cut.

Read the rest of this entry »

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The Only Wasted Vote if When You Vote For A Candidate Whom You Do Not Respect

Yay, it’s almost over!

I’m spending today trolling around campus in my political gear, smiling sweetly at those who glare at my t-shirt.

Then Pi Sigma. Then Libertarian dinner.

Then, one eye on NaNo-ing, one eye on the election shenanigans.

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Debate #1

The Presidential Election is so much less stressful when one candidate has no shot of winning. I wasted way too much time in 2000 being outraged. Because, in the end, it doesn’t matter.

How’s that for Zen-like?

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Political Posting, For Once

The good news is that actually paying attention to the Democratic National Convention may have ended my strike on politics, so I can go back to school in September and be the good little over achieving government major and keep myself busy with OCD notes.

Additionally, it did its job: it made me more optimistic about Kerry, made me actually want to vote for Kerry, and made me think he could actually do some good.

 The bad news is that it did it’s job: it made me more optimistic about Kerry, made me actually want to vote for Kerry, and made me think he could actually do some good. Even if Kerry wins, he’ll have a Republican Congress. I am far too cynical to honestly believe the dream of things actually changing. And even if things did change, what effect does it have on my life as an individual? What effect does it have on my decisions? Very little, if any. Society is made of individuals making decisions. It isn’t shaped by the politicians in Washington. Thank God for that.

Read the rest of this entry »

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Super Tuesday – How Un-Surprising

I kind of feel sorry for Edwards. He’s all charming and Southern and innocent looking (even though he is a professional liar). And his son died! It would have been a hook to grab voter sympathy. That sounds terrible, but it’s so true.

Not like any of this is a surprise; Kerry basically swept the primaries, overall. Kerry is certainly not an ideal candidate, but then again, who is? (Besides Andrew Shepard in the American President, of course) And so long as it’s not Howard Dean, I’m mildly satisfied. So Kerry 04’, etc…

I’m still doubting Bush can lose, unless he does something really, really stupid before the election. Bush hasn’t even started campaigning yet, and there are plenty of Nascar dads to convert.

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Judging

“Dean annouces he will stop campaigning but leave his name on the ballot”

This means, that after the news stops covering Dean’s “BOLD” move, I will see less of him. And less of the woodchuck man is a good thing. I have real qualms with Dean, but it is more fun to be immature and judgemental about it

Marge: Homer it’s very easy to judge…
Homer: Hehe, fun too!
-yes, exactly.

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Bill Clinton, V-Day, Sheryl Crow

Bah. I don’t like any of the Democrats very much. My burst of enthusiasm for non-Dean characters is ending. (Although I still say Anybody But Bush, Any Democrat but Dean ((but that also sounds cool!))).

Bill Clinton should come back and declare himself Caesar.

And I am only the SECOND biggest Clinton apologist. Kevin beats me, but then again, thats part of the reason he won Coolest Person of 03.

Oh it’s Valentine’s Day, isn’t it? I don’t celebrate Valentine’s Day; manufactured love is kind of a turn off. Instead Christina is going to get drunk and I’m going to make sure she doesn’t drunk dial anyone. And I’ll get some good champagne out of it.

Also, does anyone know if Sheryl Crow is “Lesbian Rock” and if she’s a lesbian? This was an object of debate for far longer than it needed to be on Wednesday night. I’m glad we’re all so fucking productive.

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IHHS Girls Are Smart

This was posted in my comments by the other girl who managed to escape IHHS (and Skidmore!) with some brains, and its so cool that it bears repeating. Her comments in bold

3) I really don’t think its a big deal that Kerry and Edwards voted for the war. Luckily, most Democratic voters don’t seem to think so either.”
-As to this…whatever…the way I see it at that point in time if you voted for the war, good for you, if you voted against the war, you were strung up in Senate. Newsflash Deany-boy…nearly EVERYONE voted FOR the war…old news. so old.

4) Dean did not invent the concept of civil unions. Dean was also not revolutionary in his support of civil unions. But he did not invent the concept. (Just like Al Gore didn’t invent the internet) ((yes but Al Gore did take the initiative to fund the project which started the internet in the 80s, if anyone cares))”
Furthermore contrary to many what many w ithin the GLBTQ community thinks, Dean really isn’t all that great for gay folks. If people actually took the time to go back and look at what Dean was debating back and forth about during the whole civil unions vs. gay marriage thing, I think they’d find that Dean is on par with Kerry. They’re both against gay marriage (and civil unions are NOT the same thing no matter how much the politicians, and some gay activists for that matter, try to dress it up with pretty rainbow ribbons) whereas Edwards actually stated that marriage is a state’s rights issue and while he didn’t come out in support of gay marriage, he also didn’t come out as condemning the recent MA decision either.

7) People who endorsed Dean really screwed up. First of all, it is really dumb to endorse a candidate that early (ie, the Al Gore endorsement…it made no sense to do a YEAR before the election). Now th ere are all these pledged delegates who are realizing “Uh, maybe this guy doesn’t have the support we thought he did”. A man supported by college liberals does not a presidential candidate make. (I wrote that sentence just so I could phrase it like that, because I am so cool)”

no duh AND I jus t want to state that I was attacked on several fronts by other people who fall into the same categories as I do as A) Democrats; B) liberal arts college grads; C) women and D) lesbians, when I said I didn’t support Dean because his policies were pretty shitty and I don’t trust a man who looks like a woodchuck when he’s trying to smile. And yeah, Sassy…you ARE cool ;)

Gina is SO getting a place on the world leadership council. Look for the campaign around 2025

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Random Thoughts of Mini-Super Tuesday

I’ll probably write something more detailed and articulate, but then again, I might decide to get a life.

1) John Edwards is growing on me. He has charisma, he’s a decent politician. He has a southern accent and can charm southern voters.

2) Can someone articulate for me why Kerry ‘sucks’, as my liberal friends keep saying? (Besides the fact that he voted for the war and looks like a tree)

3) I really don’t think its a big deal that Kerry and Edwards voted for the war. Luckily, most Democratic voters don’t seem to think so either.

4) Dean did not invent the concept of civil unions. Dean was also not revolutionary in his support of civil unions. But he did not invent the concept. (Just like Al Gore didn’t invent the internet, hehe) ((yes but Al Gore did take the initiative to fund the project which started the internet in the 80s, if anyone cares))

5) I like Clark better than Kerry in terms of the military men in this race. However, I think a lot of votes that could have gone to Edwards went to Clark. And I like Edwards better than Clark, so I want Clark to drop out

6)Dean even lost to Al Sharpton!

7) People who endorsed Dean really screwed up. First of all, it is really dumb to endorse a candidate that early (ie, the Al Gore endorsement…it made no sense to do a YEAR before the election). Now there are all these pledged delegates who are realizing “Uh, maybe this guy doesn’t have the support we thought he did”. A man supported by college liberals does not a presidential candidate make. (I wrote that sentence just so I could phrase it like that, because I am so cool)

8. Al Sharpton should be given his own TV show. Maybe he can take over the daily show and Jon Stewart can run for president

9) The Daily Show last night rocked, and I want to marry Jon Stewart

10)There should be an industry devoted to gambling on politics

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The More Things Change

YWS: we had to do one of those stupid arts and crafts projects in health today where we have to cut pictures out of magazines

YWS:: I picked up and opened a Time magazine and saw the table of contents

YWS:: talking about how ‘Bush’ was planning a space program for Mars in order to boost the technological age, restore purpose to NASA, etc

YWS:  SPACE: America should embark on a mission to Mars
Two decades after the first moon landing, President Bush has a chance to launch an ambitious, long-term program that will give NASA a goal and restore the nation’s technological prowess.

YWS: I saw another article about Isreal/palestine ESSAY: If the Palestinians win, so will Isreal.
The dangerous notion that the intifadeh must be defeated rather than calmed transcendes Isreal’s current political crisis. True statesmen would seek victory for everyone.

YWS:  Then I flipped to the front of the magazine

YWS: it was from 1989!

Me: thats really horrible

YWS: hilarity

Me: this proves that bush is not like FDR, nor mckinley. bush is like bush

YWS: along with another ’89 one about the Supreme Court setting the stage for a corrosive political fight by upholding a restrictive abortion law

YWS: who the hell compared Bush to FDR?

Me: a lot of people. cuz he’s a wartime president whose massively expanding the government

To add to that, um, stirring comparison…Kuzma compared Bush to FDR, because Bush ‘used his instincts, not facts, to guide his foreign policy.’ This was before September 11, but I think it still speaks volumes.

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I’m Bored

To steal from Bill Maher, and paraphrase a bit, this is my interpretation of what the state of the union will sound like:

<GWB>

FOCUS FOCUS! War on terror! War on terror! Saddam was captured! Captured! I did it Daddy, I got the bad man! War on terror! Iraq! Weapons of mass destruction! Destruction, of mass kind! FOCUS FOCUS WEAPONS OF MASS DESCRUCTION. Rebuild Rebuild, Billions, FOCUS FOCUS WAR ON TERROR, PROTECTION FROM TERRORISM WAR ON TERROR, protection from WEAPONS OF MASS DESTRUCTION, IRAQ, iraq, Saddam is Captured, ALERT ALERT Al-Queeda, FOCUS SAFETY WAR ON TERROR, 9/11, 9/11, terrorists, scary, bad Muslims, keep them away! Focus, FOCUS WAR ON TERROR, terror, destruction…MARS

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Iowa’s a useless state, so why do we let it go first again?

Anyway, the results of Iowa caucus we’re surprising at first, but then when you started to think about it, not that surprising at all.

Kerry won, and although he has no personality, he might be the most qualified of any of the Dems to be president. Plus he’s a Vietnam vet, so they can’t go after him for a military record. A lot of libs don’t like that he voted for the war, but he’s certainly a much better option then Bush. Anyone but Bush…Edwards was second, and although he’s a little too into God for me (he’s Southern) at least he has charisma. A Kerry/Edwards ticket could be pretty powerful against the Bush Dynasty.

Dean was a distance third, and I’m pleasantly surprised. Dean is just unelectable. In addition, I don’t like him. I don’t know why I don’t like him, but I don’t. I mentioned to Brent that it was irrational for me to dislike him for being ‘phony’ because all politicians are phony, but Dean’s brand of phoniness really bugs me! He’s also kind of scary with his anger. He made this really crazy concession speech about how ‘I have only begun to fight’ and he just looked like he was rabid.

Dean’s not really running on anything besides contradicting Bush with the whole Iraq situation. Which someone needs to say, obviously, but he’s made himself into a sound byte candidate. So we went to war, and you didn’t like it. So what.

Most of the candidates have realized that in the minds of voters, that’s in the past. Foreign policy is still a key issue, and they need to have a viable platform. Dean just spouts rhetoric on the subject. That’s certainly not saying that any of the other candidates have any less rhetorical, but at least they’re saying something other than “the war is bad. Bush is bad. I wouldn’t have gone to Iraq.” Because yes Dr. Dean, we already know that, now how about telling us what you are planning on doing?

Dean’s supporters keep saying that people are ‘afraid’ of nominating someone so far left. The thing is, Dean isn’t as far left as he’s pretending to be, if you actually look at his past record. He’s not any more ‘liberal’ in American political terms than Kerry or Edwards. He’s just good at using the right catchphrases right now. And while that’s attracted a certain type of voter, its simply not realistic, and he hasn’t really done anything but complain. Someone like Kerry, Edwards, and Clark CAN get the centrist vote, which, whether lefties like it or not, is going to essential in this election. It has nothing to do with fear, or control, or any of those things Dean keeps spouting. It IS about electability, because its about getting rid of George Bush, and if the Dems could show a united front instead of bitching and nitpicking at each other, then maybe that would be possible.

I still like Clark, but I think the other military guy (Kerry) will beat him out in NH. If Edwards does decently in NH its also going to be a huge boost to the campaign because a lot of the Super Tuesday primaries are in the South. This is actually an exciting primary for once, unlike 2000. Stupid Al Gore. Stupid, stupid Al Gore and the wasted nomination.

In other news, the state of the union is tonight, which is the ultimate in rhetoric. I always get angry about it. Stupid Bush. I really, really, really hope he loses in November.

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Potential SkidNews Article

After Senate meeting last night, I was basically too angry to be coherent. It was absolutely ridiculous. There are no words for how ridiculous people are – Skidmore needs a professional hand holder or something, if stupid liberals are going to CRY because an election official makes them sign a piece of paper saying they will not break the law.

Anyway, SYRA has unofficially nominated me to write something about it. This is what I have so far:

Read the rest of this entry »

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“Those accused of rape have rights too”

I basically agree with this entire article.

October 28, 2003

Partial Shield

Those accused of rape have rights, too

By Cathy Young

The judge in the Kobe Bryant sexual assault case has ruled that the basketball star will go to trial even though the evidence against him is slim. Meanwhile, the hardball tactics of the defense, which has requested access to the accuser’s health records and has disclosed that the young woman had had sexual intercourse with two other men in the three days preceding her encounter with Bryant, have come under harsh criticism from victim advocates. “Trying to shift the blame is a standard tactic for rape defendants, but this was a new low in attacking the victim,” Cynthia Stone of the Colorado Coalition Against Sexual Assault told the Denver Post.

Advocates and many commentators warn that victims of sexual assault will be discouraged from coming forward if they know they can be publicly smeared or grilled about embarrassing, intimate details of their private lives. That’s an understandable concern. But we must also remember that respect for the privacy of an alleged victim cannot supercede respect for the defendant’s civil rights.

Attitudes toward sexual assault victims have changed greatly in the past 30 years—and thank goodness for that. In the early 1970s, juries in many states were still commonly instructed to consider evidence of “unchaste character” (such as going to bars alone or using birth control) as detracting from a woman’s credibility or suggesting that she was likely to have consented. Rape shield laws forbidding the use of the complainant’s sexual past as evidence are rightly seen as an important accomplishment of the women’s movement.

And yet many people, including feminists such as Columbia University law professor Vivian Berger, have cautioned against going too far in protecting the accuser at the expense of the accused. In some cases, the woman’s past—including her sexual past—can indeed be relevant to the man’s guilt, particularly in he said/she said cases without much physical evidence.

What if the woman has a record of making false accusations of rape or other crimes? What if she is so mentally unstable that she has trouble distinguishing between imagination and reality? What if she has engaged in sexual acts that could provide an alternate explanation for the physical evidence the prosecution is using to prove sexual assault?

These are wrenching questions. Obviously, a woman with a history of mental illness (such as, apparently, Kobe Bryant’s accuser) or of substance abuse or even of lying about rape could still be a rape victim. Obviously, the prospect of having embarrassing details of one’s life exposed in court—let alone the media—may discourage victims from coming forward. Just as obviously, keeping relevant evidence from the jury may result in sending an innocent person to jail. Some victim advocates worry that even if the woman in such a case has not been raped, she may be brutally abused by the legal process. They seem to forget that being falsely accused of rape is a terrible form of abuse as well.

Sometimes, the broad application of rape shield law has almost certainly resulted in miscarriages of justice. In New York in 1998, Columbia University graduate student Oliver Jovanovic was convicted of kidnapping and sexually abusing a Barnard College student and sentenced to a minimum of 15 years in prison.

While the defense argued that the encounter involved consensual bondage, the judge disallowed the use of e-mails in which the alleged victim had discussed her interest in and past experience with such activities. The conviction was eventually overturned by a court of appeals, which ruled that Jovanovic was denied the chance to present an adequate defense.

Rape is a despicable crime, and an accusation of rape should be taken very seriously—but the rights of the accused should be rigorously protected. After the 1997 trial of sportscaster Marv Albert, defending the judge’s decision to admit compromising information about Albert’s sexual past but not about his accuser’s, feminist attorney Gloria Allred decried “the notion that there’s some sort of moral equivalency between the defendant and the victim.” Yet as long as the defendant hasn’t been convicted, he and the victim are indeed moral equals in the eyes of the law.

It’s frightening to put oneself in the place of a sexual assault victim who finds the intimate details of her life paraded in public. But it’s at least as terrifying to imagine that you, or your husband or brother or son, could be accused of sexual assault and denied access to relevant information that could make the difference between guilt and innocence.

Cathy Young is a Reason contributing editor. This column appeared in the Boston Globe on October 27, 2003.

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Iraq

Scary Picture of Cheney

As Kevin says, Cheney is playing Himler what with his desire for a Final Solution for the Iraqi people.

And Bush said:

“the war in iraq is going well… i don’t care what you s… i don’t care what you read”

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Dean and Dubya

So here, there was a meeting of Howard Dean supporters, and there was a false email sent out that Dean would actually be here.

Which he wasn’t, obviously. Why would Howard Dean come and speak here, in Davis auditorium tha tonly seats about 100 people?

Anyway, on the GWB front, it’s not so much him I hate, it’s the people who fall for his nonsense. This is six months from the fall of the regime in Iraq, and his bs declaration of “major combat over.”  What is of course infuriating is that the same people that jumped on Bill C for lying about a blow job have yet to jump on Bush of course)

If Bill C. had tried to go to war the was Bush did, he would have no domestic support, whereas people rally around Bush with “our president, right or wrong?”

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In Lieu of a real entry about the lecture I went to

Me: at the lecture today the guy referred to bush as “shifty” which i thought was a good description

Brent: it is, he’s like a crafty ape

Me: well he was talking about how we’ve lost whatever credibility we might have had, because we should have started doing something about regaining stablity in the region as soon as bush declared major combat over, but bush keeps changing the direction of the mission

and he wants to do things so it works out around election time, which is impossible

Brent: those crazy bush planners… what won’t they do!

Me: you can’t bring democracy to a country thats ethnically and religiously fragmented, and has never had democracy and has no gov’t structure in 8 months, which is what they want to do

Brent: what they’ll end up with is a weak democracy that falls apart quickly

Me: well look at afghanistan. We set up government there quickly, it was real successful

Brent: well no one cares about that

Me: exactly “Thats not the issue”

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