It must be a mutation

September 15th, 2006 by jac1975

This morning as I was driving to work, I came across a car with an interesting combination of stickers on its bumper.  First I noticed the fish symbol colored in with a rainbow.  That tells me this person is loudly proclaiming herself a lesiban Christian.  (I could tell it was a woman driving  when I passed.)   The next sticker was more shocking:  a W 2004 sticker.

As I drove past this lesbian of color, I became more flabbergasted.  What could possibily lead a person of homosexual orientation to support Bush’s re-election in 2004?  Let alone a lesbian of COLOR!  If anyone knows oppression, it would be a lesbian of color.  I know about 29% of the gay vote went to Bush in 2004, but I figured most of that was snotty white guys who figured that greed was good and they’d have enough money to "buy" acceptance in a GOP world.  That’s usually how Log Cabin Republicans are at their core, despite the flowery rhetoric of "this is the only thing I don’t agree with the GOP on" and "I’m more than my sexuality."

But a lesbian of color still having her W 2004 sticker on her car just boggles my mind.  Here is a man who based his reelection on scaring the living crap out of conservative and rural voters with visions of forced homosexual marriages in every corner of the country, regardless of your sexuality!  Bush purposely demonized LGBT people for his political purposes, which makes him no better than the segregationists of the South who did the same thing to blacks during the 1950s and 1960s especially.  Luckily, the politicians who still vilifiy blacks (albeit more subtlely) in order to get elected are nearly all on the GOP side now. 

How could an openly lesbian woman of faith support that man?  How does she sleep at night knowing what she has contributed to?  I simply do not get it.  Bush’s policies harm homosexuals and people of color.  He’s driven down wages, and given tax breaks to the most wealthy among us.  He’s undone good programs like Hope VI in order to pay for his military ventures.  Yet, this lesbian of color (STILL kills me!) proudly puts her W2004 sticker on her car!

It makes me wonder if there’s some kind of genetic defect that make people adopt a political party and set of beliefs that causes great harm not only to themselves but to everyone who is like them.  Do they hate themselves that much?  Or it is a mutuation that renders them incapable of rational thought?

Young Democrats of America November Meeting

September 1st, 2006 by jac1975

Young Democrats of America Update

Greetings fellow Georgia Young Democrats!

Brooke and I wanted to update you on the annoucement of the next national meeting of the Young Democrats of America. The last general meeting was in June in Las Vegas with a theme of "What Happens in Vegas Changes America".

YDA Announces Conference in Jackson, MississippiYDA is proud to announce the location of our next conference will be in Jackson, Mississippi. The Young Democrats of Mississippi will be wonderful hosts and we are excited to spend some time in the south after the elections.
Register for the conference today!The conference registration fee of $25 per person includes lunch on Saturday and all training materials. The Registration fee does not include the hotel room fees. Reserve your room today for the special rate of $129.00, see below for hotel information.

Dates:November 17-19, 2006
Hotel Information:Marriott Jackson200 East Amite StreetJackson, MS 39201
Hotel Rate:$129.95
Hotel Reservation Information:Phone reservations ONLY 1-800-256-9194 or 601-969-5100Please tell operator you are with the "YDA Group"
Last Day to Reserve Room with Guaranteed Rate:October 27, 2006

For those who find the above hotel cost a bit pricey (which is probably everyone!), another alternative is the Edison Walthall Hotel (http://www.edisonwalthallhotel.com/) about a 1/2 mile or 5 city blocks from the Marriott. I found prices ont he hotel website for $99/night and on Expedia for $90/night. With 4 people per room, that’s much more affordable.

Since Jackson is about 5.5 hours from Atlanta on I-20, we will be caravaning for those who are interested. If you would like to attend, you will have a good time, as the Mississippi Young Democrats are known for their hospitality, and they have been waiting a long time to host a national meeting. It would be great to pack the place with Southerners! Please email Jason at jacecil6@bellsouth.net if you plan to attend with a cc to Brooke at floralu19@aol.com. We can try to hook people up with roommates and rides if needed. As always, please ask us any questions you might have.

Democratically Yours,
Jason Cecil & Brooke Hesse

My Own Slap Against Corruption

August 31st, 2006 by jac1975

Today, I took a hard stand against corruption.  I’m lucky in that the
rules by which I was operating allowed me to easily dismantle the
attempt to steal public health funds for private gain.

As a
federal employee, I am sometimes asked to sit on panels, reviewing
applications for grants and cooperative agreements.  There are strict
rules governing this process, including confidentiality.  This makes
posting about my triumph today tricky because I have to be vague by law.

The cooperative agreement application I reviewed today was for a pot of
money meant to combat a very real public health threat in a developing
country.  The "principal" of this application just happens to be a key
player in the GOP.  In fact, this asswipe was arrogant enough to
highlight his political ties in his application.  I suppose this GOP
shill thought that subtlely hinting closeness with the White House
would cow us into granting him/her the money.  The application did not
even pretend to be seriously combating the public health threat the
money was meant to fight.   It was obvious that the money would be used
to make  a business case for the applicant to "offer services" to this
developing nation to build an internet infrastructure.  The top outcome
of this "project" was to produce "profitable business relationships". 

I was enraged when I finished this application.  The panels can make it
difficult to grant someone money, but there are ways to bypass the
recommendation of reveiw panels.  As a result, I decided to put into
writing, using quotations from the application itself, to make
selection of this project nearly impossible to anyone looking at the
situation.  Luckily, everyone at the panel was as shocked as I was at
how bad the application was, and just how bad it "smelled". 

This GOP hack will not get the money he/she sought from the CDC.  And
while it’s not much, I  will sleep better tonight knowing that I have
done my part to prevent another instance of a Bush crony enriching him
or herself  at the expense of the American people.

Surprise! The Rich Get Richer… We Get SCREWED

August 28th, 2006 by jac1975

Normally, I wouldn’t just cut/paste an article, but I think this story by the NY Times shows (with hard data) just how the average American has been screwed by the Bush Administration’s policies. It goes beyond the subtle subversion of our Constitutional separation of powers or the far right social agenda. If you are not in the top 1% of this nation’s economic relief, your wages are decreasing in a very real way, thanks to high energy prices and other factors mentioned in the article. But, unlike Sec. Paulson, I think it’s VERY useful, and highly instructive to blame the political party that instituted the policies that brought about this problem…the GOP.

Real Wages Fail to Match a Rise in Productivity

By STEVEN GREENHOUSE and DAVID LEONHARDT
Published: August 28, 2006 (NY Times)

With the economy beginning to slow, the current expansion has a chance to become the first sustained period of economic growth since World War II that fails to offer a prolonged increase in real wages for most workers.

That situation is adding to fears among Republicans that the economy will hurt vulnerable incumbents in this year’s midterm elections even though overall growth has been healthy for much of the last five years.

The median hourly wage for American workers has declined 2 percent since 2003, after factoring in inflation. The drop has been especially notable, economists say, because productivity — the amount that an average worker produces in an hour and the basic wellspring of a nation’s living standards — has risen steadily over the same period.

As a result, wages and salaries now make up the lowest share of the nation’s gross domestic product since the government began recording the data in 1947, while corporate profits have climbed to their highest share since the 1960’s. UBS, the investment bank, recently described the current period as “the golden era of profitability.”

Until the last year, stagnating wages were somewhat offset by the rising value of benefits, especially health insurance, which caused overall compensation for most Americans to continue increasing. Since last summer, however, the value of workers’ benefits has also failed to keep pace with inflation, according to government data.

At the very top of the income spectrum, many workers have continued to receive raises that outpace inflation, and the gains have been large enough to keep average income and consumer spending rising.

In a speech on Friday, Ben S. Bernanke, the Federal Reserve chairman, did not specifically discuss wages, but he warned that the unequal distribution of the economy’s spoils could derail the trade liberalization of recent decades. Because recent economic changes “threaten the livelihoods of some workers and the profits of some firms,” Mr. Bernanke said, policy makers must try “to ensure that the benefits of global economic integration are sufficiently widely shared.”

Political analysts are divided over how much the wage trends will help Democrats this fall in their effort to take control of the House and, in a bigger stretch, the Senate. Some see parallels to watershed political years like 1980, 1992 and 1994, when wage growth fell behind inflation, party alignments shifted and dozens of incumbents were thrown out of office.

“It’s a dangerous time for any party to have control of the federal government — the presidency, the Senate and the House,” said Charles Cook, who publishes a nonpartisan political newsletter. “It all feeds into ‘it’s a time for a change’ sentiment. It’s a highly combustible mixture.”

But others say that war in Iraq and terrorism, not the economy, will dominate the campaign and that Democrats have yet to offer an economic vision that appeals to voters.

“National economic policies are more clearly in focus in presidential campaigns,” said Richard T. Curtin, director of the University of Michigan’s consumer surveys. “When you’re electing your local House members, you don’t debate that on those issues as much.”

Moreover, polls show that Americans are less dissatisfied with the economy than they were in the early 1980’s or early 90’s. Rising house and stock values have lifted the net worth of many families over the last few years, and interest rates remain fairly low.

But polls show that Americans disapprove of President Bush’s handling of the economy by wide margins and that anxiety about the future is growing. Earlier this month, the University of Michigan reported that consumer confidence had fallen sharply in recent months, with people’s expectations for the future now as downbeat as they were in 1992 and 1993, when the job market had not yet recovered from a recession.

“Some people who aren’t partisans say, ‘Yes, the economy’s pretty good, so why are people so agitated and anxious?’ ” said Frank Luntz, a Republican campaign consultant. “The answer is they don’t feel it in their weekly paychecks.”

But Mr. Luntz predicted that the economic mood would not do significant damage to Republicans this fall because voters blamed corporate America, not the government, for their problems.

Economists offer various reasons for the stagnation of wages. Although the economy continues to add jobs, global trade, immigration, layoffs and technology — as well as the insecurity caused by them — appear to have eroded workers’ bargaining power.

Trade unions are much weaker than they once were, while the buying power of the minimum wage is at a 50-year low. And health care is far more expensive than it was a decade ago, causing companies to spend more on benefits at the expense of wages.

Together, these forces have caused a growing share of the economy to go to companies instead of workers’ paychecks. In the first quarter of 2006, wages and salaries represented 45 percent of gross domestic product, down from almost 50 percent in the first quarter of 2001 and a record 53.6 percent in the first quarter of 1970, according to the Commerce Department. Each percentage point now equals about $132 billion.

Total employee compensation — wages plus benefits — has fared a little better. Its share was briefly lower than its current level of 56.1 percent in the mid-1990’s and otherwise has not been so low since 1966.

Over the last year, the value of employee benefits has risen only 3.4 percent, while inflation has exceeded 4 percent, according to the Labor Department.

In Europe and Japan, the profit share of economic output is also at or near record levels, noted Larry Hatheway, chief economist for UBS Investment Bank, who said that this highlighted the pressures of globalization on wages. Many Americans, be they apparel workers or software programmers, are facing more competition from China and India.

In another recent report on the boom in profits, economists at Goldman Sachs wrote, “The most important contributor to higher profit margins over the past five years has been a decline in labor’s share of national income.” Low interest rates and the moderate cost of capital goods, like computers, have also played a role, though economists note that an economic slowdown could hurt profits in coming months.

For most of the last century, wages and productivity — the key measure of the economy’s efficiency — have risen together, increasing rapidly through the 1950’s and 60’s and far more slowly in the 1970’s and 80’s.

But in recent years, the productivity gains have continued while the pay increases have not kept up. Worker productivity rose 16.6 percent from 2000 to 2005, while total compensation for the median worker rose 7.2 percent, according to Labor Department statistics analyzed by the Economic Policy Institute, a liberal research group. Benefits accounted for most of the increase.
“If I had to sum it up,” said Jared Bernstein, a senior economist at the institute, “it comes down to bargaining power and the lack of ability of many in the work force to claim their fair share of growth.”

Nominal wages have accelerated in the last year, but the spike in oil costs has eaten up the gains. Now the job market appears to be weakening, after a protracted series of interest-rate increases by the Federal Reserve.

Unless these trends reverse, the current expansion may lack even an extended period of modest wage growth like one that occurred in the mid-1980’s.

The most recent recession ended in late 2001. Hourly wages continued to rise in 2002 and peaked in early 2003, largely on the lingering strength of the 1990’s boom.

Average family income, adjusted for inflation, has continued to advance at a good clip, a fact Mr. Bush has cited when speaking about the economy. But these gains are a result mainly of increases at the top of the income spectrum that pull up the overall numbers. Even for workers at the 90th percentile of earners — making about $80,000 a year — inflation has outpaced their pay increases over the last three years, according to the Labor Department.

“There are two economies out there,” Mr. Cook, the political analyst, said. “One has been just white hot, going great guns. Those are the people who have benefited from globalization, technology, greater productivity and higher corporate earnings.

“And then there’s the working stiffs,’’ he added, “who just don’t feel like they’re getting ahead despite the fact that they’re working very hard. And there are a lot more people in that group than the other group.”

In 2004, the top 1 percent of earners — a group that includes many chief executives — received 11.2 percent of all wage income, up from 8.7 percent a decade earlier and less than 6 percent three decades ago, according to Emmanuel Saez and Thomas Piketty, economists who analyzed the tax data.

With the midterm campaign expected to heat up after Labor Day, Democrats are saying that they will help workers by making health care more affordable and lifting the minimum wage. Democrats have criticized Republicans for passing tax cuts mainly benefiting high-income families at a time when most families are failing to keep up.

Republicans counter that the tax cuts passed during Mr. Bush’s first term helped lifted the economy out of recession. Unless the cuts are extended, a move many Democrats oppose, the economy will suffer, and so will wages, Republicans say.

But in a sign that Republicans may be growing concerned about the public’s mood, the new Treasury secretary, Henry M. Paulson Jr., adopted a somewhat different tone from Mr. Bush in his first major speech, delivered early this month.

“Many aren’t seeing significant increases in their take-home pay,” Mr. Paulson said. “Their increases in wages are being eaten up by high energy prices and rising health care costs, among others.”

At the same time, he said that the Bush administration was not responsible for the situation, pointing out that inequality had been increasing for many years. “It is neither fair nor useful,” Mr. Paulson said, “to blame any political party.”

Poor, Sad Ruthie

August 17th, 2006 by jac1975

In today’s AJC, there was a headline that caught my eye:  Tech students endured threats in free speech crusade.  Reading the article, I was reminded of a lawsuit that had been filed by a couple of College Republicans who felt their constitutional right to bash minorities, gays, and other "undesirables" was threatened by Georgia Tech’s speech code.  This code was meant to suppress intolerant or offensive behavior.

Ruth Malhotra and Orit Skylar filed the suit, and if I remember correctly, it was funded by an ultra conservative legal group like Southeastern Legal Foundation or Heritage.  These facts make me automatically hostile to whatever claim they made, but these two do have a point.

The politically correct speech codes of the 1980s and 1990s probably have gone too far.  People should be free of harrassment and intimidation in school, and making people aware of the affect of language is a benefit of having these "speech codes".  What bothers me is telling people what they can and cannot say.  Many people are boors and will say just many offensive things about a variety of groups.  I’m pretty sure that Ruth Malhotra falls in this category.  She’s a right wing GOP nutjob who’s opposed to any form of affirmative action, gay rights, women’s rights (ironic how women have always fought women’s rights throughout time…every group has its sellouts I guess), etc.  You name the progressive issue, and I’m sure Ruthie is against it.

From the coverage of the lawsuit, I remember that Ruthie was especially incensed about female empowerment (via the Vagina Monologues), abortion rights, gay rights (and really, anything that said being gay was OK and not a choice you could "undo"), and affirmative action.  One thing that got her in trouble at Georgia Tech was having a "diversity bake sale" where people were charged different prices depending on their gender and race.  While clever, that stunt was a false analogy.  The 1964 Civil Rights Act makes it illegal to discriminate in a publicly offered "good" based on race, gender, national origin, etc.  It would have been more appropriate for her to have some kind of raffle for a highly desirous prize and give extra entries automatically to people based on race, gender, etc. 

So Ruthie and her pal in the Georgia Tech GOP, Orit Skylar, sued.  Tech has now backed off its speech codes, which is probably a good thing.  The nice thing about free speech is that while Ruthie can spew her bile, we can speak the truth to counteract.  Hopefully, she can be held up for shame and ridicule for her right wing views.  Already during the last school year, Ruthie had to endure death threats, maiming threats, and a Twinky shoved in her mailbox (she’s Indian, so someone was saying she’s yellow on the outside and white on the inside).  She’s now "nervous" about coming back to campus.

Poor, poor Ruthie!  Allow this white homosexual who believes in everything she despises to shed a tear.  Poor Ruthie exercised her rights of free speech, and others did too.  Now, I don’t advocate violence or threats of violence, but ridicule is fair game.  She didn’t deserve death threats or threats of having acid thrown on her, but she did deserve to be heavily mocked and ridiculed. 

She’s literally fighting for her right to belittle people, attack women’s rights, attack gays, and whatever other right wing agenda item she wants to advocate.  One thing the right wing likes to do is say that progressives are hypocrites because we are "intolerant of intolerance".  Well, DUH!  Society has to have a standard, and if you can’t be respectful of others different from you, we shouldn’t tolerate that behavior or attitude.  We should ridicule you even while you spew your hateful speech on the street corner.  The First Amendment is a two way street.

Ding, Dong, Fuhrer McKinney’s Gone!

August 10th, 2006 by jac1975

Cynthia McKinney, the racist anti-Semitic Congresswoman from DeKalb County (GA-4th), has been soundly defeated.  Let’s hear it for the voters!  Hip, hip!  HOORAY!

Hank Johnson creamed Cynthia with 58.8% of the vote, or 41,148 votes to her 28,832 votes.  She was crushed in the Gwinnett and Rockdale portions of the district, and she even lost DeKalb by nearly 9,000 votes.  But, classy woman that Cynthia is, she didn’t go down quietly.

First,  her website listing  weird complaints about the voting machines and how her name wasn’t listed, people getting the wrong ballot (and not getting the right one until they complained…imagine that!  Poll workers who aren’t psychic…must be a conspiracy), and people saying they tried to vote for Cynthia but their ballot said they voted Hank after the "Cast Ballot" button was pushed.  On that last point, it’s impossible.  The second you cast your ballot, you are taken back to the welcome screen.  There is no"summary" after you cast your ballot.  The Secretary of State’s office checked into complaints and found no basis for them.  I suppose Cynthia is saying that Diebold had the machines count all HER votes as being cast for Hank and all of Hank’s for her.  Please.

When she "conceded", Cynthia went on a rant about the President and stolen elections, and then tried to sink Pink’s song "Mr. President".  Her supporters went buck wild when she lost too.  The police had to be called because members of her "gang" decided to literally beat on the press, chasing 11 Alive cameramen to their van and threatening them until the police came.  You can see the video of the incident here.

Now, Cynthia is saying that she got beat because of the GOP crossed over into her primary.  First, Cynthia thinks just about any white person who doesn’t support her must be a Republican.  Second, there aren’t that many Republicans in DeKalb to make the kind of difference that Cynthia would need to win.  She can’t face the notion that her own reckless behavior has led to her defeat.  Black, white, old, and young were all TIRED of being embarrassed by her behavior.  It became crystal clear that she was ineffective and a pariah.  Even if she "spoke truth to power", she’s such a loony-tunes that it made no difference.

Finally, Cynthia’s people are blaming … the J-E-W-S!  Yes, the old anti-Semite comes out when the times are tough.  One of her people said to a cable crew, You wanna know what led to the loss? Israel. The Zionists. You. put on your yarmulke and celebrate."  Guess all that Islamist money that came her way was for naught.

Cynthia McKinney’s gone.  I say, "GOOD RIDDANCE."

Run-Off Results

August 10th, 2006 by jac1975

The Run-off was pretty good overall.  I’m only sad that my friend Allen Thornell did not win his race for State House.

LT. GOV:  Jim Martin (62.4%)

SEC. OF STATE:  Gail Buckner (55.2%)

CONGRESS, DIST 4:  Hank Johnson (58.8%)

STATE HOUSE 58:  Robbin Shipp (53.5%)

STATE HOUSE 59: Margaret Kaiser (53.5%)

DEKALB SOLICITOR GEN.:  Robert James (56%)

Of course, I couldn’t vote in the 4th District race or the State House 58 or 59 races.  Otherwise, my choices all won.  I was thrilled that Jim Martin not only beat but PULVERIZED his Smurfiness, Greg Hecht.  The way Greg ran his smear campaign against Jim was shameful, and I’m glad that the Democratic party voters came out and said in a loud voice they would not tolerate that kind of behavior. 

I sincerely hope that this is not the end of Allen Thornell’s electoral career.  He ran a great campaign, raised a ton of money, and came close to winning in a majority black district.  The fact remains though that he did not win solely because of his skin color, and that’s a shame.  His opponent ran solely on the fact that she was black, and it worked.  I predict, though, that if she doesn’t change her tune, the rapidly gentrifying district will dump her in 2008.  The days of making class and race appeals and winning on that argument alone seem to be dwindling.  Hopefully they will be gone for good before long.

Electoral Aftermath

July 25th, 2006 by jac1975

First, the results.

GOVERNOR:  Mark Taylor (51.65%)

LT. GOV:  Jim Martin (41.26%) and Greg Hecht (36.4%)

SEC. of STATE:  Gail Buckner (25.45%) and Darryl Hicks (21.88%)

SCHOOL SUPER.: Denise Majette (67.08%)

US CONGRESS, DIST 4:  Cynthia McKinney (46.92%) and Hank Johnson (44.52%)

HOUSE 44:  Sheila Jones (63.2%)

HOUSE 56:  Kathy Ashe (73.2%)

HOUSE 58:  Robbin Shipp (40.81%) and Allen Thornell (26.32%)

HOUSE 59: Doug Dean (44.86%) and Margaret Kaiser (40.47%)

HOUSE 65:  Sharon BEASTLY-Teague (60.70%)

SENATE 36:  Nan Orrock (62.21%)

HOUSE 84:  Stacey Abrams (51.19%)

HOUSE 86: Karla Drenner (62.45%)

DEKALB COMMISSION, DIST 2:  Jeff Rader (51%)

Obviously, these are all Democratic results.  The only remark I will make on the GOP primary is that Ralph Reed was given a stunning defeat with only 43.91% of the vote.  There was some cross-over voting, although the Democratic primary had more voters than the GOP primary.  This proves that the Theocrats are losing strength, even in Georgia.  My only hope is that this will kill any chance of Ralph Reed having a career in politics, and that it’s the beginning of the end for Sadie Fields and her minions.

Another piece of relatively good news is that of the candidates that Stonewall Democrats endorsed, only one lost outright:  TJ Copeland.  More on that race later.  Two others, Allen Thornell and Doug Dean, are in the run off August 8 for their respective house seats.  Jim Martin also made the run-off in his race after gay-baiting by Greg Hecht’s campaign.

My thoughts on the governor’s race are ones of sadness.  Cathy Cox gave a truly inspiring concession speech last night around midnight.  It brought to mind the Cathy Cox whose candidacy once inspired and thrilled me.  The one who electrified the hall when she spoke to the Young Democrats convention in April at UGA.  I don’t know if she fell victim to the Al Gore syndrome of becoming captive to her DC-based consultants or what.  Her campaign was a mess, and stumbled badly through the summer.  It started with the gay marriage issue which I have blogged about.  She could not have handled her response to the amendment being temporarily overthrown more badly if she’d tried.  Then she came out to basically say she felt gays should have no protections under the law whatsoever (no civil union rights, no adoption rights, no non-discrimination in housing or jobs rights, etc), all while trying to oddly wink at the gay community.  She backed away from the pro-choice crowd, hedging her bets on that issue too.  Her commercials were OK, but didn’t seem to say much.  She fought from a defensive stance all summer, and she paid the price yesterday.  If she’d had been the Cathy we all knew she could be, I think she would have run away with the nomination.

Mark Taylor gives you a smarmy feeling.  It was strange seeing his child-bride next to him on the stage and his DUI and vehicular homicide charged son standing behind him as he gave his victory speech.   Mark is a good ol’ boy from the days of when Democrats were the only party in town.  He does abuse his power and seems to love power for its sake alone.  My only comfort is that I know he’ll do anything to win.  Sonny better buckle his seat belt, because if Mark can raise the money, he will attack Sonny with a vengeance.  Still, I think we’ll see Sonny win in November.  As bad a governor as he is, Sonny doesn’t give you that "I need a shower" feeling that Mark Taylor does.

I’m very happy that a man as decent and good as Jim Martin is leading in the Lt. Gov’s race.  I hope he can beat the crap out of Hecht on August 8.  The smurfling hit new lows in campaigning this past week when he accused Jim Martin of being:  a) a child murderer, b)a rapist-lover and c) some kind of firebrand looking to force your children into watching gay porn.  Ok, I exaggerate the last point, but Hecht’s campaign fingerprints were all over a false call that went out this past weekend to rural Georgia and older white males in Metro Atlanta featuring an effiminate "gay sounding" voice talking about how Jim Martin wants gay marriage and all this other stuff.  It was gay-baiting, pure and simple.  Jim Martin is a fair minded candidate, and he sees gays as human beings worthy of respect.  Greg Hecht sees us as convenient punching bags in his climb up the political ladder.

The Secretary of State’s race stunned me the most.  The two most qualified candidates were BY FAR Shyam Reddy (16.51%) and Scott Holcomb (11.52%).  Yet, they came in 4th and 5th respectively.  Even more appalling is that Glamour-shot photo Angela "Vote for Miss Angela" Moore came in THIRD with 17.53% of the vote.  That a bad joke like Angela Moore could beat Shyam and Scott is something that Democrats should be deeply ashamed of.  If I weren’t such a political junky, this race alone would have shaken my faith in the system to its core.  I can understand why people don’t vote when I see results like this.  The two candidates that seemed to come out of nowhere were Gail Buckner and Darryl Hicks.  I am not suprised that one of the two black candidates got into the run-off.  With the black vote nearly 1/2 (it might have even broke the 50% barrier yesterday…the numbers have not been released) of the primary vote, it makes sense.  At least it was Darryl and not "Miss Angela".  Gail Buckner is the one who stunned me.  I don’t know if she even really campaigned, but she came in first.  As a friend told me yesterday, I had to remember that she was the only viable woman on the ballot, and she was listed first.  In a 6 person primary, most people didn’t know WHO to vote for, so they go with the first name or the girl.  Especially since the office was "SECRETARY" of State.  Anyway, in the run-off, my vote goes to Gail Buckner hands down.  Darryl Hicks is a corporate tool from Atlanta Gas & Light, and I view him with a LOT of suspicion.

Denise Majette won on name recognition alone.  She may be the only name that stands a chance against Kathy Cox, but Kathy will run away with his election in November.  The only way Denise makes this a contest is to hit hard and consistently on Georgia’s low test scores and standing in the nation.  It would help too if she could articulate a plan to turn the education system around.

Another surprise of the night was Cynthia McKinney being forced into a run-off.  This race doesn’t affect me anymore since I am now in John Lewis’s district (THANK YOU GOD!!!), but I hope that all the GOPers in North DeKalb who didn’t vote yesterday rush to the polls on August 8 to send Cynthia home for good.  She’s an embarrassment to the Democratic party, to DeKalb County, and to Georgia.

In state house races, it looked at first like Robbin Shipp would get the nomination without a run-off.  As it turned out, her strongest precincts came in first, because her vote percentage kept lowering as the evening wore on.  In a majority black district, Robbin being the only black candidate meant that she would make the run-off and probably come in first, both of which happened.  Luckily, Allen pulled away from his competition in the end to survive to fight again on August 8.  Hopefully people will turn out for him that day and send the first openly gay man with HIV to the legislature to join Karla Drenner.

Speaking of Karla, I was glad to see her beat back a challenge from a woman whose sole argument was, "This is a black-majority district, and we need a black woman to represent it, not some honkey lesbian."  Karla’s district rebuffed this argument and sent her back to the state house.  She will be sorely needed when the GOP goes after gay families through adoption.

I’m very happy to see Nan kick ass in her primary.  She will be such a forceful progressive voice in the state senate.  I look forward to having her there. 

The race between Sharon BEASTLY-Teague and TJ Copeland lives me sickened the most.  TJ ran a brilliant campaign.  He walked all over that district, went door to door, did all the right things a candidate should do.  All this against an incumbent who does nothing, barely shows up when the legislature is in session, and is an anti-gay bigot.   TJ is as fine and upstanding a man as I’ve seen run for office.  That his district would vote for a woman who doesn’t do her job, doesn’t pass bills, and works against the interests of her district, says a lot about them.  South Fulton residents can go to hell as far as I’m concerned.  They get the government and representation they deserve.  I hope BEASTLY continues to shit all over them and that they are starved of resources.  I hope their schools continue to fail.  Voting for what witch over a hard worker like TJ shows they don’t deserve him.  I will never lift a finger for South Fulton in the future.

Finally, in DeKalb, the tool of developers and Vernon Jones, Jeff Rader, won his county commission seat.  It was much closer than I thought.  Don Broussard had a lot of silent support, but he lost in the end.  I think Gail’s (the retiring commissioner) call the day before the election talking about what a bad man Don was to be "lying" about Jeff Rader may have made the difference.  It looks like Vernon’s majority on the commission just got stronger….God Help Us.

The Presiding Bishop-Elect of the Episcopal Church Responds

July 10th, 2006 by jac1975

I posted my letter to the Bishop of Atlanta, the delegates to the General Convention of the Episcopal Church USA from the Atlanta diocese, and the Presiding Bishop and Presiding Bishop-elect.  Going through my email, I received an actual response from the Presiding Bishop-elect, whose email I swiped from the Diocese of Nevada’s website before they could hide it better. 

I am amazed that she took the time to write back to me, as I’m sure being the newly elected Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Church means she is being innundated with emails, letters, phone calls, etc.  I find her response to be hopeful, and I do feel I am in safe hands with her at the helm.  Here is the text of the letter:

Sent: Saturday, July 01, 2006 12:08 AM
Subject: Re: Personal Thoughts on the Reactions to the General Convention

Dear Jason,

I agree with you about the place of gay and lesbian people in the church, and I will continue to do what I can to ensure that that place is expanded to include all ministries and orders of ministries in this church.

We also have a role in advocating for our gay and lesbian brothers and sisters in other parts of the Communion, and we lose our ability to do that if we are seen to repudiate our membership in the Communion.  I certainly recognize the challenging place in which we stand just now, and your pain at this point, and can only assure you of my prayers.

Shalom,

Katharine

I never in a milliion years thought I’d receive a note from a church leader like this.  Unlike some politicians, I don’t think that the Presiding Bishop-elect will throw gay Episcopalians under the proverbial bus in order to placate Africa and the rest of the Global South.

Perdue Can Kiss My A&&

July 6th, 2006 by jac1975

The good news is that I have a nice tan from my time in South Beach.  The bad news is that I must return to Atlanta tomorrow and resume "normal" life.  I’m sad for it to be over, but it’s been a great vacation.

The real world has intruded itself in my email.  I saw that Georgia and New York gave LGBT equality a one-two punch today.  Georgia Supremes voted unanimously that the legislature meant to deny marriage AND all its benefits to gay people, so the marriage amendment was legal and reinstated, despite the fact the question on the ballot only asked about defining marriage.  Once again, the South leads the way in discrimination and hatred against a particular minority group.  Governor Perdue stated that he hoped that gay Georgians didn’t feel "marginalized" by the decision.  "I don’t think it demeans gay Georgians in any other way," he said.  "They’re free to work and live their lives; they’re just not free to marry in Georgia."   

Governor Perdue can KISS MY ASS.  And we’re not "free to work" without fear of being fired, as it’s legal in Georgia to fire someone just because you think they’re gay and you "don’t like fags."  That man is full of shit, and his "statement" is rubbing salt in a wound.  Doesn’t DEMEAN gay Georgians?  Please…do I look like I’m severely retarded and would believe such a lie?

The only good thing is that it takes the issue off the table for this year’s election. But the damage is done as far as Cathy Cox is concerned.  She has cut her own throat with gays for nothing.  If she had kept her damn mouth shut about the legislature being recalled if the Georgia Supremes had not acted as they did today, she would still have gay support.  As it is, none of us will vote for her. 

New York’s top court also said that it was quite LOGICAL to actively discriminate against gays.  They took the amici briefs of the religious right and basically cut and paste the arguments.  It’s very disheartening to read the defence of gay bigotry as the law of NY state.  The only hope is to get the legislature to change the law.  Yeah, let me hold my breath while THAT happens.

I wonder if blacks felt this way in the 40s, 50s, and 60s when civil rights became really heated for them.  Did they think that they’d NEVER win their rights to be treated as equal?  The constant fighting for my rights to be treated as I would if I were straight is tiring.  I hope it will be won in my lifetime, but I hope I’m not too old to enjoy it when it does.