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A Vermont wedding...

August 31st, 2009 (01:33 pm)

Rae and I were blessed to have shared a beautiful wedding last September. I feel so lucky to have her as my wife. It was such an amazing day, one that I will never forget. The only thing missing were the legal protections providing our union with the same rights and privileges as other marriages.

Currently the state of Maryland is considering a proposal to honor same sex marriage certificates from other states. If this is to occur, Rae and I would like to have taken the steps to have a legal marriage that can then be acknowledge in the state we have chosen to make our home.

In order to make this happen, we are going to get married in the state of Vermont. The green mountain state requires that each marriage be solemnized, so we are holding a small ceremony in Burlington this weekend.

It is going to be a very simple ceremony, but one that would be made even better with the presence of family and friends. We are excited about this opportunity and could not resist taking advantage of the chance to have that legal certificate and hopefully very soon the legal recognition of our marriage.

I am so lucky to have such an incredible partner, best friend and wife. I would marry her every day if I could. In some ways I do because every day I pledge to love her and do what I can to make her happy. She is the best thing that has ever happened to me!

JOB OPENING: Government Relations Specialist—Healthcare

August 25th, 2009 (11:32 am)

Government Relations Specialist—Healthcare

The Amputee Coalition of America (ACA) is the leading national organization serving the needs of people of all ages living with the loss or absence of limbs. We have members, industry partners, peer visitors and support group leaders throughout the country. The ACA’s government relations and public policy department is committed to advancing policies aimed at ensuring that people with limb loss are able to reach their full potential.

The Government Relations Specialist for Healthcare analyzes pending and/or proposed legislation, regulations and amendments by identifying proposals, responding to notices of proposed rulemaking, routing information to subject matter experts for input and identifying the potential impact to the limb loss community in order to advise key decision makers. Establishes and maintains relationships with external entities such as government organizations, customers, coalitions, business associations, and unions by networking, sharing information and identifying areas of mutual interest in order to foster future interactions and strengthen the ACA’s position through a joint sphere of influence.

Responsibilities

• Coordinates visits by elected officials and staff at the state and federal level in order to further our legislative goals around a range of issues related to access to healthcare and insurance reforms.
• Builds grassroots advocacy coalitions by canvassing and assembling constituent groups such as employees, board of directors, members, donors, and other partners providing information on topics of mutual interest, educating constituent groups on lobbying and influence techniques and establishing and maintaining communication networks in order to expand and strengthen the ACA’s sphere of influence.
• Influences decision makers and stakeholders (members, leadership, donors community groups, professional organizations, legislative and regulatory bodies) by providing information related to issues, communicating impacts and providing recommendations in order to represent the interests of the limb loss community.
• Maintains relationships with executive leadership and internal subject matter experts in order to further department priorities around quality of life, membership advancement, lifelong learning, and communications/pr through networking and understanding the work plans and processes of the overall organization in order to provide government relations guidance and incorporate ACA strategic goals and objectives requirements into lobbying prioritization.
• Represents ACA as the lead for issues related to insurance coverage, health care access and public health programs, including Medicare and Medicaid
• Creates reports and documentation (expense reports, federal/state/local reporting requirements) related to spending, lobbying activities, ethics and gratuities in order to comply with local/state/Federal laws and regulations and ACA requirements.
• Monitors the Federal Register to track rules, proposed rules, and notices of Federal agencies and organizations, as well as executive orders and other presidential documents.
• Assist with the writing, editing and compilation of written materials for internal and external audiences, including regular updates in internal communications and documents for external audiences.
• Track communications with and information about involving members of Congress, their staff and other officials at the federal, state and local levels
• Support logistics for the Director’s visits with members of Congress, their staff and other officials at the federal, state and local levels.
• Organize and assist with events involving members of Congress, their staff and other officials at the federal, state and local levels.
• Assist with department logistics and administrative office functions, including submitting purchase orders and compiling materials for meetings and events.

Requirements

• Bachelor's and typically 6 or more years' related work experience, a Master's degree and typically 4 or more years' related work experience or an equivalent combination of education and experience
• Direct experience working with Congress either as a staffer or in a previous government relations position
• Strong knowledge and experience in healthcare policy
• Strong understanding of the political, legislative and regulatory process
• Demonstrated ability to successfully manage multiple complex projects
• Extensive network of government and industry contacts
• Deep knowledge of legislative procedure and rules of the House and Senate
• Experience in legislative drafting and negotiations
• Proven political experience and acumen
• Strong written and verbal communications skills including public speaking experience
• Ability to leverage teams and assets to drive a positive result
• Ability to deliver results on time and within budget
• Proven effective research skills
• Ability to perform independently with minimal guidance and to work collaboratively with a team comprised of individuals from all levels of the organization
• Flexibility and adaptability with a strong work ethic and an entrepreneurial spirit to accommodate growing levels of responsibility
• Energetic, enthusiastic, and interested in learning within a growing, dynamic organization

Compensation is competitive and will be commensurate with a candidate’s skills, experience and education. Full benefits package.

Please, e-mail a cover letter, writing sample and resume to Morgan Sheets, Director of Government Relations & Public Policy (msheets@amputee-coalition.org). The Amputee Coalition of America is an Equal Opportunity Employer.

The ACA has staff in the Knoxville, TN and Washington, DC area. This position is located in the Tennessee office.

RIDICULOUSLY hilarious!

May 11th, 2009 (03:24 pm)

Miss CA --- you did not win. GET OVER IT!

April 30th, 2009 (11:07 am)

Miss California to campaign against gay marriage.

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5jXbpPgZ9rkS-z8Prv2lT2YREFXzgD97SPGHG1

Come on Maryland, catch up!

April 30th, 2009 (11:06 am)

NH -- next state working towards equality.

http://www.eagletribune.com/punewsnh/local_story_120005859.html?keyword=topstory

NC -- you can do better than this evil, crazy woman!

April 30th, 2009 (11:05 am)

Rep. Virginia Foxx (R-NC) actually had the audacity to claim that the most famous gay bashing hate crime in recent American history [Matthew Shepard], was in fact a "hoax," perpetrated by activists eager to pass "these bills" [hate crimes protections]".

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/michael-rowe/what-an-ogress-you-are-co_b_193167.html

Texas passes prosthetic and orthotic parity protections!

April 30th, 2009 (11:04 am)

Thrilled to announce that Texas just became the 5th state this year to pass legislation to ensure that amputees are able to get coverage for prosthetic devices! The others were MD, VA, IA and AR. WOO HOOO!

Arms and Legs are not a Luxury!

April 30th, 2009 (11:03 am)

The ACA recently launched a new site to help spread the word about the need for prosthetic parity legislation at the state and federal level to protect access to care. It is PRETTY SHARP! Check it out: www.armsandlegsarenotaluxury.com.

Heartbreaking & Important: More on Prop 8

February 12th, 2009 (11:16 am)

More activity on the Prop 8 issue in California. There is an AMAZING video out there to raise awareness. I seriously sat in front of my computer weeping. Yes, I am mushy, but it is heart breaking.

Ken Starr is attempting to forcibly divorce 18,000 same-sex couples that were married in California last year. The Supreme Court will hear oral arguments in this case on March 5, with a decision expected within 90 days. I can't imagine having been given the legal right and then have it taken away. It is horrifying!

Please watch the video now, sign the petition and spread the word by sharing it with your friends and family.

http://www.couragecampaign.org/Divorce

EVEN if you are not from California, I think it is important for them to see just how much opposition there is out there and how upset people are about these crazy, hateful actions.

Happy birthday to me!

December 19th, 2008 (09:36 am)



As of today, I am 32 years of age. It is a busy, busy day. My parents and sister get into town tomorrow, so I am trying to get some work done, clean up the house and wrap the last few presents. Rae is taking me out to dinner tonight and then we are having big family/friend soiree tomorrow. It should be a great weekend.

I always get a little pensive/reflective on my birthday. But I also embrace it with the joy of having the opportunity to really celebrate how far I have come and all that I have ahead of me. I have a job that continues to challenge me mostly in good ways. I have terrific people in my life. I have a very supportive family and an incredible wife who loves me for exactly who I am. I am pretty blessed.


So happy birthday to me!

MUST SEE: Jon Stewart takes on Huckabee on equal marriage rights. AMAZING!

December 12th, 2008 (02:20 pm)

“Semantics is cold comfort when it comes to humanity.” ~Jon Stewart

This is one of THE BEST examples of arguing for equal marriage rights. I am seriously astounded at home incredible Stewart’s argument really is. This could seriously be used as an educational tool to help people understand why denying civil marriage rights is just plain wrong.

TOMORROW...Protest Hate: Join the national protests against Prop 8!

November 14th, 2008 (10:06 am)

TO BALTIMORE AREA FRIENDS: Please, join me and Rae this Saturday at 1:30pm at City Hall. (100 N. Holliday Street) in a protest against Prop 8. 

Prop 8 would allow for a constitutional amendment stripping gays and lesbians of equal marriage rights in CA. This is not only detrimental to California. It could set the goal of equal marriage rights back in a huge way.

Important Information:
1)  Bring signs.  There will be media there.
2) Grab a friend or two or ten.  We need lots of supporters.
3) It is supposed to rain. Bring an umbrella, but be there.
4) There will be anti-gay protesters.  Ignore them. Don't engage.  The news coverage should be about our message, not theirs!
5) This needs to be a PEACEFUL event. 

NOT IN BALTIMORE?  To others, attend a gathering in your area or MAKE YOUR OWN!!   Protests are being held all over the country.   Find a location in your area at: http://jointheimpact.wetpaint.com

CAN'T MAKE IT TOMORROW? Think about writing a letter to your local paper calling for marriage equality.  Call your state rep/senator and urge them to support marriage rights.  Post a blog or send an email educating your friends & family.  We can all do something! 
 

Be an extremist for love and for justice...

November 13th, 2008 (01:17 pm)

Good afternoon, Normally, I would wait until Friday to write to you, but with all that's going on right now, I felt it was important to speak to you today.

Our community is facing great challenges in the wake of the outcomes of ballot initiative fights in California, Arizona and Florida. Now, we must decide how to approach the obstacles ahead.

As Martin Luther King wrote in his Letter from a Birmingham Jail:

Will we be extremists for hate or will we be extremists for love? Will we be extremists for the preservation of injustice--or will we be extremists for the cause of justice?

On November 4, less than six months after the California Supreme Court ruled that lesbian and gay people are fully equal under the law, a slim majority of voters declared that we are not.

In Arizona and Florida voters also took away rights we had not yet even been granted.

We are angry - and that anger has moved to the streets.

Our rights were stripped. Our love was branded unworthy of the name marriage, though our commitments and responsibilities to each other are worthy of nothing less.

We are determined the world will see we are not an issue; we are families. Many of us are people of faith; many are people of color; our children play with yours; all of us are neighbors.

The Mormon Church played a huge role in the travesty called Proposition 8. In response, there have been protests at churches. The Mormon community faced persecution in its early years. In the wake of Prop 8, I question whether members of that community have forgotten the lessons of their struggle.

Likewise, the Roman Catholic Church disregarded the history of sectarian oppression and pursued a campaign of deceit and misinformation in support of Prop 8 reminiscent of the anti-Catholic movement of the early 1800s.

It is chilling to realize the Catholic and Mormon Churches knew they were telling lies - that marriage equality would require children to learn about homosexuality in school - priests would be required to solemnize marriages of same sex couples - and they lied anyway.

As our community and allies exercise our uniquely American right to protest, I hope we will remember the lessons of the HIV/AIDS protests in the 1980s. We were angry, but strategic; impassioned, but smart. Our actions in the streets will set the tone for the ongoing debate about marriage equality. Let us be motivated by our pain, while we model love and justice.

The fact that 70% of African Americans voted for Prop 8 has been particularly jarring. Lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people have depended on the real leadership exerted on our behalf by African American leaders. As the Obamas move to the White House, the African American family is receiving long overdue respect. We, too, strive to have all families supported and valued by society.

We ask ourselves why the community that has endured the most violent and persistent discrimination in our country's history failed to understand our struggle for human rights. The results of the campaign have fueled rage. Yet this is misdirected anger. We obviously failed to communicate to African Americans the interdependence of our struggles.



The question before us now is, will we stray from our own path toward justice, and reduce a human rights movement to tactics of recrimination? How we respond to Prop 8 and defeats in Arizona and Florida will define our success, and say much about who we are.



To my community and allies, I say this: our anger is just; our goal is alive. We must remain worthy of the cause we fight for. Our cause is love; and only through love can we win the freedom to marry. In the streets and over coffee, our message must be consistent. We love our soul mates and our families; we love and respect our neighbors; we expect love and respect in return.



To reverse the outcomes of November 4, we must embrace our passion and anger, and redirect them to tasks that have as yet gone undone.



We must take this election as an occasion to look inward. In our California, Arizona and Florida campaigns, we asked diverse communities to hear our stories and respect our rights. But have we heard the concerns of the people we asked to listen to us? We assert that equal marriage rights are basic human rights. We must also show that our concern for human rights does not end with marriage. We must make clear alliance with those we seek as coalition partners.



As we ask communities of color and religious communities to engage and partner with us, we must demonstrate our commitment to the people and issues they care about. We must show that we will not abandon forty-seven million uninsured once we have domestic partner benefits, and that non-discrimination laws are not enough when legions of children are denied equal opportunity by failing schools, violence, and racism. We must stand with immigrants as they, too, seek to fully realize the American dream.



Our campaigns to beat back discriminatory ballot measures in California, Arizona, Florida and Arkansas failed to help others who have experienced discrimination understand that putting the rights of one minority up for a vote puts everyone's rights at risk. That is a conversation with our neighbors that starts today. I hope I will be better able to communicate with them, not because my argument is sound, but because they will be better able to hear me as we labor together for justice for all.



Now is the time to be constructive with our hurt and disappointment. This weekend, thousands in all 50 states will take to the streets with one common goal in mind—full equality for all—let us not forget that our cause is one of civil respect rooted in justice and fairness. Marchers will call not only for justice for LGBT families, but for an end to all the oppressions that hold our nation back and give the false impression that our differences are more profound than what we have in common. To locate a Join the Impact rally near you, visit http://jointheimpact.wetpaint.com/.



During and after the Join the Impact protests, we must all recommit ourselves to confront our neighbors with our love.



I will engage my Mormon, Catholic, and African American neighbors—and will ask them to engage me in their lives. I am ready to listen and act on their behalf while I make my case for their support.



November 4 showed us how much work is left to do, but it also brought out the passion we will need for that work. We must hold on to it, and use it wisely. We seek to live as loving families in peace and equality with our neighbors. We trust in the power of love.



Joe Solmonese, President
Human Rights Campaign

Gay couples can start to marry in Connecticut

November 12th, 2008 (10:46 am)

This is incredible! After a huge set back last week with anti-gay initiatives passing in CA, FL, AZ and AR, Connecticut's move towards equality seems particularly exciting!
Join in a national protest THIS Saturday to push for the protection of marriage rights in California!! Learn more here: http://jointheimpact.com/protest-locations.

Rae and I will be in Baltimore (Nov 15th, 1:30 pm at City Hall)!

__________________________________________

Gay couples can start to marry in Connecticut
By JOHN CHRISTOFFERSEN, Associated Press Writer John Christoffersen, Associated Press Writer 1 min ago
NEW HAVEN, Conn. – A judge cleared the way Wednesday for gay marriage in Connecticut, a victory for advocates stung by California's referendum that banned same-sex unions in that state.

Minutes after a judge entered a final ruling, the New Haven city clerk's office issued its first marriage license to a gay couple. It went to Barbara and Robin Levine-Ritterman of New Haven, one of the eight couples who successfully challenged a state law prohibiting gay marriage.

"It's a great day for Connecticut," Robin Levine-Ritterman said after a brief hearing in court.

Others couples planned to celebrate by immediately marching to New Haven City Hall to get marriage licenses. At least one ceremony was scheduled Wednesday morning on the New Haven green.

The judge's order marks "the end of a very long journey toward equality," plaintiffs' attorney, Bennett Klein, said earlier. "Each of the plaintiffs asked me to convey to the court how proud they are to be citizens of this state."

The Connecticut Supreme Court ruled 4-3 on Oct. 10 that same-sex couples have the right to wed rather than accept a civil union law designed to give them the same rights as married couples.

Peg Oliveira, 36, a yoga teacher and educational consultant, and Jennifer Vickery, a 44-year-old lawyer, planned to wed on the New Haven green Wednesday. They have a 3-month-old baby.

"We're thrilled and we don't want to wait one minute," she said earlier. "I want to show the folks who worked so hard to make this possible that we are very grateful and we don't want to wait any longer to be able to say the words `We are married.'"

Manchester Town Clerk Joseph Camposeo, president of the Connecticut Town Clerks Association, said clerks were advised by e-mail shortly after 9:30 a.m. they could start issuing the licenses.

"The feedback I'm getting from other clerks is that we're all at the ready, but no one really has a sense yet of what kind of volume we're going to get," he said.

According to the state public health department, 2,032 civil union licenses were issued in Connecticut between Oct. 2005 and July 2008.

The health department had new marriage applications printed that reflect the change. Instead of putting one name under "bride" and the other under "groom," couples will see two boxes marked "bride/groom/spouse."

Only Connecticut and Massachusetts have legalized gay marriage. The unions were legal in California until a statewide referendum to ban gay marriage narrowly passed last week. The vote has sparked protests and several lawsuits asking that state's Supreme Court to overturn the prohibition.

Constitutional amendments to ban gay marriage also passed last week in Arizona and Florida, and Arkansas voters approved a measure banning unmarried couples from serving as adoptive or foster parents.

However, Connecticut voters last week rejected the idea of a constitutional convention to amend the state's constitution, a major blow to opponents of same-sex marriage.

The Family Institute of Connecticut, a political action group that opposes gay marriage, condemned the high court's decision as undemocratic. Peter Wolfgang, the group's executive director, acknowledged banning gay marriage in Connecticut would be difficult but vowed not to give up.

"Unlike California, we did not have a remedy," Wolfgang said. "It must be overturned with patience, determination and fortitude."

The state's 2005 civil union law will remain on the books, at least for now. Same-sex couples can continue to enter civil unions, which give them the same legal rights and privileges in Connecticut as married couples without the status of being married.

State Rep. Michael Lawlor, D-East Haven, co-chairman of the legislature's Judiciary Committee, said lawmakers will have to decide the fate of the civil union law.

"We'll definitely be taking this up," he said. The new legislative session opens in January.

___

Associated Press writer Susan Haigh in Hartford contributed to this report.

SAY NO TO DISCRIMINATION (Sat, Nov 15th)

November 10th, 2008 (08:03 am)

As you know, Rae and I got married one month ago. We feel so lucky to have found each other. We are looking forward to building a life together. What most of also know is that currently our marriage is not given equal consideration and protection under the law. This is just plain wrong!

Some states have started to take steps forward, including California where gay couples have been given the right to marry. But last week at the same time that history was being made and Barack Obama was elected, a ballot initiative in California won by a tiny margin and took away that right. This is not only detrimental to California. It could set the goal of equal marriage rights back in a huge way. So PLEASE JOIN ME IN DOING SOMETHING ABOUT IT!!!

Protests are being held all over the country this Saturday, November 15th. I am asking you to seriously consider attending one. We need fellow LGBT people and our allies (straight friends and family) to make it known that we will not stand for rights being taken away!

DATE: Saturday, November 15th
TIME: 1:30pm EST
LOCATION: They are mostly being held at city halls.

Click here to see your location (http://jointheimpact.com/protest-locations/).

If they do not have a location listed in your town, think about heading down to your city hall with a sign, a camera and some friends. It only takes a handful of people to make it a protest. And you are joining thousands of people all over the country in taking a stand against hate and discrimination.

PLEASE STAND WITH US THIS SATURDAY AND SAY "NO" TO DISCRIMINATION!

Morgan

P.S. For BALTIMORE AREA FRIENDS, join me and Rae this Saturday at 1:30pm at City Hall. (100 N. Holliday Street).

Goodbye Dr. Hahn.....

November 6th, 2008 (11:54 am)

I will be very sad to see Brooke Smith leave Grey's after tonight. She gave such an amazing performace last week in her scene about discovering her sexuality and really seeing the world. It resonated with me. I could identify with the way in which she described realizing how different it felt finally realize who she was, an epiphany I am sure she struggled with. Very powerful.



Not to rain on anyone's parade (including my own)...

November 5th, 2008 (10:48 am)

I am thrilled about Obama, but it looks like the anti-gay marriage initiative in CA is going to pass. And two others passed (AZ and FL). That is very sad. That means that marriages in CA will be nullified and it really sets the cause back.

It took us hundreds of years to have an African-American president. Women have had the vote less than one hundred years. I know progress takes time. But there is still a small part of me that is sad.

Not to rain on your parades, since this is am AMAZING day in US history!! I still plan to celebrate. No doubt about it. This is an incredible turning point. Merely allowing myself a moment to grieve. Then I will raise my toast!!

SHAME ON ABC!! Grey's Anatomy's lesbian character abruptly fired...

November 4th, 2008 (09:29 am)

Entertainment Weekly reported on Monday that Grey’s Anatomy has let actress Brooke Smith (Erica Hahn) go, spelling the end of her character and the relationship with Sara Ramirez’s Dr. Callie Torres. Smith confirmed the news in an interview with Ausiello. Her last episode will be this Thursday. She had no idea!!!

Smith’s dismissal means the loss of American broadcast TV’s only lesbian/bisexual couple in primetime. It was also the first significant gay relationship portrayed on the hit ABC series. The handful of remaining lesbian/bisexual relationships on TV are on cable, premium channels and daytime television.

Rhimes told reporters in July that she planned to explore Erica's coming-out process, along with Callie's, "and then we're going to watch the larger world of what happens when the two of them come out in the hospital, and what happens when Callie's dad finds out and that sort of thing, which I think is going to be really, really interesting." Where did this commitment to true representation and fully developed storylines disappear to? And why exactly I wonder?

The damage is done, but ABC should still be held accountable for this rash and disrespectful move!

After you go to the polls to vote (hopefully for Obama), contact ABC and tell them that you are not happy to see yet another lesbian character erased from television.

Contact them at: http://abc.go.com/site/contactus.html.

You get 500 characters.

Here is a SAMPLE (what I sent this morning):

I am furious about the firing of Brooke Smith and end of Callie/Erica. Here is a very strong woman character and one of the most touching portrayals of a same sex couple on television and you are just cutting her off the show. This is ridiculous!

Shonda Rimes' claim that this has nothing to do with Erica being a lesbian character rings untrue. This is not a mere coincidence.

In July, Rimes said that this relationship would be explored and yet now she is gone.

Shame on you ABC!

ANOTHER SAMPLE:

I am shocked. Firing Brooke Smith and downplaying Melissa George's character's sexuality. I cannot believe that ABC is going to allow Grey's Anatomy to be yet another show to give in to the downplaying or deleting real gay characters and storylines from their show.

Recently, Rimes discussed how the coming out process and impact of this relationship would be shown and now you just delete a lesbian story.

This is homophobia at its worst -- by people who pretend to want to do better!

INFURIATING: In a statement by Rime's on the firing: "The impact of the Callie/Erica relationship will be felt and played out in a story for Callie. I believe it belittles the relationship to simply replace Erica with 'another lesbian.' If you'll remember, Cristina mourned the loss of Burke for a full season."

Right, but Alex has a different love interest every other show. Izzie, Meredith....hell, we did not even know how Rose was but when McDreamy needed another love interest they found one. So don't say that the lesbian/bi woman has to mourn and wait for another love interest because that makes sense. No that just means you don't have to deal with a true, sensitive, real portrayal of a gay character. Nice spin, Shonda.

AND: E! Online's Kristin revealed that Melissa George's character who had been reported as bisexual and a potential triangle/jealousy angle in the burgeoning relationship between Callie and Erica is no longer. "Melissa came on as a lesbian character," a Grey's source tells Kristin, "but they changed the script and now she isn't. She starts off flirting with Callie but it never goes anywhere."

E's Kristin added, "I'm told by those who work on the ABC series that the gay-themed storylines and gay characters are being downplayed and even erased from upcoming scripts."

Never mind that the most explicit thing viewers saw between Ramirez and Smith was kissing and later lying together fully-covered in nightgowns.

Right, and we are not supposed to think that the lesbian storyline has been eliminated>?! This is outrageous! Please, contact ABC (after you vote) at: http://abc.go.com/site/contactus.html.

See the AfterEllen story on this shocking move by ABC: http://www.afterellen.com/TV/2008/10/greys-fires-brooke-smith?page=0%2C1.

Sorry Redskins fans!

November 4th, 2008 (06:42 am)

They lost. WOOO HOOO!

Washington Redskins 6 - Pittsburgh Steelers 23
Nov 3 1 2 3 4 T
Washington 6 0 0 0 6
Pittsburgh 0 10 6 7 23 «


Why do I care? Good question since I am not a big football person.

There is this whole thing about the score of the Redskins last home game before the elections and the results of the election. People say that if they lose (which they did), then the challenging party (this year the Democrats) will win. If they win, then the incumbent party is favored.

Interestingly, in 2000 the Redskins lost their game. Al Gore won, which should have meant that the prophecy was not true anymore, but of course that election was stolen so it remained.

In 2004, the Redskins prediction said that John Kerry should have won. I remember being thrilled. But really no one, the Redskins included could explain what the hell happened with that election. Seriously, low approval rating, war in Iraq, what we now know was foreshadowing of an economic plummet and people still voted in that idiot. That really could not have been predicted by anything or anyone.

So I am not usually a superstitious person, but I'll take it!!

For equality, for peace, to protect everything we have fought for.....VOTE OBAMA on NOVEMBER 4th!!

October 31st, 2008 (11:30 am)

This is why anyone who cares about peace (or at least not blowing up anyone we disagree with just because we think we can), equal rights, censorship, privacy, a woman's right to choose and basically any right won by women (and men) over the past 10,20,50 years HAS TO VOTE FOR OBAMA on Tuesday, November 4th!!


Palin Wants to Write Discrimination Into the Constitution......(OBAMA/BIDEN to protect equality)

October 31st, 2008 (11:29 am)

Discrimination is ICKY!

October 21st, 2008 (01:32 pm)


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Right to the point about Proposition 8!

October 21st, 2008 (01:30 pm)


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<lj-embed id="15"/><br> <div style="font-family:" trebuchet="Trebuchet" ms";font-size:12px;width:400px;"="MS&quot;;font-size:12px;width:400px;&quot;"> From Crackle: <a href="http://crackle.com/c/Reality/Vote_No_On_Proposition_8_-_Procreation/2382048/#ml=fu%3D2460428%26fx%3D" title="Vote No On Proposition 8 - Procreation" style="text-decoration:none;font-weight:bold;overflow:hidden;text-overflow:ellipsis;word-wrap:break-word;">Vote No On Proposition 8 - Procreation</a></div><img style="visibility:hidden;width:0px;height:0px;" border="0" width="0" height="0" src="http://counters.gigya.com/wildfire/IMP/CXNID=2000002.0NXC/bT*xJmx*PTEyMjQ2MTAyMTE5MDYmcHQ9MTIyNDYxMDIxNTIxOCZwPTEyMjE*MSZkPSZnPTImdD*mbz**ZjY1YTkwYTJjZjA*MDNmOGViMzdhMmEzMTZiMWFhYQ==.gif" />

"I Picked a Girl" By John McCain.....LOL!

October 19th, 2008 (10:22 pm)

Come on California --- NO ON PROP 8!

October 17th, 2008 (09:54 am)



Do the right thing!

http://www.noonprop8.com/

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