The Political Playground

July 21st, 2010

On July 14th the NAACP passed a resolution condemning the racist elements with in the Tea Party movement. Needless to say that didn?t go over well with the Tea Party or the conservative movement in general.

Now, I’ll be honest, I haven?t read the text of the resolution, but I find it hard to believe that the NAACP was actually condemning the entire Tea Party Movement, and was instead just targeting the racist fringe elements, elements that tend to exist within all most any political movement. Elements that most Tea Party leaders themselves have been trying to remove.

So, on the 19th, Andrew Brietbart dug up some video clips from an NAACP awards dinner in March where Shirley Sherrod, USDA Georgia Director of Rural Development gave a speech, edited them to remove any context, and posted them on his site Big Government in an attempt to prove a point. Using editied video to undermine your political opponents has exploded thanks to the advent of the YouTube era.


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Posts Tagged ‘Gay Rights’

National Equality March

This weekend a crowd that has been reported at nearly 250,000 descended on the steps of the Capital in DC.

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After the break a video round up of the event from C-Span.

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HRC Dinner

Saturday night before the National Equality March, The HRC held a fundraising dinner at which President Obama spoke. He reiterated his commitment to repealing DOMA and DADT. Now if he would only put action to it.

Obama?s speech is posted after the break.

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State Supreme Court to Review Prop 8 Lawsuits

It’s official, The San Francisco Chronicle reported today that the California State Supreme court has agreed to review 2 of the lawsuits filled by Prop 8 opponents after the Nov 4Th election that removed the right of gay and lesbian couples to marry in that state.

What is before the state high court:

1. Does Proposition 8 make such a far-reaching change to California’s Constitution that it amounts to a constitutional revision, which requires a two- thirds vote of the Legislature to be placed on the ballot?

2. Does Prop. 8 violate the constitutional separation of powers by restricting judges’ authority to protect the rights of same-sex couples?

3. If constitutional, does Prop. 8 invalidate the 18,000 same-sex marriages that took place in California between June 16, when the court’s ruling legalizing gay and lesbian unions took effect, and the election?

Love Prevails in Connecticut

Connecticut joins with Massachusetts today as the only 2 states in the nation to currently have Legal Same-Sex Marriage. While Connecticut has allowed civil unions since 2005, the state supreme court ruled 4-3 that same sex couples had the right to wed after the civil unions law gave them all marriage rights but was deemed unfair as it created a “different but equal” status, which to some is akin to segregation which was endured by the African-American community for decades. For now voters in Connecticut have voted down attempts to amend their state Constitution., but the The Family Institute of Connecticut and other gay equal rights opposition groups vow to keep fighting.

Douglas Healey / AP

Personally today is in stark contrast to the events of November 4th when California passed Proposition 8, along with Same-Sex bans in Arizona and Florida. The fight for equal rights is far from over.

Fight the H8 in Your State
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