No on 8

October 18, 2008 at 5:49 am | In politics | 1 Comment
Tags: , ,

California has long been a state that has paved the way for civil rights. Although California was not the first state to recognize same sex marriage it was the first state to have same sex marriage approved by the state legislature, in both 2005 and 2007 (unfortunately Governor Schwarzenegger vetoed it both times).

In May California continued to shine a line on civil rights when our supreme court overturned the ban on same sex marriage. Same sex couples from all over the states, and the country, began getting married in California. Unfortunately, our celebration was extremely short lived.

In just 16 days Californians will vote on whether to continue to show fairness and equality or to write discrimination into our state constitution and eliminate same sex couples right to marry.

Many people argue that same sex marriage is not in the California State Constitution. Of course it’s not but equality is. Equality means equal. As a good friend of mine says what part of equal do you not understand.

In California and the United States as a whole people have the freedom to practice any religion they want or not religion at all. Yet people still hind behind the bible to justify their homophobia. Never mind that doing that imposes your religious beliefs on other people.

So yes I am a gay man. And I have faced homophobia everyday of my life. Whether it was own father calling me a fag when I was a two year old boy, kids calling my house to harass me when I was in middle school, a hostile neighbor at my boyfriends apartment or uneducated close minded students at my job, It has been there everyday.

Yet I have fought to accept myself for who I am. I do believe in god. I believe that god made me gay and that god wanted me to find love with another man. I believe that he passage in the bible that condemns homosexuality is as irrelevant as the passage that says you should not eat shellfish or that a father can stone his daughter to death if he disobeys her.

Love is love. So if you live in California and you have any compassion or sense of equality in your heart and mind Vote No on Prop 8. I am moving in my boyfriend later this month. Please do not take away our opportunity to get married. And more than us please do no take way the right for couples that have been together for fifty years and want their relationships recognized by the government.

Domestic partnerships are not enough. Separate is not equal.

And please whether you live in California or not contribute to No on 8.

http://www.noonprop8.com/

Genius or suicide?

September 1, 2008 at 5:46 am | In politics | 1 Comment
Tags: , , , , , , , ,

As expected the day after Barack Obama’s acceptance speech in Denver John McCain announced his running mate. However, he unexpectedly named Alaskan Governor Sarah Palin his running mate. This was shocking to me. I had expected Mitt Romney, Joe Liberman or if he did pick a woman it thought it would be Texas Senator Kay Bailey Hutchinson. I’m sure I was one of many American who thought Sarah who?

 

The pick of Polin was either a genius move by John McCain or a suicidal move.

 

I think it is very clear why he picked Palin. It is a clear move for all the Hillary Clinton supporters who still feel robbed by Barack Obama getting the nomination. On Tuesday night Hillary asked if they were in it for her or if they were in it for the issues. Unfortunately, I think there are a lot of women, and gay men, who voted for Hillary Clinton in the primaries in large party just because she’s a woman. And I fear that these same people will vote for John McCain because they want to make history by making Sarah Palin the first female vice president of the United States. I hope this isn’t true but I’ve learned never to overestimate the intelligence of the American public. My first thought when I hear that John McCain had picked a woman was that he had just won the election.

 

However, Palin is incredibly unqualified to be Vice President. Yes, she’s a governor but she’s the governor of a state who’s population is less than that of Aurora, Colorado. For those of you who don’t know Aurora, Colorado is a eastern suburb of Denver and it is not big at all. So basically Palin runs a moderately sized city. Plus she’s been Governor less than two years. How can Barack Obama’s four years in the U.S. Senate not be enough experience but Palin two years as Governor of Alaska is? Before becoming Governor Palin was in the city council and then major of her small town of about 8,471 people. I am from a town whose population is around that size and believe you me running a town that size does not prepare you to be Vice President to 300.000 people! So again Barack Obama’s eight years in the state legislature in Illinois isn’t enough experience but being major of a town that the size of three big city high school is? When Palin is running for Vice President not President. But the Vice President is just a heartbeat away from the Presidency and when the President is as old as John McCain could be you need somebody who is ready on day one…And I don’t want to hear that John McCain isn’t too old. He may be of sound mind and body today but he has had cancer in the past as a person’s health after the age of seventy can take a drastic turn at a moments notice.

 

So if the American public is really paying attention to this race Palin’s choice shows how desperate John McCain is and how the Republicans are tied to big oil and how they still only have three cards to play…Guns, God and Gays…But the question remains is the American public really paying attention or are they as easily swayed and distracted as they were in 2000 and 2004? Only time will tell.

 

History

August 29, 2008 at 7:18 am | In politics | Leave a Comment
Tags: , , ,

Tonight I had to honor to attend the final night of Democratic National Convention at INVESCO Field at Mile High. Seeing Bill Richardson and Al Gore speak was really cool. Of course the highlight of the night was getting to see the man who hopefully will be the next President of The United States of America, Barack Obama give his acceptance speech. As always, he was articulate and bright. It was a once in a lifetime experience and I am glad I got to be there.

Please god

August 28, 2008 at 6:30 am | In politics | Leave a Comment
Tags:

Today I watched Barack Obama officaly become the first African-American nominee of a major American political party. I was filled with so much pride in my country and how far we’ve come. But I know we have a long way to go. I teach in Watts. My students need something to believe in and something to hope for. I have a niece who is five days old I want her to live on a planet that isn’t doomed. I am a gay man in a loving relationship, I want my love to be recognized. Please god let Obama win. Please let this country move forward again.

Oh hell no!

August 23, 2008 at 3:44 am | In politics | Leave a Comment
Tags: , ,

Barack Obama is set to announce his Vice-Presidential pick tomorrow.

It appears most likely that it is going to be Delaware Senator Joe Biden. However, today I have herd grumblings of a last minute surprise by the name of Chet Edwards. I had never heard of this man before. The world has been focused on the other Edwards and his shenanigans.

So who is Chet Edwards? He’s a congressman from Texas who is a Democrat. But he appears to be a DINO (Democrat in Name Only). He voted for the Iraq war. Okay so did Biden. (I also believe Obama would have caved in and voted for it if he had been a Senator in 2002 but we can never know that for sure)…But here is the kicker Chet Edwards voted for the Defense Of Marriage Act in 1996, the single biggest slap in the face to the LGBT community that occurred during the Clinton era. He also voted in favor of a constitutional amendment banning gay marriage in both 2004 and 2006.

As a gay man I find this deplorable. If Obama picks Edwards I will be hearbroken and angry. I will still vote for Obama in November, but my California vote for him really won’t mean much. But I WILL not volunteer or give any more money to his campaign. I can not support somebody who doesn’t support me.

John Edwards

August 9, 2008 at 12:26 am | In politics | 1 Comment
Tags: , , , , ,

When John Edwards dropped out of the Democratic Primary contest less than a week before Super Tuesday I was lost and disappointed. I liked Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama. However, I didn’t think this country was ready for a woman or an African-American to be President. Although it was not the most progressive viewpoint I thought the Democrats best chance to win the Presidency was to have a white southern at the top of the ticket (it worked for Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton the only Democratic Presidents in my lifetime). I also believed John Edward’s working class background would help.

I was wrong and I am so grateful I did not throw my vote away on him. Politicians have affairs all the time. We know that but don’t get caught. Especially when your wife has cancer! And certainly don’t her pregnant. What a stupid douche bag…I feel so bad for Elizabeth Edwards.

The democrats dogged the mother of all bullets here. The white house and possibly congress would be gone if he had won. So I’m glad it came down to the woman and the white guy because the white guy would have sunk the party.

Turning a red state blue

June 17, 2008 at 8:22 pm | In politics | Leave a Comment
Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

I am from Colorado. I love Colorado. Yet despite Roy Romer, Patricia Schroeder and Gary Hart Colorado has been a red state for almost  my entire life. 

Only in 1992 did Colorado turn from red to blue for Bill Clinton. In 1996 Bob Dole, who was from neighboring Kansas, turned Colorado back to red. In 2000 I was in college at The University of Colorado at Boulder. A friend of mine said I should vote for Ralph Nader because Al Gore had no chance of winning Colorado. I didn’t believe him so I voted for Al Gore anyway. I believed that if everybody who didn’t think Al Gore had a chance of winning Colorado voted for him he could win Colorado’s eight electoral votes. I was wrong. George W. Bush won Colorado comfortably.

In 2004 I was living in Los Angeles and canvassing for the Democratic National Committee. I swore to my co-workers that John Kerry could win Colorado. I was wrong again. But John Kerry did narrow the gap. Despite George W. bush keeping Colorado red in 2004 the state has been turning purple and even blue over the last six years. Before the election in 2004 the republicans controlled the state legislature, the governor was a republican, both senators were republicans and five of the seven congressional seats were held by republicans.

But today the democrats control the state legislature, the governorship, one senate seat and four out of the seven congressional seats. And after this November there is a possibility the other senate seat and an additional house seat will be held by a democrat. Not to mention the fat that Colorado hosts the Democratic National Convention this August and that Barack Obama has made Colorado the biggest target in his western state strategy.

What accounts for this political turn around? A big part of the credit has to be given to the Colorado Democratic Party. In 2004 when the republicans wiped the floor with the democrats Colorado was the one bright spot for the party. By getting the right candidates and focusing on issues like education and he environment the Colorado Democratic party has helped turn the state around.

But another factor is the fact that Colorado’s Latino population has increased greatly in the last ten years. This swing population has voted mainly with the democrats. A couple of years ago I was visiting a friend din Fort Collins (which is located in Northern Colorado close to the Wyoming border). I looked at the white people in their trucks whose lives involve the weekly bowling league and thought that even though I grew up among people like them I was no longer like them. I thought that it is the Latin population, of which my dad’s side of the family is part of, is what will save Colorado politically.

Another factor (if not the biggest one)is the influx of people from more liberal states (most notably California). They have brought their blue state values to a red state and helped move it forward.

But Colorado’s political progress has not come without a price. The new population has lead to urban sprawl and massive building in mountains. My great grandmother and mother, both life long democrats, bitch about George W. Bush and root for Barack Obama. Yet, they rail against the growth in Colorado. I think they don’t’ realize that the political progress in the state they have called home their entire lives is due to the very growth they don’t like.

You can’t have one without the other. If I had to choose between the read and undeveloped Colorado I grew up in or the blue developing Colorado I visit now. I have to go with the later. Progress comes at a price but it is ultimately worth hit.

So once again I will tell you people that Colorado can go blue this November. And even if I am wrong again there is no denying that the state has become more open and accepting of all people. And that in the end is the best thing about turning this red state blue.

2,118

June 1, 2008 at 3:50 am | In politics | 2 Comments
Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

All the hoopla about the DNC rules committee is over. The magic number has been moved from 2,026 to 2,118. Hillary was able to cut into Barack’s lead. But just  like with Texas and Ohio, then Pennsylvania, then West Virginia and then Kentucky it wasn’t enough to make much of a difference.

The Puerto Rico primary is tomorrow, while South Dakota and Montana are on Tuesday.

But according to my latest caculations it is impossible for Hillary Clinton to reach 2,118. Let’s say the last three contests go down like this…

Clinton win Puerto Rico 58% to 42%

Obama wins Montana 56% to 44%

Obama wins South Dakota 53% to 47%

These results seem resonable enought given the latest polls.

If that happens Obama will only need 15% of the remaining upledged super delegates to become the nominee…Hillary can’t get to 2,118 even with 100% of the remaining unpledged super delegates. If the results go down like this Hillary will have 2,102.

If 2,118 is to be a possibility Hillary has to get 100% of the remaining super delegates and the results need to change to this.

Clinton wins Puerto Rico 79% to 21%

Clinton wins Montana 56% to 44%

Clinton wins South Dakota 65% to 35%

Florida and Michigan were supposed to save her. But here she is and she can’t afford to loose even one primary to Obama.

Game over

Without Michigan and Florida there is no way

May 28, 2008 at 1:53 am | In politics | 1 Comment
Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,

Another handful of super delegates have gone to Barack Obama over the last few days. Hillary Clinton has manged to squeeze out a few more as well, but not as many as Obama which means she has fallen further behind.

It is almost mathematically impossible to get to 2,026. Even with the super delegates. She needs the DNC rules committee to rule in her favor on the 31st when it comes to Michigan and Florida or it is game over a week from today.

Let’s say the last 3 contents go down like this…

Clinton wins Puerto Rico 62% to 28%

Obama wins South Dakota 56% to 44%

Obama wins Montana 52% to 48%

This results seem reasonable given the latest polls. If that happens Hillary Clinton will need….100% of the remaining 199 super delegates to get to 2,026. There literally is no room for error left and with her RFK comment alienating even some of her staunches supporters it really is over.

Barack Obama can win with white voters

May 21, 2008 at 5:29 pm | In politics | Leave a Comment
Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

I am so tired of hearing that Barack Obama can’t win over white voters. My fifty-four year old white mother voted for him for crying out loud.

Barack Obama has won 15 states that have less than a 5% African-American population.

Hawaii

Alaska

Washington

Oregon

Idaho

Utah

Colorado

Wyoming

North Dakota

Nebraska

Kansas

Minnesota

Iowa

Vermont

Maine

Of those states Hawaii, Washington, Oregon, Colorado, Minesota, Iowa and Maine are all possible swing states and add up to 52 electoral votes. Hillary Clinton says she can win the swing states but she certainly didn’t win those swing states.

Next Page »

Blog at WordPress.com. | Theme: Pool by Borja Fernandez.
Entries and comments feeds.