Friday, 1/21/2005

It’s A Cartoon Character.  Get It?

Political Rants by Judy @ 12:38 pm PST
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First it was Tinky Winky, and now SpongeBob SquarePants.

What is it about cartoon characters that the neocon right just doesn’t seem to understand?

This is fiction, people. There’s no hidden agenda here. It’s just a cartoon. Tinky Winky, SpongeBob, Barney and the rest are not equipped with sexual organs or hormones.

And what puts SpongeBob’s intentions in question? A video by the We Are Family Foundation staring SpongeBob, Arthur, Barney, Bear, Big Bird, Clifford, JoJo and over 100 others in which they sing the song “We Are Family.” The video was produced by the We Are Family Foundation together with its partners the Anti-Defamation League, Crown Theatres, Disney Channel, FedEx, Nickelodeon, HIT Entertainment, Nile Rodgers/Sony Publishing/The Bernard Edwards Estate/Warner Chapel, Nelvana, Scholastic, Sesame Workshop, Toni Mendez Shapiro Estate, and WGBH. The video also features cameo appearances by Bill Cosby, Diana Ross and Whoopi Goldberg. It will be distributed to 61,000 elementary schools (public and private ) in the US in March in celebration of the proposed National We Are Family Day.

The We Are Family Foundation supports programs that:

inspire and educate individuals of all ages about diversity, understanding, respect and multiculturalism; and to support those who are victims of intolerance.

All I can figure is that James Dobson, or someone who works for him, googled “We Are Family” and came up with the similarly named We Are Family Organization, a local group in Charleston, SC that bills itself as the “voice of informed straight, lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgendered people who have chosen to love and support our relatives and friends by working to spread truth about homosexuality. Our focus is on young people because they generally feel so desperately alone.” This group doesn’t use cute little cartoon characters as part of its program.

I happen to think that its mission is not a bad idea. But I don’t believe the two groups are involved with each other.

Lighten up, everyone. Sometimes a cartoon is just a cartoon.

CHORUS
We are family
I’ve got all my sisters with me
We are family
Get up everybody and sing!
We are family
I’ve got all my sisters with me
We are family
Get up everybody and sing!

Everyone can see we’re together
as we walk on by.
And we fly just like birds of a feather
and we’ll tell no lie.
All of the people around us they say
can they be that close.
Just let me state for the record
we’re giving lovin a family dose

CHORUS

Living life is fun and we’ve just begun to get our share
of this world’s delights
High hopes we had for the future
and our goals in sight
No we don’t get depressed here’s what we call our golden rules
have faith in you and the things you do
you won’t got wrong oh no
this is our family view

CHORUS

Monday, 1/10/2005

Leonard T. Bayard, Where Are You?

Political Rants by Judy @ 6:15 pm PST
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Who is Leonard T. Bayard? Even The Oregonian is covering the story about the elusive sole-owner of Bayard Foreign Marketing LLC.

Bayard Foreign Marketing has recently purchase a certain Gulfstream V executive jet previously owned by Premier Executive Transport Services that has been used to transport suspected terrorists to countries where human rights are not as respected as they are in other places in the world — countries where torture is allowed. The Gulfstream is able to do so because it has permission to use US Military airfields worldwide.

The CIA justifies the practice, called “rendition,” as necessary to elicit information from suspects who would not talk if held in more humane conditions where torture is not an option. The CIA has authority to carry out renditions under a presidential directive first signed by the Clinton administration, and then renewed by the Bush administration.

Rendition is prohibited by the U.N. Convention on Torture.

The Gulfstream, currently assigned tail number N44982, has been spotted at Islamabad and Karachi, Pakistan; Riyadh, Saudi Arabia; Dubai; Tashkent, Uzbekistan; Baghdad; Kuwait City; Baku, Azerbaijan; Rabat, Morocco; Jordan’s military airport in Amman; and at airports in Frankfurt, Germany; Glasglow, Scotland; and Larnaca, Cyprus; not to mention Dulles International Airport.

Bayard Foreign Marketing’s address is listed as 921 SW Washington St., but Leonard Bayard apparently doesn’t work there. It’s the address of the company’s attorney. The telephone number on the company’s annual report is listed to a private residence in a less-upscale section of northeast Portland.

Leonard T. Bayard has no residence address, no telephone number, no Social Security number, no credit history, no automobile or property ownership records, no voter registration.

Does he exist? Scott Caplan, Bayard Foreign Marketing’s attorney, insists that he does but declines to say more. Public records show that Caplan filed the incorporation papers for Bayard Foreign Marketing in August, 2003. And somebody signed the name Leonard T. Bayard on the company’s annual report.

Knowingly filing a false corporate document in Oregon is a crime punishable by up to 6 months in prison and a $1,000 file. Perhaps it’s time to let Bill Bradbury and Hardy Myers know that we don’t take kindly to illegal CIA operations being fronted in Stumptown.

Tuesday, 12/28/2004

Question For The English

Miscellaneous Musing by Judy @ 12:22 pm PST
tags:

Perhaps someone out there can answer this question. I learned yesterday that there is a memorial to JFK at Runnymede.

Why?

I mean, I realize it’s a nice geture and all. I just don’t understand any connection between JFK and the (at least to me) far more important signing of the Magna Carta.

Tuesday, 12/21/2004

Support For Bush & Iraq War Keeps Slipping

Political Rants by Judy @ 7:28 am PST
tags:

According to an ABC News/Washington Post poll, support for Dubya and his little war continues to slip.

56% of those asked now believe that the cost of the war outweighs the benefits and is not worth it.

57% disapprove of the way that Bush is handling the situation in Iraq.

53% disapprove of the way that Rumsfeld is doing his job.

52% believe that Rumsfeld should be replaced.

Fewer than half believe there has been significant progress towards restoring order. But 60% believe that the elections should take place in as scheduled in January, and 58% believe we should remain there until order is restored.

Bush’s approval rating on Iraq is down to 42%.

The margin of error is 3%.

I wonder where all of these people were during the election? What suddenly opened their eyes? And I keep reminding myself that Time’s Person Of The Year title is given to the person who has the largest impact — for good or ill.

Thursday, 12/16/2004

Not-So-Wacky Thursday

Political Rants by Judy @ 12:30 pm PST
tags:

There was no Wacky Wednesday yesterday, probably because I hadn’t caught up on my sleep since The Great Frozen Door Latch Fiasco. Nothing yesterday seemed all that wacky to me. But… if Monday came on Tuesday this week, then Wednesday can come on Thursday.

Yesterday was Bill Of Rights Day It was the 213th anniversary of the first 10 Amendments to the US Constitution — those wacky little afterthoughts that give us some of the freedoms we all seem to take way too much for granted. Like the first one, for example:

Amendment 1 - Religion, Speech, Press, Assembly, Petition

Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.

This is the little addition to the Constitution that give me the freedom to write here about whatever I please — even if it’s to make derrogatory and derisive comments about Dubya and his neo-con wing-nut followers. And, if you are one of those, it give you the freedom to make derisive comments about me, too. And I find that very cool.

It means that I can blog in peace without expecting the Secret Service, CIA, FBI, or a handful of other letters, to show up on my doorstep and cart me away only to bury me in some deep dark hole where I will never be seen or heard from again, but wherein I will suffer a long and painful demise, simply because I made some remark that the Government saw as subversive.

It means that journalists can not be forced to reveal their sources.

It means that your faith is your business, and you can raise your children in that faith without fear of negative consequences from the government.

It means that your faith is your business, and I don’t have to worry about having my nose rubbed in it all the time.

It means that I can send my son to public school without fearing that his head will be stuffed with a lot of religious nonsense that I don’t agree with under the guise of teaching “science,” “sex education” or civics.

Well… OK, some of these statements are uphill battles, still.

In fact, a lot of them are.

A federal judge last week sentenced Rhode Island television reporter Jim Taricani to six months of house arrest for refusing to name the source of an FBI surveillance tape. Taricani broke no law by airing the tape, and the source voluntarily identified himself before the sentencing.

Reporters from The New York Times and Time magazine are appealing a contempt ruling and could each be jailed for up to 18 months for refusing to testify about their confidential sources in a probe into whether the Bush administration illegally leaked a covert CIA officer’s name to the media.

U.S. reporters have been held in contempt for refusing to disclose sources in stories about scientist Wen Ho Lee, who was suspected of espionage at the Los Alamos nuclear laboratory and later pleaded guilty to a less severe charge.

In April, U.S. marshals seized reporters’ tape recorders during public remarks by U.S. Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, and returned them only after Scalia’s comments were erased.

U.S. Undersecretary of State John Bolton declared his speech at Tufts University “off the record,” even though the event was open to the public.

In 11 of its last 12 free-speech rulings, the U.S. Supreme Court has rejected First Amendment claims.

A judge refused to delay a trial Tuesday when an attorney objected to his wearing a judicial robe with the Ten Commandments embroidered on the front in gold. Circuit Judge Ashley McKathan showed up Monday at his Covington County courtroom in southern Alabama wearing the robe. McKathan told The Associated Press that he believes the Ten Commandments represent the truth “and you can’t divorce the law from the truth. … The Ten Commandments can help a judge know the difference between right and wrong.”

A Texas school district was sued Wednesday for censorship after a third-grade student was prohibited from distributing candy canes with religious messages.

Don’t let the wing-nuts erode our basic liberties. Let’s keep the ones those whack-job Founding Fathers guaranteed us in the Bill Of Rights. When you see something that is contrary to these freedoms, exercise the one given you in the First Amendment and speak out!



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