Republican Smears Push Some Too Far

I first read this op/ed piece in an email forwarded to me by a friend, and as you should be with any such content, I was skeptical. I am not familiar with Frank Schaeffer, but email is a favorite means for sharing falsely attributed writings of all sorts. But later I stumbled onto the same piece online on the Dallas Morning News web site, and I found it a worthy enough read to share. It’s nice to know readers in Dallas are reading about Mr. Schaeffer’s epiphany, I just hope it’s being read by Virginia voters as well.

Frank Schaeffer: I should be supporting Allen. Instead, I’m leaving the party.
The Dallas Morning News, 11/1/06

ActBlue in Virginia

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I need your help! Virginia needs your help! America needs your help! Election Day is looming large, and if you’re not furious about what George Bush and his rubber-stamp GOP Congress have done to America, then you’re not paying attention (or stupid… better to claim you weren’t paying attention). The time to wake up and act is now! We may be stuck with George until 2009, but we don’t need to let him continue thinking he’s a King and not a President. Help me help these candidates and parties, and make a difference today. Make a contribution today. Please.

Thank you.

Two Ads

Here’s two ads for Virginia related campaigns that I find to be particularly effective.

In Virginia’s 2nd District, Freshman Republican Thelma Drake is in a tough race to keep her seat. This ad, from Majority Action, puts a spotlight on Drake’s vote against stem cell research.

Stem Cells – Drake

Virginia is considering legislation to write discrimination into our State Constitution by banning same-sex marriage. This ad from The Commonwealth Coalition evokes one of Virginia’s founding fathers in making their argument in opposition.

Burning

The Way of the Whigs

An Iraq war that has cost us nearly half trillion dollars—and the good will of the world—might not have done it. Runaway federal spending that allowed the national debt to reach $8.5 trillion might not have done it. George Bush’s low approval ratings, the lack of comprehensive immigration reform, the historical pattern of an anti-incumbent “six-year itch” in presidencies, the cascade of stories about administration ineptitude and dissembling and congressional financial and lobbying corruption—none of these issues seemed destined to end the Republicans’ 12-year reign in Congress.

Then came the Foley Scandal. If the Democrats can’t take the Hill now, they deserve to go the way of the Whigs.

Howard Fineman, It Takes a Sex Scandal
Newsweek, 10/3/06

If, after the Foley episode — a maraschino cherry atop the Democrats’ delectable sundae of Republican miseries — the Democrats cannot gain 13 seats, they should go into another line of work.

George Will, What Goeth Before the Fall
The Washington Post, 10/5/06

What line of work did most former Whigs go into? Wikipedia says that most quit politics or switched parties when their own party reached met it’s demise in the 1850s.

I’m not ready to join the Whigs yet, but I’ve been tempered enough by seeing my party snatch defeat (or have victory stolen) in the face of what looked like a sure win. And so I try not to let comments like those above get me too carried away with optimism over the coming elections. And yet, given how badly George Bush is fucking up our country, with the Republican Congress as his willing accomplices, anything less than a major Democratic victory next month will certainly leave me feeling ready to join the Whigs, wherever it is that they went.

(OK, you might point out that many went to the Republican Party. In 1860, I may have as well. But not in 2006 or anytime in this century, that I promise.)

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