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Delegate Filing Deadline for Dem Convention

Written by: Monica Smith on Nov 30, 2007 2:00 PM EST

Linked to groups: Rockingham/Strafford DFA

As you know, the deadline for filing to be a delegate to the
Democratic National Convention is fast approaching (5 PM, December
5th). The declaration has to be on paper and either mailed or hand
delivered to the offices of the Democratic party in Concord. at 2 1/2
Beacon Street. To simplify matters, I have copied out the pdf and am
including the two page form as a text file which you should be able to
print out. The original is here
http://nhdp.org/uploads/Declaration%20of%20Candidacy.pdf
Please keep in mind that, in addition to helping select the next
President, delegates (three women and four men from District One, four
women and three men from District Two) will help decide how future
elections and conventions are run. It's important that we
progressives be represented and that we all become familiar with how
the process works. Even if you don't plan to be a delegate, plan to
attend a caucus for one of the candidates on December 15. I will send
out addresses of meeting places later.


DECLARATION OF CANDIDACY
FOR PLEDGED PARTY LEADER AND ELECTED OFFICIAL DELEGATE
THE UNDERSIGNED,_______________________________, of
_____________________, New Hampshire, hereby declares my candidacy for
Democratic Party Pledged Party Leader and Elected Official Delegate
for the
______________________________Congressional District.
I hereby pledge my support for
___________________________candidate for
President of the United States (the "Candidate"), and hereby pledge to
cast my vote in
all good conscience to reflect the sentiments of those who elect me if
I am selected as a
delegate.
I further certify that I am a registered Democrat, qualified to
vote in the State of
New Hampshire.
Dated:
_______________________________

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

APPENDIX TO DECLARATION OF CANDIDATE
Please provide your contact information:
Name:
Sex (circle): Male Female
Phone Number (home)
Phone Number (work)
Phone Number (cell)
E-Mail Address:
In order to assist us in meeting our affirmative action goals, please
check below if you
are a member of any of the following communities:
African American __
Hispanic __
Native American __
Asian/Pacific American __
Senior (65 and older) __
Youth (18-24) __
Disabled __
Gay/ Lesbian/ Transgender __
Please list any elected offices (state, county or local) that you
hold:
___________________________________
___________________________________
___________________________________
___________________________________












Tags:
Location: Concord, NH 03301

Discuss
 

Reply

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By * rdorgan on Dec 1, 2007 9:53 PM EST

Who's on first ?

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By * rdorgan on Dec 1, 2007 9:53 PM EST

Howard

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By rae hart on Dec 1, 2007 10:31 PM EST
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By rae hart on Dec 1, 2007 10:33 PM EST
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By mprov on Dec 1, 2007 10:56 PM EST

if you look at the 2nd tier candidates in the poll, none of them are viable. so, honest bet, richardson goes to hill. the others combined don't make a challenge when added to either john or obama???

then consider the margin of error, which was no where to be found on the polling data??? 5 points? at least?

polls/stuff like this is misleading and probably bunk besides!!!

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By Linda on Dec 1, 2007 11:27 PM EST



The Al Gore/Arnold Schwarzneggar global warming conference will be held on December 19th.

The conference will also be hosted by Senator John McCain.

We're awaiting more details, but at least we have a date.

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By LZ XRAY on Dec 1, 2007 11:17 PM EST

Sunni bloc boycotts Iraq parliament after crackdown on leader Sat Dec 1, 7:12 AM ET

BAGHDAD (AFP) - Iraq's main Sunni bloc pulled out of parliament on Saturday in protest at a crackdown on their leader Adnan al-Dulaimi, throwing the country's political process into new turmoil.

"We announce our boycott of the parliament until Adnan al-Dulaimi returns to the assembly today or tomorrow," Abdul Karim al-Samarraie of the National Concord Front said in parliament.

---

The political QUAGMIRE continues...an awfully lot of American taxpayer money (12 BILLION dollars a month) is being flushed down the can in Iraq that could be used to assist in expanding healthcare coverage to MILLIONS of American children.

I thought the minimal surge was going to provide the Iraqi government with the necessary space to negotiate and bring about political reconciliation. Ironically, however, the increased presence has had the opposite effect of what it was intended to provide. Rather than promoting better cooperation among the sectarian parties, it has further divided them.

Such is the nature of QUAGMIRES.....

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By Linda on Dec 1, 2007 11:36 PM EST

Now, those are some icicles  hanging on those balls.

 

...now, if someone tells me those are cherries.......

don't we have another problem of cherries on a tree in December? 

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By mprov on Dec 1, 2007 11:29 PM EST

ok, no gore...i'm left to pick/choose and move forward. i'm going to work for the election of john edwards. i have heard and realize the truths contained in sitka's and other's statements about edwards, but i think that he is saying the right stuff of all the candidates, and, unfortunately, the only way to know the truth is to elect him. the other candidates, for me, don't get there. i like dodd. obama's ok. the rest, for me, well, no there there. ok. i just wanted to be completely open about this and tell all my dfa friends where i've landed.

criticism is welcome. slamming is not.

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By roger rankin on Dec 1, 2007 11:33 PM EST

3882

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By mprov on Dec 1, 2007 11:34 PM EST

oh, and, btw, feet-fire is the thought process going forward. no one who gets support or gets elected is free of the feet-fire scenario. WE have to be the fire for those feet. WE have to hold them accountable. without us, they'll do as they want.

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By mprov on Dec 1, 2007 11:39 PM EST

roger, it's going to be 4,000 soon. i fear for my brothers and sisters in harm's way. whose face will fate choose? i don't want to be any part of the prediction. troops home now! all troops! no permanent bases, no residual troops for any reason!!!!

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By Linda on Dec 1, 2007 11:55 PM EST

8.  :(  a tough choice isn't it.?   There isn't a stand out winner.  It's a choice of which one has at least a bit more spice than the rest of these bland flavor choices.

 Folks are not very excited by this.  So sad...and scary.

 

...I remain hopefull that some folks wake up for the better the Dem party, 

our country and planet.

 

....this path these folks want to take us on will not lead us to where we need to be:(   

 

Time for

a COOL

change,

GORE

2008 

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By Sitka on Dec 1, 2007 11:47 PM EST

but i think that he is saying the right stuff of all the candidates, and, unfortunately, the only way to know the truth is to elect him.

 

It's your money to gamble. 

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By mprov on Dec 1, 2007 11:47 PM EST

linda, you know i'm for gore, but he isn't running. isn't that the truth? we're left with those who are running, and i've decided to back edwards. i hope that you can see the logic behind my stance. if not, well, we can still be friends, right....

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By Sitka on Dec 1, 2007 11:49 PM EST

WE have to be the fire for those feet. WE have to hold them accountable. without us, they'll do as they want.

That doesn't hold  water when you're willing to set Edwards' record aside. Because what are politicians to be held accountable FOR if not their actions while in office?

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By Linda on Dec 2, 2007 12:04 AM EST
CARACAS, Venezuela (CNN) -- A Colombian rebel group holding hostages had agreed to release some of them by the end of the year, but Colombian President Alvaro Uribe has derailed those plans, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez told reporters Saturday.

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez delivers a speech during a news conference in Caracas Saturday.

Chavez, who has been mediating with the rebels, said a commander of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) had agreed to release the first group by Christmas.

The captives include a Colombian senator and three American contractors.

At a wide-ranging news conference in Caracas, Chavez accused Uribe of being a liar and accused the Colombian government of working with the United States -- another frequent Chavez target -- to block the hostages' release.

The 53-year-old Venezuelan president was barred by election rules from discussing Sunday's referendum on constitutional changes that would abolish presidential term limits and move the country toward institutionalized socialism.

He said Friday that if the referendum passes and "the Venezuelan oligarchy, playing the [U.S.] empire's game, comes with their little stories of fraud," then he will order oil shipments to the United States halted first thing Monday.

He expanded that threat Saturday, saying he would halt oil exports worldwide if Venezuela is invaded or if attempts are made to oust him.
http://www.cnn.com/2007/WORLD/americas/12/01/venezuela.chavez/index.html
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By Linda on Dec 2, 2007 12:06 AM EST

14. mprov, Oh yes, I agree.  Did I say something wrong?  i agreed, these are the choices folks have...............CURENTLY   :)

 

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By mprov on Dec 1, 2007 11:57 PM EST

"That doesn't hold water when you're willing to set Edwards' record aside. Because what are politicians to be held accountable FOR if not their actions while in office?""

absolutely right, sitka.

i'm not setting his record aside, but instead hoping that his current bi-line is the true john. i think its a matter of something to loose or not. john and elizabeth don't have anything to loose. hill and obama do....

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By Linda on Dec 2, 2007 12:09 AM EST

...it's just not real choices, imo

Un problemo grande para mi.  No se. 

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By mprov on Dec 2, 2007 12:01 AM EST

no, linda, you and are together on this. i completely agree!!!!

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By Sitka on Dec 2, 2007 12:30 AM EST

john and elizabeth don't have anything to loose. hill and obama do....

That's been said here before. I didn't get it then either.

One of the things I find all Edwards' supporters have in common is the need to rationalize their support around his record, which they can't support.

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By Linda on Dec 2, 2007 12:42 AM EST

mprov, I'm just gonna' have to do what Al asked in his last  RS interview.  I'll keep my" energy stored to have a go at it then" when ever that future date comes.

 

...and it's staying in that lock box that only HE HAS A KEY TO  :)

 

 

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By Sitka on Dec 2, 2007 12:32 AM EST

I'll keep my" energy stored to have a go at it then" when ever that future date comes.

I don't feel the need to join a campaign just for the sake of it. 

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By Sitka on Dec 2, 2007 12:35 AM EST

i'm not setting his record aside, but instead hoping that his current bi-line is the true john.

You have to believe that his record is insincere and set it it aside in order to believe he is sincere now. 

 

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By Linda on Dec 2, 2007 12:56 AM EST

I would have to agree, out of the the "3 front runners", Edwards would be the only possibility, but that doesn't really help me for final decisions.



Hillary's record, we all know. Funny, at least she's not trying to pretend about it, she doesn't lie and try to tell us she's somethingn she not. She does deserve some kudos for that. Obama's record is even more disturbing, not even holding up his US Senate Campaign promises and all those other votes from Condi to bankruptcy amendments and liquified Coal. Worse for me is that he claims opposite of his votes and that is truly troubling that he tries to pretend he's something he's not. And showing to vote for his donors, from Exelon and Nukes to Coal and his financial backers that he voted for the Bankruptcy amendments. And that he has only been in the US Senate 2 years before running, with this record, I think is a nightmare scenario.

Then Dodd. He seems like a nice man, but his record is all the same as Lieberman. Including Alito.

OY VEY!

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By Sitka on Dec 2, 2007 12:50 AM EST

I would have to agree, out of the the "3 front runners", Edwards would be the only possibility

That's why I think it best to consider them all regardless of their polling and vote for the one whose rhetoric and record best matches my values. 

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By Sitka on Dec 2, 2007 12:57 AM EST

But I would like to see just one Edwardian say, "I LIKE his Senate record and don't care that it no longer matches up with what he's saying now!"

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By floridagal . on Dec 2, 2007 1:05 AM EST

Good interview of Howard Dean at C-Span during intermission of the DNC meeting.

http://www.c-span.org/rss/video.asp?MediaID=33625

Hover your mouse over the video to get the 2x mode or full screen.   About 5 minutes.

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By Linda on Dec 2, 2007 1:21 AM EST

28. Well, don't look my way. LOL


Twas fun. Nite folks.

Be well.

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By Sitka on Dec 2, 2007 1:16 AM EST

Hillary's record, we all know.

If so, then we also know the records of Edwards, Biden, and Dodd since they are virtually identical.

When I narrow it to that lineup, I might as well vote for the first woman president.

And since becoming a senator, Obama is almost another clone of them except that he's skipped a lot of the telling votes in order to claim plausible deniability.

Richardson doesn't have the damning Senate record, but he's DLCer who supported invading Iraq. That's no-go  enough for me.

Kucinich's only problem with me with regard to record is that he threw his support to the WarDem Edwards in 2004, so I won't go out on limb and praise him.

Gravel? His boasting about the Alaska pipeline and call for a regressive sales tax have tainted him for me.

My primary is on Feb. 5, so I'll tell everyone how I vote then. 

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By Sitka on Dec 2, 2007 1:21 AM EST

My primary is on Feb. 5, so I'll tell everyone how I vote then.

And my vote will not be influenced by who wins previously. I will not be herded. 

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By Linda on Dec 2, 2007 1:40 AM EST

30.....still here, taking a break from dishes. YEP, what a quandary, huh?

????????

some how, something tells me if I don't write Al Gore, I should just go with Kucinich.


But even that leaves me.............

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By Sitka on Dec 2, 2007 2:41 AM EST

some how, something tells me if I don't write Al Gore, I should just go with Kucinich.

Sometimes it's a tough call to do what's best. That's why I'll make no decision this time around until I need to. 

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By Tom Bearse on Dec 2, 2007 4:47 AM EST

Mark wrote "ok, no gore...i'm left to pick/choose and move forward. i'm going to work for the election of john edwards."

Does your decision have anything to do with whether Edwards has a shot at winning?

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By JudyforDean on Dec 2, 2007 5:23 AM EST

Good morning, BFA!

**********
Just like to say here that I support and admire all here who are working for their Dem candidates of choice, because they are DOING something that they believe in. And it is the doing that will make the difference.

I'm like Linda, and mprov, and LOTS of others who really believe that Al would be unquestioningly the best option. So long as he is not running, I really cannot get 100% behind anyone now running in the primaries and really keep hoping against hope that some kind of miracle will happen. It's probably a fantasy but just perhaps this one might come true.

Of the top three, however, I lean Edwards for many of the reasons that mprov stated. I would probably have used Sitka's reasoning for Hill, but she lost me with her Kyl-Lieberman vote. There's a lot of hope generated with Obama, but I've seen little real there there. Sorry, Obama fans, that's just me.

Of those not currently in the top three, I like Dodd the best because of the whole package. He has the same baggage as Edwards and Hill with his Iraq vote, but he also has seen the error of his ways, has found his stride and is letting Chris be Chris instead of a calculating politican. Of all of those running, as a former Peace Corps Volunteer, he has seen what it is like to work with other cultures at the grassroots level and how our foreign policy can literally mean life or death in their daily lives.

And thanks to all the good people like Monica for all that they do!

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By JudyforDean on Dec 2, 2007 5:26 AM EST

After the billions of USD poured into the black hole of Iraq, this prospect illustrates the total failure of putzCo there more than anything else.

The miracle is that it has taken this long to come.

====================
Cholera crisis hits Baghdad
Iraqi capital fears an epidemic if stricken sewerage system collapses as the rainy season arrives
David Smith
Sunday December 2, 2007
Observer

Baghdad is facing a 'catastrophe' with cases of cholera rising sharply in the past three weeks to more than 100, strengthening fears that poor sanitation and the imminent rainy season could create an epidemic.

The disease - spread by bacteria in contaminated water, which can result in rapid dehydration and death - threatens to blunt growing optimism in the Iraqi capital after a recent downturn in violence. Two boys in an orphanage have died and six other children were diagnosed with the disease, according to the Iraqi government. 'We have a catastrophe in Baghdad,' an official said.

The United Nations Children's Fund (Unicef) said 101 cases had been recorded in the city, making up 79 per cent of all new cases in Iraq. It added that no single source for the upsurge had been identified, but the main Shia enclave of Sadr City was among the areas hardest hit.

As Iraq's rainy season nears, its ageing water pipes and sewerage systems, many damaged or destroyed by more than four years of war, pose a new threat to a population weary of crisis. Claire Hajaj, a spokeswoman for Unicef, said: 'Iraq's water and sanitation networks are in a critical condition. Pollution of waterways by raw sewage is perhaps the greatest environmental and public health hazard facing Iraqis - particularly children. Waterborne diarrhoea diseases kill and sicken more Iraqi children than anything except pneumonia. We estimate that only one in three Iraqi children can rely on a safe water source - with Baghdad and southern cities most affected.'

Although US forces in Baghdad have found that security is improving, on daily patrols they face complaints from residents about streets plagued by piles of household waste and fetid cesspools, often near schools and where children are playing. Captain Richard Dos Santos, attached to the 3rd squadron of the 2nd Stryker Cavalry Regiment, said that in the al-Hadar area of south Baghdad sewage pumps were only 30 to 40 per cent operational. 'There is sewage near schools and there is an increased threat of cholera and flu in winter when resistance is low,' he said.

The UN has reported 22 deaths from cholera this year, and 4,569 laboratory-confirmed cases, almost exclusively in northern Iraq where it was first detected in Kirkuk in August. It has now spread to half of the country's 18 provinces, but anxiety is focused on Baghdad.

[...]
http://observer.guardian.co.uk/print/0,,...

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By Monica Smith on Dec 2, 2007 5:40 AM EST

Good morning, everybody

Woke up thinking about why I referred to Barack Obama as "presentable" yesterday and then contrasted him with Jess Jackson, who's presidential.  What I've decided is that it comes down to my being comfortable about saying "I'd like to present Barack Obama to you," and realizing that he's not what used to be called "seasoned."  In his case, I think it's that he's not experienced any real disappointment or failure.  And, in that sense, he's very representative of the American Dream--it's what Americans wish life were like, but know it isn't.  

Anyway, I think Americans could be proud to present Barack Obama as the face of America to the world.  There are no Republicans in the field about whom that can be said.  

I certainly couldn't/wouldn't  say it about Bush or Cheney or Rice or  a host of other people who are an embarrassment.  That they hold the positions they hold is shameful.

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By JudyforDean on Dec 2, 2007 5:33 AM EST

The EU is seriouslz looking towards development of renewable energy sources. If this idea works, it would be beneficial for all concerned ... and most of all for the globe.

But under putzCo, whose souls were sold to their oil & gas friends from the beginning, we are doomed to grub about and battle for the last bits of fossil fuels.

==================
How Africa's desert sun can bring Europe power
A £5bn solar power plan, backed by a Jordanian prince, could provide the EU with a sixth of its electricity needs - and cut carbon emissions
Robin McKie, science editor The Observer Sunday December 2 2007

Europe is considering plans to spend more than £5bn on a string of giant solar power stations along the Mediterranean desert shores of northern Africa and the Middle East.

More than a hundred of the generators, each fitted with thousands of huge mirrors, would generate electricity to be transmitted by undersea cable to Europe and then distributed across the continent to European Union member nations, including Britain.

Billions of watts of power could be generated this way, enough to provide Europe with a sixth of its electricity needs and to allow it to make significant cuts in its carbon emissions. At the same time, the stations would be used as desalination plants to provide desert countries with desperately needed supplies of fresh water.

Last week Prince Hassan bin Talal of Jordan presented details of the scheme - named Desertec - to the European Parliament. 'Countries with deserts, countries with high energy demand, and countries with technology competence must co-operate,' he told MEPs.

[...]
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/20...

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By JudyforDean on Dec 2, 2007 5:38 AM EST

Monica Smith
Sun, 12/02/07
5:40 am

[...]
Anyway, I think Americans could be proud to present Barack Obama as the face of America to the world. There are no Republicans in the field about whom that can be said.

[...]

I absolutely concur with your thoughts, Monica, although as also noted above, I currently do not lean Obama.

***************
On a whole different topic, Carla del Ponte is Swiss and I believe that the Swiss have good reason to be proud of her tenure at the ICC.

===============
The pride and passion of a manhunter
Crusading UN war crimes prosecutor Carla Del Ponte is about to end an eight-year mission that has convicted 53 killers. In this exclusive interview with Ed Vulliamy in The Hague, she looks back at her triumphs and failures
Ed Vulliamy
Sunday December 2, 2007
Observer

She is compact, with a shock of white hair and darting eyes that give more than a hint of the passions within the wrapping of the practice of law and its dry lexicon.

Carla Del Ponte, the world's most powerful criminal lawyer, has been chief prosecutor of the international criminal tribunals for the former Yugoslavia and Rwanda for eight epic years. A week tomorrow she gives her last report to the United Nations Security Council and leaves The Hague on New Year's Eve.

In her first valedictory interview, she told The Observer of the bittersweetness of the tribunal's successes and failures to conclude: 'For me, it started with the victims, continued for the victims and it ends with them. That is what I have to tell myself - if we have established the record of what happened to the victims, then we have achieved something'.

Del Ponte is hardly a modest or retiring woman, but on her desk, by way of salt in her own wound, lies an adulatory pennant showing the Bosnian Serb general Ratko Mladic, with its sadistic squint. This is the man - along with political counterpart Radovan Karadzic, the Bosnian Serb leader - whose continued freedom, 12 years after they were indicted for genocide, is a thorn in Del Ponte's side. Alongside that of the late Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic, their pictures hang on her office walls and taunt her. 'To one side, I can look at everything this tribunal has done, to establish that these crimes were committed and give voice to the victims. Then I look the other way and have Karadzic and Mladic, wanted for ordering those very crimes and for genocide at Srebrenica, still at large after 12 years of indictment and my eight years here. Then I feel terrible disappointment'.

There are those who see the delivery of Karadzic and Mladic to The Hague as the litmus test of the tribunal's cogency, especially as its biggest catch - Milosevic, who unleashed the killing - cheated justice by dying on trial. But this is churlish. The tribunal - the first of its kind since Nuremberg - has convicted 53 people, both masterminds and lowly perpetrators of horrendous crimes committed during the violence that broke up Yugoslavia. The man who ran the Srebrenica massacre, General Radislav Krstic, was convicted of genocide, reduced on appeal to aiding and abetting genocide. The Srebrenica case was an end piece to years of other criminal violence in Bosnia, much of it preventable by an international community which established the tribunal as an act of contrition.

[...]
http://observer.guardian.co.uk/print/0,,...

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By Monica Smith on Dec 2, 2007 5:51 AM EST

BTW, it seems they're really scraping the bottom of the barrel for posts.  The delegate selection deadline obviously only applies to new hampshire and people need to consult their state parties to get the local schedule.  I'm not aware that this part of the process was ever well publicized.  In Florida, btw, the county democratic executive committees are much more formalized and active than in New Hampshire.  Members of the committee were regularly on the ballot for each precinct and the slots (we had four people in out voting precinct) were allocated according to gender. 

None of which is to suggest that the executive committees actually had any power.  I introduced a motion of censure once against our State Representative who'd agreed to the transfer of the city's airport to an "independent" authority whose members would be appointed by the governor as an abuse of power.  That didn't go anywhere.  But, you can see that over twenty years ago, I was concerned with the haphazard allocation of public assets to private interests.  The airport, btw, is still languishing.  Compared to a place like Orlando, north-central Florida doesn't look profitable. 

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By JudyforDean on Dec 2, 2007 5:40 AM EST

Yikes, the blog is doing it again ... my last was supposed to follow Monica's.

*************
I also misspoke in my last. Carla Del Ponte was at the UN War Crimes Tribunal, not at the ICC.

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By JudyforDean on Dec 2, 2007 5:43 AM EST

Must leave for a bit. Will leave you to mull over this one in the meantime.

=================
Turkey attacks Kurdish rebels
Associated Press
Sunday December 2, 2007
Observer

Turkish armed forces fired on a group of between 50 and 60 Kurdish rebels inside Iraq yesterday, inflicting what they called 'significant losses'. The military did not say whether its troops had crossed the border into Iraq.

On Friday Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said his government had authorised its army to launch a cross-border offensive against Kurdish rebels in northern Iraq at any time.

The military said the attack on guerrillas of the Kurdistan Workers' Party, or PKK, happened 'inside Iraqi borders' south-east of Cukurca, a Turkish border town in Hakkari province. Hakkari, where rebels are active, shares a border with Iran as well as Iraq.

The US is sharing intelligence on the Kurdish insurgents with Turkey, but the Turkish army did not say whether it conducted yesterday's operation with American help.

http://observer.guardian.co.uk/print/0,,...

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By Monica Smith on Dec 2, 2007 5:57 AM EST

Hi, Judy.  Funny you should highlight the failure of the prosecutor at the Hague.  It's just that kind of failure that Obama lacks.  Not that it's something anyone wants.  But, it's almost inevitable if one is struggling for the right, rather then one's own interest or convenience.

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By Monica Smith on Dec 2, 2007 6:01 AM EST

42.  Turkey has been losing patience for four years.  Their argument that if the U.S. is in charge of security it should be in charge is legitimate.  If "securing the borders" means anything, it should mean preventing armed groups from crossing and waging assaults, on either side.

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By Phil Specht on Dec 2, 2007 6:14 AM EST

If so, then we also know the records of Edwards, Biden, and Dodd since they are virtually identical.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

inflexibility is the hallmark of Bush, and only Hillary has refused to recognize her war vote as a mistake, and only Hillary voted for the Iran War authorization vote

but ignore any reality you want if your mind is made up 

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By Phil Specht on Dec 2, 2007 6:24 AM EST

 And, in that sense, he's very representative of the American Dream--it's what Americans wish life were like, but know it isn't.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The fact that Edwards has experienced the personal challenges of the death of a child and the health struggles of his wife balances I think his living the American dream. Biden too. But Obama has had to overcome the subliminal slights of racism all his life and that does season him in a unique way like Clinton or Richardson as well.

I think we have an outstanding field in many respects and they vary pretty widely in their politcs which makes for a choice.

Kucinich's life history often is found in those that don't vote. but i don't doubt he would remember if elected

but the words they run on matter too because that is the bar we hold them too in office

I still wish as a group they would discover defense of the Constitution and get behind Dodd on that issue. Equality under the law is where that distinction you make shows up. ordinary people don't stand a chance when that is abandoned

Sharon_christmas_angel_119_tinythumb

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By Phil Specht on Dec 2, 2007 6:27 AM EST

Members of the committee were regularly on the ballot for each precinct and the slots (we had four people in out voting precinct) were allocated according to gender. 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

They have legal responsibilities in Iowa and the caucus purpose that is in our Constitution is for that, the Presidential preference division of the house was added in the reform surge of 72.

We elect our delegates at our District Convention in April.

~~~~~~~~

we got dumped on with seven inches of snow for me to move this morning, bbl

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By Monica Smith on Dec 2, 2007 7:39 AM EST

Hi, Phil.  I was just thinking this morning, after a couple of days of really hard freezes that it would be better if we had a blanket of snow.  This way the frost will get down low.  Our first freeze was late (sometimes it comes as early as Sept 8th), but the last few days it's been hard (17 degrees over night and not over 20 during the day).

 

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By * rdorgan on Dec 2, 2007 8:05 AM EST
4.


rae hart
Sat, 12/01/07
10:33 pm

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rae hart -

Thanks for sharing that Frank Rich op-ed piece about Obama.

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By * rdorgan on Dec 2, 2007 8:08 AM EST

40.

...

Anyway, I think Americans could be proud to present Barack Obama as the face of America to the world.  There are no Republicans in the field about whom that can be said.

...

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Monica -

Thanks for that comment.

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By JudyforDean on Dec 2, 2007 8:50 AM EST

Back for a few minutes.

More about the tragic situation that is Iraq.

=================
December 2, 2007
Nonstop Theft and Bribery Are Staggering Iraq
By DAMIEN CAVE

BAGHDAD, Dec. 1 — Jobless men pay $500 bribes to join the police. Families build houses illegally on government land, carwashes steal water from public pipes, and nearly everything the government buys or sells can now be found on the black market.

Painkillers for cancer (from the Ministry of Health) cost $80 for a few capsules; electricity meters (from the Ministry of Electricity) go for $200 each, and even third-grade textbooks (stolen from the Ministry of Education) must be bought at bookstores for three times what schools once charged.

“Everyone is stealing from the state,” said Adel Adel al-Subihawi, a prominent Shiite tribal leader in Sadr City, throwing up his hands in disgust. “It’s a very large meal, and everyone wants to eat.”

Corruption and theft are not new to Iraq, and government officials have promised to address the problem. But as Iraqis and American officials assess the effects of this year’s American troop increase, there is a growing sense that, even as security has improved, Iraq has slipped to new depths of lawlessness.

One recent independent analysis ranked Iraq the third most corrupt country in the world. Of 180 countries surveyed, only Somalia and Myanmar were worse, according to Transparency International, a Berlin-based group that publishes the index annually.

And the extent of the theft is staggering. Some American officials estimate that as much as a third of what they spend on Iraqi contracts and grants ends up unaccounted for or stolen, with a portion going to Shiite or Sunni militias. In addition, Iraq’s top anticorruption official estimated this fall — before resigning and fleeing the country after 31 of his agency’s employees were killed over a three-year period — that $18 billion in Iraqi government money had been lost to various stealing schemes since 2004.

[...]
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/02/world/...

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By JudyforDean on Dec 2, 2007 8:53 AM EST

And Phil, I'm sending lots of ♥ ♥ and warm thoughts Iowa's way, as well as other areas in the Upper Midwest.

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3 dead as winter storm disrupts highways, airports

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) -- Forecasters predicted freezing rain and snow flurries Sunday in Iowa, a day after snow and ice plastered the Midwest, disrupting airport and highway traffic and leaving at least three people dead.

Hundreds of flights were canceled at airports in Des Moines, Chicago and Milwaukee on Saturday, with officials closing Des Moines International Airport for several hours after a United Airlines plane slid off a taxiway as it headed to a runway for a flight to Chicago's O'Hare. None of the 44 passengers was injured and the airport reopened by mid-afternoon.

At Dane County Regional Airport in Madison, Wisconsin, an incoming Mesa Airlines regional jet flying for United Express slid off the pavement after failing to make a turn onto a taxiway, but no injuries were reported among the 25 passengers.

The National Weather Service had posted winter storm and ice warnings across parts of Nebraska, Iowa, Wisconsin, the eastern Dakotas, Illinois and northern Michigan, but many of the warnings were lifted later in the day. In Minnesota, Duluth received nearly 8 inches of snow.

[...]
http://edition.cnn.com/2007/US/12/02/win...

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By Michael Ellis on Dec 2, 2007 9:09 AM EST

Mccain gets the endorsement of the Manchester Union Leader..........I tell ya, Mcain is gonna come out of nowhere in this thing.............look for a Mccain/Huckabee ticket.....................

And the Democrats.................well, if history repeats itself in the upside down world of elections in this country, they will not beat that ticket............long shot?  Edwards/Obama................

Only election Ive ever been wrong in?  92.......................

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By * rdorgan on Dec 2, 2007 9:01 AM EST

http://news.yahoo.com/photo/071130/photos_wl_africa_afp/3b152853cc21e56b4b604486b0812829;_ylt=AgdZwVjXYUfROT6mH2UWLfKZsdEF

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AFP/File - Fri Nov 30, 3:05 PM ET

Residents walk in the center of Freetown. Sierra Leone will press ahead to sign accords to liberalise trade with the European Union that have been heavily criticised by anti-poverty lobby groups, a minister said on Friday.(AFP/File/Issouf Sanogo)
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By * rdorgan on Dec 2, 2007 9:04 AM EST

http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/L30457322.htm

INTERVIEW-Help S.Leone's child soldiers more, UN judge says30 Nov 2007 11:16:14 GMTSource: ReutersBy Peter Murphy ABIDJAN, Nov 30 (Reuters) - A judge on Sierra Leone's war crimes court has appealed to foreign donors to fund projects to teach a trade to thousands of former child soldiers to bring them back into society. The West African state is slowly rebuilding after a civil war from 1991 to 2002 in which thousands of children were kidnapped, drugged and forced to fight for rival rebel groups. Many killed civilians or hacked off limbs. A disarmament and reinsertion programme for ex-fighters ended several years ago, but Renate Winter, an Austrian judge at Sierra Leone's U.N.-backed Special Court, said more was needed. "It's wrong for donors to just demobilise (combatants) then stop. You've only done half the job. You have to give them not only training but also a job," she told Reuters in an interview late on Thursday....
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By JudyforDean on Dec 2, 2007 9:13 AM EST

If you haven't already read this book, please plan to do so. Hat tip to DU.

==================
"Shock Doctrine" Shock

I'm just over 90 pages into Naomi Klein's "Shock Doctrine" and I'm already in need of a mental health break. As compelling a must-read as the book is, it's also overwhelming. I'm in the section now about the University of Chicago/Friedman disciples interventions in Latin America - it's been a shocking bit of education for me. It will also cause you to think all kinds of unsettling thoughts.
This little section, focused on Pinochet's overthrow and assasination of Allende, encouraged by the "Chicago Boys," I find particularly horrifying:

"For the Chicago Boys, September 11 (1973) was a day of giddy anticipation and deadline adrenaline. Sergio de Castro had been working down to the wire with his contract in the navy, getting the final sections of "The Brick" approved page by page. Now, on the day of the coup, several Chicago Boys were camped out at the printing presses of the right-wing El Mercurio newspaper. As shots were being fired in the streets outside, they frantically tried to get the document printed in time for the junta's first day on the job. ......
"The proposals in the final document bore a striking resemblance to those found in Milton Friedman's "Capitalism and Freedom": privatization, deregulation and cuts to spending - the free-market trinity. Chile's U.S.-trained economists had tried to introduce these ideas peacefully, within the confines of a democratic debate, but they had been overwhelmingly rejected. Now the Chicago Boys and their plans were back, in a climate distinctly more conducive to their radical vision. In this new era, no one besides a handful of men in uniform needed to agree with them."

And all of that relates to the book's thesis:

The corporatist alliance is in the midst of conquering its final frontiers: the closed oil economies of the Arab World, and sectors of Western economies that have long been protected from profit making - including responding to disasters and raising armies. Since there is not even the veneer of seeking public consent to privatize such essential functions, either at home or abroad, escalating levels of violence and even larger disasters are required in order to reach the goal. Yet because the decisive role played by shocks and crises has been so effectively purged from the official record of the rise of the free market, the extreme tactics on display in Iraq and New Orleans are often mistaken for the unique incompetence or cronyism of the Bush White House. In fact, Bush's exploits merely represent the monstrously violent and creative culmination of a fifty-year campaign for total corporate liberation.

[...]
http://www.democraticunderground.com/dis...

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By JudyforDean on Dec 2, 2007 9:20 AM EST

Just what are putzCo planning now ... or is this just a back-door way to bullying Congress into voting more funds for the black hole of Iraq?

===================
White House seeks to slash anti-terror funds
Homeland Security grants may be cut by more than half, documents show

WASHINGTON - The Bush administration intends to slash counterterrorism funding for police, firefighters and rescue departments across the country by more than half next year, according to budget documents obtained by The Associated Press.

The Homeland Security Department has given $23 billion to states and local communities to fight terrorism since the Sept. 11 attacks, but the administration is not convinced that the money has been well spent and thinks the nation’s highest-risk cities have largely satisfied their security needs.

[...]
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/22046131

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By * rdorgan on Dec 2, 2007 9:27 AM EST

new Front thread

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By JudyforDean on Dec 2, 2007 9:28 AM EST

This is long, especially the Tutu interview, but it's a VERY worthwhile read.

And that's all for now.

======================
While Bush Mangles Names & Ducks Out Early on Phony Peace Conference, Tutu Manifests the Power of the Prophetic Tradition & Speaks Old Testament Truth
By Richard Power

I do not write on the conflict between Israel and Palestine much anymore, or even speak about it in my personal life.

I have given up trying to engage in reasoned debate with friends and colleagues who willfully blind themselves to both facts and truths.

Yes, facts and truths are two different orders of knowledge.

Facts concern economic conditions, election results, definitions codified in international law, the content of UN resolutions, and the lines drawn on maps, etc.

Truths illuminate the intentions behind such facts.

In a situation in which the miserable nature of so many facts is so willfully misrepresented, it is impossible to gain acknowledgement of the few bitter truths behind them.

[...]
http://words-of-power.blogspot.com/2007/...

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By Monica Smith on Dec 2, 2007 11:12 AM EST

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xVCoDVpxcuQ

 

JC must be ROFLMAOing up there in heaven. 

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