One Person One Vote Died a Year Ago today

222px-Black_Ribbon.svgIn an important landmark case Reynolds v. Sims, 377 U.S. 533 (1964), the Supreme Court established one of the most significant voting rights rulings impacting our Republic since the enfranchisement of woman and the election of U.S. senators by popular vote. Both of these occurred earlier in the century.  Basically, Reynolds v Sims established the means to ensure  that the United States was a truly representative form of government.  It provided a legal way to enforce the idea that legislatures are those instruments of government elected directly by and directly as representatives of the people. Because of this, all elected officials should be elected in a free and unimpaired fashion. One Person one vote is a bedrock of our political system.

That was until one year ago today, when the Democratic Rules and Bylaws Committee declared the voters of Michigan and Florida to be one half of a person.  This decision, done in a closed room behind close doors, was done in the name of party unity and led to the famous “party unity my ass”  uttered in this very blog that led to the PUMA movement.  It led to spontaneous outrage across the country.

What began as a Democratic Party initiative to change the caucus and primary schedule to appease some special interest groups, wound up as a means to disenfranchise two states as Florida and Michigan were selectively punished for their decisions to change the dates of their primary caucuses.  While other states similarly changed their dates, these two states were singled out for retribution.  This was a stinging indictment of our entire political system for those of us that supported Hillary Clinton and were still stinging from the earlier disenfranchisement of Florida under the Bush v. Gore ruling that essentially gave us a President who mostly likely did not win the election.  Every one knows how well that worked out.

080530-vote-florida-hmed-1p.h2Here are some reports from the day.  This one is from MSNBC’s Chuck Todd called Nothing is fair about Florida and Michigan.  Here was his suggestion for the situation at the time.

Why not consider punishing the party leaders and not the voters? Couldn’t the committee take away the states’ superdelegate votes? After all, it wasn’t the voters who demanded the states break party rules, but rather the leaders of the respective state parties.

Of course, this is too logical. The likely ruling on Saturday will probably highlight the party’s inability or reluctance to punish the superdelegates. There is a challenge from a Florida superdelegate claiming the party violated its own charter by stripping the state of both pledged delegates and superdelegates. Most members of the Rules Committee I’ve talked to indicate that he may be right. Keep in mind members of the Rules committee are all superdelegates themselves.

The Golden Rule could apply: Do unto other superdelegates as you would want done unto you.

The second idea the committee should be considering but isn’t reflects everything we’ve learned throughout this long primary season.

As many have noted, census data for each state have been remarkably determinative of results since Super Tuesday. In fact, the support groups for the two candidates have been incredibly stable. Why not apply what we’ve learned about the support groups of both candidates and split the delegates accordingly?

Of course, we found out soon enough that the party leaders did have their agenda and it was to ensure that we had their Candidate.   We’re still unraveling the reasons for this travesty.  We endured sexism, misogyny, and race-baiting through out the entire election cycle.  We will be paying for this most undemocratic of decisions for years to come.   We could have had a President that supports Abortion Rights and Universal Health Care.  We could have had a President that refused to vote for FISA.  We could have had a President that wasn’t controlled by lobbyists, Wall Street Fat Cats, and was a policy wonk extraordinaire. Instead, as Ted Ralls of Common Dreams, puts it, we got this:

We expected broken promises. But the gap between the soaring expectations that accompanied Barack Obama’s inauguration and his wretched performance is the broadest such chasm in recent historical memory …From healthcare to torture to the economy to war, Obama has reneged on pledges real and implied …Obama is useless. Worse than that, he’s dangerous. Which is why, if he has any patriotism left after the thousands of meetings he has sat through with corporate contributors, blood-sucking lobbyists and corrupt politicians, he ought to step down now–before he drags us further into the abyss.

I don’t know about you, but I WILL NEVER FORGET THIS DAY OF INFAMY.puma-head

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125 Responses

  1. Me neither, Dak. In fact, I find myself talking about it to everyone I see today. It’s astonishing to me that people do not realize that the Democratic Party did not honor the principle of one person, one vote.

    As my 10 year old points out, Hillary was the Al Gore of 2008.

    Worst to me is the reapportionment of the delegation from Michigan: after the state certified the vote at 73 delegates for Hillary, 59 for uncommitted — a legal status for delegates going to the convention — the RBC assigned all 59 uncommitted delegates to Obama as well as 4 of Hillary’s 73 delegates.

    PUMA!

  2. I was outside the hotel that day, I really believed that the DNC would do the right thing, the democratic thing. I bought into the hype that the Democratic party represented the people that made up the Democratic party. I thought only Republicans cheated in elections. I was naive and I was wrong. I stopped being a Democrat that day and I have never looked back. PUMAmerica is the answer.

    • We were there too, Honora. My 2 boys and I. And later went out to dinner with some friends who were laughing about the RBC decision. Ugh. I have not forgiven them.

  3. The term ‘One Person One Vote’ died for me with Proportional Representation.

    Seriously, in today’s age – in the UNITED STATES! – how does this exist (and only for the Democratic Primary)?

    I learned so much about my party last election – and they do not represent me any more. Good Luck and Good Riddance.

  4. The whole Florida Michigan strategy was developed long before 5/31/08.

    The “5 state pledge” involved…yes…5 states, not two. once the DNC turned the other way on NH, IA, and SC (those states they expected HIM to win) there should have been no repercussions for FL and MI (those states they expected HER to win), yet there were. His withdrawal from MI was part of the plan and FL stood to be closer but still, the momentum issue was critical.

    Obama stood to lose big in both votes and momentum, something he (and those that were pushing him forward) could not afford. So create this whole charade…drag it out…clip Hillary’s momentum from winning those states…and wait till the end and see what you need to drag his ass over the finish line.

    C’mon…handing over uncommitted votes or the earned delegate votes of another candidate was a CLEAR violation of the rules. Their attempts to paint Hillary and her supporters as the sore losers was dispicable and an affront to those of us who (previously) cherished the Democratic Party as part of our personal identities.

    Remembering this makes me sick to my stomach. I guess I’m still grieving.

    • The Florida thing was even more of a travesty given that the Republicans in the state moved up the election and the Dems couldn’t do anything about it. It was obvious then, the RNC wasn’t worried about being fair. It was a backroom deal, period.

    • If Ed Schultz, Stephanie Miller, and Randi Rhodes among others in on the blogs want to know where their audience/readership went, they should remember there hatred they directed towards us.

  5. Florida, the sodomy state.
    thx for the PUMA anniversary post – the day I switched to Independent. twice is enough. I’ll never bend over for those DNC thugs again. GOP can beg for my vote. VIVA PUMA!!!
    may John “the cheating pig hypocrite” Edwards rot in hell with his phantom MI votes.

  6. The flags should be half-mast today. Seriously. This is how a Republic dies. I’ll never be a Dem again. Independent always. They can rot – and they are.

    Hillary was our real hope and change. I love my country with my whole heart. But, the crap in DC can get flushed.

    • I do not love my country with my whole heart. I am sick at heart over what is happening in and to my native land, angry, hardened, utterly disappointed, and not at all “hopeful”. The fix is in, apparently on a permanent basis. Short of genuine revolution, I think the future of this country is not something I even want to contemplate.

  7. This day marked the beginning of a revolution. The begining of Hillary supporters joining together and vowing to vote country before party, the beginning of a new group. We had made a break from the Democratic party we were no longer their faithful servants! It was like we all suddenly got Spring fever and yelled “to hell with the Democrats!” Many of us being lifelong Democrats felt liberated we were fighting for Florida & Michigan’s representation and we were fighting for Hillary – we would never back down. We would never quite be exactly the same.

    PUMA

  8. In keeping with the death of democracy:

    Breaking NEWS ….Kansas abortion clinic doctor George Tiller was shot and killed at his church this morning.

    Tiller was shot just after 10 a.m. at Reformation Lutheran Church at 7601 E. 13th, where he was a member of the congregation. Witnesses and a police source confirmed Tiller was the victim.

    No information has been released about whether a suspect is in custody.

    Tiller’s clinic was vandalized two weeks ago.

  9. Those who cannot learn from history are doomed to repeat it.”philosopher George Santayana.”

  10. I just knew I could come to the Confluence to read a commemoration of May 31, 2008, the day I will never forget. Don’t have time to say more now, but will stop by later.

    Just wanted to say thank-you to dak for this post, and to everyone here. Some things should never be forgotten, and we can honor that here without being “bitter clingers”. Memory is especially important when it is the repository of truth. Thanks for your courage and integrity.

    • i dunno, i’m beginning to embrace my inner bitter clinger as well as my bitter outer clinger … A year ago I was saying You don’t fool me! Now, I’m just saying I wasn’t fooled…

      • Oh, I’m bitter, and angry, and I won’t forget. I just reject what they mean when they call us that and tell us to get over it–that we’re useless and irrelevant. Because we’re not. The story of what happened last year is gigantic. And what we hold and carry will be necessary when the whole story, the real story is told.

        Last night I went to a NCLR (Nat’l Center for Lesbian Rights) dinner in San Francisco. There was a fair amount of B0 praise by the speakers, but it was qualified. “love you buddy, but….” They plan to hold his feet to the fire, and said so more than a few times. It gave me some relief to know that not all gay people are giving him a pass.

        Then to my great joy, a conversation began with the woman who invited us (a new friend) when I objected to the Palin bashing that was going on onstage. Turns out she was a strong Hillary supporter and likes Palin too. Of B0 she said, “he’s not our friend.” We talked about the misogyny of the campaign and clinked our glasses while almost everyone else was laughing. She was noting how the liberal bloggers are complaining about the verbal treatment of Sotomayor and have apparently forgotten how they heaped the same abuse on Hillary and Palin. I cannot tell you how happy I was to find another lesbian who saw through the hypocrisy of the election. It feels like a tiny bit of refuge.

        So while I shed a few tears last night about the state of lgbt issues, and democracy, and Hillary, and the horrible election rip-off committed by my (soon to be ex) Party, I also feel a glimmer of awakening about this selected president out there, and a growing willingness to confront and fight him.

  11. I’m in moderation. Don’t know what I said to upset Spammy.

  12. one year anniversary of the day democracy died in the U.S.A…

  13. Can’t read this post without crying.

  14. Lambert shrewdly remarked that we haven’t seen or haven’t heard from Harold Ickes since that terrible day.

    Isn’t it kinda strange?

  15. A special thank you to SMS.
    One voice spoke out and created a movement.
    Party Unity My Ass
    This rallying cry brought people from all over the country and all walks of life together.
    We may not agree on everything, but we do agree on One Person = One Vote.
    We have made some difference and are making people pay attention.

    SMS YOU ROCK THANK YOU

    WOMEN WITH INTELLIGENCE AND EXPERIENCE,MEN WHO SUPPORT THEM AND COUNTRY BEFORE PARTY ALWAYS

    PUMAS,BUBBAS,EQUALISTS AND THOSE PEOPLE RULE

    • Maybe she will check in today. I wish she would.

      Thank you for writing this, Dakinikat. We must never forget that day. It seems longer than a year ago to me.

  16. Thanks for posting this DK. Duly linked at Blue Lyon. Today marks the day I “lost my religion.”

  17. Thanks for this from me too DK. I mark it as a double anniversary for me. The day I saw Democracy die in the Democratic Party and the day I stopped being a Democrat after 43 years.

  18. I just realized that I’ve been reading all the comments but, I’m too afraid to read your post! I don’t think I can take it today. Maybe later. Maybe tomorrow.

    For such a beautiful day, it’s pretty horrible.

    • that’s okay, it was a hard one to write, i was thinking i probably couldn’t do it justice but i guess i drew the short straw to try and make some sense of it. I’m relying on the comments to outshine the post.

      • Oh, Kat – I’m sure it’s great. You’re a wonderful writer.

        But, it’s like those scenes at the beginning of Walk the Line where they keep showing the table saw and you just KNOW what’s coming….. I had to leave the room until that bit was settled.

        I just KNOW what’s in your post and I can’t make myself read it right now.

        I’m a total whimp

  19. Thank you for remembering this dark day in our “democracy.” Yet another reason I switched to Repub after 40+ years as a Dem.

  20. brilliant post, dakinikat!!! thank you!

  21. Not a good day –

    (1) I was in DC oustide the hotel where democracy died a year ago today.

    (2) I am a native Kansan and once again the state is in the news because of another crazy person.

    (3) I just found a tick that I have to remove. At least it is something I can fix.

    Signed,

    A PROUD INDEPENDENT
    (after 44 years of being a hard-working Dem)

  22. Hello PUMA family,

    I’m sorry that I’ve been away for so long. I just got back from a roadtripand need to unpack, but logged on to be here on this day. I will never forget–ever.

    I am speechless over the news in Kansas. Want to cry.

    I love you all, and feelso fortunate to have this home. I will be back on later this eve, but have to dash now.

    Thank you Dak, for another incredible post.

    • Thinking that it had been a long time since something like this had happened (I follow these stories pretty closely; Dr. Gunn was a friend of my family), I trotted over to Wikipedia and if the entry there is correct, it looks like I was right. And more ominously, these things seem to happen in pairs, although the time lapse between the events in each pair could mean that they’re coincidence, or they could mean that the first event inspired the preparation for the second, or they could mean something else entirely.

      3/10/93: Dr. David Gunn, Pensacola, FL (killer doing life)
      (?)5/21/93(?): Dr. George Patterson, Mobile, AL (murder may have been attendant to robbery and not politically motivated)

      6/29/94: Dr. John Britton, James Barrett, Pensacola, FL (killer executed)
      12/30/94: Shannon Lowney, Lee Ann Nichols, Brookline, MA (suspect committed suicide in prison)

      1/29/98: Robert Sanderson, Birmingham, AL (killer doing life)
      10/23/98: Dr. Barnett Slepian, Amherst, NY (killer convicted)

      5/31/09: Dr. George Tiller, Wichita, KS (suspect in custody)

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-abortion_violence#Murders

      Sorry if this is a derail. Dak, thank you for a wonderful post about 5/31. A crappy day all around.

      • Anyone want to predict how long it will take for Obama to make a statement and call this what it is, domestic terrorism?

        • In millineums or eras?

        • My money’s on “never.”

        • Funny you should say that, I was just checking and freaking Operation Rescue has already released a condemnation, but nothing from the WH. We’ll be lucky if he doesn’t say Tiller’s assassins deserve a seat at the table.

        • Operation Rescue issuing a condemnation is like the Klan criticizing a cross burning.

        • It’s hypocritical all right, especially since they had inciting words about Dr. Tiller on their website, but all the major anti-choice organizations know they’re expected to say something. Even if it causes them to miss a matinée.

    • Hi Joanie, I hope to see you when you come back.

  23. If somebody could please fish me out of the moderation tank, I would appreciate it. Thank you!

  24. “As my 10 year old points out, Hillary was the Al Gore of 2008.”

    A fact that is positively frightening. No matter who the people want, the powers that be will install their puppet. All that we can do is hope with all our hearts that Americans finally wake up and bring democracy back.

  25. Anyone want to predict how long it will take for Obama to make a statement and call this what it is, domestic terrorism?

    The WH statement won’t use the word “terrorism”

    I’m guessing Obama will tepidly condemn the violence but say it’s not the fault of the good people who are just worried about the lives of those casually aborted fetuses.

    • Well he could do something ballsy and symbolic and sign FOCA. But of course he’d need a set of balls for that.

  26. Dakinikat-

    Thanks for a great post.

    I am currently on Short Tern Disabbility fighting to stabilize the diabetes and I come by from time to time.

    Has anyone read Dick Morris’ column on the Clintons and how they are being marginalized by BO’s administration.? The response to Gibbs by the British press about the US media and its muzzling? Your thoughts?

    I’m hearing some rumbling from the kool-aid crowd here after the latest date-trip by the Obama’s on taxpayer money. They are not too happy about it given the economy and their pay-cuts and layoffs.

    • looking for integrity, I’m so sorry about your struggles with diabetes. I’ve had diabetes for 10 years and about 5 years ago my blood sugar spiked to about 275 and stuck there for several weeks. It was a scary time.

      I’ve kept it under pretty good control since then but, I’m always nervous about it.

    • I also refuse to read anything by Morris. He’s really a head case. How can Hillary being prominent as SOS be considered marginalization? Only to Morris. He is incorrigibly obsessed with the Clintons, and can turn a story about daffodils into some sinister Clinton plot or failing. It’s beyond pathetic at this point. Meanwhile, Hillary is getting standing O’s wherever she appears. The only satisfying thing is that she could care less about Morris.

    • The British media is way ahead of the US press at this point. They started noticing the glaring gaps between O’s rhetoric and actions a while ago, and are now freely criticizing him.

  27. Hi looking for integrity,

    Hang in there. I hope you are successful in stabilizing your diabetes.

    Dick Morris is a lying piece of crap and I will never read anything he writes or listen to anything he says.

    Gibbs is a fool.

  28. What BB said.

  29. I thought I was crazy for still grieving over this day. I know now that I’m not. I keep feeling robbed and it’s just hard to even see the words “President Obama” knowing that the ending should have been very different. This was the turning point if there ever was one.

    • I will never forget.

    • I don’t acknowledge him. It’s just Wrong on so many levels. It was a visceral violation–you don’t get over that.

    • Agreed. But yesterday was a day of mourning for me. I’m still grieving today.

      I miss you, and all of my Hill-girls on LJ.

  30. Great post Daki, right there with you, Woman. I’ll never forget.

  31. Just wanted to ditto everyone’s sentiments–great post, DKat.

  32. The WH just a released a statement

  33. 1 year ago today, I watched the RBC, downloaded a form, and changed from Democratic to NPA. How strange it felt to say “Independent” to the precinct worker who hadsknown me for years as a Democrat. As a Florida voter, I can truly say that neither party cares to count me vote. Therefore neither party need count on my vote.

  34. BTW, isn’t this PUMA’s birthday?

  35. New post on Tiller murder.

  36. Thank you for posting this.

    I too was in Washington DC that day and had the displeasure of watching this travesty unfold. Donna Brazile and the rest of the thugs on the RBC applied the rules arbitrarily by only penalizing Florida (my state) and Michigan even though New Hampshire and South Carolina had also moved up their primary dates. The most egregious ruling of that day was taking four of Hillary’s Michigan delegates and awarding them to Obama based on the bogus metric of exit polling.

    The fix had been in. The RBC got their candidate, and all of us got the shaft.

    • Remember Donna B’s tone talking about “her mamma and the roolz?” Disgusting. And the four delegates were also based on UNOPENED absentee ballots, and phantom voters (ie: voters who MIGHT have gone to the polls if there had been a primary). Huh?!

      I felt Hillary did not have adequate representation at that meeting either. Ickes gave a great summation, but where was the outrage? Where was the discussion of SC & NH? What about Obama breaking the rules in Florida by running ads for 2 weeks, thus disqualifying him? etc. etc. etc. Utter bullsh*t.

  37. I WILL NEVER FORGET MAY 31,2008 AS LONG AS I LIVE.

  38. Been dragging a heavy heart around all day, trying to avoid the computer.

    Glad (I guess) to see I am not the only one.

    Kinda feels like the day I found this place, thanks to all for being here!

    • Oh, how rude of me dakinikat! What a great post, you did do it justice. Thank You!

  39. Thank you for doing this post Dakinikat. I watched that entire spectacle unfold on this day last year. It was the crowning F*ck You from Obama and the Party. I am changed from that experience, and will never feel the same about Party loyalty. Words do not suffice. As a result, BO is forever illegitimate to me. You cannot violate the foundation of our system, blatantly, and claim to stand for anything. The fraud of FL & MI doesn’t even include the thousands of cases of caucus fraud, but if it hadn’t been for the Party leader intervention(s), he would not have been able to swing it his way. I will never forget. Ever.

    • He was selected and installed, but he will never be a legitimate president to me either.

  40. Thank you for remembering that day. Being there was a very painful experience. We should write about that day for future generations.
    The day the music died.

  41. Hello, everyone. Haven’t posted here, or anywhere really since March, when we lost our Mom. We’ve been dealing with that, and I was just not up for posting since then.

    The anniversary prompts me to break my silence, and glad the PUMAs are still here. I still lurk a bit, just been too preoccupied to comment.

    I was at the DNC RBC rally outside the Sheraton in Washington a year ago myself. I phoned in reports to my Mom, who was also a Hillary supporter. She watched the proceedings on TV, and wondered what was going on during that lunch break the committee took to cut the deal (contrary to the DNC’s own rules as I recall. Mom wondered what really happened at the Convention when it came time for the roll-call vote.

    Thus, in one way, I feel nostalgic for the event, because I shared it in real time with Mom, who had a passion for current events and politics, even late in life. Lord knows, I miss talking with her, even if we disagreed at times, or agreed to disagree.

    Wonder what Mom thinks about all of this now that she’s on the other side, and perhaps has a wider view of things. (My belief system allows for an afterlife – O.K.?)

    Recalled that Mom asked last year if people read my PUMA blog entries. Told her I’d get replies sometimes. She ended up voting for Obama, but resisted family members who asked if she’d “set me straight”, or gotten me to come around and support him, by telling them I had the right to vote for whoever I’d choose. (I never really told her how I voted – just not O).

    As I’ve noted here before, 5/31/08 was when I heard about The Confluence and PUMAs outside the DNC RBC debacle. I also finally, belatedly connected with other Hillary supporters in person, after being a faithful volunteer. The whole episode helped open my eyes to some truths about politics that were not right, downright scary, and yet gave me hope that some dedicated people had a sense of what is right and fair, and were willing to fight for it. Guess I found some identity with the PUMA movement that has made me feel more convicted.

    Meanwhile, a loss can give you new perspectives on things, so hope I can keep PUMA in perspective, too.

    One footnote: Among Mom’s things that I asked to have at a gathering yesterday – a black ceramic panther lamp. I so wanted to call it “The PUMA lamp”, but had to hold my tongue around some Obot siblings. Pleased to say I was allowed to have it, and hope to re-string it, so there will be a PUMA light burning. If I can get a photo to you, might become an Avatar.

    Thanks for letting me share.

    • {{Liberty Belle}}

      It’s been 17 years and I still wish I could have just
      “one more talk” with my dad on just about everything.

      Your post really touched me, peace to you.

      • Thank you, Soupcity, thank you. Realize I’m later posting in the thread, and glad someone could share with me. You really touched me, too, as I well up with tears and cry now. Tears are good for the soul, as you know.

        I know exactly how you feel. Wish I could have that talk with Mom, and Dad (gone 6 years now).

        We were blessed to have them when we did, and I’m sure you were so blessed, too.

        I wonder if they became PUMAs on the Other Side…

    • Your post was very moving to me too. My mom and I were both Hillary supporters and contributors. One of the joys of last year was paying for my mom to get to see Hillary as a mother’s day gift. She was so excited. 81 years old, and she walked to downtown, stood in line, then waited 2 hours for Hillary to arrive. Then walked back home carrying yard signs, bumper stickers, and buttons. Her summary: “She is so gracious, intelligent, and high caliber.” Hillary didn’t win Oregon (at least, not that we know), but she won over my mom completely.

  42. Thanks for remembering 5/31/08. Let’s never forget it.

    PUMA forever.

  43. Voter Rights=Civil Rights
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7aKVqCkCLm8&feature\

    I agree with this fine man, he has got it right!

  44. Donna Brazile at the RBC Meeting
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RGb1ob1bowI

    Donna Brazile playing poker with the Votes of Voters on May 31st, 2008.

  45. http://www.npr.org/blogs/newsandviews/2008/08/lawsuit_exposes_rift_between_g.html
    Lawsuit Exposes Rift Between Gays, Blacks in DNC

    The Democratic National Committee’s former gay and lesbian outreach director, Donald Hitchcock, has filed a lawsuit against the organization, and it’s reverberating in political circles.

    According to the Austin American-Statesman, “Hitchcock was fired by the DNC in May 2006 after his domestic partner sent an open letter to gay Democrats criticizing Dean and suggesting that gays should temporarily withhold donations to the Democratic Party.”

    Interestingly, the lawsuit has exposed a rift between blacks and gays within the party, as described by DNC Chairman Howard Dean in his videotaped deposition … care of YouTube:

    Delegate Selection
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aD0ANgN36z8&eurl

    Why didn’t we know about this rift? The deposition was taped on March 6th, 2008. Who was keeping this quiet and why?

    • This is interesting, in a depressing kind of way. It appears that Donna Brazille, and others in the Black caucus were (are?) blocking lgbt participation. And isn’t Donna a lesbian? The gay folk are under the bus, big time.

      • We’ve been under the bus for ages. Of course, it’s our own damn fault, since most of the queer community supported the idiot.

  46. I will remember that day for the rest of my life. I had just moved in my new house and was yelling on top of my lungs at the TV, open windows. I was thinking my new neighbords probably thought they had inherit a lunatic!

    Out that very sad and scary day, when I saw democracy being highjacked in front of my eyes, I experienced a fantastic (re)birth. I gained a completely new perspective on the way I was thinking about politics. I gain some new virtual acquaintances and a very good friend a continent away. I gain so much knowledge, insight and empowerment.

    The DNC can rot in hell. I am a PUMA, not an ex-dem, not a dem in exhile. I am a PUMA!!!

    VIVA PUMA!

  47. I read this all yesterday, but I just couldn’t comment. Thanks for the post. Yesterday was a bad day on two counts (Tiller and the HRC anniversary). It’s good to know I’m not alone.

  48. http://pandagon.net/index.php/site/comments/how_come_people_arent_so_scared_and_resentful_anymore/

    Wow. Read the comments on this. They’re still clinging to the PUMA=racist meme.

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