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Virginia Constitutional Amendments

So I was poking around on the Fairfax County Democrats website and discovered a list of three ballot questions that would attempt to amend the Virginia Constitution. This is news to me, I have been well aware of the hateful Marshall/Newman Amendment that strips away protections for domestic partners who are not married and writes discrimination into the constitution; but I had never heard of the other two proposed amendments.

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Prince William County Democratic Caucus and Jeanette Rishell Fundraiser

Today was a good day. I went to the Prince William County Democratic Caucus to vote for Sharon Pandak, but arrived to late to get certified to vote, damned traffic along I-66 and PWC Parkway. Sharon Pandak won by a wide margin anyway, all but two districts (Gainesville and Woodbridge went for Gary Friedman). Now Sharon will face off against Corey Stewart in the November election.

There were 211 voting delegates, and probably 220 people in the standing room only auditorium. It was fun seeing so many fellow activists all gathered together. I’d intended to try canvassing with the Commonwealth Coalition, but the caucus continued until 2:00 pm, and the canvassing was scheduled to end then.

Later I hooked up with Erci and we went to the Jeanette Rishell Fundraiser at the Roemmelt’s home. We got to hear Delegate Brian Moran speak. We met Howling Latina, James Martin, and saw Kenton Ngo and Greg Bouchillon again. It was a lot of fun, and the food was awesome. Change is in the wind and it’ll be nice to be in a Virginia that is finally catching up with the 21st century when all these excellent progressives win in November!

If you live in Prince William County, get on the newly re-designed website and find out what is going on.

Prince William County Democrats
The Commonwealth Coalition

Update:
scottnolan.org/elections_2006.html is a information-only, non-partisan guide to the 2006 Virginia Election races.

Politics of Fear

Wow – exactly what I suspected, but could not bring myself to believe:

The LJ user thisficklemob writes about the timing of the UK liquid bomb scare:
http://community.livejournal.com/liberalrage/348778.html

Remember folks, toothpaste and bottled water are not the threat here.

Participatory Democracy

The more Jeffrey Feldman I read, the more and more I like what he writes. He has an excellent article about why the Lamont victory is so important for American democracy.

It’s not about the war. It’s not about any referendum on President Bush. Please don’t believe the spin that has been accepted by the main stream media.

It’s about participatory politics, the politics of inclusion and participation. Where every American can get involved and have a say in their government. Where the candidate is willing to actually listen to the people he or she plans to represent.

Please take the time to really read Jeffrey’s article: Lamont and the 3 Ps of Progressive Politics (it’s useful knowledge for both progressives and conservatives). An involved public, a public with a stake in the outcome, is a far more powerful force than any top-down hierarchy.

This why I am so excited by the three upsets in Democratic primary elections this year. Tester (MT), Webb (VA), and Lamont (CT). Each represents a grassroots and participatory victory over the official party establishment. Each has exciting possibilities of their own. Lowell over at RaisingKaine has done a better analysis of this than me, so check out his RK diary: Lamont, Tester and Webb.

These are real “underdog” campaigns, so if you like what you see, get involved. Volunteer, contribute, tell your friends you what you like about the campaigns. We have a chance to retake control of our country. The United States has been “by the lobbyists for the corporations and corporate executives” for way too long, let’s get back to “by the people, for the people” again.

Democracy only works if you are involved. If you are eligible to vote, register to vote now! Find out who is running in your area (politics1.com can help) and volunteer in a local congressional or senate race. Get your state board of elections to tell you everything that will be on your ballot well ahead of the election day so you have plenty of time to do a little research and make informed choices.

Hate Crimes and Terrorism in Aldie

Less than 5 miles from my house, a horrible hate crime was committed against a gay couple new to the area. It is a shame this has happened, a shame on all Virginians. We are quickly becoming the laughing stock of the nation with our crazy legislature more interested in what happens in your bedroom than in running the schools, keeping the roads open, and the lights on.

I have read a lot of stories lately about gay and lesbian people moving out of Virginia, and I am worried about the future of the state where citizens no longer feel safe or welcome. Please reach out to your neighbors and welcome and embrace them as human beings. It does not matter what color, religion, sexual or political orientation they are. Connect with them. Help them be happy. It’s contagious, in a good way.

Vote NO in November.

Offer to help your neighbors out from time to time.

Cidade de Deus

Last night Erci was finally in the mood for a film, so we sat down to watch Cidade de Deus (aka: City of God) which has been on our to be seen pile from Netflix for months (eeks; not enough time for movies!?). In a word: Wow!

Warning: this film is not for minors in any sense, ever. It is a graphic depiction of life and death in the “Cidade de Deus (City of God).. housing project built in the 1960’s that–in the early 80’s–became one of the most dangerous places in Rio de Janeiro.” (quote from IMDB’s plot summary). Excellent and thought provoking film, but also shocking violence and language. DVD cover from IMDB.com

One quote that kept floating back into my head afterwards, from the documentary that accompanies the film a police officer says: “we (the police) are the only state agency that sets foot in the favelas, the only agency with any presence at all there” – and that, if it is accurate, explains it all. If greater society does not value it’s poor, it’s youth, it’s people; those people will not value themselves. Where is society’s great equalizer: solid public education? The kids growing up in the favelas have no hope because their country does not even invest in them.

The reviewers on IMDB have done a much better job that I can of reviewing this awesome film, but I give it another endorsement and want people to think about the impact of walling themselves off from the poor and forgetting about them. As American’s jump into suburb-enclaves (burbclaves in the language of Neal Stephenson), and try to cut their tax burden by ignoring and cutting off programs for the poor; I wish they would at least think on the possible results of their own selfish actions. One possibility is the kind of violence we see in Cidade de Deus.

NeoOffice Coming Soon!

I am very excited about the new, fully Aqua enabled, NeoOffice coming soon. This is a Java-free (in other words: it may actually work reliably, use little memory, and be fast) completely open source solution to the ongoing problem of reading proprietary/non-standard file formats (MS Word, MS Excel, MS Powerpoint) that people insist on sending around even though they require expensive crap software from MicroSoft.

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Middle of the Heat Wave, and AOL’s big Change of Strategy

It’s Wednesday, August 2nd; it’s 97F outside (106 heat index) with 50% humidity. We are in the middle of the heat wave (in the D.C. area). I sure am grateful for the pool in the backyard now, though to be honest is has not been that refreshing lately (water is 86-90F).

Please be careful out there folks. Don’t strain yourself, drink lots of water, stay in the shade. Check on your elderly neighbors to be sure they are doing well. Heat like this can kill people.

In other news AOL has made their big change of strategy public now. Essentially, if you already have connectivity, you can use AOL for free. If you still want to use AOL’s point of presence to dial into the internet, you’ll still need to pay a monthly fee. Pretty damned good deal if you like and use AOL’s client software for mail or quotes.

The thing I find most disturbing about this is that so far, there has been no discussion of this change at all on the various geek forums (slashdot, boingboing, kuro5hin, digg), which implies that the geeks are all day-time sleepers or they simply no longer care what AOL does. Perhaps tomorrow we’ll know for sure.

Update: turns out I missed a little discussion of this on slashdot, the topic was brought up before the news was public.

VOIP experience anyone?

Does anyone out there have VOIP phone experience? I am looking to talk to someone about how mobile a VOIP setup is. I am wondering how easy and reliable it would be to temporarily set up VOIP phones in our house (which has Comcast cable modems, but no local telephone service) for a conference call party on Sunday, August 13th.

Are those VOIP phones the sort of thing you can simply unplug, drive over to a friend’s house, re-ip address, and connect with? Can it be that easy?

As persistent readers will recall, we were planning on hosting a political fundraiser for Jim Webb way back in June. Sadly, he injured his hand and had to go in for surgery and we ended up canceling the event. Because he won the primary, and it is looking to be a really competitive race; his schedule has filled up and getting him out to our house in person will be difficult. We have been offered the chance to host a conference call fundraising event (somewhat experimental) where our guests will hear the candidate but not be able to shake hands and meet face to face.

I am a little dubious about how appealing that will be, but am willing to give it a try; but we have a technical problem as well. We rely on cell phones here, but for something this important I think we need more stability. Verizon is out of the question for technical, ethical, and political reasons. I am wondering how hard it would be to rig up a temporary VOIP solution.

A separate question is: would anyone be interested in coming to a fundraiser/conference-call? There’d be no chance to shake hands and read body language; but the plus side is you’d still get to eat Erci’s cooking and jump in the pool before or after the call.

Your thoughts on either issue are cordially invited.

Three Days of Excessive Heat Advisory

Yikes! Local news channels are all predicting that today, tomorrow, and Thursday will have peak temperatures of 99 or 100 F, with heat index of over 110 for the greater Washington DC area. Icky, sticky. This is one of the reasons we moved out to the woods where we could have a pool and be a little cooler (temperatures in the lee of Bull Run Mountain run 3-6 degrees cooler than they do at Dulles airport only a few miles away).

At least we are scheduled to mostly be indoors between work and dance lessons/practice through most of the expected heat wave, and it is supposed to cool to a still hot and sticky 88 F (95 heat index) by Saturday when we’ll be helping our Soka Gakkai Area Youth Division put on their Festival “Trust through friendhip, peace through trust” at Marshall H.S. from 11:00-1:00.

Definitely a week to hang out in your basement and check on your neighbors periodically to make sure they are surviving the heat. Brutal heat like this can be very hard on the elderly and the poor.