Friday, January 10, 2014

Federal Government Will Recognize Utah Same-Sex Marriages, Eric Holder Announces


ABratt's Favorite Comment from this article:

For a lame duck administration Obama is taking the advantage of not having to run again, to drag the nation kicking and screaming into the 21st century.

He is free of the constraints placed on him by having to cater for the majority and now is reinforcing the rights of minorities that have for far too long been ostracized, marginalized, vilified and treated as lesser beings let alone lesser Americans.Equal rights is freedom from the tyranny of the majority and for millions of people, they can join in and say, free at last, free at last.

The entire opposition to equal rights for the LGBT has been a selfish, magical thinking somehow if they get the same rights as me, I lose something and yes they do, they lose the ability to control other grown adults personal lives.

If marriage is such a moral institution then why can’t those same morals justify same sex marriage, there is love in both and there are broken families by the score that are formerly married heterosexuals, yet those divorce statistics aren’t judged by the same criteria that sort to deprive same sex couples of the same basic rights to marry.

Utah has set a non stoppable force in motion because the government based their entire premise to deprive people of fulfillment and a normal life on anti constitutional nullification of the 14 th amendment that guarantees equal rights under the law throughout the nation and those rights are not subject to interpretation under the 10th amendment of states’ rights, just like interracial marriage, the rights of access for disabled and the rights to an education that is equal as was proven by brown V Board of Education that guaranteed the integration of schools, why the entire civil rights act was premised and passed on the 14th amendment and the same people fighting against the rights to equality for the LGBT community are the same or decedents of the people who fought against the civil rights act .

Antisocial extremists are losing battle after battle and what was seen as extreme in years past is now seen as normal, They lost to the suffragette movement, they lost the civil war and they are losing this fight too.

If you love you love and laws should never interfere nor block love between adults.1 America, 1 set of laws, 1 equality and a common road to acceptance.

Thursday, January 9, 2014

Thomas Jefferson's Top Ten Quotes On Religious Freedom -

Thomas Jefferson's Top Ten Quotes On Religious Freedom -

The Christian Right's attempts to revise/re-write the historical words and actions of Thomas Jefferson is a travesty of immense proportions. Further proof that they have forefited  any chance of ever lasting life in Heaven Above.--ABratt

Open Letter To Editor Joe Rutherford Tupelo Mississippi Daily Journal: Tupelo's Dark Side

Open Letter To Editor Joe Rutherford Tupelo Misissippi Daily Journal: Tupelo's "Dark Side"
Dear Joe Rutherford:
As a citizen of Tupelo and and a Human Rights Advocate I would like to share the following article with you and the Daily Journal Readers Community: Tupelo Mississippi, an otherwise All American City, has a very distinct "Dark Side" known nationwide as the American Family Association, a SPLC Designated Hate Group. Xeneophobia (an irrational, intense dislike or unfounded fear of people from other countries-Webster Online) is among the various phobias fueling AFA's bigoted Pseudo-christian/political agenda. --ABratt, Jan. 9, 2014.

Right Wing Watch:
Recently,“AFA’S [Tupelo, MS based] Tim Wildmon warned that offering undocumented immigrants a pathway to citizenship would lead to ‘the end of the Republican Party as we know it,’ while…”
In the same post, “AFA’s Sandy Rios called such a move ‘Republican suicide’ and urged GOP leaders to get out of Washington more and live in places like Mississippi. ‘I think of that phrase in the Old Testament about a ‘strong delusion,’ she said. ‘I would say that the Republican leadership is under a strong delusion. I don’t understand it, I can’t explain it except that they just don’t get out enough, they need to go live in Mississippi, they need to go live in Nebraska, wherever, because the sanity seems to leave them.’” [A 'strong delusion', Amen!] 
Read the complete article from the link below:

Friday, November 22, 2013

Dynamics of U.S. Senate race take shape in Mississippi

by Bobby Harrison
JACKSON
"In recent years, Republicans’ efforts to take over the United States Senate have been thwarted at least in part by the ultra-conservative wing of the party – i.e., the Tea Party.
In Nevada, Delaware, Missouri, Indiana, Alaska, to name a few, the Republicans have lost what at one time were considered likely victories by nominating candidates the general election voters viewed as too conservative, out of the mainstream.
PPP, a national polling firm that is viewed as having allegiances to the Democratic Party, recently polled the 2014 Senate race here in Mississippi.
The poll revealed that in Mississippi – viewed as a safe Republican seat in national and most state elections – at this point in time a Democratic candidate would be competitive with state Sen. Chris McDaniel, R-Ellisville, who is the only candidate yet to announce he is seeking the seat in 2014.
McDaniel, who can be seen statewide in television commercials being paid for by national Tea Party-related political action committees, leads by slight margins two big-name Democrats – former Gov. Ronnie Musgrove and former U.S. Rep. Travis Childers of Booneville. He trails by a slight margin current Attorney General Jim Hood – Mississippi’s only statewide elected Democrat.
In all three instances, the races are statistically dead heats, meaning the results are within the poll’s margin of error.
It would be interesting to see how Northern District Public Service Commissioner Brandon Presley would have fared in the poll.
Secretary of State Delbert Hosemann, a possible candidate for the Senate seat, polls better than McDaniel against the three Democrats – though there is only a one-point difference in a head-to-head with Hood.
PPP polled 502 Mississippi voters, “including an over sample of 422 Republican voters,” making the strong showing of the Democrats mentioned in the poll even more surprising.
Of course, the question is whether six-term incumbent Thad Cochran will run again. The veteran Republican has said he will announce a decision this month.
The poll indicates that Cochran is vulnerable. He leads McDaniel by only 6 percentage points and 55 percent say they would prefer a candidate more conservative.
At this point, the smart money might be on Cochran not running. Normally, if a politician plans to seek re-election, that person does not give any potential challenger an opening by wavering.
If Cochran does run, none of the aforementioned Democrats will enter the race, though, surprisingly, according to the poll, Hood would be competitive against the incumbent.
But still, regardless of the poll, it is difficult for daily observers of the Mississippi political scene to imagine a scenario where a Democrat could defeat Cochran in the general election.
If Cochran does not run, though, look for big-name Republicans and at least one Democrat to enter the race.
The PPP poll shows McDaniel, who has received a great deal of statewide attention since his announcement, with a slight lead in a crowded Republican field, which might include U.S. Reps. Greg Harper and Steven Palazzo, Lt. Gov. Tate Reeves, Auditor Stacey Pickering and Hosemann.
Interestingly, Reeves polls at the bottom of the Republican field with only 3 percent support.
But the interesting proposition for state Democrats, who have been beaten up and are at a low ebb, is whether a candidate could emerge from the Republican primary that even by Mississippi standards might be viewed as too conservative.
That has happened in other states, costing Republicans a chance to garner a Republican Senate majority.
Many might argue that the general electorate is much more conservative in Mississippi, meaning that a candidate who is too conservative, say in Indiana, would not be in Mississippi.
Is that correct?
We might see next November."
Bobby Harrison is the Daily Journal’s Capitol Bureau chief. Contact him at (601) 353-3119 or bobby.harrison@journalinc.com.
Comments: Read more including an excerpt  from  the New York Times on Mississippi Senator Chris Mc Daniel's campaign to unseat incumbent Senator Thad Cochran here: