Wednesday, November 26, 2008

Mama said, Marmoset

Ugh. Bad economy, hiring freeze, more work for fewer people, 8-10 hour days become 10-12 hour days, I'll just take this work home tonight becomes maybe I can finish this up over the weekend, and office closed for the holidays means an opportunity to work on those big projects... I might catch up if I work real hard.

But just remember



Marmoset, it's the failing global economy, stupid. You can't fix it by spinning faster. Days are gonna be like this.

Saturday, November 22, 2008

A gorgeous Saturday

It's sunny, breezy and gorgeous in D.C. today. The balcony doors are open, the air blowing in over Rock Creek Park smells great. We're planning an afternoon out and about the town.

But first, let's intensify the mood with some music from Alison Sudol and A Fine Frenzy.

Come On, Come Out



Okay, gotta dump the cats from my lap and get outside.

Saturday, November 15, 2008

Gay rights, Prop 8 and the Black vote

My friends and I still break into big smiles over Obama's election. But we're also wondering what happened in California, where Proposition 8 proposed to ban gay marriage and won by 52% of the statewide vote. That's a pretty close vote. Some say that the Black vote could have made the difference and that African Americans did not stand up for the civil rights of others. Some gay folks are just plain pissed off. I waded through the data and I've drawn 4 conclusions.

1. Prop 8 won because California is a red, conservative state. 82% of White Republicans and 85% of all conservatives voted for Prop 8. Conservatives were 30% of the vote. Even moderates (44% of the vote) had only a slight majority (53%) for gay right to marriage. The stereotype of California as liberal is not real. California has been a Republican, conservative state since the Reagan years.

2. Racial politics doesn't really explain this vote. A large majority of Blacks (70%) voted against gay right to marriage. The Root's Kai Wright makes a strong case that anti-gay attitudes are doing terrible harm to the Black community. But African Americans were only 10% of the total California vote. There just aren't enough African Americans in California to determine the outcome of this vote. Whites made up 63% of total votes, significantly more than their percentage of the population, but had only a very slight majority (51%) for gay right to marriage.

You can skip to my conclusion #3 or read the CNN exit poll, statewide break down here. Remember "yes" means "ban gay marriage in California."

All Men: 53% Yes (46% of the total vote)
All Women: 52% Yes (54% of the total vote)

White Men: 51% Yes (31% of total)
White Women: 53% Yes (32% of total)
All Whites: 49% Yes (63% of the total, 51% for gay right to marriage)

Latino Men: 54% Yes (8% of total)
Latino Women: 52% Yes (11% of total)
All Latinos: 53% Yes (18% of total vote)

Black men: N/A
Black women: 75%, (6% of total vote)
All African Americans: 70% (10% of total vote, strong majority against gay marriage)

All Asians: 49% Yes (6% of total vote, 51% for gay right to marriage)

All other: 51% Yes (9% of total)

So it was very close in all groups, except African Americans. But there just aren't enough African Americans in California to determine the outcome of this vote. Shanikka breaks down the population.

African Americans are 13% of the national population but only 6% of the entire California population and the percentage is falling. The California population breakdown is:

43.1% non-Hispanic whites
35.9% Latinos
12.4% Asians
6.2% Black


3. Judging by the California vote, the debate about the right to gay marriage divides Americans by age, education, political identity and religion at least as much as it divides by race. Supporters of the right of gays to marry are young, well-educated, liberal-minded, optimistic about race relations and optimistic about an Obama presidency. People who are not church goers or do not identify with any particular religion are overwhelmingly (90%) in support of the right of gays to marry.

Again, read details from the CNN poll here or skip to #4. The following groups voted no on Prop 8, meaning they voted for gay right to marriage:

People with post-graduate degrees (60% voted no)
People who strongly disapprove of the war in Iraq (60% voted no)
People who disapprove of Bush and believe McCain would continue his policies (60-65%)
18-29 year olds (61%)
First-time voters (62%)
People who believe race relations are going to get much better (61-64%)
Democrats (64%)
Unmarried people (64%)
People who felt excited or optimistic about the possibility of Obama's election (60-63%).
People who felt scared by the prospect of McCain's election (66%)
People who live in the San Francisco Bay Area (66%)
People who voted for Obama (68%)
People who also oppose off-shore drilling (68%)
People who think Obama's positions are "about right" (69%)
Liberals (78%)
White Democrats (79%)
People who are not church-goers (83%) or identify as "no religion" (90%)


4. Blaming Blacks for not standing up for the civil rights of gays is just confusing the issue. On Nov. 4th Arizona, California and Florida all banned gay marriage. Arkansas banned gay couples from adopting children. Did the Black vote lose the battle in all of these states? Is it so surprising that these bans pass in a few politically conservative states?

Let's keep the argument straight. This is a simple, national civil rights issue. It is so because our society uses marriage as a legal mechanism to gain a set of fundamental rights that every American couple or family needs. We could decide to nationally recognize civil unions as the way to access couple and family rights, letting churches do whatever they want and letting people choose church marriages if they want. Most European nations did this over the past decade. Or we can allow gay couples to marry. If we do neither, we are denying basic civil rights to Americans on the basis of discrimination.

Some of the leaders of the Black civil rights movement of the 1950-70s are very eloquent and clear on this.

Coretta Scott King: "Gay and lesbian people have families, and their families should have legal protection, whether by marriage or civil union. A constitutional amendment banning same-sex marriages is a form of gay bashing, and it would do nothing at all to protect traditional marriages."

John Lewis: "In 1948, when I was 8 years old, 30 states had bans on interracial marriage, courts had upheld the bans many times, and 90 percent of the public disapproved of those marriages, saying they were against the definition of marriage, against God's law. But that year, the California Supreme Court became the first court in America to strike down such a ban. ...We hurt our fellow citizens and our community when we deny gay people civil marriage and its protections and responsibilities."

Mildred Loving: "Not a day goes by that I don't think of Richard and our love, our right to marry, and how much it meant to me to have that freedom to marry the person precious to me, even if others thought he was the 'wrong kind of person' for me to marry. ...I am still not a political person, but I am proud that Richard's and my name is on a court case that can help reinforce the love, the commitment, the fairness, and the family that so many people, black or white, young or old, gay or straight seek in life. I support the freedom to marry for all. That's what Loving, and loving, are all about."

Don't know who she is? The 1967 case of Loving vs. Virginia overturned state law against mixed race marriage.

Friday, November 14, 2008

Thursday, November 13, 2008

A bedtime story

It's been a busy and exciting week, it's late and we need some rest, so here's a bedtime story.


Once upon a time... from Capucha on Vimeo.

Sleep tight.

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

It's President Obama!

It's real we did it Pennsylvania showed it's true colors -- we showed the world and each other: oh yes we can! America and Americans can be this good. I'm working in Texas this week and watched the Dallas democrats party. A diverse group of people, tears, smiles, hugs, and a man who touched his heart and said "I'm a part of this one." A beautiful thing anywhere but maybe especially in Texas.

Still, I wish I could've been in D.C. - we voted 93% for Obama!!

Sunday, November 2, 2008

Sunday

Ahhh, a wonderful lazy Sunday. So lazy that I stayed in pajamas all day, reading, doing laundry, brushing cats, doing my nails, packing and organizing for my week of conference travel ahead... and listening to my current favorite song.

Saturday, November 1, 2008

Totally tested!

Right here. Right now.



Obama Undertakes Presidential Internship To Ease Concerns About His Lack Of Experience

Alrighty then.

Or maybe you prefer

You know I'm loving The Daily Show, The Colbert Report, SNL and The Onion. Truly great political comedy is an American tradition and a national treasure.

But let's say when deciding how to vote, you prefer a straight up objective, intelligent interview. I don't mean objective as in: Pretend I'm smart but somehow have no opinions. I mean objective as in: I'll tell you my perspective so that you can take it into consideration. I don't mean interview as in: Let's shout, call names, repeat our talking points even if they aren't quite true because the end justifies the means and by the end I mean as long as I win in the end.

I mean a real conversation about things that matter, discussed as if you know they matter. As if you are actually listening to each other and could hear something that worth considering. There are lots of good interviews on the Rachel Maddow website, including her interview with Dan Rather. He sets the junk-talk aside and says, look we have two candidates who are both qualified to be President. What matters is their politics.

The best interviews of this campaign may be this series of interviews Maddow did with Obama in this last week. It's no secret that she's a liberal. She's also a great interviewer.



Lots more at The Rachel Maddow Show

Catty, aren't we.

1. Catty

Gov. Palin doesn't understand why 60% of women don't support her. ABC News

Jezebel thinks it just might be Palin's political positions on "pay equity, abortion, health care, taxes, the environment, energy exploration, foreign policy or who should pay for the forensic exams after a woman is raped."

Conservative radio host Bill Bennet thinks the problem is those liberal feminists. "I don’t know which drives them more crazy. Let me give you three things that I think drive them crazy, and you don’t have to comment. That’s she’s very attractive, that she’s very competent, or that she’s very happy. You know, as a human being." Notice Bennet offered, "you don't have to comment." But Republican campaign guy Rick Davis jumped right into it with, "Yeah, all of the above." You can listen here if you can stand the whole minute or so.

I guess it's a women are from Venus thing. But here's what I just love.
Apparently 60% of American women are now liberal feminists!

2. Crumpy


Meanwhile, you guys from Mars don't have to vote based on political positions either. I can suggest three reasons why many conservative men don't support Obama. He’s very attractive, he’s very competent, and he’s very happy. You know, as a human being. And he can dance.

The Dance-Off! Yay-yo!