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Susan Mariner: “Why I Am Running for DPVA 1st Vice Chair of Organization”

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On June 12, 2010, the Democratic Party of Virginia (DPVA) will select a new 1st Vice Chair. The following statement is from former Webb “ragtag army” superstar Susan Mariner, who I am strongly supporting for this position.  Also supporting Susan so far are people like Sen. Chap Petersen, Del. Scott Surovell, Roanoke County Clerk of Circuit Court Steve McGraw, Prince William County Democratic chair Pete Frisbie, 10th CD Democratic Committee member Charlie Jackson, Isaac Sarver, Joe Montano, Joseph Puckett, 316 Facebook fans, and more. I hope you’ll support Susan too. Thanks!

WHY I AM RUNNING for DPVA 1st VICE CHAIR of ORGANIZATION

I’m Susan Mariner, and I’m asking for your vote on June 12th

First and foremost, the job of the DPVA 1st Vice Chair of Organization is to elect Democrats.  I am running for this seat at this particular time because I believe I am uniquely qualified to accomplish that goal.   Here’s why–

*I have the proven ability to grow, strengthen, and diversify the Party:  In 6 months as Chair of the Virginia Beach Democratic Committee, I have increased our committee membership from 80 to 175, brought in a critical infusion of energetic young people, and vastly increased participation of minorities.  If you want a 1st Vice Chair of Organization who has the skills to grow, strengthen, and diversify the Democratic Party across the Commonwealth, I ask for your vote.

*I will leave no committee behind:  Over the years, my work with urban, rural, and suburban Democratic committees has made me acutely aware that the challenges faced by committees throughout the state are not the same and cannot be met with a “one size fits all” solution.  If elected, I will personally and actively support all committees across this great state.  If you want an energetic and knowledgeable 1st Vice Chair of Organization, one who will spend time helping any committee that seeks my assistance in creatively energizing, professionalizing or expanding their organization, I ask for your vote.

*I can improve relations between the Party establishment and the grassroots/netroots:  The Democratic Party of Virginia needs everyone’s support.  Unfortunately, there has been a feeling among numerous grassroots Democrats that the Party leadership is disconnected from the activists who support the Democratic Party every day.   Whether this feeling is justified or not, the tension damages the Party and weakens us in our efforts to elect Democrats.  Every election cycle, we rely heavily on our grassroots activists to do the heavy lifting on the ground.  Similarly, we rely on our netroots activists to articulate and disseminate a compelling political narrative to the mainstream media and the public.  Along these lines, I have credibility and strong support amongst the grassroots and netroots activist base of our Party.  If elected, I will serve as a bridge between the activists and our Party leadership, ensuring the best possible working relationships between these crucial groups.  Over the years, the DPVA has demonstrated that it can accomplish amazing things when we are unified.  If you believe in the value of electing a 1st Vice Chair who will help to improve relations between grassroots activists and Party officials, I ask for your vote.

*I have professional political campaign experience:  If you think that having a 1st Vice Chair of Organization who has professional experience working on campaigns in tough districts and who has a history of accomplishment winning tough races for Democrats would be a good thing for the Party, I ask for your vote.

*I know what it takes to win:  We must have a 1st Vice Chair of Organization who knows what it takes to win against difficult odds so that we preserve our critical State Senate majority and win back seats in the House of Delegates in 2011. Just imagine what Bob McDonnell and Ken Cuccinelli would do with control of the Senate as well as the House of Delegates.  Needless to say, that’s not acceptable.  Also unacceptable would be to have Glenn Nye, Tom Perriello, Rick Boucher or Gerry Connolly defeated in 2010.  As 1st Vice Chair of Organization, I will be able to use my training and experience to ensure that Democrats hold their ground and expand from there.  To that end, I ask for your vote.

If  I am afforded the extraordinary opportunity of serving as 1st Vice Chair of the great Democratic Party of Virginia, I will focus like a laser beam on strengthening the Party at all levels and will work tirelessly to put our Party in a position to win this year and beyond.   I will be responsive and inclusive and will work collaboratively with you at every turn because I am absolutely convinced that together we can make this a Bluer Virginia.  

I love this Party and want to serve.  I ask for your vote on June 12th at the Central Committee meeting in Charlottesville.

Warmest Regards,

Susan Mariner

(757) 692-0989

Why Conservatives Must Support UVA Against the Cuccinelli Inquisition

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Here at Blue Virginia, we spend many joyful hours going after the right wing – cataloguing flaws in conservative thinking, opposing Republican policy disasters, and questioning whether such characters as Sarah Palin truly represent the finest in American statesmanship.

That said, I do believe there are thoughtful conservatives out there who bring something to the public debate and who are capable of listening and responding to reason.  So in the belief that such individuals exist, I am targeting today’s diary at them, with this message:  

A genuine conservative, looking at the emerging court case of Cuccinelli vs. the University of Virginia, must – to be true to be his or her beliefs – support UVA in this fight.

While conservatism has a variety of strands (social, military, fiscal, etc.) clearly the ascendant brand in the U.S. right now, with the Tea Party increasingly in the Republican driver’s seat, is libertarianism, the belief in limited, “hands-off” government.  Scan most any Republican or Tea Party or conservative manifesto, blog or website these days and you will see the same words pop up over and over again, like “liberty”, “freedom” and “Constitution.”  Play out the concepts behind those words, and it is almost impossible for conservatives to support Cuccinelli without betraying the very principles they claim so passionately to believe in.  

At the core of this controversy is Cooch’s attempt to forcibly intervene in the scientific process at a state university, by conducting a fishing exhibition to gather “evidence” to prove that a prominent climate scientist committed “fraud” for reaching conclusions that the Attorney General finds inconvenient.  This is truly a textbook case of government overreach – the very evil that libertarian conservatism exists to oppose. Indeed, I thought the whole point of that philosophy was to limit government to such essential matters as national defense, policing and such, while reducing the power and inclination of the government to stick its nose into everyone’s business.

Indeed, conservatives have long complained about “political correctness” and “speech codes” on campuses that they claim limit their free speech rights. How can they then turn around and applaud a government official trying to pick winners and losers in academia by intimidating professors through the state’s power to subpoena and prosecute?  If there are not enough real crimes and criminals in Virginia for the Attorney General to focus on, would not the conservative solution be to abolish this office altogether rather than to have it waste taxpayer dollars meddling in matters beyond its Constitutional mandate?

The most sacred freedoms, for both liberals and conservatives, are freedom of thought and expression.  Many on the right like to quote the great anti-totalitarian writers, like George Orwell and Hannah Arendt, whom I also deeply admire.  Orwell in his classic 1984 wrote:

Freedom is the freedom to say two plus two make four.  If that is granted, all else follows.

When the government decrees that two plus two equals five or six or seven, and cracks down on universities to enforce its ideology over the free pursuit of the truth, is that not where totalitarianism begins?

To be sure, there are other conservative traditions that may come into play here, but they are not traditions of which most people would be proud.  The witch hunt is a tradition that can be traced back to the Catholic Church’s crusade against Galileo and the Spanish Inquisition, through the Salem Witch Trials and the McCarthy era.  There is also the police state tradition, the belief in a strong executive most recently used to justify the use of unconstitutional practices against terrorism suspects.  If you believe in an all powerful government scapegoating intellectuals to placate the angry mob, then Cuccinelli’s actions against UVA may be for you.

But the final reason for conservatives to root for UVA over Cooch is simple politics.  There is no political benefit to be gained by crucifying professors that Republicans don’t like.  It will motivate the opposition and inflame the campuses to fight as hard as they can against the right.  You just don’t win in American politics by favoring ideology and conspiracy theories over academic freedom.  And that is what’s great about America – the country that both conservatives and liberals must always, in their own ways, guard against every threat of tyranny.

Is Ward Amstrong batshit crazy or is Jeff Shapiro desperate for a column?

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http://www2.timesdispatch.com/…

As a recruiter of House candidates for our party, Ward has been an abject failure.  Creigh Deeds demonstrated that obscure, rural, male, anti-abortion, pro-gun, D lawmakers do a lousy job motivating the urban, suburban and minority bases of the Democratic party in statewide elections. Before my downstate brethren go nuts, try a name id poll among likely Democratic primary voters in the I-95 corridor.  If Ward gets double digits, I’ll consume any article of clothing you pick.

Will Ken Plum, please, get this guy to see reality and drop this quixotic foolishness?

Is Ward going to be eliminated in this winter’s redistricting?  That’s really up to Dick Saslaw and the degree to which he wants to fight for downstate House Ds in next year’s redistricting.  

Word is that NoVa Ds are convinced the Rs will pile as many as possible into the same districts but it’s hard to draw a map the helps Rs pick up any seats in NoVa in an election with no statewide races.  But such an effort by the Speaker could make Saslaw spend any chits he has on preserving the House seats of NoVa House members.

Even so, Armstrong has done nothing to endear himself to the D base and plenty to tick them off.

Does Hunton & Williams or Maquire want another political has been on their roster, Ward?  That’s the higher percentage play.  Unless you want to pull a Specter.

GOP “far out of step,” “not being very intelligent” on DADT

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Unfortunately, in addition to people like John BONEr and Eric Can’tor “not being very intelligent” on the “Don’t Ask Don’t Tell” policy, I’d add that the GOP is also motivated by: 1) homophobia; and 2) the desire to defeat Obama and the Democrats on everything they want. Neither are good reasons to be against repealing this stupid, ineffective, obsolete, self-defeating, harmful, discriminatory, wildly unpopular policy.  Enough talk about this, we know the answer. Just ditch it. Now.

Memorial Day

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Once again, we Americans are relishing a three-day weekend holiday, one that now traditionally kicks off summer. No doubt, too few of us will stop to think about the origins of what began as perhaps our most solemn commemoration.

I can’t actually find a definitive moment when the first Memorial Day was celebrated, but most people accept that it grew out of the actions of southern women who decorated the graves of  Confederate dead soldiers soon after the end of the Civil War. Also, there were similar commemorations of various kinds, including decorating graves with flowers and small flags, in many northern communities to honor the Union dead.

The first national declaration of “Memorial Day” was General Order No. 11, issued by Gen. John A. Logan, commander of the Grand Army of the Republic, on May 5, 1868.

The 30th day of May, 1868, is designated for the purpose of strewing with flowers or otherwise decorating the graves of comrades who died in defense of their country during the late rebellion, and whose bodies now lie in almost every city, village, and hamlet church-yard in the land. In this observance no form of ceremony is prescribed, but posts and comrades will in their own way arrange such fitting services and testimonials of respect as circumstances may permit…Let no vandalism of avarice or neglect, no ravages of time testify to the present or to the coming generations that we have forgotten as a people the cost of a free and undivided republic.

In 1966 President Lyndon Johnson declared Waterloo NY to be the “birthplace” of Memorial Day because the town had organized an annual community-wide celebration that included placing decorations on the graves of their war dead shortly after the end of the Civil War. In 1971 Congress made Memorial Day a national holiday, one that memorialized those killed in all the wars that the United States has fought. Later, the original May 30 date for Memorial Day became the last Monday in May. Hence, the three-day weekend.

There are other commemorations that have been melded onto Memorial Day. A poem written by John McCrae inspired the sale of paper poppies to honor those who died in World War I. The American Legion has continued that tradition to this day.

“In Flanders fields the poppies blow

Between the crosses, row on row

That mark our place; and in the sky

The larks, still bravely singing, fly

Scarce heard amid the guns below.

We are the Dead. Short days ago

We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,

Loved and were loved, and now we lie

In Flanders fields.

Unfortunately, like so many of our holidays, Memorial Day has morphed into just another three-day weekend, dedicated to visiting now-open swimming pools and having a cookout. Plus, the standard “fill-in-the blank” holiday sales will be going on at malls all over the country.

Perhaps we all would benefit from following then-President Clinton’s May 2000 resolution asking all Americans to pause for one minute at 3 p.m. on Memorial Day in order to “consider the true meaning of this holiday. Memorial Day represents one day of national awareness and reverence, honoring those Americans who died while defending our Nation and its values.”

One minute is not asking too much from all of us in memory of all those lives cut short, all the possibilities denied to those who died in war after war throughout our national history.

Ragin’ Grannies Sing It Like It is

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Florida’s Ragin’ Grannies perform a modernized version of John Brown’s Body (also known as The Battle Hymn of the Republic) and, to the delight of somewhat younger fellow Floridians, do it at a BP gas station. Be sure to watch the outtakes at the very end, after the credits (hat tip to DailyKos for the YouTube publication)

Dinner With McCain, McDonnell, and Malek Anyone?

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Maybe they can talk about this or this while they’re dining on…this, perhaps?  And all for just $2,400 (or more, if you so desire; see the various price levels after the “flip”).  Sounds like a fun time — or, on second thought, not!