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The Christian Civic League of Maine's Mike Hein calls Pam's House Blend:
"a leading source of radical homosexual propaganda, anti-Christian bigotry, and radical transgender advocacy."

He is "praying that Pam Spaulding will "turn away from her wicked and sinful promotion of homosexual behavior." (CCLM's web site, 10/15/07)


Ex-gay "Christian" activist James Hartline on Pam:
"I have been mocked over and over again by ungodly and unprincipled anti-christian lesbians."
(from "Six Years In Sodom: From The Journal Of James Hartline," 9/4/2006, written from the "homosexual stronghold" of Hillcrest in San Diego).

"Pam is a 'twisted lesbian sister' and an 'embittered lesbian' of the 'self-imposed gutteral experiences of the gay ghetto.'" -- 9/5/2008



Peter LaBarbera of Americans for Truth Against Homosexuality heartily endorses the Blend, calling Pam:

A "vicious anti-Christian lesbian activist."
(Concerned Women for America's radio show [9:15], 1/25/07)

"A nutty lesbian blogger."
(MassResistance radio show [16:25], 2/3/07)


Pam's House Blend always seems to find these sick f*cks. The area of the country she is in? The home state of her wife? I know, they are everywhere. Pam just does such a great job of bringing them out into the light.
--Impeach Bush


who monitors yours Bevis ?? Just thought I would drop you a line,so the rest of your life is not wasted.
--"Joe"

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Lambda Legal scorches Barney Frank on ENDA

by: Pam Spaulding

Thu Oct 04, 2007 at 19:45:00 PM EDT


On Wednesday, Congressman Barney Frank (D-MA) came out with a statement in response to Lambda Legal’s analysis of the revised ENDA that asserts discrimination based on gender non-conformity would be legal under this version of the bill, saying it was not the case. Lambda Legal has, in turn, called him on it. Here's the PDF. The text is below the fold.


Pam Spaulding :: Lambda Legal scorches Barney Frank on ENDA

October 4, 2007

The Honorable Barney Frank
2252 Rayburn H.O.B.
Washington, D.C. 20515
Fax No. (202) 225-0182

Re: Your press release dated October 3, 2007 responding to our statement of October 1, 2007

Dear Congressman Frank:

It is not pleasant to have to disagree with a Congressman who has done so much that we admire and who has been such a stalwart leader for our community, but your recent response to our organization’s legal analysis of the failings of H.R. 3685 (the weakened version of the Employment Non-Discrimination Act [ENDA] introduced into Congress last week) forces us to reply. This is a difference of opinion over legal analysis, not over goals. We all share the goal of enacting a strong and effective law to protect the LGBT community against employment discrimination.

On October 1, 2007, Lambda Legal issued a preliminary analysis of the differences between

H.R. 2015 (the version of ENDA that was introduced into Congress in April of this year) and the new, less protective version of ENDA recently introduced to replace it. In your press release issued late Wednesday in response to our comments, you asserted that our analysis was flawed and that the new version of ENDA only omits reference to people who are transgender but “makes no other change in the wording on this point.” Unfortunately, that is not true, because the definition of “gender identity” that was removed from the originally proposed bill included “…gender-related identity, appearance, or mannerisms or other gender-related characteristics of an individual.” These words are critically important. This year’s original version of ENDA would protect against discrimination not only on the basis of sexual orientation or transgender identity. Unlike the more recent version, the original version also would prohibit discrimination on the grounds that a person does not have an appearance, mannerisms or other characteristics that may be perceived by some people as different from those traditionally associated with that person’s sex.

This is a very important protection, one that many LGBT organizations have been advocating to have expressly enacted into law for a number of years. Earlier today we released a joint statement with four other LGBT legal organizations to further explain our concerns about this to the community. After much negotiation with members of Congress, this protection was included in the version of ENDA introduced in April, only to have it cut out of the version introduced last week.

There can be no debating that this cut weakened the bill. As our prior analysis indicated, this cut diminished the bill not only by excluding transgender people – a consequence we strongly oppose in itself. The cut also made the more recent bill far weaker by denying the protection that would have been provided by the earlier version to those who may not identify as transgender but who are discriminated against because they are perceived as gender nonconforming. Lesbians, gay men and bisexuals frequently are perceived that way.

As our original analysis indicated, a version of ENDA that does not prohibit discrimination based on gender nonconformity is inadequate. In cases brought under Title VII (the federal law that prohibits sex discrimination and sexual harassment), employers often try to argue that employees who have been discriminated against or sexually harassed were really discriminated against or harassed based on their sexual orientation, not their sex. Because Title VII does not prohibit sexual orientation discrimination, many lesbians, gay men and bisexuals have been denied relief when increasingly conservative federal courts have agreed with those employers. In just the same way, we are very concerned that employers may argue that a law that prohibits sexual orientation discrimination but that intentionally eliminated the protections against discrimination based on gender nonconformity would provide no protection to employees judged by an employer to be non-conforming – that is, men who were judged too effeminate or women judged too masculine. We have no doubt that, were the weaker version of ENDA to pass, some employers will claim they have nothing against lesbians, gay men and bisexuals per se, but that they do not want men whom they see as unmanly or women who they believe are not feminine enough, and that that loophole would be invoked against almost any lesbian, gay man or bisexual who sought protection against discrimination under ENDA.

You stated that you were not aware of any instances where state laws that prohibit only sexual orientation discrimination and not gender identity discrimination have proven inadequate. Unfortunately, such cases exist. For example, just two years ago, a federal court of appeal ruled that a lesbian who claimed that she was discriminated against because she did not conform to stereotypical expectations of femininity did not to have a viable claim under New York state’s Sexual Orientation Non-Discrimination Act (SONDA), which fails to include an express prohibition on discrimination based on gender identity and expression.

Lambda Legal appreciates the confidence you expressed in our organization by stating that we could “easily defeat such an end run around the sexual orientation language.” If this weaker version of ENDA were to become law, we certainly would try and hope that we would be able to do so. But without an express prohibition on discrimination based on gender nonconformity, there is a real risk that we might not succeed. That is a risk that we and our colleagues at other legal organizations repeatedly have seen play out in other anti-discrimination laws, and it is a risk to which we believe members of our community should not be exposed.

It is beside the point that earlier versions of ENDA, many of which were the result of cumulative compromises made in Washington, D.C., may not have guarded against this danger. The version of ENDA originally introduced this year did, and the new version, introduced last week, did not. The more recent version is a law that provides inadequate protection to LGBT people. Lambda Legal and many other LGBT groups therefore oppose it.

In your press release, you further assert that it was appropriate for the more recent version of ENDA to delete the previously included provision that state and local governments could require domestic partner benefits and to permit a blanket exemption for all religious organizations that exists in no other federal antidiscrimination laws. You argued that contrary provisions in the earlier, stronger version of ENDA were a mistake or would have drawn strong opposition and that you are not aware of anyone involved in the drafting of the bill that raised objections to these changes. In our view, these arguments also are beside the point. Our analysis showed that the more recent version of ENDA provides significantly less protection to LGBT people in numerous respects than the version introduced earlier this year. This really cannot be contested. The new version of ENDA is less protective. Whether or not these stronger provisions might have survived amendments when the matter was voted on, the undeniable fact is that the new version of ENDA deleted them without there even being a debate or a vote.

Finally, we want to emphasize the main point we and other LGBT groups have been trying to make. It simply is wrong for lesbians, gay men and bisexuals to seek protection for themselves and leave transgender people in the dust. Transgender individuals have fought against discrimination along with gay people years before Stonewall and were prime actors at that epic moment in our joint civil rights history. Imagine if the proponents of the 1964 Civil Rights Act had decided that the prohibition against race discrimination included only some racial groups but not others. For gay people to sacrifice transgender people to get protection only for themselves would be wrong.

We stand by that position and our further concern that a sexual orientation antidiscrimination law that has eliminated protections against discrimination based on gender nonconformity will provide less secure protection for everyone, including lesbians, gay men and bisexuals. Unfortunately, as you said yourself, “bigots [will] try to get around the law.” We need a law that will make that as hard as possible. That is why we continue to support H.R. 2015, the version of ENDA introduced in April, and to oppose

H.R. 3685, the version of ENDA introduced last week. Respectfully yours,


Kevin M. Cathcart
Executive Director
Lambda Legal
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I heart Lambda

Lambda was there and out and active when I was first coming out to myself in the mid-1980s and I was amazed that there was such a strong professional organization devoted to queer rights at the time.   I'm thrilled to see them coming back to Frank in such a classy way.  Not hostile; not nasty; just direct, clear, and specific.



I'm only a click away.

Classy, not hostile, not nasty; just direct, clear, and specific

(a) tends to actually work

(b) is a superb way to interact with "enemies" as well.

Kudos to Lambda.  I've admired them for a long time as well.  Smart bunch.



[ Parent ]
We're all freaks
We're all freaks in the eyes of homophobes, and that includes the butchest gay men, and the most lipsticked of lesbians. How sad and pathetic that there's any queers who fantasize it's any different.

Amen
We might know the differnces between LBGT, but to far too many of our straight neighbors we are all just queers.

[ Parent ]
ENDA

Just as people who give up a little liberty for a little safety deserve and get neither liberty or safety, people who give up a bird in the hand for two in the bush get the same.

Racial laws didn't change all at once or overnight and neither will this issue. Take it from them piece by piece or we may get nothing.



And people
And people who cling desperately to that one bird - have a dead bird on their hands.

[ Parent ]
racial laws
i don't recall civil rights being given just to lighter-complected black people, then the real dark ones added later.  am i missing some part of history?  your analogy works if we were insisting that enda cover employment AND housing protections all at once.  but we're not.  we're talking about one legal protection for an entire minority (yes, we are one minority because the heteros with their head in the sand can't tell us apart).  starting with the 1st black army regiment and proceeding right through to the civil rights era, various protections and opportunities have been provided step-wise for people of color (for everyone, really).  but those advances affected ALL people of color, not just a select subset.

Click HERE and sign up: Campaign For Military Partners.

Lurleen on Twitter.


[ Parent ]
2 cents from Androgynous Flake

I'm relatively new in learning about all of this. But one thing I did find when researching Barney Frank was his opinion on transgender.

This gentlemen clearly has no clue of what transgender is, at all. Or at some point did he change his mind that transgender weren't people with penises who wanted to be women and take communal showers with other women?

In light of learning his opinion, I'm not shocked he pushed the T off the GLB train. I don't think he wanted it there in the first place. Not from what I read. It does seem strange that Barney Frank needs as educated about transgender as the straight community needs educated concerning gay and lesbian. I find that a hilarious irony. Just too damn bad ole Barney can't see it for himself.

However, I am very happy to see that the larger GLBT--etc organizations don't buy Barney Frank's bias.  

Face it, Barney Frank still seems to believe transgender people are guys who want to cut off their dicks and pretend to be women. I've expressed this opinion on the A blog, and really would like to see what argument is put forward as to why my opinion is wrong.

 

 

 

 



Barney on trans

Barney has changed his opinion over the past three years. Like many older gay men, his earlier opinion was based on perverse stereotypes from the 70's and 80's when trans persons were excoriated by the gay and lesbian communities, and thereby became invisible. When we returned he had a hard time making sense of it all, but has been willing to become educated on the subject.

 

That being said, people like Tammy Baldwin simply have an easier time of presenting the trans issue to colleagues than Barney apparently does. Which only means that he shouldn't be the one doing it, and if he is, then it doesn't surprise me that he feels so many votes are soft. 



Dr. Dana

[ Parent ]
Thanks

Thank you, danabeyer. I was googling Barney Frank, and a lot of what I came up with was the prior opinion I posted.

So I wasn't fully clear on on Barney Frank's opinion of transgender. Thanks for clearing that up.

I also found out that John Dingell, MI Rep for my District is one of the co-sponsors of the bill. So anybody else in here from District 15, MI, email him about this. I did.

 

 



[ Parent ]
ENDA 3685 has 4 co-sponsors,
Rep Andrews, Robert E.
Rep Miller, George 
Rep Pryce, Deborah
Rep Shays, Christopher

http://thomas.loc.go...



If I make sense? it was quite by accident.


[ Parent ]
I still say keep reminding them of this

http://dir.salon.com...

May 1999 to try to persuade Bush to support the James Byrd Jr. Hate Crimes Act, which would have increased punishment for criminals motivated by hatred of a victim's gender, religion, ethnic background or sexual orientation. "So I'm sure with that lack of interest, he didn't ask to see what was going on."

 

Bush's opposition to the bill reportedly revolved around the fact that it would cover gays and lesbians. The governor's office "contacted the family and asked if we would consider taking sexual orientation out of the bill," Harris says. "And our answer was no, because the bill is for everybody. Everybody should be protected by the law."

 

But in 1994, Bush pledged to veto any effort to repeal an anti-sodomy law, calling it "a symbolic gesture of traditional values." Protecting gays under a hate crimes law presumably wouldn't even be a thought he would entertain.

 



First they came for the trannies...
Right, it caves to the religious right, and Bush would never sign it anyway. So why the hunt for a scapegoat when it's a forgone conclusion we're never going to get a proper ENDA until we have a Dem in the White House anyway? It's no different than straight "liberals" trying to throw us overboard, even with the Repugs' numbers in the toilet. They aren't willing to make the slightest sacrifices for us, even when the risk is minimal. No different than gays who won't stick by trannies, even when they have nothing to lose that isn't already lost anyway.

[ Parent ]
NCLR found more things different in the new ENDA,
  It appears there is more caving to the religious right,

We see three significant problems with this weakened version of the bill:

1. Protections for transgender people were removed.

2. Definitions of who is protected by the bill leave gaping loopholes so that no one will be fully protected against discrimination.

3. The blanket exemption for religious employers is broader than the exemptions in other civil rights laws and leaves many workers with no legal protections.

1. Protections for transgender people were removed.

This is unacceptable. Transgender people have been a part of our community's fight for civil rights since it began, and there is no principled reason to pass a law that does not cover gender identity and expression. We have come too far in our understanding of discrimination based on gender, sexual orientation, and gender identity to leave anyone behind, unprotected by law.

2. Definitions of who is protected by the bill leave gaping loopholes so that not even lesbians, gay men, and bisexuals are likely to be fully protected against discrimination.

This new version of the bill says that it prohibits discrimination based on actual or perceived sexual orientation, which it defines as "homosexuality, heterosexuality or bisexuality." That definition not only leaves out transgender people, but creates a gaping loophole that we are concerned may leave out others as well.

There is a serious risk that courts will say a law banning only sexual orientation discrimination offers no protection to men who are fired because their employers think they are effeminate and women who are fired because employers think them too masculine. Focusing on the definition of sexual orientation, courts may well say that Congress only intended this new version of ENDA to cover discrimination against a person because of the simple fact that he or she is or is thought to be gay, straight, or bisexual and could further say that sexual orientation is defined only by a person's choice of sexual or relationship partners. In other words, the courts could rule that the law does not cover discrimination because a person is seen as not meeting others' expectations of how a "real" man or woman should look and act. Congress could have included that kind of gender nonconformity and stereotypes in ENDA, they may rule, but quite explicitly chose not to.

While some might argue that the prohibition on discrimination based on "actual or perceived" sexual orientation protects against that, courts might rule that an employer has not violated this new version of ENDA if the employer simply says that it has no problem with gay people but just did not want a worker whom the employer thinks was too feminine or masculine - something an employer might say about almost any gay man, lesbian, or bisexual. That is why the protection this new version of the bill purports to provide could prove illusory for many people.

If this sounds unlikely, it isn't. We have already seen very similar, super technical interpretations of what is prohibited under laws that ban discrimination based on marital status, sex, or disability.

Moreover, discrimination based on sex, sexual orientation, and gender identity at some level are all discrimination based on stereotypes about what is or is not appropriate for men and women; what jobs are appropriate, what relationships are appropriate, what kind of personal and public identity is appropriate. Trying to split them apart makes little sense and invites the kind of legal hairsplitting that has made so many civil rights laws less effective.

Splitting sexual orientation from gender identity in ENDA would also have the perverse effect of leaving those who most need the protections of federal law out in the cold. Between our organizations, we have many, many years of experience working with people who have been discriminated against. No one suffers more than those who appear most visibly to depart from the conventions of gender.

Congress should finish the work it began 44 years ago when it made employment discrimination based on sex illegal, and once and for all rid the workplace of sexual stereotypes.

3. The blanket exemption for religious employers is broader than the exemptions in other civil rights laws and leaves many workers with no legal protections.

Every federal civil rights law has a limited exemption for religious organizations. The 1964 Civil Rights Act says it is not illegal religious discrimination for a religious organization to give preferences to members of its own church. The Americans With Disabilities Act (ADA) has a similar exemption, and also allows a religious organization to require employees to comply with its religious tenets.

The first version of ENDA this year had exemptions for churches and for jobs outside the church for ministers and religious teachers and administrators. It also allowed religious groups to require people who work for them in other jobs to comply with all the major tenets of the religion. But this first version of ENDA did not allow employers to refuse to hire someone just because of a religious objection to LGBT people. If employers chose to require adherence to religious tenets, their policy had to require compliance with all major tenets including those, for example, about marriage and divorce. Under this earlier version of ENDA, if employers such as hospitals and universities did not require adherence to all of their major religious tenets, they could not invoke the religious exemption only to single out and discriminate against LGBT people.

The newest version exempts all religious groups from the law completely. It is not a broad exemption; it is a total exemption. It would give religiously-affiliated hospitals, social service agencies, shelters, and universities complete freedom to discriminate against LGBT people.

Sincerely held religious belief has been used to justify segregation, race discrimination, sex discrimination, and discrimination against people with disabilities, not in the 19th century, but within the last 25 years. And while the separation of church and state may require some accommodation of religious bodies, what is new about this latest version of ENDA, and unacceptable is the idea that civil rights protections should completely give way to religious organizations. What people choose to believe, and how they choose to worship are their business, and the Constitution rightly keeps the government out of it. But when an employer uses religion to justify taking away a job from an orderly, custodian, secretary, social worker, or doctor, the government has an overriding interest in preserving equal opportunity.

It should be no different with discrimination against LGBT people. Congress should treat religiously held beliefs that being gay is sinful just as it treated religiously held beliefs that women are unequal and that segregation was God's law. It should uphold a person's right to believe it, but keep it out of the workplace.

Conclusion:

Our common goal is passage of a fair and inclusive employment non-discrimination statute, and we pledge to work with members of Congress to ensure that the new law serves its important purpose securely to protect our community against workplace discrimination. A law that does not actually do that is a law not worth having.



If I make sense? it was quite by accident.


Limits of traditional civil rights bills, as applied to ENDA

This piece by NCLR is an excellent analysis.

I'd like to recommend a book by Kenji Yoshino, "Covering". He is a gay law professor specializing in civil rights laws and laws / issues affecting LGBT people. The basic thesis is that traditional civil rights law seeks to place the minority on the same footing as the Anglo US-born white Christian male - requires the minority member to assimilate to the white male cultural standard. Hence, traditional civil rights law does not protect expression common within the minority group, or activities or behavior specific to the minority group.

See my diary, titled "Covering", for more detail. 



[ Parent ]
Missed opportunity
It is a shame to see so many attacking allies rather than reaching out to build support of trans-inclusive EDNA.  The folks who support only the trans-stripped  EDNA are likely to be more turned off, not less, by the whining and bitchiness (and lack of interest in showing any gradititute).  This is not surprising from people, whose life-realities can make it difficult to look at the big-picture, but organizations should know better.  It is fine to be critical, but this battle will not be won by attacking HRC, Pelosi, Democrats in general, or Frank.  Such attitudes guarantee there will be no trans-inclusive ENDA passed this year.  I hope they change in time to do some real outreach in the coming weeks.


One can do both

I criticize Frank rather harshly - I visted my Congressmans & one Seantors office.

 

What have you done? 



[ Parent ]
Allies?

Allies don't sell you out for their own personal gain, and that is precisely what Pelosi, Frank and (at least the most visible parts of the) HRC have done.

The vast majority of the community is reaching out to build support for a trans-inclusive ENDA, and they're doing it even though the HRC actively tried to prevent them from doing it (with their veto in the LCCR).

And seriously, ENDA never had a chance of passing this year.  Anything even resembling ENDA will be vetoed by the president unless there is enough congressional support to override a veto, which there will not be any time soon.  Frank, Pelosi and the HRC wanted to yank gender identity coverage even though the bill has no chance of becoming law at this time.  The transgender community was simply an inconvenient impediment to their token gesture.



[ Parent ]
Mmm...I love the smell
of victim-blame in the morning.

I'm going to choose one thing I disagree with here and hit it with the big bat:

The battle over the markup of the stripped-down ENDa began with the statement, A trans-inclusive ENDA cannot pass this year.

So the suggestion that it's not going to pass because trans people (and lawyers who know the law about discrimination) think the stripped version is crap, and dared to object is...senseless.

But wait, there's more!


[ Parent ]
Do check out Rep. Andrews' thoughts on this-- I think he'd disagree with your analysis


Blue Jersey has a video interview up
with Rep. Rob Andrews where he explains why ENDA is being dropped.  He argues that if ENDA passes the House, it'll put pressure on the Senate to bring it up this term.  He doesn't think it'll pass the Senate this year, but argues that having it brought up at all will build momentum for future sessions.  Clearly, the people dropping trans protections don't think ENDA will pass both houses this term, let alone become law.

The Democratic strategy is to be able to win a moral victory, even if that victory is hollow, and behind the scenes appears to be far from moral.  I guess it'll give them something to show to voters, to let them know they care, even though most of them don't actually appear to.



[ Parent ]
Edit
Why trans people are being dropped, not ENDA.  But you all knew that.

no excuses

During this debate, there have been several postings that have tried to make sense of why Barney Frank and other LGBT elders are so willing to drop gender identity from ENDA. Many cite age, history, geography, socioeconomic status, little exposure, etc. While I have joined this discussion and find some of the reasons compelling, I want to make one thing very clear - there are simply no excuses for marginalizing any part of our community.

We have asked and expected straight people to lead our movement for equality even though they're not gay.

We have asked and expected people of faith to lead our movement even though their religious teachings oppose homosexuality.

We have asked and expected people of color to lead our movement even though some believe that the civil rights movement should not apply to gay and lesbian equality.

Since the earliest days of the HIV/AIDS epidemic, gay men have asked and expected lesbians to help fight this killer disease. In turn, lesbians have asked and expected gay men to help fight breast cancer and defend reproductive rights.

As Americans, we should all lead the universal fight for equality - even if we may not immediately benefit from such advocacy. There are simply no excuses.  



We don't need ENDA, we need a CIVIL RIGHTS ACT!
Speaking as a gay man and a liberal progressive, I think with all of the screaming that's going on, I think I need to add my two cents.  I think that everyone needs to realize that we're settling for scraps even with the original transgendered-inclusive ENDA.  It's an Employment Non-Discrimination Law.  EMPLOYMENT. 

What good is having a job if you can be thrown out of an apartment or rental house or denied housing for being even gay? What good is ENDA in situations where you're thrown out of a restaurant because you're holding hands with your partner?

Forget the transgender argument for a moment, why are we settling for even the original bill which is woefully inadequate?  We don't need an ENDA, We need a CIVIL RIGHTS Act.  If it takes a few extra years, then fine.  Washington State fought for thirty years for an all encompassing civil rights law.  Settling for a crap law now somehow will get the nose under the tent for public places and housing?  I call bullshit.

And shame on all of you who want throw our transgendered brothers and sisters under the bus.  A lot of people forget that the Stonewall resistance was started BY the transgendered.

Why is the GLBT community standing for such a crappy bill?  Please, we can wait two years for a full on civil rights bill instead of the scraps we're being fed.  Folks, we're getting set up to fail, expending a tremendous amount of resources on...what exactly?

Scuttle ENDA,  and go back to the drawing board, and draft up the Civil Right Act of 2009.


grrr...
Is there any way I can edit the previous post?  I was editing the posting I was making as an adaption from my private journal and I forgot a curse word.  Sorry Pam. :(

[ Parent ]
One more thing...
If you want truly broad support on this issue, then you need to also include in the Civil Rights Act of 2009 some "Fixes" that need to be included due to enforcement issues with the Civil Rights Act of 1964 in regards to race, religion, and national origin.  Make it truly broad based and national.  Instead of cutting away transgendered, we need to go full tilt and fix the original Civil Rights Act of 1964 to address the loopholes that bigots have been using for many years and failed to be addressed by Congress.

[ Parent ]
merci

I just wanted to post a brief personal appreciation for Pam's coverage of this topic. Now that John Aravosis seems to have decided to box himself into an ideological corner, and in the process given vent to a rather hair-raising flood of bicker and spew, Pam's sense of nuance is a welcome relief. 



Wonderful letter by Lambda, yes, but:

I can't help but feel they and Congressman Frank are talking past each other, and that Lambda's analysis is no less blatantly political.  They say the incomplete and admittedly inferior bill is morally and philosophically wrong.  That is not a legal analysis, and it taints their letter and the supposedly objective analysis that preceeds it.



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