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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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Pam Spaulding

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Protecting Small 'D' Democracy and the Right to Vote

by: ACLU

Fri Jul 25, 2008 at 14:31:30 PM EDT


( - promoted by Pam Spaulding)

By Nicole Kief, State Strategist, ACLU Racial Justice Program

Isn't the right to vote freely for a candidate of your choosing just that: the right to vote freely for a candidate of your choosing?

Not according to one Virginia legislator, who seemed to forget the whole principle of small "d" democracy when he characterized efforts to educate people with felony convictions about their right to vote as a big "D" Democratic conspiracy.  "I don' t know a lot of young Republicans who end up being felons," C. Todd Gilbert told the Washington Post.  "Clearly the groups that are soliciting these felons to get their rights restored are predisposed to be in support of Obama, and I am sure this registration effort is designed to help their candidate."

ACLU :: Protecting Small 'D' Democracy and the Right to Vote
(By way of background, a patchwork of state felony disfranchisement laws, inconsistent from state to state, prevent a whopping 5.3 million Americans with past felony-and, in 7 states, misdemeanor-convictions from voting. More are disfranchised by general confusion about and elections officials' misapplication of these laws.)

Even if we indulge the Gilberts of the world momentarily, all we have to do is scratch the surface to see that plenty of Republicans have helped reform their states' disfranchisement policies in favor of greater enfranchisement. (Not to mention the fact that people of all political persuasions go to prison; just check out this New York Times interview with people incarcerated in Maine and Vermont.)

Louisiana's Republican Governor Bobby Jindal just signed a bill that requires the Department of Public Safety and Corrections to notify people leaving its custody about voting rights restoration and to provide them with a voter registration form.  Jindal is in good company. It was Florida's Republican Governor Charlie Crist who revised his state's antiquated law last year to ease voter restoration for some people with nonviolent felony convictions. And George W. Bush, when he was Governor of Texas, signed a bill eliminating the state's two-year waiting period before voting rights could be restored.

These distinguished gentlemen are joined in their support of increased access to the polls for this population by Jack Kemp (former congressman and Republican vice-presidential candidate) and Chuck Colson (Nixon's former chief counsel), and no one questions their Republican cred. In fact, a diverse array of organizations has spoken in favor of greater enfranchisement, including the American Probation and Parole Association, the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops and the American Correctional Association.

Felony disfranchisement's nasty roots in voter suppression should remind us that promoting access to the polls for all eligible voters is fundamental to the health of our democracy. Following the Civil War, Southern states faced the enfranchisement of large African-American populations as a result of the 15th Amendment; in response, they scrambled to maintain white rule by, among other things, enacting or reforming felony disfranchisement laws in order to curtail African-Americans' access to the polls.  

Mississippi, for example, revised its constitution to impose disfranchisement as a penalty only for the crimes of which African-Americans were most frequently convicted. When Virginia's disfranchisement laws were debated at the state's 1901-1902 Constitutional Convention, one delegate argued that felon disfranchisement would "eliminate the darkey as a political factor in this state in less than five years, so that in no single county...will there be the least concern felt for the complete supremacy of the white race in the affairs of the government."

Over 100 years later, felony disfranchisement laws remain in effect and continue to restrict the political power of communities of color and individuals of all stripes. This is not a partisan issue, it's a democracy issue. The Washington Post, Boston Globe and Roanoke Times agree. See, C. Todd Gilbert? The right to vote is something we can all get behind.

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"I don' t know a lot of young Republicans who end up being felons,"
 Clearly they wait until they are older before they are allowed to elbow their way into the trough. But maybe official greed and corruption don't count in his tiny little mind. The list of just Bushies in prison or indicted or under investigation is quite impressive and let us not forget Cunningham, Abramoff, et al. What a clown.

Oh, the irony
"I don' t know a lot of young Republicans who end up being felons." C. Todd Gilbert needs to refresh his memory:

G. Gordon Liddy
George Ryan
Jack Abramoff
Jeff Habay
James Tobin
Scooter Libby
Duke Cunningham
Brent Wilkes
Thomas Noe
Bob Taft
George Ryan
And the list goes on, and on, and on...

While these may not all be young felons, they are Republican felons nonetheless. With the ideals of the Republican party of the 21st century, it seems there's a good chance that a young Republican will grow up to become a Republican felon. Does Mr. Gilbert want us all to believe that felonies are only committed by Democrats?


I have very little doubt...
...that most of the middle aged Republican felons were once young Republicans and since the quote is "I don' t know a lot of young Republicans who end up being felons", they all count.

[ Parent ]
There are plenty of Republican rapists and murderers out there,
not to mention white collar thieves, Mafioso type protection money racketeers, and so on. The people who want lower taxes because they are efficient at stealing and want to keep looking like standard taxpayers.

The prisons would be radically different if small scale drug possession and use were treated as misdemeanors requiring attendance at methadone clinic, addicts anonymous group, social work caseworker, etc. I am convinced that drug laws are the way they are in order to have plausible cause of arrest and conviction for black youth and men.  


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