Friday Open Thread

Filed in National by on June 11, 2010

Welcome to the Friday edition of your open thread. We’re supposed to get beautiful weather today and I’m going to the Italian Festival tonight. I’m ready for the weekend!

Our Senate is wacked, that’s the only way I can explain it. It’s completely bass-ackwards that a huge environmental disaster in our waters makes energy/climate legislation less likely. (It’s the same with immigration reform – Republicans squawking about immigration means no immigration bill). Congress won’t act on climate so the EPA will and Congress is mad:

Lisa Murkowski’s resolution blocking the EPA’s authority to regulate carbon failed in the Senate today, 47 to 53. Six Democrats crossed over: Mark Pryor, Evan Bayh, Ben Nelson, Jay Rockefeller, Blanche Lincoln and Mary Landrieu. Some people were surprised that Bayh crossed, but I’m not. He’s retiring, but his votes will reflect on Brad Ellsworth, who’s running to replace him, so he’s going to stick with the state’s most important interests. Zero Republicans voted against Murkowski.

Republicans are completely tied in knots over this BP disaster – just look at John Boehner’s multiple walkbacks on his BP remarks. Amazingly, Republicans are still blocking lifting of the liability cap for oil companies. Buying Senators is a good investment, since you only really need one or two because any one Senator has a veto. Senate reform now!

In their ongoing effort to make the word “family” an epithet, the American Family Association produced this gem about gays in the military:

If we connect the dots here, the inescapable conclusion is that gay sex is a form of domestic terrorism.

Every time an HIV-infected male has sex with another male, it’s essentially the same as plunging an infected heroin needle into his arm. He’s passing on a potential death sentence, just as the Taliban seeks to do on a foreign battlefield.

It is because of the risk of HIV transmission that the FDA will not allow a male homosexual to donate blood if he has had sex with another male even one single solitary time since 1977. The second riskiest behavior for HIV infection is injection drug use.

Now if gays are allowed into the military, they will be inevitably be put in battlefield situations where donated blood from soldiers may be necessary to save the lives of wounded comrades. An HIV-infected American soldier whose blood is used in those circumstances may very well condemn his fellow soldier to death rather than save his life.

If open homosexuals are allowed into the United States military, the Taliban won’t need to plant dirty needles to infect our soldiers with HIV. Our own soldiers will take care of that for them.

I think the logic is that all gay men have HIV (more women than men have HIV, actually) and that will lead to HIV-infected blood somehow. Military blood donations go through the same testing process as all blood donations and the ban on blood donations by gay men was wrong in the first place (and rightfully ended).

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Opinionated chemist, troublemaker, blogger on national and Delaware politics.

Comments (10)

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  1. anonone says:

    “Federal judge calls Guantanamo inmate’s detention ‘unlawful'”

    Wasn’t this place supposed to be closed by now?

    http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2010/06/10/95693/federal-judge-calls-guantanamo.html

  2. Mandatory trash collection is just like Hitler!

    The tea party movement and their corporate-funded astroturf backers at FreedomWorks often claim to be fighting “big government.” For instance, FreedomWorks complained that the individual mandate in the new health care law was an “unacceptable, unconscionable, … complete perversion of the liberties our founders fought and died to protect.” Now, local chapters of the tea party and FreedomWorks are collaborating to plan a protest in Gwinnet County, Georgia, to voice their latest grievance against government powers — mandatory home trash collection

  3. jason330 says:

    Public Service Announcement: This site is now unblocked on my work network. So, Adios productivity. You were nice while you lasted.

  4. anon says:

    If you have been away for a while, make sure you update yourself on the steadily growing list of topics that make the contributors flee for the safety of Twitter.

  5. delacrat says:

    You’d think Mary Landrieu (D-La), after so many of her constituents have been sickened by fumes from the BP blowout, would know better than to hamstring the EPA.

  6. LOL, GOP “Young Guns:”

    In fact, the current crop of the 22 Young Guns looks very much like the old generation of conservative leaders. These upstarts together average an age of 49.6 years old—two months shy of the average age of new members who joined Congress in 2008. And those current reps are no spring chickens themselves. According to one analysis, the 111th Congress is the oldest, on average, of any since 1907.

    More than half of the Young Guns, having celebrated the big 5-0, are already eligible for an AARP membership. Only two of the group’s designated candidates—Martha Roby, who is running for Alabama’s 2nd District, and district attorney-cum-reality-television star Sean Duffy, who is running for the open seat in Wisconsin’s 7th District—are under the age of 40.

    At 62, Steve Pearce is the most senior member of the group. The former congressman is hoping to win back his seat in New Mexico’s 2nd District—a job he left in 2008 to make an unsuccessful run for the Senate. But Pearce isn’t the only senior member of the Young Guns class; he’s got 59-year-old Richard Hanna of New York and 57-year-old Steve Chabot of Ohio nipping at his heels.

    Yep, pretty much the party of old white guys, now with some extra-crazy women thrown in for good measure.

  7. anon, you guys don’t need me when you’re all having a flame war. Those things are self-sustaining.

  8. AQC says:

    Mike Barbieri is doing his official announcement for re-election tomorrow from 11 – noon at Coventry Park. Come out and support him if you can!

  9. shoe throwing instructor says:

    Sooo many things about the tea party movement have me worried about our future, this is fachism being carried in on a flag drapped cross, which we were warned about in the 1930,s, One disturbing new campaign that they are touting now is repeal of the 17th admendment, a very transparent effort to totally destroy the democratic party in the senate, if state legislator are allowed again to chose our senators it totally negates the votes from the inner city minorities who traditionly vote democratic, there would be no chance for a liberal democratic senator to ever win an election in the red states and some blue states {like Delaware} would have a much more difficult time electing another democrat, it,s in effect pulling the right to vote away from minorities and leaving senate elections strickly in the hands of the white and right state legislators.

  10. jason330 says:

    “The state of Delaware made $42,960 for the first week of table games at Harrington race track and casino. That’s based on $1.2 million in bets. Those who gambled won $1.12 million back. ”

    Anybody play yet?

    http://whyy.org/cms/news/regional-news/delaware/2010/06/10/first-delaware-table-game-numbers-are-in/39792