Saturday, August 15, 2009

Elections From: Adam Graham Lee Keath Jocelyn Wolf DealBook Cory Doctorow Champaign County Clerk David Usborne PUPPETGOV Shen Yasserlatifhamdani Jarrett Murphy Administrator Alex Harrowell Rajeev2007 The Real News /26711766

Adam Graham is not really sure about that:
1) Spectral politics is the underlying force of American life Pragmatists believe Republicans must capture the center to win elections.

In contrast, Lee Keath replies:
BBC Tehran correspondent asked to leave June 21st, 2009 LONDON - British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) in an announcement Sunday said Iranian authorities have asked its correspondent in Tehran to leave. "With regret, Jon Leyne, the BBC's permanent correspondent in Tehran, has been asked to leave by the Iranian authorities," the BBC said.

Despite the previous arguments, Jocelyn Wolf has many reasons to think otherwise:
Nuff said On June 19 Guest Blogger: Jacqueline Ross Deception, interrogation & evidence On June 18 Pre-Trial Detention before the ECCC: The Continuin...

Furthermore, DealBook claims:
The McCain-Feingold law bans the broadcast, cable or satellite transmission of “electioneering communications” paid for by corporations in the 30 days before a presidential primary and in the 60 days before a general election.

While it may be true, Cory Doctorow thinks:
The purpose of this guide is to help you participate constructively in the Iranian election protests through twitter. 1. Do NOT publicise proxy IP’s over twitter, and especially not using the #iranelection hashtag. Security forces are monitoring this hashtag, and the moment they identify a proxy IP they will block it in Iran. If you are creating new proxies for the Iranian bloggers, DM them to @stopAhmadi or @iran09 and they will distributed them discretely to bloggers in Iran.

Champaign County Clerk is absolutely sure that:
I am less familiar with touch screen systems.  My impression is that the residual vote rates here also have less value than might be implied in some of the research.  The “roughly constant” standard is just not valid in any jurisdiction.  At the same time, Better Ballots points out common sense changes that intuitively look positive and which probably need to be implemented.  Additionally, if residual vote rates can demonstrate that machines are not properly calibrated, that would be good.

In contrast, David Usborne replies:
View full article here Tags: world , world americas Leave a comment Add to Memories Tell a Friend Link

PUPPETGOV explains:
By Philip Weiss~ Philipweiss M ohammad of Vancouver (a Canadian-Iranian) has relatives in the streets of Tehran, but he says that Ahmadinejad likely won the election, and the west, with its warm ears for Moussavi, is choosing to hear what it wants from the demonstrations. And Ayatollah Rafsanjani, the former Iranian president, has manipulated the electoral crisis in Iran for his own gain.

Having that in mind, Shen wonders:
Hiraya: Endless Journey TV5 shows, tuma-Top 10 na! 10 hours ago Evil Woobie How to Get Your Mojo Back After a Break Up 11 hours ago

Despite the previous arguments, yasserlatifhamdani has many reasons to think otherwise:
Opinion the NEWS The devolution saga Kashmir: shifting paradigms Nostalgic memories The ballot revolution What audacious arrogance!

Jarrett Murphy explains:
Sean Parnell President Center for Competitive Politicshttp://www.campaignfreedom.org      Reply      Favorite      Flag as abusive Posted 09:27 AM on 07/08/2009

Administrator remembers that:
NotesWilliam Blum, Killing Hope , chapter 9 ↩ Associated Press , June 16, 2009 ↩ New York Times , June 21, 2009 ↩

Alex Harrowell explains:
Culture Economics and demography Economics: Country briefings Economics: Currencies Energy and enviroment Europe and the world France General management Geography Germany Governments and parties History Life Minorities and integration Misc Not Europe Political issues Religion Science and research Terrorism The European Union Transition and accession Ukraine Vampires Websites

rajeev2007 sees it this way:
Journalist Cho Ramaswamy discussed how in MDMK leader Vaiko’s constituency, Virudhunagar, Tamil Nadu, “while counting, the votes increased by 23,000 more than the polled votes” [xx]

The Real News is rather skeptical:
Guardian Council Rules Out Vote Annulment In Iran CAIRO Overwhelmed by police and left with limited alternatives, Iranian demonstrators resorted Tuesday to more subtle ways of challenging the outcome of the presidential...

Sources:
Adam Graham Lee Keath Jocelyn Wolf DealBook Cory Doctorow Champaign County Clerk David Usborne PUPPETGOV Shen yasserlatifhamdani Jarrett Murphy Administrator Alex Harrowell rajeev2007 The Real News

Disclaimer:
This text is automatically generated from different sources on the internet. It must be considered an experiment

Elections From: ANM Blog Admin The Independent Tim Selwyn Robert Dreyfuss, The Nation Johan GS Don Morris, Ph.D. JDsg J. Robert Brown NIAC The Real News Lee Keath Cory Doctorow Ians Ognyan Minchev Adam Graham /26711773

ANM Blog sees it this way:
"Unlike Glasgow East, where the SNP gave Labour a kicking, Glenrothes saw Lindsay Roy sweep home relatively easily because lots of work had been put into finding the right candidate and doing the hard work on the ground." And where there was plenty of time for the postal votes to be, erm, what s the word I m looking for... Posted by: Andy | 30/06/2009 at 12:29 PM

But admin has a different opinion:
To encourage citizen ownership of transparent, participatory democracy. The Creekside Declaration. March 22, 2008 **Articles and commentary included in Daily Voting News do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the editors of Daily Voting News, VotersUnite.Org , or Scoop . Articles are selected for inclusion to inform subscribers ability to draw their own conclusions based on noteworthy and credible news, research, legislation, and debate bearing on the integrity of elections.**

Before going any further, The Independent wants to get this straight:
Nigel Morris View full article here Tags: uk , uk politics Leave a comment Add to Memories Tell a Friend Link

Tim Selwyn objects:
#15 (-1) Homepaddock : www.homepaddock.wordpress.com 04/2008+ "A rural perspective with a blue tint" Ele Ludemann : Right - National : North Otago

Robert Dreyfuss, The Nation is not really sure about that:
Many supporters of the opposition -- as I learned during nearly two weeks in Iran -- don't want the clergy to rule at all. "The mullahs are like idols," one government official told me. "They must be broken."

johan explains:
, mahmoud ahmadinejad, Mousavi, opposition camp, percent, president, president mahmoud ahmadinejad, vote (No Ratings Yet)  Loading ...

GS Don Morris, Ph.D. explains:
Hamas indoctrination of Kids: Bombs more precious than children http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YIBNRVgq59Y Why Ambulances Sometimes Get Targeted By The IAF http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=116_1231063776

Thinking that's not all, JDsg adds:
The Astounding World of the Future Han Solo, P.I. A ishah and Her Toys Links for 1 June 2009

Robert Dreyfuss, The Nation also takes into account the following fact:
Advertisement Upcoming AlterNet stories on Digg Speaking to a government-organized throng bused in from around Tehran and as far away as Qom, Iran's religious capital, and other cities -- a crowd, no doubt, vastly inflated by dutiful members of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps and the fascist, mosque-based Basij thugs -- Ayatollah Ali Khamenei threw down the gauntlet against the Green Wave.

In contrast, J. Robert Brown replies:
Cases Chiquita Churchill Cuban Nacchio PCAOB   Closed Cases Stockman About About This Site Contact Us   Contributors

NIAC brings a word of caution:
Historicallly, those who surf on the waves created by deluding the masses use the same methods.  Hitler was something of a demagogue before coming to power.  Chavez in Venezuela is the same.  Unfortunately, uneducated and ignorant masses become the main supporters of dictatorships.  Regarding Iranians, superstitious and religious beliefs has added to this cause like Ahmadinejad’s supporters who believe his government is approved by the absent Imam.  Now that he has won, he may well claim similar things in the future.

In contrast, The Real News replies:
The Real News Posted: June 25, 2009 10:28 AM BIO Become a Fan Get Email Alerts Bloggers' Index

admin explains:
The Smirking Chimp The Vadimus Post True Vote TruthOut Velvet Revolution Video The Vote Vote Trust USA

Similarly, Lee Keath adds:
Ayatollah Morteza Moqtadaei, a conservative Ahmadinejad supporter, has called on the opposition to choose silence to preserve the system.

As a result of that, Cory Doctorow belives:
Take a look at this #13 posted by Anonymous, June 16, 2009 6:48 AM Ugly Canuck -- Even those who refused to vote or were not supporters of Ahmadinejad or Mousavi say the 2 week run up to the election saw a blossoming of free expression in Iran's major cities. This is one of the things people don't want to lose.

Ians is absolutely sure that:
Disaster Management Minister Mortaza Hossain said: We had asked for the money. I welcome the proposal. Mukherjees budgetary promise to set up a handloom mega cluster in the state was also welcomed by the industry bodies.

In response, Ognyan Minchev claims:
Civil society groups initiated a public campaign against the practices of buying votes and exercising pressure upon voters, offering an Integrity Pact to the political parties for joining their efforts in favor of restoring a free and fair electoral process. Most parties signed the Pact, yet the parties of government considered their signatures largely nominal. The governmental majority in Parliament passed highly controversial amendments into the electoral law at the last moment possible in order to deprive both opposition and public opinion the right to debate and oppose the changes. Those changes were considered potentially favorable for the government parties’ performance at the ballot box, which did not prove the case at the end. The security services of the state (in particular the State Agency for National Security â€" DANS) were misused by the government in order to support puppet political fractions, considered potent to drain support from the government political opponents. The court system was misused together with the government-dominated Central Electoral Commission in rejecting legitimate registration of particular political parties (UDF for example) for the elections.

Adam Graham tells the real story:
Jun 28, 2009 - 3:52 pm Write a Comment Name: (required, displayed) Email: (required, not publicized) URL: (optional, displayed) remember personal info? Comments:  

Sources:
ANM Blog admin The Independent Tim Selwyn Robert Dreyfuss, The Nation johan GS Don Morris, Ph.D. JDsg J. Robert Brown NIAC The Real News Lee Keath Cory Doctorow Ians Ognyan Minchev Adam Graham

Disclaimer:
This text is automatically generated from different sources on the internet. It must be considered an experiment

Elections From: Crisitunity Simon Rosenberg DownWithTyranny Bluegreenblogger Cory Doctorow William A. Jacobson Ismael Crespo Dandelionsalad Michael Silence Stephen Zunes Robert Naiman David M. Quintana GS Don Morris, Ph.D. Lee Keath /26711765

Crisitunity imagines that:
• Votes: Although we're only halfway through the year, CQ already has initial party unity scores available for all the members of Congress, as well as similar "presidential support scores." [

While it may be true, Simon Rosenberg thinks:
Making the Case: 7 Reasons Why Congress Should Pass Comprehensive Immigration Reform this Year , Huffington Post , Simon Rosenberg, 4/30/09 - Rosenberg argues that the answer to whether Congress can pass reform this year is "yes."

Before going any further, DownWithTyranny wants to get this straight:
May 2006 June 2006 July 2006 August 2006 September 2006 October 2006 November 2006 December 2006

Furthermore, bluegreenblogger claims:
organization will all be emphasized in the right degree. My next four picks are as follows: Huguette Allen , Lynne

Cory Doctorow does not seem to agree with this. In his own words:
#15 posted by Ugly Canuck , June 16, 2009 7:01 AM Meh. To paraphrase St. Reagan: Let Iran be Iran. In general, IMHO people ought to keep a closer eye upon their own local leaders, first and foremost. I've always found it darkly amusing, the coming & going of which particular Nations the Americans consider to be "newsworthy": and why they sat they care, when they do say they care. But when the US aid money is spent, it seems always to be on weapons, and intrumentalities of control... And foreign distractions can be so useful, when domestic affairs are tangled and fraught! No race, creed or color bars the taking of that particular course of action.

William A. Jacobson thinks that the problem is:
internet: The claims of Iranian election fraud are an Israeli-created hoax spread by manipulating Twitter.The first reference to this conspiracy theory that I can find, and a driving force behind its spread, is a website called

Ismael Crespo brings more details:
FOUR Lessons for both . Although it is not a main issue for either party s executive committee, it would perhaps be worthwhile for both of them to reflect, even if it were just during the question time, on two matters: the growth of the UPyD, and both parties fear that it could turn into the new home for those dissatisfied with the traditional political class, and the medium term strategies that should come with the results.

As dandelionsalad says:
Recent events suggest that political leaders in Europe, and even some in Washington, do not accept the Zionist-mass media line of ‘stolen elections’. The White House has not suspended its offer of negotiations with the newly re-elected government but has focused rather on the repression of the opposition protesters (and not the vote count). Likewise, the 27 nation European Union expressed ‘serious concern about violence’ and called for the “aspirations of the Iranian people to be achieved through peaceful means and that freedom of expression be respected” (Financial Times June 16, 2009 p.4). Except for Sarkozy of France, no EU leader has questioned the outcome of the voting.

Despite the previous arguments, Crisitunity has many reasons to think otherwise:
Oil and Gas Commission. How long was she on this Commission? Less than a year... until she quit in January 2004 with a big public huff (leaving the Commission in the lurch with only one member), saying "the experience was taking the 'oomph' out of her passion for government service and she decided to quit rather than becoming bitter." She publicly cited her frustration with being unable to be all straight-talky and mavericky about the corruption and backbiting on the Commission, but the resignation also came at a very convenient time for switching over to lay the groundwork for her successful 2006 gubernatorial run.

In other words, Michael Silence puts it this way:
A collection of East Tennessee blogs. See the list » Links Breaking news on the blogs Hot Web talk items Pew Internet Life and American Life Project (PDF) BlogsNow Top 100 blogs

While it may be true, Stephen Zunes thinks:
  Books by this author This Blogger's Books from Problems with current U.S. policy. (Self-Determination Series).(relations with Israel): An article from: Foreign Policy in Focus by Joseph Yackley, Stephen Zunes Tinderbox by Stephen Zunes, Richard Falk

Robert Naiman objects:
In summary: It seems possible that Karroubi and Rezaie each got around a million more votes than reported and that these were switched into Ahmadinejad's column at the count, as were 3 million of Mousavi's votes (mostly in Tehran), and that another million or so were stuffed into boxes, inflating Ahmadinejad's total by 6 million overall. Of course, the numbers probably wouldn't be so round.

David M. Quintana has another idea:
New York City Department of Education New York Families for Autistic Children New York State - Alliance for Quality Education

GS Don Morris, Ph.D. shows how it is done:
The MT Press March 20091. You cannot bring about prosperity by discouraging thrift.2. You cannot strengthen the weak by weakening the strong.

Meanwhile, Lee Keath came up with this idea:
Religion News Malaysian police probe Muslim reporters who stirred Christian anger by attending Mass Report: Iran hangs 13 members of rebel Sunni Muslim group convicted of killings, bombings Official: 23 militants killed in clashes with tribal militia in NW Pakistan Judge: Prosecutors can't discuss 'polygamy' at trial of jailed evangelist Tony Alamo Cuban Catholic Church: 2nd Spanish priest killed in 5 months Lay Catholic group founded during clergy sex abuse scandal faces financial crisis Northern Ireland divisions on parade as Catholics riot over Protestants parade Pakistani refugees return home to Swat Valley; blast in country's center kills 11

Sources:
Crisitunity Simon Rosenberg DownWithTyranny bluegreenblogger Cory Doctorow William A. Jacobson Ismael Crespo dandelionsalad Michael Silence Stephen Zunes Robert Naiman David M. Quintana GS Don Morris, Ph.D. Lee Keath

Disclaimer:
This text is automatically generated from different sources on the internet. It must be considered an experiment

Elections From: Rajeev2007 Fgomez1 Liberally Conservative The Nameless Libertarian Anil Mundra Cory Doctorow Jarrett Murphy Jakegoad The Real News Louise Crawford Nathanael Smith Lowe GS Don Morris, Ph.D. Michael Falino ANM Blog The Ed Robert Naiman Narayan Mahon Admin William A. Jacobson /26711776

For this reason, rajeev2007 says:
Furthermore, the Trojan Horse could be programmed to erase itself when the EVM is turned off at the end of the day’s voting. It may leave no trace of its erstwhile existence. Trojan Horse programs are well-known among the hacker community, and are not particularly difficult to write. But they are fiendishly difficult to find and eradicate.

Despite the previous arguments, fgomez1 has many reasons to think otherwise:
Agricultural activities account for 95 % of the rural population s income, with more than two thirds of the rural population being poor (69 %), compared to 34 % in towns. Land distribution, loss of soil fertility, the use of rudimentary traditional techniques, inadequate services to support production and marketing, the high rate of illiteracy and difficulties in obtaining credit are the reasons for the agricultural sector s poor productivity, and the low incomes of rural families.

Similarly, Liberally Conservative adds:
If words matter than why has Obama refused to repeat his words from Cairo that governments that reflect the will of the people? Obama is too busy reforming the United States against the will of much of its people by taking over private companies, offering full health benefits to gay partners of Federal employees, funding abortion abroad and preparing US citizens for the biggest takeover of American individual liberty since FDR.

But The Nameless Libertarian says that's not all:
Let's dismiss one argument I've seen straight away - that it doesn't matter who LPUK puts up in this election because they ain't gonna win it. Yeah, the chances of the party winning in Norwich North aren't tremendous. And if Burridge is going to be an MP, then it will probably be after another election, when he is older. But no party should ever allow itself to be represented by someone that it wouldn't be proud to have in power. If a party runs candidates without caring who they are or what they stand for then they are jaded, old, cynical and not worthy of running in that election. Hopefully, Burridge isn't the LPUK candidate because they are certain of losing. Rather, he should be the candidate because they hope - against hope - to win.

Anil Mundra points out another thing aside from that:
A controversial mine Pascale Bonnefoy - Chile - June 6, 2009 16:17 ET A Canadian company's plan to build a gold and silver mine on the Chile-Argentina border spurs controversy.

Cory Doctorow thinks about it:
Take a look at this #60 posted by Anonymous, June 16, 2009 1:51 PM Google cache for that orginial link, please mirror & ReTweet http://bit.ly/e8chM

Jarrett Murphy has another idea:
Obama Campaign Arm Doubles Down, Targets House Dems On Health Care Ignoring criticism - namely from Senator Majority Leader...

Having that in mind, jakegoad wonders:
This year's Chapel Hill election is not merely a local issue -- it is important state-wide. The bill that would have extended public financing was put on hold in the Senate because they wanted to see how the Chapel Hill election goes.

The Real News intervenes and adds:
Michael Wolff: How Obama Saves Iran (and Himself) by Dithering The president's posture now is to openly overthink the Iran situation. He's a walking existential conundrum, and letting everybody know it.

louise crawford brings a word of caution:
Michael's Brooklyn Memoir Monte Ghertler Music NEW BLOG ON THE BLOCK New York 1 New York Daily News

Nathanael Smith comes with the facts:
Absent democracy, the roughly 10% of the public in Middle Eastern, Islamic countries willing to shoot their way into power in the name of Allah seems dominant. Actual elections reveal them to be fringe, extremist groups, greatly diminishing their power in favor of reasonable, secular leaders. As a result, the Bush doctrine of advancing democracy and human rights is now increasingly successful in combating terrorism and Islamic extremism.

Having that in mind, lowe wonders:
I saw one website in the US that was showing people how to set up web proxies so Iranians could bypass the blockout. CNN reported that a British programmer's website (That just refreshes webpages, so you can get the last bid on EBAY for example) was used to flood the Iranian government's webservers. And also, the social sites involvement.

Similarly, GS Don Morris, Ph.D. adds:
But the world didn t have the patience for that, and now the indigent jihadist statelet on the Mediterranean is the world s problem.

Still not being convinced, Michael Falino replies:
And you, of tender years, Can t know the fears that your elders grew by, And so please help them with your youth, They seek the truth before they can die.

Similarly, ANM Blog adds:
About Paul Paul Waugh's biography Other blogs Laura Craik Nick Curtis Bruce Dessau Daisy Dumas Richard Godwin Louise Jury Mark Prigg Jonathan Prynn Paul Waugh

The Ed is not really sure about that:
In their partial to total absence of a national and civic life, the Arabs are more than vulnerable to media winds: the slightest media breeze sweeps them up and scatters them like leaves. So you get reactions that vary from parroting the New York Times and even Twitter, and the translation into Arabic and dissemination of the most outrageous Israeli lies and rumours, to the deafening of ears to any piece of information or opinion, the only common denominator between them all being lack of scrutiny and critical thought.

Robert Naiman has another idea:
Here we go again. Most people are not getting their information from print media, they're getting it from TV. And of course, even in the print media, you have to search for dissenting views from the TV narrative.

Narayan Mahon thinks about it:
Pakistan: Hearts and Minds Disappearing in Sri Lanka Afghanistan: Human Terrain Ghana's Kayayo Guatemala: Forgotten Trauma

admin gives a bit of an idea about it:
Taking as one example, the results of the 2009 presidential elections for the province of Lorestan, broken down to the individual ballot boxes, an amazing pattern emerges. In126 out of 1212 ballot boxes the total figures are seemingly rounded to the multiples of hundred. That is to say, there are 21 ballot boxes with exactly 700 votes. Another 20 have 800 votes and a further 14 contain 900 whilst six other ballot boxes having exactly 1500 votes. This pattern of rounded vote counts happens in more than 10 percent of the ballot boxes in Lorestan province, a highly improbable statistical occurrence. If we consider a statistically probable figure (for a randomly generated set of figures for the votes per ballot box) the probability of encountering numbers in multiples of 100 falls well below 1%. Now, compare this to the totals for the ballot boxes outside of Iran where we find none of the 69 corresponding ballot boxes totals being a mul tiple of 100 ( rounded figures as for Lorestan).

William A. Jacobson says it all comes down to this:
June 22, 2009 9:20 AM Rosita said... Whenever I hear some Israeli conspiracy theory, I always think of the joke where the Israeli is like, "Whenever I want to cheer myself up I read the Arab newspapers, because according to them, we re controlling everything..." I don t think anyone even approaching sane thinks claims like this are anything but hogwash just like the 9/11 claims.

Sources:
rajeev2007 fgomez1 Liberally Conservative The Nameless Libertarian Anil Mundra Cory Doctorow Jarrett Murphy jakegoad The Real News louise crawford Nathanael Smith lowe GS Don Morris, Ph.D. Michael Falino ANM Blog The Ed Robert Naiman Narayan Mahon admin William A. Jacobson

Disclaimer:
This text is automatically generated from different sources on the internet. It must be considered an experiment

Elections From: JDsg Blackandred Administrator MichaelCollins Matt-wardman Richard Fernandez Eric Dondero The Real News Mehret Tesfaye Kady O'Malley Crisitunity James Eterno GS Don Morris, Ph.D. Tim Selwyn Yasserlatifhamdani Furtune Gautam Keeptonyblairforpm Magid Shihade /26711775

JDsg tells the real story:
A closer look at the voting pattern in the East-Azerbaijan region of Iran reveals that Mousavi won only in the city of Shabestar among the upper and the middle classes (and only by a small margin), whereas he was soundly defeated in the larger rural areas, where the re-distributive policies of the Ahmadinejad government had helped the ethnic Azeris write off debt, obtain cheap credits and easy loans for the farmers. Mousavi did win in the West-Azerbaijan region, using his ethnic ties to win over the urban voters. In the highly populated Tehran province, Mousavi beat Ahmadinejad in the urban centers of Tehran and Shemiranat by gaining the vote of the middle and upper class districts, whereas he lost badly in the adjoining working class suburbs, small towns and rural areas.

blackandred might have an idea about it:
You can find the Ballen-Doherty report here. Paul Craig Roberts was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury in the Reagan administration. He is coauthor of The Tyranny of Good Intentions . He can be reached at: PaulCraigRoberts@yahoo.com

Administrator does a quick recap:
NotesWilliam Blum, Killing Hope , chapter 9 ↩ Associated Press , June 16, 2009 ↩ New York Times , June 21, 2009 ↩

Still being unsure, MichaelCollins asks:
Here one of the government thugs gets ready to stab a demonstrator in the back for simply asking for a fair vote count. Image

As a result of that, matt-wardman belives:
Iranian Elections 2009 Twitter: let the last doubter now shut up Mapping Iran’s Blogosphere on Election Eve Twitter Archive of the Iranian Elections June 2009 #IranElection Twitter and the events in Iran Raw video from today s Tehran rally Iran Election Cyberwar by Twitter: The Revenge of Lilliput Video from the Iranian frontline (warning: some disturbing images) Allahu Akbar Iran Election: This is a massacre! Music: Beat it! (you fanatics, get out of my land)

Richard Fernandez is rather skeptical:
Jul 4, 2009 - 10:54 am Write a Comment Name: (required, displayed) Email: (required, not publicized) URL: (optional, displayed) remember personal info? Comments:   Notify me of followup comments via e-mail

As a result of that, Eric Dondero belives:
Comment on Dondero The people who actually work for Liberty are generally too busy with that to comment on blogs. Eric Dondero is an exception - he is just about the hardest working, most productive and most honorable petitioner... Say what you want about his blog but few can match what he has actually done in the streets to advance the cause of Liberty -- Sean Haugh, National Political Director, Libertarian Party

In addition to this, The Real News states:
Michael Jackson Couldn't Sing, Was Gay, Was Skeletal: Writer # Genetic condition had ruined his lungs and left him unable to sing # He became...

Mehret Tesfaye brings a word of caution:
The debate on whether the perpetrators of the 2007 post election violence should be tried through a local tribunal or the Hague has been gaining momentum with the tirade this time around directed at Kilonzo.

Kady O'Malley might have an idea about it:
So, remember how ITQ was wondering about the oft-repeated talking point that voting down the estimates would bring the stimulus cash rollout to a screaming halt? Canadian Press was on the job , y all:

In addition to this, Crisitunity states:
Hollis French filed a letter of intent to run for Governor in 2010 (despite fellow Dem Ethan Berkowitz's potential presence in the race), although who knows if he'll stay interested now that the race will be against a semi-incumbent Sean Parnell.

James Eterno thinks that the problem is:
Anonymous said... In 2004 when I ran against Ms. Weingarten, we the ICE caucus acquired executive board seats, at this writing I am not sure how many. I am no longer a chapter leader and cannot run against Mulgrew, but I am wondering exactly what ICE now ICE/TJC intends to do about the present situation. Mulgrew can be beaten if we set our collective skills into doing just that.

Despite the previous arguments, GS Don Morris, Ph.D. has many reasons to think otherwise:
- - Margaret FonteyMan does not live by a turkey in every oven or a color TV set in every home. Man lives by faith and hope and love, by the star on the horizon, by the trumpet that will not call retreat.

Tim Selwyn also takes into account the following fact:
#18 (+8) In a strange land : www.inastrangeland.wordpress.com 07/2007+ "Feminism" Deborah : Left - ? : NZ #19 (+4)

GS Don Morris, Ph.D. comes with the facts:
In Spanish: From disengagement to CAST http://switch3.castup.net/cunet/gm.asp?ai=58&ar=Hamas Escalation - Spanish - D&ak=null

Furthermore, yasserlatifhamdani claims:
secular pakistan shadowed forest of world politics Shirazi Sb Stray Reflections Support Pakistan Teeth Maestro The Canvas

Still being unsure, furtune asks:
Categories Animal Arts Automobiles Bank & Finance Business & Economy CELEBRITIES compulife CRIME Education ENERGY Entertainment FAMILY Fashion Festival Food & Drink General Interest Story General Science Health Law Mobile Phones & Communications motoring News Nollywood Politics Real Estate RELIGION Romance and Relationships Sports Stock and Forex Exchange Technology TOURISM Transportation Travel & Recreation Uncategorized WORLD

In other words, gautam puts it this way:
District 5 30,125 15,887 10,384 34.5% 14,238 (47.3%) District 6 18,738 10,470 8,472 45.2% 8268 (44.1%)

Before going any further, keeptonyblairforpm wants to get this straight:
BBC report here and below .Some UK embassy staff detained in Tehran and accused of inciting protests after disputed elections will face trial, a top Iranian cleric says.

As a result of that, Magid Shihade belives:
When Hamas was elected in 2006, Israel and the U.S. (with the obedient western countries) refused to accept the results of the Palestinians elections. Ronald A Judy wrote then, it is ideology not democracy that counts for Israel, the U.S. and their western obedient followers.

Sources:
JDsg blackandred Administrator MichaelCollins matt-wardman Richard Fernandez Eric Dondero The Real News Mehret Tesfaye Kady O'Malley Crisitunity James Eterno GS Don Morris, Ph.D. Tim Selwyn yasserlatifhamdani furtune gautam keeptonyblairforpm Magid Shihade

Disclaimer:
This text is automatically generated from different sources on the internet. It must be considered an experiment

Elections From: Buffalopundit Guest Post Nathanael Smith Khalid Akhter Stephen Zunes David M. Quintana Adam Graham Crisitunity Andre Haynes Senatus Andy The Nameless Libertarian Louise Crawford Stanmoore Mary Phillips-Sandy NIAC Tim Selwyn /26711777

Despite the previous arguments, Buffalopundit has many reasons to think otherwise:
There is a document being circulated that purports to reveal the actual results of last week s Iranian election. While obviously some people suspect that it s a forgery, under these results, a runoff would have been needed, Independent notes that Mousavi sure didn t want that. Anyhow, here are the (possibly) actual results of the election:

Guest Post does not seem to agree with this. In his own words:
A preliminary list of just US-covert and military interference into other countries during the 20. century can be read in Bill Blum´s “ Killing Hope” and “ Rogue State “.

Nathanael Smith points out another thing aside from that:
Christian Non-violence Cognition Creation-Myths Culture Current Affairs Development Economics Economic History Economic Journalism

Khalid Akhter thinks about it:
Although no Youth Congress member was fielded from Uttar Pradesh, the party wants to strengthen itself in the sprawling state which it dominated for decades before getting reduced to an also-ran from the late 1980s.

Having that in mind, Stephen Zunes wonders:
In apparent recognition of this trend, Congress in recent years has approved millions of dollars in funding to support various Iranian opposition groups to promote "regime change." However, most of these groups are led by exiles who have virtually no following within Iran or any experience with the kinds of grassroots mobilization necessary to build a popular movement that could threaten the regime's survival. By contrast, most of the credible opposition within Iran has renounced this U.S. initiative and has asserted that it has simply made it easier for the regime to claim that all pro-democracy groups and activists are paid agents of the United States.

David M. Quintana is absolutely sure that:
Pissed Off [Teacher] Pissed Off Mom Queens Library SoYouWanna be a teacher? Susan Ohanian Speaks Out The First Art Newspaper on the Net

Adam Graham comes with a new idea:
They are leaders.Jun 25, 2009 - 10:38 pm 26. sheesh:25. Warren Bonesteel: . . . The party of principle . . . ignoring The Constitution, promoting big government, ignoring ethics and ignoring morals and honor . . .

For this purpose, Crisitunity suggests:
• Votes: Although we're only halfway through the year, CQ already has initial party unity scores available for all the members of Congress, as well as similar "presidential support scores." [

Andre Haynes gives a bit of an idea about it:
Witch Dr. says: July 9, 2009 at 8:46 am Mr.Norton you are only exposing what has been hibernating within PNC and Corby it is time to pass on the torch to someone with real VISION. Reply

senatus comes with the facts:
Connecticut Governor Signs Bill Requiring Special Election for Senate Vacancy June 27, 2009 by senatus Republican Governor M. Jodi Rell (CT) “announced Friday she has signed a bill pushed by Democrats after the Rod Blagojevich scandal that strips her of the power to fill a vacant U.S. Senate seat and instead requires a special election,” the AP reports.

Having that in mind, David M. Quintana wonders:
NY1 - Top Stories Man Dies In Queens Hit-And-Run Accident 3 hours ago Public Advocate's Corner Gotbaum on State Senate's Failure to Renew Mayoral Control: Inaction is 'Beyond Reproach', But No Need for Panic 2 days ago

But Andy says that's not all:
Comments You can follow this conversation by subscribing to the comment feed for this post. good on the elections board. shame on the ignorant bishop.

The Nameless Libertarian considers that:
- Been subjected to a prolonged proctoscopy from HMRC.I just don t get it and if I was a wavering voter, in a seat where the person against whom people hold a grudge has gone - so this isn t a Martin Bell scenario - I wouldn t see any reason change party allegience, let alone gamble on a total unknown who quite frankly, intelligent and eloquent or not, doesn t know shit.

louise crawford objects:
real estate Religion RENEW REUNION PLANNING Richard Grayson Robert Guskind Robert Guskind and Gowanus Lounge

While it may be true, stanmoore thinks:
“I join President Obama and my colleagues in the Senate and the House in condemning the brutal beatings, threats, and imprisonments that have occurred in the aftermath of Iranian elections. However this chapter in Iranian history unfolds, the courageous actions of peaceful protestors such as Neda Soltan will not be forgotten.

Mary Phillips-Sandy is rather skeptical:
Email This to a Friend Copy HTML:    If you like this then please subscribe to the RSS Feed . Powered by Bookmarkify

Adam Graham thinks that the problem is:
Jun 25, 2009 - 2:52 pm 22. Rev316:Republicans would be quite foolish to listen to the liberal opposition to become more like liberal Democrats if they want to grow the Republican party. The Republicans are weak because they have turned their backs on conservative, Christian, small government values. McCain was a Gang of Fourteen RINO whose presidential campaign was stillborn until SARAH PALIN gave CONSERVATIVES something to get excited about and scare the heck out of liberals who know Palin has what it takes to lead conservatives. I don t care what the name of the party is, I vote conservative and socially conservative, to be more specific. Whichever candidate is the most conservative gets my vote.

NIAC comes with a new idea:
7:50 update: A powerful message from a friend of NIAC in Mashad, Iran: [We] are still safe, but to tell you the truth, all of us are feeling sick of what we have to see on streets these days. This afternoon, [we] saw five policemen attack a middle age lady. They beat her brutally, with no mercy. She tried to escape with her young daughter but they got her. I stopped and tried to help her, but three men in civilian clothes attacked my car, and I had to drive away because [my daughter] was with me. Tonight, people shouted Allah o Akabar from their roof tops, but hundreds of police forces on bikes swept the streets and marked houses from which they could hear voices. Tomorrow, I will go to a lawyer to ask for a [foreign] visa. This country will not be a safe place anymore, and I don t want to repeat my parents mistake in 1979 by staying and watching.

Crisitunity notices:
Doubt it. After seeing Specter lose his seniority and being challenged in a primary, I don't see why they would want to switch. by: panhandler @ Mon Jul 06, 2009 at 15:39:52 PM CDT [ Parent ]

Tim Selwyn brings some great news:
#15 (-1) Homepaddock : www.homepaddock.wordpress.com 04/2008+ "A rural perspective with a blue tint" Ele Ludemann : Right - National : North Otago

Sources:
Buffalopundit Guest Post Nathanael Smith Khalid Akhter Stephen Zunes David M. Quintana Adam Graham Crisitunity Andre Haynes senatus Andy The Nameless Libertarian louise crawford stanmoore Mary Phillips-Sandy NIAC Tim Selwyn

Disclaimer:
This text is automatically generated from different sources on the internet. It must be considered an experiment

Elections From: Boz Dandelionsalad Tim Selwyn DealBook Rajeev2007 Fgomez1 The Real News ANM Blog Thomas Steinmetz Carl M. Cannon Nathanael Smith Russ Wung DownWithTyranny William A. Jacobson Gautam Andre Haynes Stephen Zunes /26711774

boz scans the other's answers and reply:
Initialestimates appear that they lost about 22 seats in the lower house and 4-5 seats in the Senate. They only took about 30% of the national vote. The specific numbers could change as the votes are counted and seats are calculated (so don't take those initial numbers as absolutely accurate), but the result is certainly a loss of a Congressional majority for the president.

However, dandelionsalad states that:
What is astonishing about the West’s universal condemnation of the electoral outcome as fraudulent is that not a single shred of evidence in either written or observational form has been presented either before or a week after the vote count. During the entire electoral campaign, no credible (or even dubious) charge of voter tampering was raised. As long as the Western media believed their own propaganda of an immanent victory for their candidate, the electoral process was described as highly competitive, with heated public debates and unprecedented levels of public activity and unhindered by public proselytizing. The belief in a free and open election was so strong that the Western leaders and mass media believed that their favored candidate would win.

Tim Selwyn does a quick recap:
#8 (-) Whale Oil Beef Hooked : www.whaleoil.co.nz11/2005+ "Political commentary with bite" Whaleoil/Cameron Slater Right - National : Auckland

DealBook objects:
Shifts in court personnel since then, particularly the replacement of Justice Sandra Day O’Connor by Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr. in 2006, have substantially altered the court’s attitude to campaign finance laws.

rajeev2007 notices:
The most obvious way to add malicious code is to create a Trojan Horse [xxviii] , a program that has an undocumented back-door entry, known only to the writers of the program. Under normal circumstances, the program will function as specified, in this case correctly capturing the voter’s choice. However, the Trojan Horse can be triggered off by some specific mechanism, such as by pressing a particular sequence of buttons on the EVM. Before or during the voting process, some individual can trigger off the Trojan Horse, which becomes active. This individual could well be a party cadre who is a legitimate voter in that constituency.

fgomez1 might have an idea about it:
    We would like to highlight the importance of participation by citizens in the processes of national reconstruction. It is needed to promote participative management of the decentralised entities and participative decentralised development. Control by the citizens at a grassroots level will strengthen responsible governance from the foundations of the political system upwards.

The Real News brings some great news:
Dean, Kerry Back Obama On Iran Protests WASHINGTON Former Democratic Party Chairman Howard Dean gave the Obama administration high marks Thursday for its arms-length response to the disputed presidential election in...

Still being unsure, The Real News asks:
Michael Wolff: How Obama Saves Iran (and Himself) by Dithering The president's posture now is to openly overthink the Iran situation. He's a walking existential conundrum, and letting everybody know it.

ANM Blog comes with a new idea:
But more relevant must be Labour s last by-election victory. Unlike Glasgow East, where the SNP gave Labour a kicking, Glenrothes saw Lindsay Roy sweep home relatively easily because lots of work had been put into finding the right candidate and doing the hard work on the ground.

Thomas Steinmetz points out another thing aside from that:
Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." John F. KennedyToday, all Iranian expatriates are united in solidarity with the Iranian people in Iran. Today, we are all standing tall to let the world hear our continuous aspiration for a free and democratic Iran. Today, we pledge ourselves, under the divine inspiration, to stand beside the Iranians in Iran and echo their voices around the globe. Today, we make history, yet again.

As a result of that, Carl M. Cannon belives:
What point in the anti-slavery creed would you have me argue? On what branch of the subject do the people of this country need light? Must I undertake to prove that the slave is a man? That point is conceded already. Nobody doubts it. The slaveholders themselves acknowledge it in the enactment of laws for their government. They acknowledge it when they punish disobedience on the part of the slave. There are seventy-two crimes in the State of Virginia which, if committed by a black man (no matter how ignorant he be), subject him to the punishment of death; while only two of the same crimes will subject a white man to the like punishment. What is this but the acknowledgment that the slave is a moral, intellectual, and responsible being? The manhood of the slave is conceded. It is admitted in the fact that Southern statute books are covered with enactments forbidding, under severe fines and penalties, the teaching of the slave to read or to write. When you can point to any such laws in reference to the beasts of the field, then I may consent to argue the manhood of the slave...

However, rajeev2007 states that:
[xviii] “On New Voting Machine, the Same Old Fraud”, New York Times, 27 Apr 2004 [xix] “Sena alleges EVM malfunction in South Mumbai”, Rediff.com, 16 May 2009

Nathanael Smith gives a bit of an idea about it:
Christian Non-violence Cognition Creation-Myths Culture Current Affairs Development Economics Economic History Economic Journalism

boz is not really sure about that:
Peronists, the Radicals, the urban elite, the rural farmers and many other groups. There is no ideological cohesiveness to the opposition other than how they feel about the governing party (in fact, the disputes between potential 2011 presidential candidates could divide the opposition further). Having an opposition with real power will lower the

Russ Wung is not really sure about that:
Not all street violence is created equal. Activists protesting in Times Square against the U.S. government are merely whiners, and there is no risk in what they do.

DownWithTyranny scans the other's answers and reply:
Lindsey Graham (R-SC) was especially flaming inflammatory and sure to cause grief to the Iranian patriots struggling against a brutal and paranoid regime increasingly prepared to shoot down its own citizens. Florida's extreme right Senate candidate, Marco Rubio, looked at the troubles there as an opportunity to endear himself to the NRA and to suggest that Iranians ignore Mahatma Gandhi and Martin Luther King and turn to violence (something all

Despite the previous arguments, William A. Jacobson has many reasons to think otherwise:
Piece of Work In Progress The President Is an Ass 13 hours ago Likelihood of Success Never mind. 18 hours ago

gautam gives a bit of an idea about it:
District 1 24,211 14,373 7,486 30.9% 9838 (40.6%) District 2 27,070 No runoff No runoff No runoff

For this reason, Andre Haynes says:
Norton did not have a district conference in four years why? Norton as a former General Secretary know the party rules and constitution (two wrong cannot make it right). Norton know that District Conferences held every year.

Stephen Zunes does not seem to agree with this. In his own words:
Ironically, recent years have witnessed repeated calls by American neoconservatives who, despite having shown little concern for human rights in much of the world (including Iran when it was under the allied regime of the Shah) insist that the United States must lead the way in bringing democracy to that country. Despite being a thinly-veiled excuse for setting up another puppet regime to ensure easier access to the country's oil and natural gas resources, these supposed defenders of Iranian freedom have attacked the Obama administration for its apparently reluctance to pursue military options as well as for its interest in negotiating some kind of rapprochement with Iran regarding areas of mutual concern, such as Iraq, Afghanistan and nuclear non-proliferation.

Sources:
boz dandelionsalad Tim Selwyn DealBook rajeev2007 fgomez1 The Real News ANM Blog Thomas Steinmetz Carl M. Cannon Nathanael Smith Russ Wung DownWithTyranny William A. Jacobson gautam Andre Haynes Stephen Zunes

Disclaimer:
This text is automatically generated from different sources on the internet. It must be considered an experiment