It pretty much still is. The only high-profile conservatives I know of who favor it (and are willing to admit to that in public) are Andrew Sullivan and Ted Olson.
In the US, anyway. But it's a common idea in the UK.
'Our Mrs. Reynolds'
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
It pretty much still is. The only high-profile conservatives I know of who favor it (and are willing to admit to that in public) are Andrew Sullivan and Ted Olson.
In the US, anyway. But it's a common idea in the UK.
debra saunders - wrote a progay marriage column from the conservative side
I believe that. Although I bet that to the GOP, she's a RINO, given that she lives in the depraved Bay Area and writes for the Chron.
Came across this blog post this morning: [link] It's a GOP volunteer who was supposed to be on the GOTV team, talking about what a debacle election day was. And it shows that the reluctance to engage with reality extended to their own efforts, as well. Frankly, we're damned lucky Team Romney was as incompetent as they were: a solid GOTV effort might have made a difference in some key states.
I'm hungry. I need a pancake delivery service.
Oh dang, Dana. That sound like a marvelous idea. I'd like some pumpkin pancakes, please. I have my own maple syrup...
I'm hungry. I need a pancake delivery service.
I'm hungry too. While I don't have access to a pancake delivery service, there are pancakes a block away. I can sense them. Waiting for me.
Came across this blog post this morning: [link] It's a GOP volunteer who was supposed to be on the GOTV team, talking about what a debacle election day was.
That was really interesting.
Wonkette sez:
Anyway, this seems like it was quite the fuckup! The fact that the Romney campaign spent more than $100 million on services from political consulting firms close to his senior staff — services that we imagine were not vetted through a rigorous contracting process — couldn’t have anything to do with this and other failures, could it? Thank goodness the Republicans nominated a savvy businessman with so much private sector management experience to run this thing. Just imagine how badly it would’ve gone under the direction of some hippie community organizer!
More on this from Breitbart:
Exclusive - Inside Orca: How the Romney Campaign Suppressed Its Own Vote
As Republicans try to explain their Election Day losses in terms of policy, tactics, and strategy, one factor is emerging as the essential difference between the Obama and Romney campaigns on November 6: the absolute failure of Romney’s get-out-the-vote effort, which underperformed even John McCain’s lackluster 2008 turnout. One culprit appears to be “Orca,” the Romney’s massive technology effort, which failed completely.
eta:
Before the election, there was much fear-mongering on the Democratic side about the Republicans’ supposed plans to suppress turnout among Obama voters. After the election, GOP strategist Karl Rove accused the Obama campaign of “suppressing the vote” by running a negative campaign against Romney that kept voters at home.
The truth is much worse. There was, in fact, massive suppression of the Republican vote--by the Romney campaign, through the diversion of nearly 40,000 volunteers to a failing computer program.
There was no Plan B; there was only confusion, and silence.
My Google-fu is failing me. Would any of our librarians or otherwise smart people like to look for links to what would happen if the global economy collapsed completely? (It's for a book idea.) Not the big political stuff, the everyday details of how Average Person's life would change.
I found a couple of pieces online, but they're vague about those details. My only real reference is something like The Stand or Dawn of the Dead, and in that case services fail because everyone's dying (or coming back to life violently). If it was a strictly economic collapse, I'm wondering how long services would be viable -- would the government seize control of the utilities? Would there still be school for kids? Stuff like that.
Help, please?
My Google-fu is failing me. Would any of our librarians or otherwise smart people like to look for links to what would happen if the global economy collapsed completely? (It's for a book idea.) Not the big political stuff, the everyday details of how Average Person's life would change.
Maybe nobody knows exactly what would happen. And it would depend on how the global economy collapsed (where it started, how fast of a collapse, etc).
I hope I'm wrong and someone will find useful info for you.
So there's a small energizer plant in my small town - it employees 165 people which is pretty big. It's closing down, according to the boston.com article, it's because people aren't buying the batteries that are made there.
But on the FB page of our local newspaper one of the employees said all the jobs are moving to Singapore and the employees here trained their replacements. I haven't read the full local newspaper article (the big stories aren't online) but it really sucks if that's what happened.