Burnt Orange ReportNews, Politics, and Fun From Deep in the Heart of Texas |
Support the TDP! |
January 24, 2004My Howard Dean Evolution and DevolutionBy Byron LaMastersI promised to respond this post by Karl-Thomas a few days ago. I finally have a chance to write it now. I first met Howard Dean in May of 2001. I was a senior in high school at the time and a lesbian couple in Dallas (who had gone to Vermont to get a Civil Union), who I had met through my activism during the 2000 election cycle invited me to be their guest to a Howard Dean reception hosted by the HRC Dallas Federal Club (a group of wealthy gay donors who give $100+ per month to the Human Rights Campaign). I had no idea at that time that Howard Dean would be running for president, but it was an honor to meet the man who had the courage to sign a law granting gay and lesbian couples the same equal benefits and rights that are granted to heterosexual married couples. It almost cost Dean his re-election. While he won 50-38% over Ruth Dwyer in 2000, Vermont's quirky election laws send the election to the State House when no candidate wins a majority. With Republicans taking over the state house in a backlash over the Civil Unions (in the "Take Back Vermont" campaign which I saw on barns and yards across the state when I visited in the summer of 2000 for a rowing camp), Dean barely won re-election. Dean was within 2645 votes of the election being sent to the state house, where he surely would have lost, and likely not had the opportunity to run for president. On a side not, my lesbian friends were a big part of Dean's re-election in 2000. When the race was close in September, they decided to send out a fundraising mailer to the several hundred gay and lesbian couples who had gotten Civil Unions in Vermont since it became law earlier that year. Within weeks they raised over $10,000, and that last minute cash helped put Dean over the top. When I first looked for who to support in 2004, I looked to Al Gore. When I met Al Gore in May of 2001 (yeah, that was a busy month for me), I encouraged him to run again, and I pledged to support him. Al Gore inspired me. I may have been the only person in America to be inspired into politics by Al Gore, but I turned 18 in July of 2000, and while I initially liked Bill Bradley, I quickly rallied to Gore. While there was little I could do to help in Texas for the Gore campaign (and I got involved in a congressional race where I could make a difference instead), I did what I could. I co-wrote an article for my high school newspaper, Al Gore: The Best Choice For Our Generation. And after the election, I was angry and helped organize protests in Dallas of the Florida recount. So I was with Gore, then Gore decided not to run in December 2002, so I had to find a candidate. Well, January 2003 rolled around and I was angry, depressed and sad for America. Democrats had just gotten trounced in November. We lost our Senate majority, we lost seats in the House, we lost the Texas House, lost seats in the Texas Senate, Republicans swept the statewide ticket and we were about to go to war without allies, without clear evidence and without exhausting all of our other options. There were several candidates running for president and none of them really stood out. That was - until I heard Howard Dean speak. I remember hearing Dean speak at several forums in January and February 2003, most notably the NARAL event and the DNC Winter meeting where Dean inspired me. Finally, a candidate willing to stand up to George W. Bush. Finally, a candidate not ashamed to be a Democrat. We had lost the 2002 election, in my opinion, because Democrats failed to offer a clear and coherent message for America. So many Democrats ran campaigns on messages such as: "I support the President on this and that, but....". Howard Dean was the answer to this problem. He gave Democrats a reason to be proud of their party. He stood up against the right-wing in Vermont, and he beat them. Last Spring, he was the only one standing up to the right-wing in America, and I thought that he was our best - our only shot at beating George W. Bush. By March, I was a Deaniac. I went to my first meetup in March, and brought half of the University Democrats with me. I hosted a Students for Dean party and raised some money for the organization. I went to meetup in April and then to more meetups throughout the summer. I went to three fundraisers between March and July, donating a total of $40. I wrote letters to Iowans. Why? Because I didn't want 2002 to happen again. I saw most of the other candidates as Bush-lite. I believed that Howard Dean was the only Democrat that could beat George Bush, because he was the only one that had the courage to fight him and speak out. Howard Dean was the only candidate that drew hundreds and thousands of supporters to his events and rallies. He was the real deal. This fall, I began to have my doubts. There was no defining event last fall that caused me to go from a hardcore Dean supporter to soft supporter - it was more of a gut feeling. My anger over the war had subsided, so that was no long a defining issue. I still supported Dean, but I stopped going to meetups, donating money and volunteering. I stayed in Austin while many of my friends boarded a plane for Iowa in September to blockwalk for Dean as "Texas Rangers". Here's what I wrote about that at the time:
A few days later, I wrote this:
I guess the main concern was electability. I worried that Dean couldn't beat Bush. Not that I had any specific evidence at the time, but it was a gut feeling that he was less electable than another candidate - and electability was the main reason that drew me to Dean. Moving forward, some people might think that the "I have a Scream" speech is the main reason that I'm turned off to Howard Dean. Actually, that's not the case. The main reason is that I think that his campaign organization is vastly unprepared to take on George W. Bush. Take a look at the results of Iowa. Howard Dean probably spent about $7 Million in Iowa. He had thousands of volunteers, and finished a distant third. Geez! That's what I call a miserable failure. Pundits have pointed to a bunch of things as turning points in the campaign. The two that I've seen most often are the capture of Saddam Hussein and Al Gore's endorsement. Both are good things. It's good that Saddam is in custody and it was good, for the Dean campaign, that Al Gore lent his support. But where Dean failed, was translating Gore's support and his campaign from one of an insurgent to one as a frontrunner. He never did it. He pulled in endorsements, but continued his message attacking Washington Democrats. And while he attacked "Washington Democrats who supported the war" (Edwards, Gephardt, Kerry), Dean hit the campaign trail in Iowa with his new best friend, Tom Harkin.... a Washington Democrat who supported the war. Hypocrisy anyone? Maybe, maybe not, but regardless, a terrible campaign tactic. And those ads... I hope that Dean has a new campaign ad team. Some of his ads are decent like his response to the first Club for Growth ad, but others where he's speaking into the camera against a blank backdrop are just god-awful. So why? Why have I gone from "lean-Dean" to uncommitted at this point? Two reasons. The first is that my main reason for supporting Dean in the first place was because I thought that he was the only candidate that could beat George W. Bush. Dean was the only candidate that was energizing Democrats and bringing new people into the party. That theory was disproved on Monday night in Iowa. While more young people attended the Iowa Caucuses than ever, the majority of 18-29 year olds voted for John Kerry and John Edwards. And furthermore, while the vast majority of Iowa caucusgoers opposed the war in Iraq, the majority of anti-war caucusgoers voted for John Kerry and John Edwards. Why is this? Why did anti-war Democrats and young Democrats vote for Kerry and Edwards who supported the war resolution? They obviously saw something in Dean that made them look elsewhere. The main reason that I supported Howard Dean was because he could bring new people into the party and energize the base. The results of Iowa suggest that Howard Dean didn't do that - and if Howard Dean can't win over White pacifist Democrats in Iowa, then how can he win anywhere else, and more importantly, how can he beat George W. Bush? The second reason for my conversion from lean-Dean to uncommitted is the "I have a Scream Speech". Was I personally offended by it? Not really. Did the media completely blow it out of context? Yeah, of course. But, the fact of the matter is that Howard Dean has two major perceived weaknesses. First, that he is weak on national security, and second that he is angry and doesn't have the temperament to be president. I don't agree with either, but that's not the point. American electoral politics is much more determined by perception than reality. Yes, politics is unfair, but it's true. Is George W. Bush a "compassionate conservative"? Hell, no! But Bush and Rove convinced enough people that he was one, and he became president. Perceptions... Many people heard Howard Dean for the first time on Monday night. And what was their perception? That he is loud and angry and most importantly... unpresidential. Dean and his people like to blame the media. That's the easy way out. He was the frontrunner and the frontrunner gets media scrutiny. That's life. And that's a good thing. If Howard Dean can't handle the fire he gets from the media and other Democrats, how the heck could he handle a barrage of attacks from Bush and Rove? Dean went to the DNC chair to whine about people attacking him when he should have just had a little more thick skin and taken an "Aww, shucks" attitude about it. Instead, he lashed back, and while he knocked off Dick Gephardt, he seriously wounded himself. So what now? I'm uncommitted. If Dean proves that he can get back on message, that he can laugh at himself a little bit more, that he can spend his money a little bit better, that he can produce better ads, that he can deflect attacks, that he can stop blaming the media, that he can prove that he can go toe to toe with Bush on national security, that he can disprove attacks that he is angry and doesn't have the temperment to be president, that he can once again prove that he (and no one else) can bring new people into politics and the party - THEN I'll be back with him. But I have serious doubts. I want to see the Democrat best positioned to beat George W. Bush win the Democratic nomination, and I don't know who that is. It may be Dean. It may be Kerry. It may be Edwards. It may be Clark. Dean should get credit for being the first serious Democratic presidential candidate in this race to stand up to George W. Bush (which all of the other candidates are finally doing now), but I'd rather nominate someone who figured it out late and can bring a serious challenge to Bush, than nominate a candidate that had the right message from the begining, but who is perceived as unpresidential and would more likely lose to Bush. But for now, I figure that the best thing I can do is wait, work on local races for the next month or so, and let the good folks of New Hampshire, South Carolina, New Mexico, Arizona, Oklahoma, Delaware, Missouri, North Dakota and the other states after February 3 help me with my choice on March 9th. Update: One thing that I forgot to add, which came up in comments by Sherk:
Well I disagree with the premise, as WhoMe? points out in the comments that polls in the last day or two have shown John Kerry beating George W. Bush. We're a 50-50 nation and I believe that barring any huge changes by November, this election will result in a close victory for either side. However, I would not change who I would support even if I knew that the Democratic nominee would lose no matter what. I want Democrats to nominate the candidate that is not only best positioned to take on Bush, but who is best positioned to have coattails on our entire ticket all of the way down the ballot. In that respect, Dean has worried me for months. While I think that Howard Dean can beat Bush in November, he would probably win with a combination of the northeast, the midwest, the west coast and the southwest (and maybe Florida). The rest of the South would be pretty unattainable for Dean, in my opinion. Well the South (Georgia, Florida, South Carolina, North Carolina, Oklahoma) is where the battle for control of the U.S. Senate will be primarily fought. While it's unlikely that any Democrat would win those states (except Florida, and maybe North Carolina for Edwards), Clark and Edwards are best positioned to cut Bush's coattails in those states. If Dean were the nominee, we would probably see the Democratic candidates in those states running away from Dean on issues such as his position on war and rolling back all of the tax cuts. With the Texas redistricting, some of our Texas Democrats will be running away from Dean if he is the nominee. The best example is Martin Frost who in his announcement speach last week boasted his support of education and supporting the "No Child Left Behind Act" (which his opponent Pete Sessions voted against), which Howard Dean has attacked other Democrats for supporting. And Martin Frost is only the tip of the iceberg of Dean's potential problems for Texas Democrats this fall. Frost is probably the most liberal of the five Democratic incumbents (Frost, Stenholm, Sandlin, Lampson, Edwards) running in new Republican-dominated districts. I want all of them to win, and to have a presidential nominee with a platform that they can run with. Posted by Byron LaMasters at January 24, 2004 10:17 PM | TrackBack
Comments
An easy way out, but completly understandable. Posted by: Karl-T at January 24, 2004 10:39 PMYes Dean has stumbled, but the main reason I still like him best is because of the leadership he showed at the beginning of this race. If it weren't for him, Bush would probably still be getting a free pass. Another thing I was thinking of is that the media has already picked him apart during the primary race. Unless they find something that was missed, we know all Dean's 'warts' by now. I don't think we can say the same of the other candidates at this point, and I wouldn't like us to be finding out about their warts after our guy is nominated and trying to beat Bush. Just my 2 cents... Posted by: Jason Young at January 25, 2004 01:32 AMByron, I've become even more impressed: you've accumulated, and you're exhibiting, wisdom way beyond your years by observing, "... the best thing I can do is ... work on local races ...." Posted by: Jeff at January 25, 2004 08:18 AMByron L, and other liberals, It seems like electability is a fairly important criteria to you, for obvious reasons. I'm curious, though, what if you knew for certain (say, through divine revelation or something equally guaranteed to be true) that no Democrat could beat Bush come November? Would it change who you support? I mention this because forty years ago, there was really no one we could nominate to beat LBJ, and everyone on our side knew it. We went with the conservative, Goldwater, and got badly spanked in November. However, conservatives today are almost unanimous in thinking nominating Goldwater was the right call, since it moved the party well to the right and began the process of turning the GOP into the conservative party, setting the ground for the Reagan Revolution. If beating Bush were no longer possible, would you support Dean (or a Dean type candidate) to turn the party to the left and away from Clinton's relative moderation, or would you rather go with a candidate who would lose by less to avoid hemmoraging down the ballot? Just wondering, Sherk Posted by: Sherk at January 25, 2004 10:47 AMShrek(lich), 1. The Democratic Nominee is going to win against Bush. In fact, the latest polls show Kerry, e.g., as leading against Bush. Hence your question is moot. 2. Dean is NOT a liberal (ask any Republican, or any Democratic for that matter, member of the Vermont Legislature - oh yea, and the NRA too). Therefore, your assumption a priore unravels your question to the extent that it is purely hypothetical. 3. If your question is directed towards all Democratic affiliated blogers, not all of us think Clinton made a mistake. Several of us, who consider ourselves moderates, or who eschew such labels altogether (as I personally feel), believe that Clinton did a great job for the Democratic party by focusing on working solutions to real world problems and not blind ideology. In fact, your question reveals much more about the questioner than those who may answer: first, that anyone left of a Right Winger must be a "liberal;' and second, and most importantly, that extremist ideology is much more important than any working policy solutions. So, to answer your question (if it was ever directed at me), "Do I believe in Barry Goldwater's 'Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice?'" I believe it it no more than in Niccolo Machiavelli's "The ends justify the means." Posted by: WhoMe? at January 25, 2004 12:22 PMI like your logic, Sherk and I think that it can be reversed also. If you knew for 100% (as WhoMe? seems to) that we would beat Bush who would you want for President? Someone who is pro-gay, pro-choice, pro-environment, anti-war, pro-affirmative action, fiscally sensible with a sound plan for universal health care or someone who is wishy washy on those issues? I'd say go for the liberal, and like it or not Howard Dean is liberal when it comes to national politics. In Vermont, where Bernie Sanders (a Socialist) has been elected statewide 6 times, he's a moderate. Elsewhere, he'll be seen as a liberal, but one that's proud to be so. Posted by: Andrew D at January 25, 2004 12:56 PMPassing this along : Who isn't presidential? Posted by: Jason Young at January 25, 2004 01:04 PMDean isnt proud to be a liberal, Andrew! he denys that he is a liberal. In fact, Clark is the only major candidate who has openly embraced the liberal label. So, to say "hes proud to be so" is grossly misrepresenting Howard Dean. Really, its unexcusable. Posted by: David at January 25, 2004 02:22 PMByron, et al, I wasn't asking you to agree with the premise of the argument. Up until early October 1996 I thought Dole had a fighting chance against Clinton. I was just asking, if you accepted the premise, what your reaction would be. Which is pretty much what Byron posted. To answer your question, Andrew, if I knew for a fact that Bush would loose in 2004, or that Hillary would win in 2008, I would favor nominating a pro-life, pro-marriage, pro-tax relief, pro-War on Terror, pro-privatizing Social security, pro-... everything conservative except on immigration Republican. If we are going to go down in flames, there is no reason to betray any of our principles in the process. Just wondering if you felt the same, and apparently Byron doesn't. There is something to be said, after all, for living to fight another day, and much as I am glad we nominated Goldwater, LBJ's coattails gave him a big enough majority in Congress to enact Medicare. Sherk Posted by: Sherk at January 25, 2004 07:19 PMWhoMe? Just a random question. Why do you call me "Shrek(lich)"? I mean, I know you intend it to be insulting, but what I don't get is why you want to insult me. Granted, we disagree on almost every issue, but that is no reason to be rude. I've tried to be respectful in (most of) my postings to those of you on the left, even though I think many of your positions are nuts, and in the case of the abortion issue I believe you support the murder of innocent children. Why be personally hostile? We've never met, and I wouldn't recognize you if I saw you on the street. I mean, what's the point? What not just have a civil discussion/debate/argument on the issues with out trying to be personally offensive? I've called Mark and Owen on it when I thought they were stepping over the line, why do you seem to feel that that line doesn't exist? Curiously, Shrek(lich) Posted by: Sherk at January 25, 2004 09:25 PMSherk, In all candor, part of my reason why I am so outspoken in denouncing everything you say is because of the nature of the medium in which we communicate. It is easier to be more outspoken in what is essentially an anonymous forum, where you never actually meet anyone. I know you might not believe it, but I am actually very conciliatory in person. I defintely have a "Type A" personality, but am by no means a hostle person. The other reason is that, and please do not take this personally (in fact you may even take it as a badge of honor), you and your views are dangerous. There is nothing more dangerous than someone who believes in the divine righteousness of their cause. By the way, Shreklich is German. Sie koennen es im Woerterbuch suchen. Posted by: WhoMe? at January 25, 2004 10:17 PMWhoMe? Fair enough, and no offense taken. In one sense you are right, there is nothing so powerful as an idea whose time has come. And lets be honest, you are as equally convinced of the rightness of your cause as I am of mine, at least on issues that have nothing to do with religious values (ie., taxes, not abortion). Shreklich P.S. German, that's kind of neat. My family line (at least on Dad's side) traces back to german speaking serfs in Switzerland in the 15th century of the name of schurch, with the double dot over the u, so it makes sense. Posted by: Sherk at January 26, 2004 08:48 AM
Post a comment
|
About Us
About BOR
Advertising Policies Karl-Thomas M. - Owner Byron L. - Founder Alex H. - Contact Andrea M. - Contact Andrew D. - Contact Damon M. - Contact Drew C. - Contact Jim D. - Contact John P. - Contact Katie N. - Contact Kirk M. - Contact Matt H. - Contact Phillip M. - Contact Vince L. - Contact Zach N. - Conact
Donate
Archives
December 2005
November 2005 October 2005 September 2005 August 2005 July 2005 June 2005 May 2005 April 2005 March 2005 February 2005 January 2005 December 2004 November 2004 October 2004 September 2004 August 2004 July 2004 June 2004 May 2004 April 2004 March 2004 February 2004 January 2004 December 2003 November 2003 October 2003 September 2003 August 2003 July 2003 June 2003
Recent Entries
BORed: My Apologies
Cruel Intentions Merry Christmas! What is One-Tough Grandma Up To? **Update** House Slashes Patriot Act Extention **Update** David Van Os: "The Constitutional Crisis" All Tom DeLay Wants For Christmas... Armbrister Not Running in 2006 Rep. Ana Hernandez Sworn Into Office Federal Judge Rules Intelligent Design Out of the Classroom New from Jib Jab: 2-0-5 DeLay has been delayed. President Bush Bashes NY Times The Courage to Be a Progressive Patriot Andy Brown is Gearing Up for HD 48 Primary Chris Bell Rails Against Gov. Perry's Executive Order to Enhance College Readiness Efforts Ronnie Earle Fights Back Senate Blocks Renewal of Expiring Provisions of the USA Patriot Act David Van Os Blasts AG Abbott on Redistricting Wiktory!
Categories
2004: Dem Convention (79)
2004: Elections (571) 2005: Elections (13) 2006: Texas Elections (176) 2006: US Elections (25) 2008: Presidential Election (9) About Burnt Orange (147) Around Campus (177) Austin City Limits (233) Axis of Idiots (34) Ballot Propositions (57) Blogs and Blogging (157) BOR Humor (72) BOR Sports (81) BORed (26) Budget (17) Burnt Orange Endorsements (15) Congress (47) Dallas City Limits (93) Elsewhere in Texas (41) Get into the Action! (11) GLBT (165) Houston City Limits (46) International (108) Intraparty (50) National Politics (593) On the Issues (16) Other Stuff (51) Politics for Dummies (11) Pop Culture (70) Redistricting (261) San Antonio City Limits (8) Social Security (31) Texas Lege (182) Texas Politics (779) The Economy, Stupid (18) The Media (9)
BOR Edu.
University of Texas
University Democrats
BOR News
The Daily Texan
The Statesman The Chronicle
BOR Politics
DNC
DNC Blog: Kicking Ass DSCC DSCC Blog: From the Roots DCCC DCCC Blog: The Stakeholder Texas Dems Travis County Dems Dallas Young Democrats U.S. Rep. Lloyd Doggett State Sen. Gonzalo Barrientos State Rep. Dawnna Dukes State Rep. Elliott Naishtat State Rep. Eddie Rodriguez State Rep. Mark Strama
Traffic Ratings
Alexa Rating
Marketleap Truth Laid Bear Ecosystem Technoranti Link Cosmos Blogstreet Blogback
Polling
American Research Group
Annenberg Election Survey Gallup Polling Report Rasmussen Reports Survey USA Zogby
Texas Stuff
A Little Pollyana
Austin Bloggers D Magazine DFW Bogs DMN Blog In the Pink Texas Inside the Texas Capitol The Lasso Pol State TX Archives Quorum Report Daily Buzz George Strong Political Analysis Texas Law Blog Texas Monthly Texas Observer
TX Dem Blogs
100 Monkeys Typing
Alandwilliams.com Alt 7 Annatopia Appalachia Alumni Association Barefoot and Naked BAN News Betamax Guillotine Blue Texas Border Ass News The Daily DeLay The Daily Texican DemLog Dos Centavos Drive Democracy Easter Lemming Esoterically Get Donkey Greg's Opinion Half the Sins of Mankind Jim Hightower Houtopia Hugo Zoom Latinos for Texas Off the Kuff Ones and Zeros Panhandle Truth Squad Aaron Peña's Blog People's Republic of Seabrook Pink Dome The Red State Rhetoric & Rhythm Rio Grande Valley Politics Save Texas Reps Skeptical Notion Something's Got to Break Southpaw Stout Dem Blog The Scarlet Left Tex Prodigy ToT View From the Left Yellow Doggeral Democrat
TX GOP Blogs
Beldar Blog
Blogs of War Boots and Sabers Dallas Arena Jessica's Well Lone Star Times Publius TX Safety for Dummies The Sake of Arguement Slightly Rough
Daily Reads
&c.
ABC's The Note Atrios BOP News Daily Kos Media Matters MyDD NBC's First Read Political State Report Political Animal Political Wire Talking Points Memo Wonkette Matthew Yglesias
College Blogs
CDA Blog
Get More Ass (Brown) Dem Apples (Harvard) KU Dems U-Delaware Dems UNO Dems Stanford Dems
GLBT Blogs
American Blog
BlogActive Boi From Troy Margaret Cho Downtown Lad Gay Patriot Raw Story Stonewall Dems Andrew Sullivan
More Reads
Living Indefinitely
Blogroll Burnt Orange!
BOR Webrings
< ? Texas Blogs # >
<< ? austinbloggers # >> « ? MT blog # » « ? MT # » « ? Verbosity # »
Election Returns
CNN 1998 Returns
CNN 2000 Returns CNN 2002 Returns CNN 2004 Returns state elections 1992-2005 bexar county elections collin county elections dallas county elections denton county elections el paso county elections fort bend county elections galveston county elections harris county elections jefferson county elections tarrant county elections travis county elections
Texas Media
abilene
abilene reporter news alpine alpine avalanche amarillo amarillo globe news austin austin american statesman austin chronicle daily texan online keye news (cbs) kut (npr) kvue news (abc) kxan news (nbc) news 8 austin beaumont beaumont enterprise brownsville brownsville herald college station the battalion (texas a&m) corpus christi corpus christi caller times kris news (fox) kztv news (cbs) crawford crawford lone star iconoclast dallas-fort worth dallas morning news dallas observer dallas voice fort worth star-telegram kdfw news (fox) kera (npr) ktvt news (cbs) nbc5 news wfaa news (abc) del rio del rio news herald el paso el paso times kdbc news (cbs) kfox news (fox) ktsm (nbc) kvia news (abc) fredericksburg standard-radio post galveston galveston county daily news harlingen valley morning star houston houston chronicle houston press khou news (cbs) kprc news (nbc) ktrk news (abc) kerrville kerrville daily times laredo laredo morning times lockhart lockhart post-register lubbock lubbock avalanche journal lufkin lufkin daily news marshall marshall news messenger mcallen the monitor midland - odessa midland reporter telegram odessa american san antonio san antonio express-news seguin seguin gazette-enterprise texarkana texarkana gazette tyler tyler morning telegraph victoria victoria advocate waco kxxv news (abc) kwtx news (cbs) waco tribune-herald weslaco krgv news (nbc) statewide texas cable news texas triangle
World News
ABC News All Africa News Arab News Atlanta Constitution-Journal News.com Australia BBC News Bloomberg Boston Globe CBS News Chicago Tribune Christian Science Monitor CNN Denver Post FOX News Google News The Guardian Inside China Today International Herald Tribune Japan Times LA Times Mexico Daily Miami Herald MSNBC New Orleans Times-Picayune New York Times El Pais (Spanish) Salon San Francisco Chronicle Seattle Post-Intelligencer Slate Times of India Toronto Star Wall Street Journal Washington Post
Powered by
Movable Type 3.2b1 |