Reasonable

Hi, my name is Dave Crampton, and I’m reasonable.  Well, as long as you don’t ask my wife, I’m reasonable.  And as such a person, I have compiled a list of reasons (pun!) that would bar me from such a political office.

  • I haven’t proven myself in politics.  Flip side of this coin: I haven’t been corrupted by politics.  Both reasons that I’d never get elected.
  • I actually like living in Lansing.  I think it’s a good place to be.
  • I have a family, which comes before everything else, including office.
  • The only ass that I kiss is my wife’s, and that’s rare.
  • Carol Wood?  Seriously?  (Obligatory baseless slam!  Go me!)
  • I am The Man.  I am white, male, educated, and overweight.
  • I have some conservative viewpoints. (Fascist!)
  • I have some liberal viewpoints. (Pinko commie long-hair hippie!)
  • I like riding CATA.  Bus crazy people make me smile.
  • I see infrastructure as the basic building block needed to keep residents and businesses happy.  Having a meaty ideal instead of an empty sound bite should scare you all the way down into your booties.
  • I am a nerd.  I am also proud of it.
  • I abhor waste of any kind.  I drive my wife and friends nuts talking about reuse and recycling.
  • I can use the word abhor in a sentence.

I’ll be expounding on these and others in other posts.  Anything else that you’d like to see in a Mayor but would prevent him from getting in office?

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged

On anti-marriage amendments

First of all, I consider an amendment that prevents the marriage of two loving people, who are committed to each other for the rest of their lives, as anti-marriage. California’s Proposal 8 was -definitely- anti-marriage.

From HRC President Joe Solmonese:

Like many in our movement, I found myself in Southern California last weekend. There, I had the opportunity to speak with a man who said that Proposition 8 completely changed the way he saw his own neighborhood. Every “Yes on 8” sign was a slap. For this man, for me, for the 18,000 couples who married in California, to LGBT people and the people who love us, its passage was worse than a slap in the face. It was nothing short of heartbreaking.

But it is not the end. Fifty-two percent of the voters of California voted to deny us our equality on Tuesday, but they did not vote our families or the power of our love out of existence; they did not vote us away.

As free and equal human beings, we were born with the right to equal families. The courts did not give us this right—they simply recognized it. And although California has ceased to grant us marriage licenses, our rights are not subject to anyone’s approval. We will keep fighting for them. They are as real and as enduring as the love that moves us to form families in the first place. There are many roads to marriage equality, and no single roadblock will prevent us from ultimately getting there.

And yet there is no denying, as we pick ourselves up after losing this most recent, hard-fought battle, that we’ve been injured, many of us by neighbors who claim to respect us.

By the same token, we know that we are moving in the right direction. In 2000, California voters passed Proposition 22 by a margin of 61.4% to 38.6%. On Tuesday, fully 48% of Californians rejected Proposition 8. It wasn’t enough, but it was a massive shift. Nationally, although two other anti-marriage ballot measures won, Connecticut defeated an effort to hold a constitutional convention ending marriage, New York’s state legislature gained the seats necessary to consider a marriage law, and FMA architect Marilyn Musgrave lost her seat in Congress. We also elected a president who supports protecting the entire community from discrimination and who opposes discriminatory amendments.

Yet on Proposition 8 we lost at the ballot box, and I think that says something about this middle place where we find ourselves at this moment. In 2003, twelve states still had sodomy laws on the books, and only one state had civil unions. Four years ago, marriage was used to rile up a right-wing base, and we were branded as a bigger threat than terrorism. In 2008, most people know that we are not a threat. Proposition 8 did not result from a popular groundswell of opposition to our rights, but was the work of a small core of people who fought to get it on the ballot. The anti-LGBT message didn’t rally people to the polls, but unfortunately when people got to the polls, too many of them had no problem with hurting us. Faced with an economy in turmoil and two wars, most Californians didn’t choose the culture war. But faced with the question—brought to them by a small cadre of anti-LGBT hardliners – of whether our families should be treated differently from theirs, too many said yes.

But even before we do the hard work of deconstructing this campaign and readying for the future, it’s clear to me that our continuing mandate is to show our neighbors who we are.

Justice Lewis Powell was the swing vote in Bowers, the case that upheld Georgia’s sodomy law and that was reversed by Lawrence v. Texas five years ago. When Bowers was pending, Powell told one of his clerks “I don’t believe I’ve ever met a homosexual.” Ironically, that clerk was gay, and had never come out to the Justice. A decade later, Powell admitted his vote to uphold Georgia’s sodomy law was a mistake.

Everything we’ve learned points to one simple fact: people who know us are more likely to support our equality.

In recent years, I’ve been delivering this positive message: tell your story. Share who you are. And in fact, as our families become more familiar, support for us increases. But make no mistake: I do not think we have to audition for equality. Rather, I believe that each and every one of us who has been hurt by this hateful ballot measure, and each and every one of us who is still fighting to be equal, has to confront the neighbors who hurt us. We have to say to the man with the Yes on 8 sign—you disrespected my humanity, and I am not giving you a pass. I am not giving you a pass for explaining that you tolerate me, while at the same time denying that my family has a right to exist. I do not give you permission to say you have me as a “gay friend” when you cast a vote against my family, and my rights.

Wherever you are, tell a neighbor what the California Supreme Court so wisely affirmed: that you are equal, you are human, and that being denied equality harms you materially. Although I, like our whole community, am shaken by Prop 8’s passage, I am not yet ready to believe that anyone who knows us as human beings and understands what is at stake would consciously vote to harm us.

This is not over. In California, our legal rights have been lost, but our human rights endure, and we will continue to fight for them.

Link Salad

What’s all this stuff about ACORN?: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KdNgMKPV9xQ

Why do your kids’ textbooks seem terrible? Because they ARE terrible: http://www.textbookleague.org/103feyn.htm

Al Gore’s webacst for Power Vote: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CZPDr4v2hds

How to get my nerd vote: http://a.wholelottanothing.org/2008/10/how-to-get-my-nerd-vote.html

WAZZUP parody with the original actors: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qq8Uc5BFogE

California’s Prop 8 supporters get violent on an observer in Oakland: http://vimeo.com/2053489?pg=embed&sec=2053489

Alan Tudyk goes crazy after being kidnapped by a giant lobster monster on Gorgeous Tiny Chicken Machine Show: http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=tPi_dh6Vk1I

Link Side Salad

Colin Powell endorses Barack Obama: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4-1c0H1-zbc

AFL-CIO’s Richard Trumka on Racism and Obama: http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=7QIGJTHdH50

Increase in writing agent queries from minors: http://arcaedia.livejournal.com/179981.html

Voter Guides for the Lansing area: http://lansing.mi.lwvnet.org/Voter_Guides.html

Clearing out tabs.

What writing’s like.

The 9/11 attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon were successful.

This one’s a great essay. It highlights a lot of the difference between Republicans and Democrats. It’s not reactionary, and it makes sense. Shocking, I know. What makes people vote republican?

TED lecture on a similar subject.

Detroit City

CNN Fact Checks McCain

Plan for Change Ad

McCain giving up on Michigan

This is how Sarah Palin comes across to me.

Random Content

I am awake, with the aid of Frappuccinos. I feel like I’ve somehow betrayed my Gone Wired roots.

Ever run for office by imitating a webcomic? Somebody in Kansas is doing it. Thanks to for the link.

I like these things:
– Good writing.
– Melodrama.
– The paranormal.
– Legends, myths, religions, and disturbing commonalities between them all.
– Fiction.
– Serial fiction.

There’s a well-written, dark, mystic serial fiction that gleefully dances into melodrama, the paranormal, legends, myths, religions, and disturbing commonalities between them all. I keep linking to it. Unfortunately, being an LJ community, it’s written backwards. Newest entry, and therefore the most recent “end” to the story, shows up first. I wonder if re-arranging them in chronological order, via links, including the introduction and story behind it, would make it easier to read…

Yes, I’m talking about the .

Good article on the attempt by politics to polarize a nation that mostly strives towards the middle. This one from .

Went to ‘s preliminary appointment today. She’s got what she needs to get a referral to an OBGYN.

I’m here at work late tonight. Will be crashing hard when I get home, and likely sleeping until just before I have to come into work tomorrow.

Last rent payment sent off to my current apartment complex. All I have left to do is pack, do a light cleaning, move out, and drop off my keys and forwarding address. New address will be forthcoming as moving commences.