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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Krowbar who wrote (506624)12/9/2003 12:30:58 PM
From: DMaA  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
Thank you for demonstrating why getting the Federal Government involved in local voting process is a disaster for self government. It will be nothing but a political football, played with for partisan advantage. The end results will be no one will ever trust election results ever again.



To: Krowbar who wrote (506624)12/9/2003 12:44:14 PM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769670
 
WE CAN MAKE A CHANGE!
MoveOn redefines party politics
At gatherings across the country, all eyes turn to an anti-Bush film.

By Mimi Avins, Times Staff Writer

Mad as hell isn't necessarily the best mood to take to a
party, but when the event is political and everyone there
feels the same way, a sense of community can carry the
occasion.

In an effort to get as many people as possible to see
filmmaker Robert Greenwald's anti-administration
documentary, "Uncovered: The Whole Truth About the
Iraq War," a 1.4-million-member Internet-based liberal
advocacy group organized simultaneous house parties
throughout the country.

MoveOn encouraged its supporters to buy copies of
the film on DVD or video, then welcome strangers into
their homes for a viewing. By Sunday afternoon, when
the parties began, more than 2,200 hosts had
volunteered by posting their addresses on the Web site.
Anyone interested could RSVP and attend free of
charge.

The separate parties would be united in a mass
conference call to celebrate the grass-roots effort and
hear Greenwald answer questions about the film.

Ann Smith, who owns the New School of Cooking in
Culver City, opened her Faircrest Heights home to 40
guests at sunset. She'd joined MoveOn last March,
after she heard commentator and former gubernatorial
candidate Arianna Huffington and former "Politically
Incorrect" host Bill Maher recommend the group.
"When MoveOn decided to organize the house parties,
I thought, 'Why not?' I made a promise to myself to
work politically this year, because this is the year it
really counts," she said.

A check of the more than 40 Los Angeles-area parties
on the MoveOn Web site Friday showed that nearly all
were at capacity. Smith's guest list was filled in two
days.

About one third of the guests were friends of Smith's.
The rest signed up online, choosing her party because it
was geographically desirable. Leslie Robin, who lives
nearby, said, "I like being among neighbors. This is
more personal than it would be in a large lecture hall."

Smith's party was similar to the other local gatherings,
except for the presence of Greenwald and his co-producer, Kate McArdle.

The evening was more like an adult education class than a social occasion. Guests
wearing first-name-only identification tags initially hovered around a table of food.
Liz Biber, a friend and student of Smith's, made some of the hors d'oeuvres,
including caramelized onion tartlets that could tempt an anarchist. Biber brought
her brother, an architect visiting from New York. "I haven't seen the film, but I'm
sure I'm politically in line with it," Jim Biber said.

The group fell silent when a speakerphone was set up on the dining room table
and the conference call was broadcast before the film was screened. The
disembodied voices of MoveOn staffers welcomed the partygoers. Campaign
director Eli Pariser urged people to "show the film to your friends and to your
enemies." MoveOn estimated that 50,000 people watched the film in homes from
Fairbanks, Alaska, to Miami.

While Smith's guests listened in the dining room, Greenwald, in another room,
took the phone and answered questions that had been submitted by e-mail from
around the country. Then Smith's guests, who ranged in age from late 20s to 70s,
filled chairs set up in her darkened living room and watched the 56-minute
documentary on her television. Half a dozen people who couldn't find seats were
invited to view a second copy on her laptop in another room.

For the most part, they were a rapt and polite audience. Geoffrey Pomeroy, an
actor and musician who came with a friend, muttered an unprintable name for the
president under his breath early on, but civility reigned. In the film, one of the
former government employees voicing his opposition to the administration's
conduct quoted Mark Twain's definition of patriotism: "Supporting your country
all the time, and the government when it deserves it," a remark that elicited a
murmur of appreciation.

There's always a kitchen party. In this case, it consisted of five people who'd
already seen the film and preferred to talk about its message with one another
while it screened. Their discussion gradually moved from criticism of the war to
their antagonism toward the religious right. After the screening, Greenwald
answered questions from the crowd and told them how making the film made him
realize how effectively the administration exploited people's fear of nuclear
weapons. "Their message reaches you on a very emotional level," he said.

Missing from the evening were opposing voices. "There's an element of preaching
to the choir here," Smith said. "But the choir needs to sing a little louder. After
seeing the film, a lot of people felt that they had a responsibility to get more
involved. I've never had a party where I liked so many people! About 15 people
stayed for about an hour and half after the screening, and they were going on and
on about how great it was that this community of like-minded people had come
together."



To: Krowbar who wrote (506624)12/9/2003 12:45:32 PM
From: DuckTapeSunroof  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
Diebold ATMs hit by worm:

zdnet.com.com