Wherein Fr. Z muses about political impact of today’s terror-related news

As I do household chores, I am tuned in to frenzied news coverage of the various terrorist-related bombs, bomb scares or trial runs in the USA and London, connected with Dubai and Yemen.

Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula is suspected.

One comment I heard about this possible attack was a reminder that Al Qaeda will time attempts to connect to special dates or to create an effect on other date-related events.

For example, some years ago an attack in Spain had an effect in a change of government and bringing Zapatero to power.

If there was – this is of course conjecture – a desire to affect the US midterm elections, along the line of the attack in Spain, what could that mean?

The Spanish attack destabilized the incumbent government.

POST YOUR COMMENTThe Obama Administration has been trying to “reach out”.   If this new activity has any effect at all on political pre-election affairs and perceptions in the USA, the Democrats clearly will NOT benefit.  Republicans are seen as being more hawkish on security, less likely to want to play nice with Islam, or bow to Saudi rulers.

If any party would benefit from a shift in public opinion about who may be more willing to apply stronger security for the USA and take a harder line, it will be the Republican Party.

If countries with Islamic governments do not move swiftly to cooperate in investigating and hunting down people who made this trial run, or whatever it is, then we will see that the White House’s overtures have not had any effect.  (We can’t expect that Al Qaeda would be impressed by anything Pres. Obama did.  Governments should be another matter.)

Anyway, I am opining, that is clear.

Posted in The Drill | Tagged ,
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USAToday’s religion blogger Cathy Lynn Grossman writes about “wafer watch”

UPDATE 1820 GMT:

The original post at USAToday has been edited and this message added:

(NOTE: Language in the above graph has been changed from the original post to reflect more clearly respect for the Eucharist in Catholic belief.)

Dear Readers… use this expression of mainstream media anti-Catholicism in the best way possible: get out and vote according to the principles soon-to-be Card. Burke explained.

The worst possible thing that could happen in the liberal view, is if faithful and informed Catholics actually do exercise their right vote.

DO NOT STAY HOME ON TUESDAY.

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ORIGINAL POST
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I pick this up from CatholicVote.

“Wafer watch”… to describe the concern of Catholics that Catholics who say they are Catholics adhere to Catholic teaching if they are going to approach Communion in a Catholic Church.

Nice, huh?  Rather like mumbling “cookie worship”.

What. the. H!

Cathy Lynn Grossman, who runs USA Today’s “Faith and Reason” blog, wrote today:

Burke kicked off the ‘wafer watch’ on whether abortion rights supporter and former Democractic presidential candidate John Kerry in 2004 should take Communion, is back with instructions for the mid-terms.

Excuse me – “wafer watch”?! As a faithful Catholic, I find that phrase incredibly offensive. Catholics believe the Eucharist is the Body, Blood, Soul and Divinity of Jesus Christ Himself. … “wafer watch”?! From a religion reporter?!

Next, look at the photo chosen of Cardinal-designate Burke:

AgainWHAT. THE. H!

They managed to find and crop the one photo that makes the Archbishop appear like he’s performing some sort of Nazi salute. If they had revealed his other arm it would be clear he is performing a blessing.

Third, Grossman attempts to make an argument that, because Pope Benedict appointed both Archbishops Burke and Wuerl to be Cardinals, this action somehow undermines the pope’s recent and clear teaching about the duty of bishops to counsel the faithful to use their vote in support of pro-life candidates.

Ecclesiology 101 time for Grossman: Pope > bishop.

This is three-strikes-you’re-out for Grossman’s column. Insultingly referring to the Eucharist as a “wafer”, posting a damagingly-cropped photo of Archbishop Burke, and confusing Catholics and her readers about what the Holy Father is trying to communicate.

Please join me in emailing Cathy Grossman at cgrossman@usatoday.com and let her know about your displeasure at her insulting and disrespectful column.

She can start by removing the offensive description of the Eucharist, posting a proper photo of the Archbishop, and noting that questions about denying the Eucharist are a red herring argument trumped by the clear teaching of the Holy Father about the moral duty of Catholics to support pro-life candidates.

UPDATE 1824 GMT:

When I went to Grossman’s blog, I notice a link to a “Previous” blog entry about Comedy Central’s John Stewart and found this quote:

Instead, the “religion” of the Comedy Central hosts is sanity which appears to be code for restoring civility.

If, while applying her glaring double-standard, Grossmann thinks that sanity and civility are connected, then perhaps she is not quite sane?  What she wrote in her original entry, “wafer watch”, was certainly uncivil.

Posted in Biased Media Coverage, The Last Acceptable Prejudice | Tagged
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Benedict XVI on faith in the public square, politics

Yesterday the Holy Father spoke to bishops from Brazil gathered in Rome for their ad limina visit.

Some of his comments pertain to the upcoming US midterm election next week and the role of the Church in shaping the consciences of the faithful as they weigh the merits of candidate when going to the polls.

Be sure to read the Holy Father’s comments on transcendence.

From VIS with my emphases and comments:

BRAZIL: CHURCH TEACHES MAN HIS DIGNITY AS CHILD OF GOD

VATICAN CITY, 28 OCT 2010 (VIS) – Prelates from the National Conference of Bishops of Brazil (Northeast region 5) who have just complete their five- yearly “ad limina” visit were received this morning by the Holy Father.

“I wish to speak to you today”, the Pope told them, “about how the Church’s mission to serve as the leavening of human society through the Gospel teaches human beings their dignity as children of God, and their vocation to the unity of all mankind, whence derive the need for justice and social peace in accordance with divine wisdom”.

[he makes a distinction about the vocation of lay people and that of bishops.] “First, the duty of direct action to ensure a just ordering of society falls to the lay faithful who, as free and responsible citizens, strive to contribute to the just configuration of social life, while respecting legitimate autonomy and natural moral law“, the Holy Father explained. “Your duty as bishops, together with your clergy, is indirect because [NB] you must contribute to the purification of reason, and to the moral awakening of the forces necessary to build a just and fraternal society. Nonetheless, when required by the fundamental rights of the person or the salvation of souls, pastors have the binding duty to emit moral judgments, even on political themes“.

“When forming these judgements, pastors must bear in mind the absolute value of those … precepts which make it morally unacceptable to chose a particular action which is intrinsically evil and incompatible with human dignity. [Such as promoting abortion or unnatural sexual relations.] This decision cannot be justified by the merit of some specific goal, intention, consequence or circumstance, Thus it would be completely false and illusory to defend, political, economic or social rights which do not comprehend a vigorous defence of the right to life from conception to natural end. When it comes to defending the weakest, who is more defenceless than an unborn child or a patient in a vegetative or comatose state?”

“When political projects openly or covertly contemplate the depenalisation of abortion or euthanasia, the democratic ideal (which is truly democratic when it recognises and protects the dignity of all human beings) is betrayed at its very foundations. For this reason, dear brothers in the episcopate, when defending life we must not fear hostility or unpopularity, [Do I hear an “Amen!”?] rejecting all compromise and ambiguity which would conform us to the mentality of this world“. [An echo of St. Paul to the Romans.]

In order to help lay people live their Christian, social and political commitments in a unified and coherent fashion it is necessary, said the Holy Father, to ensure appropriate “social catechesis and an adequate formulation of Church Social Doctrine. … This also means that on some occasions, pastors must reminds all citizens of the right, which is also a duty, freely to use their vote to promote the common good“.  [Imagine.  The Holy Father is daring to say that people should use their vote well!]

“At this point politics and faith come together“, [But NCR catholics assert that politics and faith must not come together when it comes to abortion and unnatural relations.  They should only intersect when it has to do, perhaps, when passing legislation for funding to community organizers, perhaps.] he went on. “The specific nature of faith certainly lies in the meeting with the living God, Who opens new horizons far beyond the sphere of reason. … Only by respecting, promoting and indefatigably teaching the transcendent nature of the human being can a just society be built. … ‘God has a place in the public realm, specifically in regard to its cultural, social, economic, and particularly its political dimensions‘”, said the Holy Father quoting his Encyclical “Caritas in veritate”. [One of the important things here is Benedict’s mention of the transcendent.  This is where catholic liberals go off the rails, because they are for the most part modernists, stuck in the tar of immanentism.  Because of the transcendent dimension, we Catholics know how precious a human being is.  If you turn your focus away from the transcendent, you can justify setting aside the right to be born or the need for relations to be natural in favor of arguably important but logically secondary issues which, in truth, depend on a sound foundation for their trajectories to aim at the correct outcome.]

Benedict XVI concluded his discourse by joining the Brazilian bishops’ appeal for religious education and, “more specifically, for the pluralistic and confessional education of religion in State schools”. He also indicated that “the presence of religious symbols in public life is both a recollection of man’s transcendence and a guarantee of its respect. They have particular value in the case of Brazil where the Catholic religion is a component part of the country’s history”.  [Again, Benedict refers to the transcendent.]

At the end, the Pope speaks again of the transcendent.  At the end he does so through a reference to the Cross of the Lord.

Looking at the Cross is a way to remind us of the transcendent.

On the surface of it, it is a horrible image, all too earthly and cruel.  But we Catholics learn to move from the outward sign to the deeper mystery.

This is why our orientation and the Cross is so important in our liturgical worship.

For a while now I have been thinking through the intersection of politics and worship.   There is a connection.

In fact, the Holy Father here is aiming here at something I have been aiming at for a while, particularly after the Notre Dame Debacle.

Posted in New Evangelization, Our Catholic Identity, Pope of Christian Unity, The Drill, The future and our choices | Tagged ,
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Remedial Catholicism through chant

I direct you attention to an entry at The Chant Cafe:

Simple Propers for All Souls

Posted by Adam Bartlett

Download them here

Note that the chants for the Feast of All Souls are the same as the Requiem (Funeral) Mass. What if we were to sing these instead of “On Eagle’s Wings” and “Amazing Grace” at our parish funerals?

Probably would make quite a difference.

I would also love some feedback on the Offertory “Domine Iesu Christe”. This is a tricky one to handle!

This could be a part of a program of therapy for a parish, for parochial remedial Catholicism.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, New Evangelization, Our Catholic Identity | Tagged ,
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NCR has a nutty about Card. Burke’s observations about voting

Yesterday in an entry about comments made by soon-to-be Card. Burke and the responsibilities of voters in this upcoming mid-term election, I foretold that liberals would claim that Burke was “telling people how to vote”.

Arch-liberal Maureen Fielder, a dissenting woman religious who actively promotes the ordination of women, speaks for the arch-liberal NCR on her blog.

Burke tells us how to vote, from the Vatican [She is asking the NCR reader to channel their inner “Know Nothing”.  This simply plays on the anti-Catholic chestnut that a elected Catholic official would be improperly influenced by “the Vatican”.]
by Maureen Fiedler on Oct. 28, 2010

I remember distinctly, when I was about 10-11 years old, hearing my father say after church, “That priest can have his opinions, but he is not going to tell me how to vote!” (The person at issue, as I recall, was a local candidate who was divorced).  [She is setting up a moral equivalency between a Catholic politician who is divorced and a one who promotes abortion.  Since NCR catholics are expected to think that divorce/remarriage is somewhat trivial for Catholics, so too….  She isn’t saying that her father thought divorce is good.  It just isn’t important enough to make a difference.  Beyond that, reason doesn’t enter into her father’s statement: he simply wants to have things his own way regardless of what one of the Church’s teachers might say.  This will play well with NCR catholics as well.]

It sounds like Cardinal-designate Raymond Burke never ran into Catholics like my father. [Nah… he grew up in rural Wisconsin, farmed by old Poles and Germans.  No stubborn people there.] According to CatholicAction.org, Burke is once again telling American Catholics how to vote — this time from the banks of the Tiber. [Ooooo]

In an interview with Thomas McKenna begin_of_the_skype_highlighting     end_of_the_skype_highlighting, president of the arch-conservative Catholic Action for Faith and Family, Burke reportedly said that Catholics are bound in conscience to vote for political candidates who oppose aborting babies, embryonic stem cell experiments, euthanasia and so-called homosexual “marriage.[You can see why the editors of the NCR would be against that!]

There was no mention of [Here it comes… ] the central issues of the 2010 mid-term election: unemployment, the economy, the widening income gap between the wealthy and the working/middle class, home foreclosures, or even immigration. For Burke, everything apparently hinges on the “bedroom” issues, not the “boardroom” or the “border” issues. [She is rehashing the liberal catholic from the 2008 election cycle.  NCR catholics fail to see that the basic human right to live is prior to every other human right.  The foundation of true Catholic social justice rests on the right to be born and live in dignity to a natural death.  The bonds of society and our societal interactions depend on firm foundations that are in harmony with nature and common sense – and divine revelation.  Society’s basic building block is the normal and natural family.  If you tear apart what “family” means and begin to call unnatural relationships “normal” you tear at the bonds of society.]

This is a yet another example of hierarchical behavior that oversteps the boundaries of acceptable church/state relations and sends most Catholic voters up the wall — if they pay attention to it at all. [Another misstep.  She is pressing on the reader a false understanding of the chimeric “separation of church and state”.  Furthermore, she is taking a position against the right of the Church to have a voice in the public square.  Effectively, for arch-liberal Fiedler, catholics only have the right to raise their voice in the public square so long as they are pressing for her positions.  Had Burke been speaking about mercy for illegal immigrants, she and the NCR would not have taken a public position against him. They would not have praised him.  It is when Church officials say that homosexual acts are wrong that they seem to get worked up.]

Many Catholics do not agree with the official hierarchical position on some or all of these issues, but even those who do don’t want to be given instructions on how to cast their ballot. [Arch-liberal Fiedler reduces the Church’s teaching to a “official hierarchical position”.  Note the choice of words.  For NCR catholics “hierarchical” is bad.  If something is “official”, perhaps there is an un-official position which is still “catholic”.  She would like that, because she wants to have part in an alternative magisterium.]

Now Burke, as an American citizen, certainly has the right to express the official church positions — or his personal opinions — on these issues. But when hierarchical leaders [as opposed to the sort of “leader” arch-liberal Fiedler is.  She is asserting a moral equivalence.] suggest [He went beyond a “suggestion”.] that voting for candidates who do not share official church views is in any way sinful it’s akin to trying to make voting itself a potentially sinful act. That’s something many church/state scholars find unacceptable. [Who, Maureen?  Give us the list.]

The Catholic bishops as a body, in every major election, have said that voters need to weigh all the major issues in making a decision, not just one or two of them.

Now, that is a position my father would understand.  [But in the final analysis he wouldn’t care what the bishops say, because nobody was going to tell him what to do.  The apple doesn’t fall too far from the tree, it seems.]

One of the most serious wrongs that a publicly visible catholic can do is confuse the Catholic faithful and lead them into error of faith and sinful actions.  Pro-abortion politicians do this when they support evil positions contrary to Church teaching: they cause scandal in a very public way.  Women religious who give cover to catholic politicians who vote in favor of abortion or in favor of unnatural relationships do them same.

The Church must defend the faithful against that damage.

The Church must try to get the person who caused the damage to try to make amends and heal it.

Otherwise, the Church must separate that person from Communion with the hope that she will correct her views.

On 28 October Benedict XVI spoke to Brazilian bishops in Rome for an ad limina.  Among other things he said:

Your duty as bishops, together with your clergy, is indirect because [NB] you must contribute to the purification of reason, and to the moral awakening of the forces necessary to build a just and fraternal society. Nonetheless, when required by the fundamental rights of the person or the salvation of souls, pastors have the binding duty to emit moral judgments, even on political themes“.

This is what Burke did.  He did not directly tell people what to do.  His influence was “indirect” because he was pointing to guiding principles.  That is what bishops are supposed to do.

Benedict continued:

“When forming these judgements, pastors must bear in mind the absolute value of those … precepts which make it morally unacceptable to chose a particular action which is intrinsically evil and incompatible with human dignity. [Such as promoting abortion or unnatural sexual relations.] This decision cannot be justified by the merit of some specific goal, intention, consequence or circumstance, Thus it would be completely false and illusory to defend, political, economic or social rights which do not comprehend a vigorous defence of the right to life from conception to natural end. When it comes to defending the weakest, who is more defenceless than an unborn child or a patient in a vegetative or comatose state?”

It may be too much to hope that Fiedler cares what the Vicar of Christ says, but I am sure you know people who could benefit from this clarity.

In the meantime ….

[CUE MUSIC]

After a long day of debunking aging angry dissidents, why not relax with a WDTPRS mug filled to the brim with piping hot Mystic Monk Coffee?

Women religious who give cover to pro-abortion politicians and who want to impose their own “magisterium” to supplant that of Holy Church do not like or Buy some coffee!drink Mystic Monk Coffee!

Do you want to be like them?  Do you?   Do you want to associate with that lot?  That is exactly what you are doing when you don’t enjoy Mystic Monk Coffee!

… !? …

Okay.  Perhaps that may be a bit of an overstatement.

Nevertheless, the support you give to 1) traditional 2) Carmelite 3) men, 4) in habits, 5) in Wyoming, who use the 6) older Mass… the support you give 7) to me… is sure to annoy small-c catholics everywhere.  That’s reason enough to get on board!

Annoy liberals now! Refresh your supply today!

Not just Monk Coffee … Mystic Monk.

It’s swell!

Posted in Emanations from Penumbras, The Drill, The future and our choices, Throwing a Nutty | Tagged , , ,
26 Comments

Battlestar Galactica prequel… prequels… news

It seems that the Battlestar Galactica prequel series Caprica was axed yesterday.

This follows a week after the announcement that SyFy would produce a movie length pilot set during the first Cylon war.

It will be called, apparently, Battlestar Galactica: Blood & Chrome.  An odd title.

Surely it will have some action in it!

Posted in The Campus Telephone Pole | Tagged
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BLOG RENEWAL: Test of a new mobile theme

Test of a new mobile theme, posted from my iPhone.

If this works for you, pitch in.  I had to buy it.

Posted in SESSIUNCULA |
21 Comments

NYC, Manhattan Solemn TLM news for Christ the King, All Saints, All Souls

Are you in or near New York City?

There will be a Solemn Mass with the 1962 Missale Romanum at Holy Innocents in Manhattan (near 37th and Broadway) for the Feast of All Saints Monday, 1 November at 6 PM, and for 2 November All Souls Day at 6PM.  On the Feast of All Saints, the choir will  sing Morales Missa Caça and on All Souls Day, Morales Missa pro defunctis.    The choir’s got game, btw.

The undersigned will be celebrant.

Mystic MonkAlso,  on Sunday 31 October, the Feast of Christ the King in the older, traditional calendar, there will be a Solemn Mass at 10 am, also at Holy Innocents with music by Morales, the Missa sobre las voces. (This choir must really like Morales!)  After the Sunday Mass, in the humble hall below the church, there will be a solemn coffee and doughnuts Convivium featuring MYSTIC MONK COFFEE!  I am told there will be a few bags of Mystic Monk given away and some for purchase.

Immediately after Christ the King Mass on Sunday, there will be the recitation of the Act of Consecration of the Human Race to the Sacred Heart.  This Act of Consecration may be recited publicly each year on this great Feast.

Here is the text sent by a reader involved at the parish:

Most Sweet Jesus, Redeemer of the human race, look down upon us humbly prostrate before thy altar.  We are Thine, and Thine we wish to be; but to be more surely united to Thee, behold each one of us freely consecrates himself today to Thy Most Sacred Heart. Many indeed have never known Thee; Many too, despising Thy precepts, have rejected Thee.  Have mercy on them all, most merciful Jesus, and draw them to Thy Sacred Heart.

Be Thou King, O Lord, not only of the faithful children who have never forsaken Thee, but also of the prodigal children who have abandoned Thee; Grant that they may quickly return to their Father’s house lest they die of wretchedness and hunger.

Be Thou King of those who are deceived by the erroneous opinions of whom discord keeps aloof, and call them back to the harbor of truth and unity of faith, so that soon there may be but one flock and one shepherd.
Grant, O Lord, to Thy Church assurance of freedom and immunity from harm; give peace and order to all nations, and make the earth resound from pole to pole with one cry; praise to the divine Heart that wrought our salvation; To it be glory and honor forever.  R. Amen.

Posted in The Campus Telephone Pole |
18 Comments

Archbp. (Card.) Burke on the obligation to VOTE properly

Remember how soon-to-be Cardinal Raymond Burke was, as liberals crowed, promoted to a Roman office in order to remove his influence on the American scene?

This is from CNA with my E and C:

Rome, Italy, Oct 28, 2010 / 12:15 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- Cardinal-designate Raymond Burke stressed to Catholic voters in a recent interview that they have a “very serious” obligation to uphold the truth of “moral law” in the upcoming mid-term elections. He specifically cited protecting unborn children from abortion and defending traditional marriage.

The American Vatican official, who was recently named by the Holy Father as a future cardinal, spoke on Oct. 20 to Thomas McKenna, president of Catholic Action for Faith and Family, just hours after the Pope’s announcement.

Cardinal-designate Burke opened his remarks by saying that “as a bishop it’s my obligation, in fact, to urge the faithful to carry out their civic duty in accord with their Catholic Faith.” [Burke, as a Catholic bishops, is a bishop for the whole Church.] Clarifying that he does not endorse particular candidates, the prelate also spoke of his duty to relay “principles” to the faithful to help inform their vote.

Speaking on the contentious topic of abortion in the upcoming mid-terms, Cardinal-designate Burke said one [NB:] “can never vote for someone who favors absolutely the right to choice of a woman to destroy a human life in her womb or the right to a procured abortion.”

“You may in some circumstances where you don’t have any candidate who is proposing to eliminate all abortion, choose the candidate who will most limit this grave evil in our country,” he explained, “but you could never justify voting for a candidate who not only does not want to limit abortion but believes that it should be available to everyone.”

The Vatican prelate also addressed the issue of same-sex “marriage,” asserting that maintaining the definition of marriage as between one man and one woman is not unjust discrimination.

“Where there is unjust discrimination – for instance, where you say that a fellow human being, because of the color of his skin, is not a part of the same race as someone, say, who is a Caucasian, that is a kind of discrimination which is unjust and immoral,” he said.

However, he added, “there is a discrimination which is perfectly just and good, and that is the discrimination between what is right and what is wrong.” [This might be the bit idiots or the mendacious latch into.]

“Between what is according to our human nature and what is contrary to our human nature. So the Catholic Church, in teaching that sexual acts between persons of the same sex are intrinsically evil, [Idiots and the mendacious will claim that the Church (and Burke) says that the people who do these things are evil.] are against nature itself, [In other words, reason… common sense… informs us that such acts are intrinsically evil.  The Church also has revelation to support her teaching, but she also points to nature itself.] is simply announcing the truth, helping people to discriminate right from wrong in terms of their own activities.”

In his interview, Cardinal-designate Burke also urged Catholic politicians who have caused “scandal” by endorsing positions contrary to moral law to repent through a “genuine reform of heart.” [This is one of the most serious wrongs that Catholic pro-abortion politicians do when they support evil positions contrary to Church teaching: they cause scandal in a very public way.  The Church must defend the faithful against that damage.  First the Church must try to get the person who caused the damage to try to make amends and heal it.  Otherwise, the Church must separate that person from Communion with the hope that she will correct her views.]

“That’s done through the Sacrament of Penance,” he said, adding that political figures must publicly “renounce” their errors, recognizing and recanting the “evil” they have promoted.

Cardinal-designate Burke’s remarks on voting can be viewed at: http://www.catholicaction.org/

WDTPRS kudos to soon-to-be Card. Burke.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Emanations from Penumbras, Our Catholic Identity, The Drill, The future and our choices | Tagged
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Jailbirds get absentee ballots, but not military personnel?

The men and women serving in the US Military oversees are not going to be able to vote with absentee ballots for some states (Illinois, for example).  But apparently if you are in jail in Cook County (coincidentally in Illinois), that won’t be a problem.

This is from Investors Daily:

Don’t Ask, Don’t Vote
Posted 10/26/2010 07:04 PM ET

Election ’10: The president’s home state gets a pass from the Justice Department on ensuring its soldiers overseas can vote. An administration obsessed with gays in the military doesn’t care about voting rights for GIs.

You can call it a tragedy of errors, a perfect storm of incompetent and uncaring bureaucrats, or you can call it a deliberate attempt to steal what looks to be a close race for both governor and U.S. senator in President Obama’s home state by disenfranchising its servicemen overseas, votes likely to tilt Republican.

[… Read the rest there]

Meanwhile, the Chicago Board of Elections hand-delivers ballots to inmates in Cook County Jail. The board doesn’t even wait for the inmates to apply — it brings the applications with the ballots! More than 2,600 inmates have cast ballots — strikingly similar to the 2,600 soldiers who will likely not receive a ballot for Tuesday’s election.

Posted in The Drill | Tagged
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