Had trouble falling asleep last night and have been falling behind on other things. Not just that a number of little things have been going wrong in the past few hours. As I was hungry for lunch, I suddenly realized I hadn’t made it to Trader Joe’s yesterday as I had planned. [...] Full story...
In this post as well as several others from St. Paul, I reported how impressed I was with my fellow bloggers some of whom I had met thee for the first time, having theretofore only known them as pixels on my computer screen.
One of the greatest things about blogging is the e-mails we get praising us for our work. I feel we are accomplishing something when we hear from other gay Republicans (and conservatives) who have (”finally” as some put it) found a forum where others share views similar to their own.
It is perhaps ironic that I waited until the last minute to decide to attend an event which could turn out to be one of the most seminal of my life.
While I was moved, but not wowed by John McCain’s Acceptance Speech Thursday night at the Republican National Convention in St.
Last week, I noted how a liberal friend “speculated I disliked Hillary Clinton because I fear strong women.
Over at Volokh, David Kopel asks:
do VC readers know of any serious research about a link between heterosexism and capitalism, white supremacy, patriarchy and male-dominated privilege? My initial impression is the cause and effect theory of heterosexism is quite wrong.
A dear friend of mine, an outspoken and self-assured lesbian, writes (and with her permission I reprint):
have gone from Kucinich to obama {until the beiginning of this year-what an ass and an embarrassment!} to Hillary to McCain/Palin…cannot believe that I am voting Repub for the first time in 30 yrs!!
Love that woman!!! Have brother up [.
This morning, after sleeping in, I did a bit of blogging, then took my hostess out to lunch with a Twin Cities blogress, Peg Kaplan at a restaurant at the Mall of America before meeting the fetching Carlos to visit the amusement park area in the Mall’s atrium.
While the Alaska Governor wasn’t quite nobody last week (some of our readers had been pushing her for VP as long ago as July 2007), a “week ago,” according to Rasmussen reports, “most Americans had never heard of” her.
This morning as I prepared for the day and reflected on the speeches of my party’s president and vice-presidential nominees, I wondered if ever before the running mate had been more charismatic than the man at the top of the ticket.
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