Wednesday, June 07, 2006

The Most Important Issue?

From salon.com

When the saints come marching in

Sorry, Sen. Inhofe, but the gentleman from Louisiana just passed you in the pandering lane.

The Republicans' constitutional amendment banning gay marriage got just 49 votes this morning, far short of the two-thirds majority it needed -- and was never going to get -- for passage. Along the way to the vote, Republican Sen. David Vitter defended the GOP's efforts on the election-year measure by saying: "I don't believe there's any issue that's more important than this one."

We don't mean to speak for anybody else, but we're wondering if any of Vitter's displaced constituents in New Orleans -- or, say, the 57 Louisiana families who have lost loved ones in Iraq -- might see America's priorities just a little differently.

As senators voted on the ban this morning, Kansas Republican Sam Brownback vowed that "people are going to be responsible for this vote." Where men like Vitter are concerned, we can only hope that he's right.

-- Tim Grieve Link

Really, Mr. Senator?  Wow!

Monday, June 05, 2006

A Waste of My Money?

The national debt is increasing so quickly the clock in Times Square will run out of digits soon. We are fighting two wars and have numerous other government failures and ethical issues to address in Congress. So why is the Senate going to consider an amendment to the Constitution to stop people who love each other from getting married? Oh, that's right, it's an election year.

Senate to Tackle Gay Marriage Ban

Update: Just in case you want to see how many times the United State Constitution has been amended to stop the citizenry from doing something: here.