» No Surprise.

"Richard Grenell was appointed spokesperson for the U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations by President Bush more than seven years ago and became the longest-serving public servant to hold that post. But when it came to having his partner of six years listed alongside the spouses of other U.N. diplomats, his dedication to the job didn't carry much weight with the State Department." Grenell's just one of the State Department's gays who face discrimination within the government's ranks. [The Advocate]

  Respond


Barack Obama today released a new attack ad taking on John McCain's economic plans.

Entitled "Book," this latest ad follows Obama's fashion, and directly links McCain to George Bush, citing the candidates high agreement average with the President. To be fair, McCain's always said economics ain't his best subject.

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President Bush did good yesterday when he signed a revised AIDS Relief initiative.

The plan, which allocated $48 billion over five years to fight HIV/AIDS, also lifts a travel ban on infected persons looking to enter the US.

Gay group Log Cabin Republicans applauded the President's action, of course, with HIV/AIDS policy consultant David Reznick saying,

President Bush has done tremendous work to combat this disease globally and that deserves to be an important part of his legacy. This legislation will continue the dramatic improvements in the lives of millions of people living with this disease.

Recent reports indicate that HIV-infected people are living considerably longer than they did before new brands of life-sustaining drugs.

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Could former White House Chief of Staff Karl Rove be going down?

A House panel Wednesday voted to cite former top White House aide Karl Rove for contempt of Congress as its Senate counterpart publicly pursued possible punishments for an array of alleged past and present Bush administration misdeeds.

Voting along party lines, the House Judiciary Committee said that Rove had broke the law by failing to appear at a July 10 hearing on allegations of White House influence over the Justice Department, including whether Rove encouraged prosecutions against Democrats.

The committee decision is only a recommendation, and it was unclear whether Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., would allow a final vote.

The Department of Justice's "misdeeds" include vetting potential hires' political affiliations and sexuality.

» Pressure.

"President Bush on Friday signed an order expanding U.S. sanctions against the 'illegitimate' Zimbabwe government of President Robert Mugabe. 'This action is a direct result of the Mugabe regime's continued politically-motivated violence,' Bush said in a statement." [MSNBC]

  4 Responses

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George W. Bush, seen here exchanging chest love with a young military man, will tour the nation to console the millions and millions of people who have suffered under his presidency, according to Onion News Network.

CONTINUED »

» Legacies.

After finally breaking a procedural logjam, the Senate this week will move ahead with a $50 billion AIDS initiative that has the support of Democrats, Republicans and the White House… The AIDS bill is promoted by its backers as a way to show a positive side of American foreign policy by providing resources for developing countries struggling with how to care for those who are HIV-positive… Its eventual approval appears likely given strong underlying support and the fact that President Bush would like to see it enacted as one of his final accomplishments." Meanwhile, Bush today lifted the executive ban on off-shore oil drilling, but no plans can move forward without Congressional approval. And that's not likely to happen. [NY Times and AP]

  Respond


We're in love with Carol Kreck, the 61-year old woman arrested at a John McCain town hall meeting for holding a sign equating the Republican nominee with our current president, George W. Bush.

After being told by secret service to leave - because, you know, freedom of speech has no place in a national presidential election - Kreck begged the million dollar question, "Why would Republicans who voted for Bush find it offensive that McCain = Bush?" Why, oh why, indeed?!

Watch as Rachel Maddow, who's headlining MSNBC's Countdown this week, and journo James Moore shoot the shit on this sure-to-stink controversy. They also discuss how McCain's campaign screens liberal media.

The moral of the story is that John McCain and his cohorts think they can bully the American people and press. Maybe Kreck had a point…

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The gays have loads of reasons to hate on President George W. Bush.

He and his cronies did, after all, use us for political gain and continue to poo-poo on the idea of same-sex marriage.

Despite all that, however, Bush does deserve some lavender love, says activist David Benkof:

It is unquestionable that George W. Bush has done more to fight HIV/AIDS than any president in American history, including Clinton. The people pushing Bush to fight the epidemic at home and abroad are overwhelmingly conservative Christians — the same people we keep hearing gay leaders tar as narrow-minded and bigoted. Well, those narrow-minded bigots (who never had the president's ear during the Clinton administration) deserve far more credit for relieving suffering from HIV in this decade than gay men and lesbians did in the previous two decades combined.

CONTINUED »

» Git-mo Rights!

"The Supreme Court ruled Thursday that foreign terrorism suspects held at Guantanamo Bay have rights under the Constitution to challenge their detention in U.S. civilian courts. In its third rebuke of the Bush administration's treatment of prisoners, the court ruled 5-4 that the government is violating the rights of prisoners being held indefinitely and without charges at the U.S. naval base in Cuba. The court's liberal justices were in the majority." [MSNBC]

  Respond

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It's official: former White House Press Secretary Scott McClellan's the official Republican whipping boy. With the right wing aligning against him - and their "body snatcher" argument - we suspected that Bush backers would begin to question McClellan's sexuality. And, according to Down With Tyranny's reading, former prostitute turned fake reporter Jeff Gannon's doing the dirty work:

…Today the first shot in that direction from the Bush Regime's in-house male prostitute, [Jeff Gannon]: "What I hear about the book does not sound like the Scott McClellan I knew for two years. I can say without fear of contradiction, that I knew Scott better than any other White House correspondent or Washington reporter."

We're not sure if Gannon's remarks are intended to queer McClellan, but they sure as shit don't help his situation. Well, not on the Republican side.

As for us - we'd love it if McClellan were a big homo. In fact, we'd prefer it!

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George W. Bush appeared in Colorado Springs yesterday to speak at an Air Force Academy graduation ceremony. And, as you can see, he got all brotherly with one of the cadets.

Will America ever have another president who prefers chest bumping to handshakes? We seriously hope not - don't want anyone overshadowing Bush's adorable immaturity.

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Gay fearing Byron Butler provides a great segue into another kooky, confused old man: John McCain! The Republican presidential candidate's currently on day four of his "Service To America" tour, an attempt to prove his hawkish, conservative chops to a wobbly electoral base. He's walking a fine line, however, by supporting the war and keeping a distance from President Bush, who started the Iraqi disaster.

Such comparisons have long dogged Senator McCain, and yesterday he unequivocally rejected any equation between him and George W. Bush: "I'm not running on the Bush presidency. I'm running on my own service and my vision for the future."

McCain must need glasses, because we see a man who's largely in step with Bush, particularly with regard to us gays.

CONTINUED »

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Death and carnage are sooo inspiring!

Huffington Post journo and Queerty chum Nico Pitney made this nightmarish mosaic of John McCain and George W. Bush using faces of the 4,000 U.S. soldiers who have died in Iraq. Writes Pitney: "In remembrance of the 4,000 brave men and women who sacrificed everything for us — and the two men who would continue this great tragedy, despite the cost to our soldiers, our military, and our nation."

He also notes that he couldn't obtain photos of all the soldiers, so he did have to use some duplicates. Regardless, it's a pretty disturbing piece.


While we're on the subject of music, some clever kids put together this melodic tribute to our dim witted president.

Isn't it great that we can all laugh at our nation's misfortune?



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