Showing posts with label Florida primary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Florida primary. Show all posts

Monday, March 17, 2008

Make a Wish meme

~SCROLL DOWN FOR MANIC MONDAY~


Linda at Are We There Yet has designed the Make a Wish meme. I saw it at both Mo's blog and Trav's blog.

I love this kind of meme with a great graphic so here I go:

Here are the rules:

1. Think about what it is that you want more than anything, what your heart's desire and fondest wish is, and what it is that you would wish for if you were to see the above wishing star flame across the night sky.

2. Right click and SAVE the blank graphic below.

3. Use a graphics program of your choice and place your wish on the picture.

4. Post the Make A Wish Meme and your wishing star on your blog along with these rules.

5. Tag as many people as you like so that there can be wishing stars all across the Blogosphere and ask them to please link back to Linda at Are We There Yet so that I can see what wishes others have made and share those wishes with others.

So what's my wish? Well right now what I'd love is

Ah, the warm water, central air conditioning, a gorgeous pool, hot weather.

I tag:

Roger @ Idaho Daily Photo
Ann @ A Nice Place In The Sun
Liza @
My So Called Life
Julia @ A Piece of my Mind

Bridget @ ..."And Miles To Go Before We Sleep..."

Lois @ Lowdown from Lois

David @ authorblog
Gattina @ Writers Cramps
Sanni @ Coffee 2 Go

Nelia @ Blog That Mommy!

Sandee @ Comedy Plus
Sandy Carlson @ Writing in Faith



theteach

Sunday, January 27, 2008

Jewish Week points to falsehoods being spread about Obama...

Via The New York Jewish Week:

Campaign Of Falsehoods On Obama Seen Sticking

On eve of Florida primary, signs that e-mail blitz charging Muslim background gaining traction among Jews.

Sen. Barack Obama’s campaign is fighting back against the innuendos, by distributing this week an “open letter to the Jewish community” from seven Jewish Democratic Senate colleagues condemning the “abhorrent” tactics.
by James D. Besser
Washington Correspondent

When Doug Bloomfield, a columnist for Jewish newspapers and popular lecturer on the pro-Israel circuit, spoke in south Florida last week, he was astonished by what he encountered .

Anonymous e-mails and not-so-anonymous charges by some Jewish leaders about Sen. Barack Obama’s alleged Muslim past have started gaining real traction in the increasingly furious battle for the 2008 Democratic presidential nomination, he said.

"I was really shocked by the number of people who took these things seriously," Bloomfield said this week. "One man said to me: how do you know he’s not a ‘Muslim plant’; another used the words ‘Manchurian Candidate.’"

Bloomfield said he tried to "dispel what I see as a concerted hate campaign, coming largely from the Jewish right," in his speech.

Last week, a group of top Jewish leaders representing groups across the religious and political spectrum issued a statement that sought to stem the onslaught of disinformation.

Read the rest of the article.


Some friends of mine and myself are aware that such negative e-mails are being disseminated to one and all just before the Florida primary. The information is patently untrue. Such scare tactics come from the right. Don't let it get to you.


Via ADL

January 15, 2008


An Open Letter to the Jewish Community:

As leaders of the Jewish community, none of whose organizations will endorse or oppose any candidate for President, we feel compelled to speak out against certain rhetoric and tactics in the current campaign that we find particularly abhorrent. Of particular concern, over the past several weeks, many in our community have received hateful emails that use falsehood and innuendo to mischaracterize Senator Barack Obama's religious beliefs and who he is as a person.

These tactics attempt to drive a wedge between our community and a presidential candidate based on despicable and false attacks and innuendo based on religion. We reject these efforts to manipulate members of our community into supporting or opposing candidates.

Attempts of this sort to mislead and inflame voters should not be part of our political discourse and should be rebuffed by all who believe in our democracy. Jewish voters, like all voters, should support whichever candidate they believe would make the best president. We urge everyone to make that decision based on the factual records of these candidates, and nothing less.

Sincerely,

William Daroff, Vice President, United Jewish Communities

Nathan J. Diament, Director, Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of America

Abraham Foxman, National Director, Anti-Defamation League

Richard S. Gordon, President, American Jewish Congress

David Harris, Executive Director, American Jewish Committee

Rabbi Marvin Hier, Dean, Simon Wiesenthal Center

Rabbi David Saperstein, Director, Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism

Phyllis Snyder, President, National Council of Jewish Women

Hadar Susskind, Washington Director, Jewish Council for Public Affairs