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QUEER-MARRIAGE is defeated in the state of Maine!
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Calvin Lewiston  
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 More options Nov 4, 11:06 am
Newsgroups: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.gossip.celebrities
From: cal5...@aol.com (Calvin Lewiston)
Date: Wed, 04 Nov 2009 06:06:20 GMT
Local: Wed, Nov 4 2009 11:06 am
Subject: QUEER-MARRIAGE is defeated in the state of Maine!
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20091104/ap_on_el_st_lo/us_gay_marriage_maine

Gay-marriage foes claim victory in Maine

By GLENN ADAMS and DAVID CRARY, Associated Press Writers Glenn Adams
And David Crary, Associated Press Writers

PORTLAND, Maine – Gay-marriage opponents are claiming victory in a
closely watched referendum in Maine on a new state law that would have
allowed same-sex couples to wed.

The law in question was passed by the Legislature in May but never
took effect because of a petition drive by conservatives.

With more than 84 percent of precincts reporting Tuesday, the side
seeking to repeal the law had 53 percent of the vote. Their campaign
organizer, Frank Schubert, claimed victory and declared that Maine
voters had helped preserve the institution of marriage.

Gay-marriage supporters refused to concede, holding out hope that that
the tide might turn as the final returns came in. They had been hoping
Maine would become the first state to approve same-sex marriage at the
ballot box.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further
information. AP's earlier story is below.

PORTLAND, Maine (AP) — Gay marriage appeared in danger in Maine in a
closely watched referendum Tuesday that the nation's gay rights
movement had hoped would yield a breakthrough victory at the ballot
box.

Voters were asked to decide whether to repeal or affirm a state law
that would allow gay couples to wed. The law was passed by the
Legislature in May but never took effect because of a petition drive
by conservatives.

With 481 of 608 precincts reporting, the pro-repeal side had 52
percent to 48 percent for gay-marriage's supporters.

A vote to uphold the law would mark the first time that the electorate
in any state endorsed gay marriage. That could energize activists
nationwide and blunt conservative claims that same-sex marriage is
being foisted on states by judges or lawmakers over the will of the
public.

However, repeal — in New England, the region of the country most
supportive of gay couples — would be another heartbreaking defeat for
the marriage-equality movement, following the vote against gay
marriage in California a year ago.

It would also mark the first time voters had torpedoed a gay-marriage
law enacted by a legislature. When Californians rejected same-sex
marriage, it was in response to a court ruling, not legislation.

Maine's secretary of state, Matthew Dunlap, said turnout seemed higher
than expected for an off-year election and voter interest appeared
intense. Even before Tuesday, more than 100,000 people — out of about
1 million registered voters — had voted by absentee ballot or early
voting.

Frank Schubert, organizer for the campaign to repeal gay marriage,
said a victory by his side would be a "backbreaking loss" for
gay-rights activists, given the heavy mobilization and fundraising
efforts put into their campaign.

Jesse Connolly, manager for the pro-gay marriage campaign, said the
results bore out his prediction of a "razor thin" election.

"At the end of the day we're going to see a positive result," he said
late Tuesday. "We might not see that tonight. It might be tomorrow."

Five other states have legalized gay marriage — Iowa, Massachusetts,
Vermont, New Hampshire and Connecticut — but all did so through
legislation or court rulings, not by popular vote. In contrast,
constitutional amendments banning gay marriage have been approved in
all 30 states where they have been on the ballot.

"If we don't win, then Maine will have its place in infamy because no
state has ever voted for homosexual marriage," said Chuck Schott of
Portland, who stood near a polling place in Maine's biggest city with
a pro-repeal campaign sign.

Another Portland resident, Sarah Holman said she was "very torn" but
decided — despite her conservative upbringing — to vote in favor of
letting gays marry.

"They love and they have the right to love. And we can't tell somebody
how to love," said Holman, 26.

Hundreds of gay-marriage supporters gathered in a Portland hotel
ballroom in the evening to await the results. On display was a
three-tiered wedding cake topped with two grooms on one side, two
brides on the other, and the words "We All Do."

In addition to reaching out to young people who flocked to the polls
for President Barack Obama a year ago, gay-marriage defenders tried to
appeal to Maine voters' independent streak — a Yankee spirit of
fairness and live-and-let-live.

The other side based many of its campaign ads on claims — disputed by
state officials — that the new law would mean "homosexual marriage"
would be taught in public schools.

Both sides in Maine drew volunteers and contributions from out of
state, but the money edge went to the campaign in defense of gay
marriage, Protect Maine Equality. It raised $4 million, compared with
$2.5 million for Stand for Marriage Maine.

Elsewhere on Tuesday, voters in Washington state decided whether to
uphold or overturn a recently expanded domestic partnership law that
entitles same-sex couples to the same state-granted rights as
heterosexual married couples. And in Kalamazoo, Mich., voters approved
a measure that bars discrimination based on sexual orientation.

Among other ballot items across the country:

• In Ohio, voters approved a measure that will allow casinos in
Cleveland, Columbus, Cincinnati and Toledo. Four similar measures had
been defeated in recent years, but this time the state's reeling
economy gave extra weight to arguments that the new casinos would
create thousands of jobs.

• Maine voters defeated a measure that would have limited state and
local government spending by holding it to the rate of inflation plus
population growth. A similar measure was on the ballot in Washington
state.

• Another measure in Maine, which easily won approval, will allow
dispensaries to supply marijuana to patients for medicinal purposes.
It is a follow-up to a 1999 measure that legalized medical marijuana
but did not set up a distribution system.

• The Colorado ski town of Breckenridge voted overwhelmingly to allow
adults to legally possess small amounts of marijuana.

___


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editor@netpath.net  
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 More options Nov 4, 12:35 pm
Newsgroups: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.gossip.celebrities
From: "edi...@netpath.net" <edi...@netpath.net>
Date: Tue, 3 Nov 2009 23:35:42 -0800 (PST)
Local: Wed, Nov 4 2009 12:35 pm
Subject: Re: QUEER-MARRIAGE is defeated in the state of Maine!
When are gay-marriage proponents going to realize the obvious - that
gay marriage isn't going any further, as it now ALREADY has won (or
lost) all the easy liberal states?  All that's left is states where
it's implausible that gay marriage will be enacted - at least for
generations.

http://www.redstate.com/erick/2009/08/04/where-is-your-townhall/ is
the all-states, continually-updated calendar of "town halls."

http://www.Internet-Gun-Show.com - your source for hard-to-find stuff!


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Charlie  
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 More options Nov 4, 6:31 pm
Newsgroups: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.gossip.celebrities
From: Charlie <varric...@aol.com>
Date: Wed, 4 Nov 2009 05:31:09 -0800 (PST)
Local: Wed, Nov 4 2009 6:31 pm
Subject: Re: QUEER-MARRIAGE is defeated in the state of Maine!
On Nov 4, 2:35 am, "edi...@netpath.net" <edi...@netpath.net> wrote:

> When are gay-marriage proponents going to realize the obvious - that
> gay marriage isn't going any further, as it now ALREADY has won (or
> lost) all the easy liberal states?  All that's left is states where
> it's implausible that gay marriage will be enacted - at least for
> generations.

> http://www.redstate.com/erick/2009/08/04/where-is-your-townhall/is
> the all-states, continually-updated calendar of "town halls."

> http://www.Internet-Gun-Show.com- your source for hard-to-find stuff!

Fudgepackers aren't concerned about real gay marriage, they just want
to bully people into accepting their lifestyle as normal.  It will
never happen.  People will always be revolted by the notion of what
they do.  They're accepted because almost everyone has a family member
with the affliction.  That's why they're tolerated.  Nothing to see
here, we'll just move on now.

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