Green Mtn
location: Observing the Progressive madness with considerably less amusement.
listening to: Grandchildren, the best reason for saving the future.
registered: 2004.04.03
posts: 2617
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she's gonna buy her some faith huh. Doyaspose Rupert gave her
this idea over one of their many lunches this past year?Question(s):
Will Pat cross-over?
Will liberals still see her as their own.Hillary Hires Evangelical ConsultantTuesday, Dec. 26, 2006 12:11 a.m. EST
Hillary Clinton has hired an "evangelical consultant” to help woo
Christian conservatives in her likely 2008 presidential campaign.The move comes after a similar political operative successfully
aided Democratic candidates in several states in the midterm
elections.More than one-quarter of the nation’s voters identify themselves
as evangelical — a voter bloc that has long been courted by
Republicans.Clinton’s new hire is Burns Strider, an evangelical Christian who
directs religious outreach for House Democrats and is the lead
staffer for the Democrats’ Faith Working Group, headed by
incoming Majority Whip James Clyburn of South Carolina.Story Continues Below Incoming Speaker Nancy Pelosi created the group last year when
Democratic strategists observed that the party lost ground in the
previous election in part because candidates failed to reach centrist
and conservative voters in rural areas, who tend to be churchgoers
concerned with moral issues, according to the Washington, D.C.-
based publication The Hill.Strider was an aide to Pelosi when the group was formed and
joined Clyburn’s staff as policy director of the Democratic Caucus
earlier this year, the paper reported."Observers of Clinton’s expressions of faith say religion has always
been important to her, that she attended prayer group meetings
while first lady, and that she joined a Senate prayer group shortly
after winning election in 2000,” The Hill reports."Reporters anticipating Clinton’s ’08 presidential run wrongly
discount her expressions of faith as cynical political maneuvering,"
the observers add.Clinton is not the only potential Democratic candidate for the White
House to launch efforts to appeal to religious voters. New Stock Market Report ? Limited Time Offer!
7 Funds at Vanguard to Buy; 10 to Sell-Free!
Learn The Truth. Christians Are Still Being Persecuted!
A Real Conservative Running for President
Josh Dubois, an aide in Barack Obama’s Senate office, is heading
his religious outreach. Sen. John Kerry gave a speech on "service
and faith” in September at conservative Pepperdine University, and
has brought in Shaun Casey, an associate professor of Christian
Ethics at Wesley Theological Seminary, as a consultant on religious
outreach.Kerry also traveled recently to California for a meeting with Rick
Warren, pastor of Saddleback Church and author of the best-seller
"The Purpose-Driven Life.”Clinton’s evangelical point man, Strider, will take his cue from Mara
Vanderslice, whose consulting firm Common Good Strategies
helped Democratic candidates make inroads among evangelical
and churchgoing Roman Catholic voters in Kansas, Michigan, Ohio,
and Pennsylvania.Exit polls showed that Vanderslice’s candidates did about 10
percentage points better than Democrats nationally among those
voters, The New York Times reports.In Michigan, Democrat Gov. Jennifer Granholm cut significantly into
the white evangelical vote that normally goes Republican. Similarly,
in Ohio, Democrat Gov.-elect Ted Strickland took nearly half of the
white evangelical vote. And in Pennsylvania, Sen.-elect Bob Casey
won nearly a third of white evangelicals.In all three states, Democrats began conducting well-organized
outreach efforts to appeal to religious voters long before election
day, according to The Hill.Vanderslice and her business partner, Eric Sapp, urged Democrats
to speak in detail about the religious basis of their policies and to
buy commercials on Christian radio. In Ohio and Michigan, they
even enlisted nuns to staff phone banks and call Catholic and pro-
life voters to urge support for Democratic candidates.Vanderslice has criticized Democrats’ usual reluctance to involve
religion in their campaigns. She disclosed in an interview that she
told candidates not to use the phrase "separation of church and
state,” which does not appear in the Constitution’s language
barring the establishment of religion.Vanderslice herself didn’t become an evangelical Christian until she
attended Earlham College, a Quaker school in Indiana known for its
adherence to pacifism. She acknowledges that she still struggles
with common evangelical ideas about abortion, homosexuality, and
the literal reading of Scripture, according to the Times.After college, Vanderslice spoke at rallies held by the AIDS activist
group Act Up, which disrupted Mass at St. Patrick’s Cathedral in
1989 by spitting the Eucharist on the floor. In 2000, she practiced
civil disobedience when she took to the streets of Seattle in a
protest against the World Trade Organization.During the 2004 presidential campaign, when Vanderslice directed
religious outreach for John Kerry’s campaign, Catholic League
President William Donahue denounced her as an "ultra-leftist who
consorts with anti-Catholic bigots.”Her advice was largely ignored by the Kerry campaign. But in the
recent elections, the Times reports, she and partner Sapp were
heeded when they "told Democratic candidates not to try to fake it,
advising those of non-Christian faiths or no faith at all to talk
about the origins of their sense of ethics.”http://newsmax.com/archives/ic/2006/12/26/122609.shtml?s=lhAnswer(s):He might.Sure they will, the ends justify the means for social darwinists.
–--
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
G
Green Mtn
(view)
she's gonna buy her some faith huh. Doyaspose Rupert gave her
this idea over one of their many lunches this past year?Question(s):
Will Pat cross-over?
Will liberals still see her as their own.Hillary Hires Evangelical ConsultantTuesday, Dec. 26, 2006 12:11 a.m. EST
Hillary Clinton has hired an "evangelical consultant” to help woo
Christian conservatives in her likely 2008 presidential campaign.The move comes after a similar political operative successfully
aided Democratic candidates in several states in the midterm
elections.More than one-quarter of the nation’s voters identify themselves
as evangelical — a voter bloc that has long been courted by
Republicans.Clinton’s new hire is Burns Strider, an evangelical Christian who
directs religious outreach for House Democrats and is the lead
staffer for the Democrats’ Faith Working Group, headed by
incoming Majority Whip James Clyburn of South Carolina.Story Continues Below Incoming Speaker Nancy Pelosi created the group last year when
Democratic strategists observed that the party lost ground in the
previous election in part because candidates failed to reach centrist
and conservative voters in rural areas, who tend to be churchgoers
concerned with moral issues, according to the Washington, D.C.-
based publication The Hill.Strider was an aide to Pelosi when the group was formed and
joined Clyburn’s staff as policy director of the Democratic Caucus
earlier this year, the paper reported."Observers of Clinton’s expressions of faith say religion has always
been important to her, that she attended prayer group meetings
while first lady, and that she joined a Senate prayer group shortly
after winning election in 2000,” The Hill reports."Reporters anticipating Clinton’s ’08 presidential run wrongly
discount her expressions of faith as cynical political maneuvering,"
the observers add.Clinton is not the only potential Democratic candidate for the White
House to launch efforts to appeal to religious voters. New Stock Market Report ? Limited Time Offer!
7 Funds at Vanguard to Buy; 10 to Sell-Free!
Learn The Truth. Christians Are Still Being Persecuted!
A Real Conservative Running for President
Josh Dubois, an aide in Barack Obama’s Senate office, is heading
his religious outreach. Sen. John Kerry gave a speech on "service
and faith” in September at conservative Pepperdine University, and
has brought in Shaun Casey, an associate professor of Christian
Ethics at Wesley Theological Seminary, as a consultant on religious
outreach.Kerry also traveled recently to California for a meeting with Rick
Warren, pastor of Saddleback Church and author of the best-seller
"The Purpose-Driven Life.”Clinton’s evangelical point man, Strider, will take his cue from Mara
Vanderslice, whose consulting firm Common Good Strategies
helped Democratic candidates make inroads among evangelical
and churchgoing Roman Catholic voters in Kansas, Michigan, Ohio,
and Pennsylvania.Exit polls showed that Vanderslice’s candidates did about 10
percentage points better than Democrats nationally among those
voters, The New York Times reports.In Michigan, Democrat Gov. Jennifer Granholm cut significantly into
the white evangelical vote that normally goes Republican. Similarly,
in Ohio, Democrat Gov.-elect Ted Strickland took nearly half of the
white evangelical vote. And in Pennsylvania, Sen.-elect Bob Casey
won nearly a third of white evangelicals.In all three states, Democrats began conducting well-organized
outreach efforts to appeal to religious voters long before election
day, according to The Hill.Vanderslice and her business partner, Eric Sapp, urged Democrats
to speak in detail about the religious basis of their policies and to
buy commercials on Christian radio. In Ohio and Michigan, they
even enlisted nuns to staff phone banks and call Catholic and pro-
life voters to urge support for Democratic candidates.Vanderslice has criticized Democrats’ usual reluctance to involve
religion in their campaigns. She disclosed in an interview that she
told candidates not to use the phrase "separation of church and
state,” which does not appear in the Constitution’s language
barring the establishment of religion.Vanderslice herself didn’t become an evangelical Christian until she
attended Earlham College, a Quaker school in Indiana known for its
adherence to pacifism. She acknowledges that she still struggles
with common evangelical ideas about abortion, homosexuality, and
the literal reading of Scripture, according to the Times.After college, Vanderslice spoke at rallies held by the AIDS activist
group Act Up, which disrupted Mass at St. Patrick’s Cathedral in
1989 by spitting the Eucharist on the floor. In 2000, she practiced
civil disobedience when she took to the streets of Seattle in a
protest against the World Trade Organization.During the 2004 presidential campaign, when Vanderslice directed
religious outreach for John Kerry’s campaign, Catholic League
President William Donahue denounced her as an "ultra-leftist who
consorts with anti-Catholic bigots.”Her advice was largely ignored by the Kerry campaign. But in the
recent elections, the Times reports, she and partner Sapp were
heeded when they "told Democratic candidates not to try to fake it,
advising those of non-Christian faiths or no faith at all to talk
about the origins of their sense of ethics.”http://newsmax.com/archives/ic/2006/12/26/122609.shtml?s=lhAnswer(s):He might.Sure they will, the ends justify the means for social darwinists.
–--
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
