Jump to content

Listen to Pattaya FM105

View New Content  

ProThaiExpat's Photo


ProThaiExpat

Member Since 2004-05-02
Offline Last Active 2012-05-25 06:47
**---

Posts I've Made

In Topic: Gay Marriage On Trial In America -- Watch The Play

2012-03-24 07:48:14

JT & LeC:  This article from the NY Times this morning surprised me as to the breadth and seriousness of those helping to finance the fundamental change in civil rights for gays in the US.  The prominent Republicans helping make the change suggests that there are moderate Republicans around, who perhaps have the bigger burden of moderating their RRs.

The last paragraph mentions the OP Prop 8 production.
Gay Marriage Effort Attracts a Novel Group of Donors

By ADAM NAGOURNEY and BROOKS BARNES





LOS ANGELES — On a warm Friday afternoon three years ago, Rob Reiner, the director, arrived for lunch at the Beverly Hills estate of David Geffen, the entertainment mogul. Mr. Reiner and his political adviser, Chad H. Griffin, had spent six months drafting an ambitious legal campaign aimed at persuading the United States Supreme Court to establish a constitutional right of same-sex marriage.
Posted ImageProposition 8, a California voter initiative approved the previous November banning same-sex marriage. He informed Mr. Geffen that they had recruited two renowned lawyers, David Boies, a Democrat, and Theodore B. Olson, a Republican, to argue the case.
“Our feeling is not to go state by state,” Mr. Reiner said. “Our strategy is to make this wind up in the United States Supreme Court and have this a settled issue for all time.”
Mr. Geffen asked few questions as they sat in the dining room off his screening room, with a sweeping view down his sculptured estate. He agreed before the dessert arrived to raise the money. “I said I’d give them half the money and raise the other half,” Mr. Geffen recounted. Mr. Geffen wrote a check for $1.5 million and asked Steve Bing, a friend and producer, to make up the rest.
That lunch was a milestone in the dramatic evolution of a behind-the-scenes fund-raising network whose goal is to legalize same-sex marriage from coast to coast. This emerging group of donors is not quite like any other fund-raising network that has supported gay-related issues over the past 40 years. They come from Hollywood, yes, but also from Wall Street and Washington and the corporate world; there are Republicans as well as Democrats; and perhaps most strikingly, long-time gay organizers said, there has been an influx of contributions from straight donors unlike anything they have seen before.
Mr. Griffin, who this month was named president of the Human Rights Campaign, a national gay advocacy group, recounted being at a September 2010 fund-raiser for the Proposition 8 legal fund at the Mandarin Oriental Hotel in New York, organized by, among others, Wall Street financiers and the former chairman of the Republican National Committee.
“I knew literally no one in the room,” said Mr. Griffin, whose fund-raising activities on behalf of the Obama campaign helped earn him a seat at President Obama’s table at the state dinner at the White House last week. “It was a very bizarre moment for me. It was really a turning point.”
Money does not always translate into political success, of course. While the network has bankrolled the legal case that led two courts to throw out Proposition 8 and also helped power a same-sex marriage bill to law in New York State, tough battles may lie ahead with marriage initiatives on five state ballots this year: Maine, Maryland, Minnesota, North Carolina and Washington State.
And opponents say that while they might be outmatched financially — the National Organization for Marriage said it had an annual budget of about $20 million, and estimates that the combined money being spent in support of same-sex marriage is many times that — they have a more saleable message. Brian S. Brown, the president of the organization, said voters had opposed same-sex marriage in the 30 times the question has been on a ballot since 2000.
“We know what we have to do to win,” he said. “We have shown we did not need to match them dollar for dollar. I would love to. But we’ve won without doing that.”
The seed money collected at the Geffen home — part of millions of dollars that have flown into campaigns to finance court battles, initiative efforts and the campaigns of sympathetic state lawmakers — was an early indicator of the changing donor network. Mr. Geffen is gay; Mr. Bing is straight. Mr. Bing is known as a big contributor to political causes, but associates said this was only the second time he had ever made a major contribution to a gay-related cause.
The Republican support for the effort largely began after Mr. Olson, a solicitor general under President George W. Bush, lent it his name. It accelerated with the fund-raising role of Ken Mehlman, the former chairman of the Republican National Committee and of Mr. Bush’s re-election campaign, who announced he is gay 18 months ago and has since helped raise close to $3 million by fishing in waters where gay organizers had rarely gone before.



(Page 2 of 2)
As surprising — and encouraging — to organizers of the movement is the Wall Street names added to their roster. Prominent among them is Paul Singer, a hedge fund manager who is straight and chairman of the conservative Manhattan Institute. He has donated more than $8 million to various same-sex marriage efforts, in states including California, Maine, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York and Oregon, much of it since 2007.
“It’s become something that gradually people like myself weren’t afraid to fund, weren’t afraid to speak out on,” Mr. Singer said in an interview. “I’m somebody who is philosophically very conservative, and on this issue I thought that this really was important on the basis of liberty and actual family stability.”
The New York fund-raiser was sponsored by Mr. Singer and Mr. Mehlman, among others, and drew a crowd that included Henry R. Kravis, a private equity investor; Daniel S. Loeb, a hedge fund manager; Lewis M. Eisenberg, a former finance chairman for the Republican National Committee; and Steve Schmidt, who managed the 2008 presidential campaign of Senator John McCain.
“I try to look for places where there is both a financial and political angle,” Mr. Mehlman said. “So the fact that we were able to get prominent Republicans and businesspeople, some of whom were involved before but others who are new, helped in the effort both financially and politically.”
This is on top of a network of wealthy gay men and women who have a history of giving money to philanthropic causes and in recent years have shifted much of their effort to same-sex marriage.
Tim Gill, a billionaire software developer from Colorado, who is gay, has assembled a network that has been likened to a gay version of Emily’s List, which supports female candidates. Mr. Gill’s foundations have distributed over $235 million to gay-related causes, with much going to promote same-sex marriage, his advisers said.
“My husband and I are legally married in some states but obviously not married in others, so that’s a pretty big focus,” Mr. Gill said.
David Bohnett, a co-founder of GeoCities and a gay philanthropist here, has donated more than $4 million over the past 10 years to candidates and organizations support same-sex marriage, his advisers said.
And this week, Freedom to Marry, a group that advocates same-sex marriage, announced on Thursday a $3 million fund-raising campaign aimed at winning the five ballot initiatives and pushing the New Jersey Legislature to override the veto by Gov. Chris Christie of a same-sex bill, said Evan Wolfson, the founder of Freedom to Marry.
The first $250,0o0 is coming from Chris Hughes, a founder of Facebook, and his fiancé, Sean Eldridge. “Chris and I certainly prioritize in our contributing,” Mr. Eldridge said. “Marriage is a top priority.”
Mr. Brown said the same-sex-marriage cause had been greatly helped by people like Mr. Hughes. “A couple of billionaires go a long way,” he said. But Mr. Wolfson said the “vast majority” of donations came from small donors.
The broadening of the coalition also reflects a concerted effort by backers of same-sex marriage to put straight and Republican supporters out front. “Prominent straight people from entertainment were crucial,” said Dustin Lance Black, an Oscar-winning screenwriter who wrote “8,” a play re-enacting the courtroom challenge to Proposition 8. “We wanted people who were not the usual suspects.”

A reading of Mr. Black’s play here, which raised more than $2 million, was notable for the participation of screen idol-type American actors like George Clooney and Brad Pitt, who historically would have steered clear this kind of production. Norman Lear, the television producer, wrote a $100,000 check even before Mr. Geffen had made his commitment. “It was the right moment and the right way to go,” he said.

In Topic: Gay Marriage On Trial In America -- Watch The Play

2012-03-22 13:04:02

JT:  The Supreme Court just issued two opinions regarding the right of an accused to COMPETENT counsel even during plea bargaining. Justice Kennedy crossed over to the progressive side and the decisions were 5-4 as it was in the prior gay cases I referred in an earlier post.

This is the guy we are counting on to do the same thing when gay marriage comes to them.

What shocks me and gives credence to your post that there are few moderate Republicans out there, is the fact that four Supreme Court Justices could reason that a plea bargain is not a trial on the  merits of the case and thus no constitutional rights are involved.  Since more than 90 percent of all criminal cases in the US are plea bargained, accused citizens rights are more affected by plea bargains than trials and the need for legal advice before agreeing or refusing to a plea bargain presented by a lawyer/prosecutor in what is clearly a adversarial proceeding  seems a slam dunk to me but not to Roberts, Scalia, Thomas and the other one.

In Topic: Gay Marriage On Trial In America -- Watch The Play

2012-03-22 07:37:26

Perhaps there is hope for some Republican legislators, as this article demonstrates.  Log Cabin Republicans is the gay group within the Republican Party that won a major federal court decision against DADT at the trial level.  Perhaps gays should consider supporting moderate Republicans who show, by their voting record that they are not RR's. From the Advocate News Site:

Marriage Equality


By Lucas Grindley and Andrew Harmon


Posted Image
John Lynch, David Bates
A Republican-led effort to repeal marriage equality in New Hampshire decisively failed today. Lawmakers voted against the repeal, against replacing marriage with civil unions, and against putting marriage rights up to a voter referendum.

Just to ensure the message was clear, Republican representative Seth Cohn, who supports marriage equality, proposed banning marriage between left-handed people. That didn't pass either.

The final vote was 211-116 to kill a bill that would have rescinded marriage equality in the state, and the votes against the repeal included several Republicans, such as Cohn, who broke with their party.

Gov. John Lynch signed marriage equality legislation in 2009 after it narrowly passed through the legislature, and he has promised to veto any effort to repeal the law. It would have needed to pass through both Republican-led chambers before reaching his desk.

But the bill, introduced by state representative David Bates, couldn't muster the votes to pass the House, let alone come anywhere near the two-thirds majority needed to override a veto.
Bates had also sought a referendum but lost that vote 162-188. Polling on the issue showed that a solid majority of New Hampshire residents opposed rolling back marriage rights for gay residents. And marriage supporters argued that it was their role, not voters', to make a decision on repeal.

It wasn't the first time marriage opponents had tried to put the question on a ballot. House members voted against a similar initiative in 2010, failing to reach the 60% of members' votes to add the initiative to the ballot.

"Our opponents tried to abuse the 2010 Republican legislative sweep in New Hampshire to repeal the popular law," said Marc Solomon, Freedom to Marry’s national campaign director. "What they didn’t count on was the fact that the freedom to marry is becoming a bipartisan value, as resoundingly reflected in today’s vote."

In Topic: Chances For Us Tourist Visa For Farmer?

2012-03-18 18:07:52

Your latest post changes the picture considerably.

Your long standing relationship can be the theme to establishing her "compelling reason" to return to Thailand, once you establish that relationship in a documentary way and your future plans to remain in Thailand, including your visa status supporting that contention.

Likewise, she is does not have a virgin passport, so all of her travels with you clearly establishes prior trips outside of Thailand to countries where she could work at a high paying job, compared to Thailand, and clearly that is not her aim.

Certainly an itinerary of all of her travels with you in the past with departure and return dates and what was done on those trips together buttresses your contention that the trip to the U.S. is just another overseas trip for the two of you, as before, with a return date to Thailand established.  An itinerary in the US is a good idea as well.

If you are paying the expenses of the trip be clear about that and it doesn't hurt to provide proof of the ability to pay them.  If she is sharing in the expense of the trip, she should show the ability to do so.

I think she has a good chance of getting the visa if you follow the long term love relationship between with you and both of your continued long term Thailand connections and obligations upon your return.

Good luck and enjoy your trip.

PS As much documentation as you can provide the better, a rule of thumb is supporting every contention you make regarding her "compelling reason" to return to Thailand by documentation.

In Topic: What And Where Should You Buy To Make Thai-Style Sticky Rice?

2012-03-17 22:40:02

We use one of the rice cookers that has a hinged top and a steam escape valve.  Rice goes in the plastic basket provided with the cooker and is steamed. Great for warming it up when it is a leftover as well.

I prefer this method as I often can taste a flavor from the traditional method using the woven basket that I don't like.

The basket and pot shown in the above thread would certainly be a cheaper original acquisition cost.

Quick Navigation   View New Content Site search: