Team Supreme Blog

Party Crasher

This morning we learned that Senator Lincoln Chafee (R-RI) had become the first, and possibly the only, member of his party to vote against the nomination of Samuel Alito to the Supreme Court.



If we still need to ask why, Senator Chafee made it clear by quoting from Roe:


"These matters, involving the most intimate and personal choices a person may make in a lifetime, choices central to personal dignity and autonomy, are central to the liberty protected by the Fourteenth Amendment. At the heart of liberty is the right to define one's own concept of existence, of meaning, of the universe, and of the mystery of human life."



Sounds good, doesn’t it? So good, in fact, and so basic to our understanding of our Constitution, that Justice Kennedy quoted it in Lawrence, the case that invalidated sodomy laws and affirmed the personal dignity of millions of GLBT people.


So the question is not why Senator Chafee announced his intention to vote against Judge Alito, but why so many of his colleagues have not done so. Moderates should stand by the principle that our Constitution—our great national promise to ourselves—is an expansive document. Conservatives should be deeply troubled by the idea of a government so large that it can invade our bedrooms and conduct surveillance of peaceful, law-abiding citizens without a warrant.


Senator Chafee proved that fairness knows no party and that a senator is not a rubber stamp. Who will join him? Stay tuned.
Posted by Lara Schwartz on 1/30/2006 | Permalink | Comments (354)  

Outside the Circle

For many of us, after even a cursory review of his record, it was clear that Judge Alito would shift the balance of the Supreme Court in a dangerous direction. Our thorough review of his record and the hearings eliminated any doubt. Judge Alito is a major threat to the rights of GLBT Americans.

The challenge has been to communicate to all fair minded Americans about the significance of the Alito battle and to engage them in this fight. Today’s New York Times editorial emphasized the importance of defeating Alito: “…portraying the Alito nomination as just another volley in the culture wars vastly underestimates its significance. The judge's record strongly suggests that he is an eager lieutenant in the ranks of the conservative theorists who ignore our system of checks and balances, elevating the presidency over everything else.”

Judge Alito would tilt the court so far to the right that it will start to resemble a circle. An ever narrowing circle with fewer and few Americans on the inside and more and more left out. Inside the circle will be groups like the Family Research Council and American Family Association, who have hailed the Alito nomination. Fair minded Americans will be on the outside of that supreme circle, not even bothering to look in for justice.
Posted by David Stacy on 1/26/2006 | Permalink | Comments (11)  

Alito Fails the Justice Test

The hearings have been held. The documents have all been reviewed. The questions have been asked. Now it is time for our Senators to carry out their Constitutional responsibility of advise and consent.

As Senator Ted Kennedy (D-MA) and others have pointed out, no one is entitled to a seat on the Supreme Court of the United States. It must be earned. Judge Sam Alito, Jr. has not proven his case. The Senate should withhold their consent.

It is impossible for us to conclude that Judge Alito will bring a fair and impartial view of the law and Constitution to bear in his consideration of cases on the Supreme Court. His exceedingly narrow view of the right to privacy and liberty, as evidenced in his judicial and executive branch record, gives every indication that he will shift the balance of the court away from protecting the civil rights and liberties of GLBT Americans. His non-responsive answers to questions posed by the Judiciary Committee provide absolutely no reassurance that his previously expressed, out of the mainstream views have changed.

If his record, philosophy and unresponsiveness to committee questions were not troubling enough, those who oppose GLBT equality continue their love affair with Alito. The rights of gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender Americans are squarely in the cross hairs of extreme right wing activists. Their buddy sitting in judgment of our rights is just too scary to contemplate.

Yet contemplate we must, lest we face that reality.

Eight Senators on the Judiciary Committee stood up today to defend our rights and voted against confirmation. It is now up to every Senator to do everything possible to keep Alito off the Supreme Court. The stakes couldn’t be higher for those of us who believe in full equality.
Posted by David Stacy on 1/24/2006 | Permalink | Comments (0)  

Questions, Yes; Answers, Not So Much

Just when it seemed like Judge Alito would slip by without being asked about GLBT issues, my home state Senator Russ Feingold (D-WI) jumped into the fray.

Of course, the fact that Alito was asked the questions does not mean that he gave informative or satisfactory answers. We thought Justice John Roberts was good at dodging committee questions, but while not as smooth as Roberts, Alito was at least as good at obfuscation. I doubt anyone who examines the transcript of all three days of committee questions can find more than a handful of questions in which Alito expressed his personal or legal opinion.

Senator Feingold first asked whether Congress has the power to enact laws like the proposed Employment Non-Discrimination Act to protect GLBT Americans. Alito’s answer was one of the more concrete he’s given all week, although he left himself plenty of wiggle room: “I can't think of a reason why Congress would not have that power, but I would have to be presented with the arguments.”

Feingold also asked Alito about the Saxe case, in which Alito struck down a school district’s harassment policy, and for which he received the Family Research Council’s “Golden Gavel” award. Feingold stated that Family Research Council is an anti-gay group. It was refreshing to see a United States Senator call it like he sees it—there can be little doubt that FRC does not protect families, as it claims, but spreads hate toward the GLBT community.

If only Alito had been as candid. He mischaracterized the harassment policy at issue. He described it as prohibiting nearly any speech, when in fact it only addressed severe, pervasive harassment that created a hostile environment or interfered with a student’s education.

Finally, Feingold asked whether Congress could put conditions on use of federal funds that require a school district to adopt an anti-harassment policy. Alito’s answer seems to indicate it would be okay, but he was not at all definitive.

These were exactly the right questions. It’s just too bad that Alito wouldn’t provide any real answers.

Now that the questioning is over, the questions remain. Judge Alito says assess him based on his record as a judge over the last 15 years. It’s that very record that raises serious questions for GLBT Americans.

Judge Alito could have used his testimony to demonstrate that he was a fair-minded judge who understands the impact of the law on everyday Americans. He didn’t. He could have used his testimony to commit to supporting the extensive jurisprudence supporting the right to privacy. He didn’t. None of our pre-hearing doubts have been assuaged.

How disappointing. And scary.
Posted by David Stacy on 1/12/2006 | Permalink | Comments (1)  

This CAPs everything: Alito’s Amnesia about Anti-Gay Group

Some of the more fiery moments of today’s hearings surrounded Judge Alito’s membership in Concerned Alumni of Princeton ("CAP"), a group that had a record of hostility to including women and minorities at Princeton, and whose magazine, the Prospect, had published extreme anti-gay statements.

Senator Kennedy called Alito out on this, making note in particular of the anti-gay statements. Here’s an example of their exchange:

KENNEDY: The June '84 edition of Prospect magazine contains a short article on AIDS. I know that we've come a long way since then in our understanding of the disease, but even for that time the insensitivity of statements in this article are breathtaking.

It announces that a team of doctors has found the AIDS virus in the rhesus monkeys was similar to the virus occurring in human beings.

KENNEDY: And the article then goes on with this terrible statement: "Now that the scientists must find humans, or rather homosexuals, to submit themselves to experimental treatment. Perhaps Princeton's Gay Alliance may want to hold an election."

You didn't read that article?

ALITO: I feel confident that I didn't, Senator, because I would not have anything to do with statements of that nature.

Why should we believe Alito’s attempt to distance himself? CAP was the subject of very public controversy through the 70s and 80s. Yet just one year after this outrageous article was written, Alito listed CAP as a conservative credential in a job application. Is it really plausible that Alito maintained a membership but didn’t read the magazine? That he knew enough about CAP to think it impressed the Reagan Administration but not enough to be aware of its anti-gay stances? That he didn’t hear of the controversies surrounding CAP, such as that now-senator Bill Frist withdrew because of its radical stances?

From the right wing’s elation over Alito, to Senator Sessions and Brownback’s statements about "redefining marriage," we’ve seen some ridiculous stuff today.

But this caps everything.
Posted by Lara Schwartz on 1/11/2006 | Permalink | Comments (44)  

Under The Lights

Click, click, click. The sound of reporters typing away at their laptops. That was the first thing I noticed, as I sat today in the cavernous Senate hearing room for the second day of hearings on the nomination of Judge Alito to the Supreme Court. Then came the other clicks—from the cameras of the photojournalists as Alito and the Senators took their seats.

Aside from the reporters, the cameras, and the klieg lights, observing the hearing first hand is remarkably similar to being at home or at the office. It’s a big room, with rows of tables for reporters between the audience and the dais. Alito’s balding pate is vaguely visible in the distance. The Senators are recognizable from their voices and their seating arrangement far more than actual visual recognition.

Fortunately, the television monitor is just a few feet away so the audience can see what’s going on.

In the few hours I was there this morning, there were no major revelations. For the most part, Senators did ask substantive questions, rather than pontificating. Listening carefully to Alito’s articulation of the legal principle of stare decisis (the principal that the previous decisions are to be followed by the courts) in regard to the legal precedents underlying Roe v. Wade and other privacy cases, his language is nearly identical to Justice Roberts’ in his confirmation hearings. I suppose the White House is following the principle that if it worked so well once, it will work well again.
Posted by David Stacy on 1/10/2006 | Permalink | Comments (0)  

Act One: Setting the Scene

There was not much news made in the first day of the Alito hearings. While the opening statements were not quite Kabuki theater, the Senators and Judge Alito all knew their roles and followed the script. After all, the first day of hearings is always about posturing rather than substance.

Each of the Democratic Senators raised concerns about Judge Alito’s record as a federal appeals court judge, as a government lawyer working for the Reagan Administration in the 1980s, and his publicly stated beliefs. Some questioned his views of executive power, particularly in light of the National Security Agency warrantless spying on American citizens. Some contrasted Alito’s expansive view of federal executive power with concerns about his decisions that indicate a limited view of Congressional power. The upcoming questions on this will be crucial since the power to enact employment non-discrimination legislation to protect the GLBT community is dependent on the authority of Congress.

Republicans focused on Alito’s qualifications for the job. With the many mentions of the American Bar Association’s rating, you’d think Senators forgot about the Bush Administration’s attempts to sideline the ABA.

Of course, as we moved down the Republican seniority list, social issues jumped to the top of the agenda. Senator John Cornyn (R-TX) blamed “liberal interest groups” who want to “impose their liberal agenda on the American people…they want judges who will find traditional marriage limited to one man and one woman unconstitutional.”

Senator Tom Coburn (R-OK) focused almost exclusively on overturning the Roe v. Wade decision, arguing that the hearings were really about whether we allow abortion to be legal in the United States. He did manage to throw in a line about legal sodomy too.

Following introductory remarks from Senator Lautenberg and former Governor and EPA Administrator Whitman, which consisted of paeans to New Jersey, Judge Alito got his chance. He wants you to know that he’s a humble guy, from a humble background, from humble New Jersey. He went to Princeton and Yale Law School, but he’s not elitist.

It’s a "just-your-average-guy" kind of image he's attempting to get across, but I wonder how many times he rehearsed?
Posted by David Stacy on 1/09/2006 | Permalink | Comments (0)  

Justice Sunday Three and the Faith-Based Initiative: The Best Justice That Money Can Buy

Here we go again. The hearings on nominee Samuel Alito are set to begin on today. Last night, anti-gay and anti-choice activists gathered in Philadelphia for "Justice Sunday III: Proclaim Liberty Throughout the Land." The lineup included the usual suspects—James Dobson, Tony Perkins of Focus on the Family, Pennsylvania Senator Rick Santorum, and Jerry Falwell.


New additions to the evening’s programs included Philadelphia-based pastor Herb Lusk, a partisan activist whose church has received more than $1 million from the Bush Administration’s "Faith-Based Initiative." What a coincidence that he would agree to be on the program.



In fact, Reverend Lusk made no secret of the fact that his participating in Justice Sunday has nothing to do with Alito’s merit as a potential justice and a lot to do with rolling back GLBT rights, admitting to the New York Times that "I don't know enough about him to say I actually think he's the right man to do the job … I'm saying I trust a friend of mine [President Bush] who promised me that he would appoint people to the justice system that would be attentive to the needs I care about." According to the times, these needs stopping marriage equality and breaking down the wall between church and state.


Speakers at previous "Justice Sunday" events made clear that “activist judges” meant judges who rule in favor of GLBT equality. We expect this event to be no different.

By now we’re used to shameless displays of partisanship disguised as religion, and the anti-gay baggage that comes with it. Justice Sunday III takes the cake, though, because on top of all that, it entangles government favors with advocacy about our most independent branch of government.


Real justice can’t be bought. We hope that the United States Senate understands that and does its duty to disregard the anti-gay hysteria that Justice Sunday III is likely to dish out.
Posted by Lara Schwartz on 1/09/2006 | Permalink | Comments (0)  

Will the Real Judge Alito Please Stand Up

The more we learn about Sam Alito, the murkier his image becomes. Is he the true movement conservative that right wing activists hailed in days after his selection by President Bush? Does he have an agenda to reshape our courts and our country based on narrow constitutional principles?

His supporters thought so, and our careful and thorough examination of his record led us to the conclusion that he would at best undermine and at worst totally reverse all the progress that lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender Americans have made over the past few decades.

Yet, many observers are pointing out that Alito is systematically distancing himself from many of the more controversial pillars of his resume and record. The anti-gay and co-education Concerned Alumni of Princeton? Alito says he doesn’t remember being a member even though he put it on his job application to work at the Justice Department.

On that same job application, Alito wrote that “the Constitution does not guarantee the right to an abortion.” When this became public, according to media reports, Senator Dianne Feinstein (D-CA) asked him about it and he said it should not be used to represent his views.

Interestingly, it’s not liberal Bush opponents that are most loudly objecting to Alito’s obfuscation on his conservative record. Sunday’s Washington Post featured an op-ed from conservative legal activist and former Reagan Justice Department official Bruce Fein. Entitled “Don't Run From the Truth: Why Alito Shouldn't Deny His Real Convictions,” in the piece Fein says that:
Samuel Alito Jr. is similarly insisting that he served in the Reagan administration as an ambitious apparatchik uncommitted to conservative principles. According to senators whose statements have been denied by neither the White House nor the nominee, Alito has distanced himself from his own writings assailing Roe and a cluster of dogmas dear to Democrats -- for example, racial preferences and welfare rights. Those writings, Alito is now saying, were crafted to curry favor with his superiors but did not reflect the authentic Alito.
While Fein is not someone with whom we often agree on policy, it is difficult to reject his conclusion that:
The explanations offered by Roberts and Alito, tacitly denying their Reaganite heritage, are fatuous on their face, akin to Thomas Jefferson's disavowing the Declaration of Independence to win a seat on the British Privy Council, or Justice Abe Fortas's disputing that he was a New Dealer despite having raced to serve under President Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Let’s hope that the Senate Judiciary Committee Members are able to lift the veil on the real Sam Alito.
Posted by David Stacy on 12/19/2005 | Permalink | Comments (0)  

Concerns About Alito

The universal praise for the nomination of Judge Alito by the far right wing groups who dragged Harriet Miers through the wringer was worrisome enough. Unfortunately, the deeper you examine Alito’s record, the more you find that may justify their glee.

For instance, in a 1985 job application at the U.S. Department of Justice, Alito indicated that he was a member of the Concerned Alumni of Princeton (CAP). Just what concerned CAP so much? They were formed to oppose Princeton going coed. When that effort failed, their concerns expanded to new groups.

Just the year before Alito’s job application, the group complained that "[h]ere at Princeton homosexuals are on the rampage." In 1983, CAP’s publication—Prospect—noted that "[p]eople nowadays just don't seem to know their place...Everywhere one turns blacks and hispanics are demanding jobs simply because they're black and hispanic, the physically handicapped are trying to gain equal representation in professional sports, and homosexuals are demanding that government vouchsafe them the right to bear children." Alito apparently felt this was the kind of group a Justice Department lawyer could be proud to be a member of.

Every American should be concerned about Alito’s membership in Concerned Alumni of Princeton and his failure to repudiate these positions.

Alito’s lengthy record of decisions paints a clear picture of a judge with an unusually narrow view of the fundamental legal principles that underlay our civil rights protections and basic liberties. For example, he was the only dissenter in a 12-1 decision that held "[o]nly in extreme circumstances is it proper to invoke substantive due process." Substantive due process is a lynchpin in civil rights claims and a critical legal concept underlying our right to privacy. The major cases expanding our rights to liberty and autonomy all build upon this line of reasoning. Few legal principles are so central and few legal scholars take the fringe view that Alito does.
Posted by David Stacy on 12/07/2005 | Permalink | Comments (0)  

A "FAIR" Judiciary? That's what we deserve.

As snow begins to blanket Washington, DC, the city feels quiet and peaceful. But make no mistake—GLBT rights advocates will be navigating a minefield Tuesday as they present their oral arguments before the Supreme Court in FAIR v. Rumsfeld. This case challenges the Solomon Amendment, which denies federal funding to any university that does not allow military recruiters on campus. Because the military’s "Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell" policy discriminates against GLBT people, allowing these recruiters to use their facilities forces schools to violate their own anti-discrimination policies.



Nobody likes "Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell." Turns out that most Americans don’t care whether the soldier who captures Osama Bin Laden is gay. And they really don’t want to hear that their sister has not been able to come home from Iraq because the soldier who was supposed to replace her was kicked out for being gay.



Why does the military persist in excluding gay and lesbian patriots when our military needs them most? It certainly isn’t about military readiness—our coalition allies have openly-gay soldiers.



So basically the Solomon Amendment is a big bully in the classroom, telling the other kids what to do, even if it’s wrong.



And that’s what FAIR is about—it’s about being able to say "this is wrong, and we won’t be part of it."



The Supreme Court will have the final say in this, and many other important cases. Chief Justice John Roberts will preside over this important case. And on January 9, hearings for swing-voter Sandra Day O’Connor's replacement will begin. The nominee, Judge Samuel Alito, looks like trouble. With so much at stake, it’s important to ensure that cases like FAIR get decided by fair-minded justices.
Posted by Lara Schwartz on 12/06/2005 | Permalink | Comments (2)  

Dreaming of a right-wing Christmas

Because her greeting cards to the President constituted the bulk of Harriet Miers' official record, I think a card to her at this point is appropriate.



Harriet, we barely knew ye. No hearings, no documents, just a few conference calls with James Dobson and a dizzying fracas of right wing outrage will be your legacy. We know that you were credited with vetting judicial nominees–do not despair that the process did not work for you.

Love, everybody but the Extreme Right



Miers dropped out, and she did so by employing a pre-determined script. A week before her withdrawal, conservative columnist Charles Krauthammer came up with a graceful exit strategy: blame the nomination’s failure on the White House's inability to release Miers' documents without compromising executive privilege. Wow, I bet that’s something the White House never even thought of before choosing Miers! Remarkably enough. Miers and the White House followed the script to the letter.

Scarcely three days after Miers made her graceful exit, the President announced that Samuel Alito would be his next pick. Since Miers was originally in charge of vetting nominees, one has to wonder who vetted him.

By all accounts, it was the right wing–the same anti-gay groups pushing the so-called Marriage Protection Amendment and fighting basic protections for GLBT people.

A very small segment of our electorate feels that they were promised the ultimate gift from this President: a justice who would vote with Scalia and Thomas to roll back reproductive rights and stop GLBT rights in their tracks. This same group was displeased with Miers, and clearly felt entitled to control the nominations process. As of today, they seem to think that they’ve pulled it off.

Third Circuit Judge Samuel Alito, whom the President nominated today, was at the top of their wish lists. It’s not a coincidence, then, that he got the nod.

In fact, they’ve already taken credit! Matt Lewis, of the Leadership Institute and GOPAC, wrote on his Human Events blog that "[Alito’s] very nomination proves that when conservatives become active, you and I can make a difference. Blogs, letters to the editor, and calls to yourCongressman . . . can change history. Conservatives have arrived at a point where we can flex our muscles – not just in campaigns – but also during public policy fights. It’s been a long time coming. Now, let’s fight."

The American Center for Law and Justice—the legal arm of Pat Robertson’s anti-gay empire, called Alito’s nomination the fulfillment of a promise: "President Bush promised that he would nominate Justices in the mold of Justices Scalia and Thomas. In choosing Judge Alito for the high court, President Bush has done just that."

And of course the Concerned Women for America—who opposed Miers nomination—announced that Alito had been one of their top choices right from the beginning.

The Family Research Council proclaimed that Alito is "a promise kept."

So, with research occupying the next few weeks, and hearings sure to stretch into the holidays, these anti-gay groups seem to be looking forward to a Right-Wing Christmas.

What are you wishing for in a Supreme Court justice? Let your senators know.
Posted by Lara Schwartz on 11/01/2005 | Permalink | Comments (10)  

Extremists Show True Colors on Miers Gay Questionnaire Issue

Following President Bush's nomination of Harriet Miers to the Supreme Court, the revelation of a questionnaire on gay issues she had filled out 16 years ago sparked controversy among the far right. She wasn't seeking the endorsement of the gay group, nor was she in favor of repealing the state's sodomy law, but the mere fact that she met with gay voters sent extremists on a rampage.

"I have a concern that Miss Miers was helping legitimize the drive of homosexual organizations for power and influence over public policies," said Tony Perkins, president of the Family Research Council in a statement Tuesday.

"Bush's pro-Sodomite nominee" is what the right-leaning website covenantnews.com labeled her, according to the Chicago Tribune.

  • While her meeting showed openness and offers some hope that Miers might have some fair-minded inclinations, Miers wasn't even seeking the endorsement of the gay political group.
  • In fact, she supported laws that criminalized private bedroom behavior and wouldn't say she supported a non-discrimination law for gays in the workplace. Miers only acknowledged support for AIDS funding during some of darkest days of the epidemic in America.

Cathie Adams, president of the Texas Eagle Forum told the Washington Post "For goodness' sake, why elevate AIDS over cancer? She shouldn't have filled out that questionnaire at all."

While we still have a lot more to learn about Miers, the reaction from the far right-wing to this news so clearly reveals the depth of their opposition to basic decency toward GLBT Americans.

Posted by Michael Cole on 10/06/2005 | Permalink | Comments (12)  

Filling in the Blanks

With so little background currently available about her views and recognizing that little else will be released, Americans of all political and ideological stripes are clamoring for just a glimpse of her views or information on her background that makes her qualified for a lifetime appointment to the Supreme Court. It is no wonder, then, that the media has been so intrigued by a candidate questionnaire that Ms. Miers completed for a lesbian and gay organization during her successful 1989 run for Dallas City Council.

Many in the gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender community saw her willingness to appear before a gay and lesbian audience in Dallas in 1989 as a small glimmer of hope that Miers is not as intolerant as the Right Wing wants a justice to be. While her answers indicated that she supported the Texas sodomy law (which was later overturned by the Supreme Court with Sandra Day O'Connor's vote) and didn't support an ordinance to ban discrimination based on sexual orientation, we were hopeful that she was open to equality for the gay and lesbian community. Was she?

White House surrogates fell over each other to assure their base that she was not. Amazingly, the simple suggestion that Miers might be slightly sympathetic to the gay and lesbian community produced a ferocious backlash from conservative "validators". James Dobson's group, Focus on the Family, said that they had no problem with her answers on the survey. Focus on the Family has been a longtime foe of basic civil rights for the GLBT community – including workplace protections and hate crimes laws.

How was Focus on the Family so quick to judge her answers and validate her bona fide conservative credentials? One must look back to this past weekend... even before her nomination was announced to the Senate and to the American people. The NY Times reported that Karl Rove called James Dobson, head of Focus on the Family. In welcoming the Miers nomination that came as a shock to many in the conservative corner, Dobson said he knew things that he wasn't a liberty to talk about. Huh? Why is James Dobson the holder of information that nobody else , including those United States Senators who are going to vote on this nomination, knows? http://www.nytimes.com/2005/10/04/politics/politicsspecial1/04conserv.html
Posted by Christopher Labonte on 10/05/2005 | Permalink | Comments (18)  

Up Next? Ms. Miers..

The President has just announced his pick to fill the seat of Sandra Day O'Connor, Harriet Miers. Other than the biographical information readily available on the web, we know very little about Ms. Miers at this point. And we know next to nothing about her views on important legal issues that impact the gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender community.

She has no judicial experience, although many justices -- including Chief Justice Earl Warren -- had no judicial experince. She is a Bush loyalist. She is from Texas. Some have expressed surprise that in the press conference announcing her nomination, the president stated that Miers was on the board of an organization called Exodus Ministries. This is not the infamous ex-gay group, but is a Texas-based organization that describes itself as "a non-denominational Christian organization established to assist ex-offenders and their families become productive members of society by meeting both their spiritual and physical needs." http://www.exodusministriesinc.com/objective.htm

Since very little is known, it is up to the Senate to carefully examine her record and her views. Given the importance of the seat she has been nominated to fill, they owe it to the nation.
Posted by Christopher Labonte on 10/03/2005 | Permalink | Comments (15)  


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