Dems Making Massive Gains As GOP Deteriorates: Pew Poll

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First Posted: 05-21-09 10:20 AM   |   Updated: 05-21-09 01:26 PM

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In seven short years, the American electorate has radically changed, as voters' priorities have shifted to the economy and away from such wedge issues as abortion and gay rights, as well as away from the threat of terrorism and from the war in Iraq, according to a comprehensive survey released Thursday morning by the Pew Research Center.

From 2002 to 2009, voters' partisan identification has moved from virtual parity -- 43 percent Republican and 43 percent Democratic at the height of George W. Bush's popularity in the immediate aftermath of 9/11 -- to a massive Democratic advantage today of 53 to 36, a 17 percentage point split, by far the largest difference in the past two decades.

The Pew survey is a testament to the miscalculations of the Bush administration and of the Republican leadership in Congress. The two were handed an extraordinary opportunity to build on an outpouring of public support in the wake of the attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon. Instead, those chances to revive a Republican majority were squandered on a mismanaged invasion of Iraq and dissipated by ill-advised culture war offensives, as well as by disclosure of corrupt lobbying and spending scandals in Congress under Republican rule.

"There is an enormous amount of material about the deterioration of the Republican Party in this survey," Andy Kohut, who runs the Pew Research Center, told the Huffington Post. The GOP is currently 88 percent non-Hispanic white; it has grown steadily older, from an average of 45.5 years in 2000 to 48.3 years in 2009; it is increasingly dependent on self-identified white evangelicals (35 percent of today's GOP, on Southerners (39 percent of today's GOP), and on voters who describe themselves as conservative (66 percent of today's Republican electorate). Those who espouse conservative views on the family, homosexuality and civil liberties -- a population which was in the majority in 1987 -- have fallen to the 50 percent level or below, the Pew survey found.

"The Republican Party is facing formidable demographic challenges," Kohut wrote in a report describing the new Pew findings. "Its constituents are aging and do not reflect the growing ethnic and racial diversity of the general public. As was the case at the beginning of this decade, Republicans are predominantly non-Hispanic whites (88%). Among Democrats, the proportion of non-Hispanic whites has declined from 64% in 2000 to 56%, as Latinos and people from other racial backgrounds have joined the ranks of the Democrats."

The issue environment has, in addition, become much more favorable to the Democrats. When voters were asked "What One Issue Would Matter Most in Your Presidential Vote?," the number identifying Iraq and Afghanistan fell from 22 to four percent between 2004 and 2009. "Moral values" dropped from 27 percent to 10 percent during the same period. Conversely, the percentage identifying the economy and jobs has more than doubled, from 21 to 50 percent, with smaller, but still significant, gains for voters selecting health care and education as the most important issue.

"The decline in the importance of moral values as an issue in a possible election has come across the board, but the drop has been especially large among Republicans and working-class voters," Kohut wrote. "In 2004, 45% of Republicans cited moral values as their top issue; now just 21% do so, compared with 47% who mention the economy and jobs....Slightly more than half (51%) of older white working-class Republicans and leaners cited moral values in 2004; now just 23% do so."

While Republican identification has nosedived, the percentage of voters who say they are conservative has remained consistent through this decade. In 2009, 38 percent of voters described themselves as moderate, 37 percent as conservative and 19 percent as liberal -- the same split found in every Pew survey over the past nine years.

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The Republican Party has been bleeding from both its conservative and moderate ranks. In 2005, 52 percent of conservatives said they were Republican while in 2009, only 41 percent of conservatives said they were aligned with the GOP. The percentage of self-identified Republicans who call themselves moderate has dropped from 23 percent in 2005 to 16 percent this year.

Among poor people, Republican support, already low, has been dropping further, while among the affluent -- those with incomes over $100,000, a traditionally Republican segment of the electorate -- Democrats have gained parity with the GOP.

At the same time, the percentage of Republican identifiers who say their own party is doing a good job in standing up for such traditional Republican issues as reducing the size of government, cutting taxes, and pressing for conservative social values has shrunk radically, from 67 percent in 2004 to 24 percent now.

While Democrats have made substantial gains in the partisan identification of voters, the party does not have a clear mandate to move to the left across the board, the survey found. Although the Pew findings represent good news for Democrats, there are some costs to their gains. Many of the new Democratic voters are not as liberal as traditional party loyalists, so that support for such initiatives as expanded health care, progressive taxation, and a stronger safety net may face opposition from within party ranks.

On the basic issues of the liberal-conservative divide, the Pew study found a level of polarization "never before seen" between Democrats and Republicans over the fundamental role of government on such questions as whether the government "should help more needy people, even if it means debt," "guarantee everybody enough to eat and a place to sleep," and should "care for those who can't care for selves." On each of these issues, Pew found, there is more than a 30 percentage point difference in the views of Democrats and Republicans.

Independent voters, many of whom have become Democratic "leaners" providing crucial margins on election day, fall right between the two partisan camps. More worrisome for the Obama administration and Democratic congressional leaders is the Pew finding that "the overall balance of public opinion on the government's responsibility to provide for the needy has shifted to the right" despite the onset of a severe recession.

The survey found that "the share of Americans overall who favor helping more needy people even if it means greater debt has fallen from 54 percent in 2007 to 48 percent today, and there is a comparable drop in the share who say the government should guarantee every citizen enough to eat and a place to sleep (from 69 percent in 2007 to 62 percent today). This rightward shift is starkest among independents. Today, just 43 percent of independents say the government should help more needy people even if it means going deeper into debt, down 14 points since 2007. And over this period the number of independents who favor guaranteeing food and shelter for all has fallen 13 points from 71 to 58 percent."

These numbers amount to a warning for the Obama administration, which so far has been able to maintain strikingly high favorability ratings while pursuing an agenda calling for a major expansion of the safety net, especially in health care.

The Pew survey did not find evidence of anti-business sentiment growing. Fully 76 percent of voters agreed with the statement, "The strength of this country today is mostly based on the success of American business" -- the same percentage as in past years.

Conversely, public support for labor unions appears to be weakening: the percentage of people agreeing that "labor unions are necessary to protect the working person," has dropped from 74 percent at the start of this decade to 61 percent this year. The decline was sharper --- from 76 to 53 percent, a 23 point fall -- among independent voters than among either Democrats or Republicans.

While large majorities of voters continue to support tough environmental regulation, there is less willingness to accept economic costs as worth the benefit of improving environmental conditions. The percentage of respondents who said "protecting environment [is] a priority even if it causes slower growth and/or job losses" dropped from 69 to 51 percent between 2002 to 2009. Similarly, the percentage of respondents who said voters "should be willing to pay higher prices to protect the environment" has fallen from 62 to 49 percent over the same period.

On cultural -- as opposed to economic -- matters however, the country appears to be moving decisively towards greater social tolerance: One of the biggest attitudinal changes over the past two decades among voters, Pew found, has been on public views towards homosexuals. The percentage of people who say "school boards ought to have the right to fire teachers who are known homosexuals" has fallen from 51 percent in 1987 to 28 percent this year. At the same time, the percentage who do not think school boards should be empowered to fire gay teachers has grown from 42 to 67 percent.


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In seven short years, the American electorate has radically changed, as voters' priorities have shifted to the economy and away from such wedge issues as abortion and gay rights, as well as away from ...
In seven short years, the American electorate has radically changed, as voters' priorities have shifted to the economy and away from such wedge issues as abortion and gay rights, as well as away from ...
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Grab a shovel, the Party's over. Finally. I'm happy. :)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:03 PM on 05/21/2009
- ladyearth I'm a Fan of ladyearth 76 fans permalink

We need to have the "personhood" of corporations rescinded. Corporations are currently seen as "artificial" persons, and as such, are granted all the rights that are given to persons under the Constitution. Repeal "personhood" of corporations and they can no longer donate money or have their hands in policy.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:03 PM on 05/21/2009
- Bobrobert I'm a Fan of Bobrobert 9 fans permalink

roflmao

Fibs... all fibs!!!

Obama can do anything he wants any time he wants... and he is showing everyone that he can.

He is pissing off all kinds of folks and remains "popular"!!!

:-)

Read it and weep slugs... repuke-licans are history... irrrelevan­t... roflmao... roflmao... roflmao!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:01 PM on 05/21/2009

While in power, the GOP espoused "sexually based "moral values, but omitted to promote fiscal "moral values." Let's face it sex based moral values is more of a luxury than fiscal moral values. Would a desparate man do almost anything to feed his family, when he realizes that those in charge, of the government, fleeced him of his ability to provide for his family? Will unemployment, social security, medicare, medicaid, and welfare payments cause the government to print so much more money that the world stops buying US Govt securities? It looks to me that we are almost there. Alas, I might be too optimistic.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:58 PM on 05/21/2009
- Kiabell04 I'm a Fan of Kiabell04 22 fans permalink
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God I hope this lasts awhile.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:56 PM on 05/21/2009
- apduncan1 I'm a Fan of apduncan1 42 fans permalink
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Forty years at least.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:02 PM on 05/21/2009
- Cyberoptic I'm a Fan of Cyberoptic 7 fans permalink

It doesn't make any difference if the Republican are dwindling. In what ways, specifically, are the Democrats any different? Look at Pelosi and Reid, and tell me how they differ in actions from the Republican policies. Skip the rhetoric, look at the actions. How are they different?

Look at Reid, leaping out there with the Republicans, no Gitmo prisoners in U.S. Then look at him leaping back today. The Democrats hold a majority in Congress, but they still blame Repubs for their failures, OR up spring moderate democrats who somehow keep the Democrats from anything the Republicans don't want.

And behind all of this are the corporations who do what they want. The two parties are on corporate hands, like Miss Piggie and Kermit, different puppets, on the hands of one controller.

And look at the last administration. In what way were they not serving corporations?

If we want any changes, we need to control corporations, and elect those people who will represent people, not companies.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:49 PM on 05/21/2009
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sticking with sarah, ehh...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:56 PM on 05/21/2009
- Cyberoptic I'm a Fan of Cyberoptic 7 fans permalink

Hi. whohortonehears2,

Sorry if I gave the impression of supporting Sarah, or you may have projected something. I wouldn't want Sarah to water my house plants.

No, I meant what I said without bias. I'm afraid both parties are hand puppets for corporations. I would like to believe in change we can believe in, but I have seen little real change.

Corporations need to be controlled. And some people gave replies to my comments that give me some more thinking points. There must be a solution to this.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:30 PM on 05/21/2009
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Pelosi and Reid are only 2 of millions of Democrats. As a progressive, I don't like Pelosi or Reid. They sided with Bush too many times.

I agree corporations must be controlled more. They are too big and too powerful. They don't pay their fair share of taxes. It's time to apply real anti-trust laws to break them up where ever possible. We need real competition again.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:57 PM on 05/21/2009
- tigs I'm a Fan of tigs permalink

Controll big companies ,? in your dreams,! unfortunatly The New World Order is taking hold,you havnt seen anything yet. Its not a whacko thought anymore, its becoming a reality.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:07 PM on 05/21/2009
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Yeah how did that go for you in 2000 with Nadar . We wouldn't be in this mess NOW !!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:58 PM on 05/21/2009
- Agenhippy I'm a Fan of Agenhippy 3 fans permalink

The first step in resolving our current troubles is to take control of what we've created.
End Corporate Personhood.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:05 PM on 05/21/2009
- barksalot I'm a Fan of barksalot 45 fans permalink

Where are you going to get your free dole from when you've milked industry dry.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:40 PM on 05/21/2009
- booboo111 I'm a Fan of booboo111 81 fans permalink
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Ralph, (Mr. Nader), don't you have your own site to comment on?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:10 PM on 05/21/2009

Fascinating watching the GOP 'IMPLODE'

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:49 PM on 05/21/2009
- tigs I'm a Fan of tigs permalink

The gop know what they re doing but makes no attempt to change, its like they intentionally creating their own demise, knocking Obama wont work but they still keep doing it, why , ?
keep your eye on the ball Obama supporters (im one of them). Something is not right .

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:18 PM on 05/21/2009

Our Governor in California may be a Republican, but when in Cali you act like a Democrat. That's why we voted down all of his Props last Tuesday. He will get the message sooner or later.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:45 PM on 05/21/2009
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which part of massive gains, don't you understand, genius...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:57 PM on 05/21/2009
- Bobrobert I'm a Fan of Bobrobert 9 fans permalink

You might want to move soon. I calculate that since you and your friends refuse to pay your share of taxes that approximately 1/2 of your firemen, policemen, teachers and colleges are soon going to become history.

Enjoy all the money you have saved by not paying your taxes... move soon... take the loss on your home and have a nice day.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:05 PM on 05/21/2009
- Mike949 I'm a Fan of Mike949 9 fans permalink

California has the second highest (behind Hawaii) State Income tax in the country. California for years has simply mismanaged its resources.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:42 PM on 05/21/2009
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California's governor doesn't act like a Democrat with respect to business or taxes. His policies are purely GOP conservative. He holds positions closer to Democrats with regards the environment and education because if he didn't he would have lost the last election. Arnold is finished. He terms out next year so whatever he does now is largely irrelevant. As long as one third of the legislature controls a veto on taxation and the budget, don't expect a resolution of the present woes any time soon. I expect the state to literally shut down. The crap is going to really hit the fan when the governor balances the state budget with money that has been going to local governments. Local governments should have been placed on their own footing in 1978. Instead, the state government rescued local governments after the ill conceived Proposition 13 was passed. That time is finished.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:20 PM on 05/21/2009
- Altx I'm a Fan of Altx 4 fans permalink

Thing is, even though the current Republican party likes to refer to itself as 'conservative', it's actually extremely reactionary and no less activist in their own way than the Democrats -- it's just that they like to tell us what we can't do rather than what we can.

The few genuine Conservatives I know are all kind and open-minded people who really DO believe in 'live and let live'. They'd just prefer, for instance, that the states had more say, and the Federal Government less, in the day to day running of the country, that we all took much better care of each other so faceless bureaucracies didn't have to quite so much, and feel strongly that we all have a responsibility to pull our own weight for the greater good of the country. It could certainly be argued that some of those reflect the ideals of a simpler time and of a smaller, less fragmented population, but I'm not sure that too many people would have any serious issue with those kinds of genuinely conservative values; as opposed to -- with a few notable exceptions -- the shrill dogmatism and embarrassingly simplistic 'thinking' of this current batch of Republicans

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:42 PM on 05/21/2009
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I see this with my family that lives in rural Oregon. They do live in a simpler society and still take care of each other. They have volunteer ambulance, firefighters and they know each other even though they live miles apart. The urban areas are different. There the mass of people make it difficult to have the same social relationship. I'm sure it is possible on some end, but am not sure how easy it would be to form those relationships. I love visiting there, but my profession needs an urban center, so I live in a city with a university. My sis and I disagree on many political matters, but not on the fact that a society succeeds best when the people in it have share a social responsibility.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:16 PM on 05/21/2009
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You draw a very clear and I think accurate distinction between activist right wing and traditional American conservatives. The GOP is no more conservative then the Democratic Party is liberal.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:22 PM on 05/21/2009
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You libs still lose!

In 2009, 38 percent of voters described themselves as moderate, 37 percent as conservative and 19 percent as liberal -- the same split found in every Pew survey over the past nine years

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:38 PM on 05/21/2009
- Karmatic1 I'm a Fan of Karmatic1 6 fans permalink
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It really depends on which poll you look at, how the questions were phrased, and in the end who's voters show up at the POLLS. L.oser. ;

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:42 PM on 05/21/2009
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The issue isn't a shift in people's beliefs - it seems to merely be a drift away from the Republican party. No doubt this will vary with time.

If you wish to feel that you are a "winner" somehow, by all means go ahead.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:44 PM on 05/21/2009
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we clearly won last Nov., your the loser period.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:44 PM on 05/21/2009
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Logic is lost on those who shall not see.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:45 PM on 05/21/2009
- dartagnan I'm a Fan of dartagnan 49 fans permalink
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The way people self-identify has not changed, but the definitions of what's moderate, what's conservative and what's liberal have changed.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:55 PM on 05/21/2009
- DinSea I'm a Fan of DinSea 25 fans permalink

Republican leadership teaches us "YOU'RE ON YOUR OWN" ... you first ... greed is good; every man for himself. That's about as un-Christian as it gets. What is the second commandment, after all?

Our Democratic leadership is trying to bring us back to our humanity -- "lean on me - we all need someone ...". Some flowers grow when the sun is shining ... others just refuse to grow, period. Now, FINALLY, we have a PEOPLE'S PRESIDENT ... but some people just refuse to work with him, even though our nation is crying out for them to be part of the solution, not the problem.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:34 PM on 05/21/2009
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rethug's and the four gs, gun's, god, greed, and let's worry about what the gay's are doing today

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:46 PM on 05/21/2009
- Mike949 I'm a Fan of Mike949 9 fans permalink

This is simply an unfair generalization. Do the affiliations of George Soros and trial lawyers mean that Democrats are the party of greed? Absolutely not.
Conservatives give at least 3 times more (on a percentage basis) to charities than people who identify themselves as liberals do. That hardly indicates an every man for himself belief.
One way to put it is that a conservative wants to help people to help themselves as opposed to an "I'll take care of you approach".
The only important thing is that regardless of political affiliation we need to work together to resolve our nations problems. Name calling and labeling serves no purpose.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:06 PM on 05/21/2009
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Giving to charity is a tax write off, hmmm, would most of the uber rich be Republicans by chance?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:13 PM on 05/21/2009
- WmC I'm a Fan of WmC 16 fans permalink

Edsall fails to mention the tactic of labeling Lush as the "titular head"--or headular tit--of the Republican Party. I think that probably had a major impact on the polling numbers. I have a hunch that Stewart and Colbert have had a major impact too.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:30 PM on 05/21/2009
- BushBites I'm a Fan of BushBites 31 fans permalink

I think you can almost stop blaming Bush at this point.

Sure, he started the downfall by being the worst president in history, but the Repubs have picked up his booze-stained mantle and are running with it.

I mean, seriously:

They've spent so much time promising a return to Bush policies that even Cheney feels like one of the gang again.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:30 PM on 05/21/2009
- teacheng I'm a Fan of teacheng 4 fans permalink

Absolutely. I mean Nixon barely hurt the GOP party at all - because the other Republicans stood against his policies and lawbreaking. Plus, they didn't have the huge group of insane people who formed their core.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:48 PM on 05/21/2009
- xlntcat I'm a Fan of xlntcat 90 fans permalink

Moral values: I consider a woman's right to choose to be moral, but it might not have been at the top of my list because I didn't feel that is was in immediate jeopardy. I consider equality for all citizens regardless of race, sex, or sexual preference to be moral. As a hetrosexual, I believe that DADT is a highly immoral practice. It's WRONG! I strongly believe that torture is a cowardly act perpetrated by weak, cowardly individuals. It is the equivalent of animal cruelty. The victim of torture is defenseless. I believe that the education of the populus is a moral issue. In the middle ages and in the Era of Powerful Kings, the populus was kept illiterate because education instills personal power. The south followed the same reasoning during slavery. This is immoral but check out the educaion standards in states with a GOP governor. Check out the state's investment in students, teachers and schools. An eduacated populus does not favor the GOP. Those with a post-graduate education rejected the GOP 2 to1 in 2008. MDs, Ph'd, MBAs, CPAs, Pharmacists, etc., once supporters of the GOP fled in record numbers.

Demanding honest business practices is a Moral issue. Demanding ethical standards in our government is a moral issue. Fiscal responsibility is a moral issue. Demanding a healthy populus and the right to healthcare is a moral issue.

By the way, 2008 was the first time in my adult life that I voted for the democrat.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:28 PM on 05/21/2009
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You believe all those things and you didn't vote for the Democrat until 2008?
Would you mind explaining what in the world you were thinking before then?
Bush was out there in all his glory for the world to see. Anyone paying attention to the issues could see Bush for who he was. It's nice that you finally came around but it is a little troubling that it took you so long.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:37 PM on 05/21/2009

As a former republican, during the 8 years of the Bush/Cheney regine, I have gone from that party to Independent and now Democratic BECAUSE they time and time again acted outside of moral and ethical boundaries. You are absolutely spot on!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:39 PM on 05/21/2009
- factotem I'm a Fan of factotem 132 fans permalink
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Exactly. Why, if the GOP is sooooooo moral, couldn't they see where immoral business practices would leave plunge the nation and the world? They really didn't care.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:45 PM on 05/21/2009
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Got to admire morality that makes sense.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:48 PM on 05/21/2009

Who decides what is moral or immoral in America. Is it the Majority or the Moral Minority? I absolutely feel abortion is wrong, but I will fight to the death, anyone preventing someone from choosing what is right for them. In fact, it is the law of the land. Until technology can totally irradicate abortion as a means for birth control, I would prefer they be safe, legal and rare; instead of unsafe, illegal and only for the rich. Abortion is a tool of the upper class to keep poor people and the middle class from reaching the upper class. While the poor and middle class are being forced to have 10, 11, 12 children, the upper class will be going to Germany, Japan, Candada and Sweden to have their abortions. Birth control through technology and family planning is the way to go. Until then, the hypocritical republicans who controlled the congress, presidency and supreme court for six years and made only fringe changes to abortion law will use it to raise money and drive a wedge into the American politico.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:50 PM on 05/21/2009

"IIIIII'm MMMMelting"

throw more water on them!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:27 PM on 05/21/2009
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