COMMENTS: 38
A Dumb Donkey Report
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The report primarily documents the fact that Jim Crow voter suppression tactics targeting Democratic African-American voters were rampant in Ohio's cities during the 2004 presidential election. It cites and spends most of its time analyzing the most visible problems: from shortages of voting machines in minority precincts, to unreasonable obstacles to voter registration, to disproportionate use of provisional ballots on Election Day among new voters and Democratic constituencies, to inadequate poll worker training and election administration, to poor post-Election Day record keeping.
But the DNC reports says those factors do not mean John Kerry won the election, nor does it mean that the new electronic voting machines are unreliable — even though some of the precincts with the highest percentages of reported problems were outfitted with the new electronic voting machines, known as DREs. The DNC asked for access to the new electronic voting machines and their software, but was denied by local election officials and the private manufacturers. The report leaves the matter there.
It is statements like this one, on page 189, and a failure to follow-through that make the report more than a disappointment to election protection workers, voter rights advocates and those grassroots activists who worked for John Kerry's campaign. Speaking of the new electronic voting machines, the DNC report states, that "many of the county boards (of elections) do not actually control the electronic records created during the tallying process." When the Fairfield County Board of Elections was asked for election results, they merely forwarded data from a private vendor.
Since county vote totals are tabulated on computers and sent directly to the Secretary of State's office — who has real-time access to those figures — you might expect the report to address the question of whether the 2004 vote count was susceptible to fraud. It doesn't.
The DNC says it sought access to the computers used to record and tabulate Ohio votes, but those same county boards of election that didn't control the data -- and the voting machine manufacturers who did — declined, citing "security concerns" (p.187) and "vendors pointed out their extreme discomfort with providing this sort of access to a partisan organization."
That might sound reasonable, if you don't recall — and the report does not recall — that the chief executive of the nation's largest electronic voting machine manufacturer, Diebold's Walden O'Dell, was not only a top-tier fundraiser for George W. Bush, but also promised in an infamous August 14, 2003 fundraising letter to Republicans that he is "committed to helping Ohio deliver its electoral votes to the president next year." Also, both ES&S and Triad corporations, the latter which tabulated ballots in 41 of Ohio's 88 counties, have well-established Republican ties.
The DNC report is filled with omissions of that magnitude and dismissals of the work of citizen-activists who — with no help from the DNC, or Kerry campaign — fought for a fair accounting of the 2004 vote after Election Day.
Consider these paragraphs from an introductory letter to the report from Donna Brazile, the chair of the DNC's Voting Rights Institute.
"Although voters across America voiced concerns which questioned the fairness and the accuracy of the 2004 general election, President George W. Bush's narrow victory in Ohio (a pivotal state) provided sufficient electoral votes to ensure his re-election. There was a myriad of litigation surrounding the general election in Ohio that targeted controversial conduct on the part of the Office of the Secretary of State.
"Following the election recount, the House Judiciary Democratic Staff published an exhaustive report, "Preserving Democracy: What Went Wrong in Ohio" that is replete with anecdotal evidence of numerous, serious election irregularities in the Ohio presidential election which resulted in a significant disenfranchisement of voters."People who put their lives on hold and went to Ohio to work for John Kerry will shake their heads. Brazile cites "a myriad of litigation" that her party and candidate fought, did not fund and sought to undermine. Moreover, the reference to the House Judiciary Committee's Democrat Staff inquiry as "anecdotal" is an insult to voting rights activists and volunteer lawyers who conducted public hearings -- at their own expense, not the DNC's — and took sworn testimony from more than 1,000 voters who cared enough and volunteered to testify under oath and file affidavits. The hearings were anything but anecdotal; they were perhaps the largest group of people to testify under oath about elections in the history of the state. The first two hearings in Columbus occurred within two weeks of Election Day. Four other hearings in Cleveland, Cincinnati, Toledo and Warren occurred more than a month before the DNC could conduct its phone survey from the east coast.
It's worth remembering the timing and origin of this report. The Democratic Party and its allied supporters, such as Americans Coming Together, spent millions of dollars on their election protection efforts. The same Ohio Democratic Party that told John Kerry not to challenge the result and to concede to Bush, also was completely caught off-guard with Republican's resurrection of Jim Crow voter suppression tactics, according to its own report. What kind of a party stations hundreds of lawyers at polls in anticipation of poll challenges that don't happen, but isn't aware that voting machines will not be evenly distributed among white and black neighborhoods? Or isn't aware of the fact that newly registered voters aren't receiving proper precinct information, or are being targeted with new provisional ballots that are likely to be disqualified on frivolous technicalities?
There's more history to the DNC report. The DNC announced it would investigate election irregularities on December 6th, two days before Rep. John Conyers, D-MI, and Democrats on the House Judiciary opened their first of several hearings into the 2004 Ohio presidential vote. In effect, the DNC knew Conyers' inquiry would be explosive and sought to pre-empt his investigation by announcing its inquiry first.
The Ohio Democratic Party wanted nothing to do with examining the evidence of voting fraud — what Brazille derides as "anecdotal" — and did not participate in the election recount. The Kerry-Edwards campaign joined the recount effort late, only after it was embarrassed by the Libertarian and Green Parties. The Kerry campaign gave several hundred thousand dollars to the gubernatorial recount in Washington, but didn't advance a dime to the Ohio election challenge lawsuit.
What the DNC did was announce — two days before Conyers' first hearing — that its review would not contest the election results, but would "fulfill the Democratic Party's commitment to ensuring that every eligible voter can vote and every vote cast is counted." Rather than achieve that lofty goal, the party conceded for a second time — Kerry's concession being first — by confirming Bush's victory before a recount was completed and similarly by avoiding participation in a voter challenge suit.
The report contains other outrages. It states African-American voters waited an average of 52 minutes in line, compared to white voters waiting an average of 18 minutes. That calculation defies the experience of thousands of voters who waited four, five or six hours. That figure is the kind of statistical averaging is akin to having a tornado touch down in Columbus and having the National Weather Service say its been a breezy day across the state.
In the primarily African American 55th ward in Columbus, on the ground election protection volunteers clocked an average wait of three hours and 15 minutes. In the adjacent inner city 5th ward, the wait was three hours and five minutes. The Franklin County Board of Elections, under the control of former Franklin County Republican Party Chair Matt Damschroder failed to put out 76 voting machines by his own admittance. All 76 from the Democratic-rich city of Columbus and 42 of them from the African American wards on the city's near east side. Apparently, a few blacks in Bucyrus didn't wait long and needed to be averaged into the DNC's report totals.
But the biggest disappointment of the DNC report is that it gives no indication that the old-school Jim Crow abuses will be addressed and rectified, and that the newer school electronic voting machine abuses will be similarly addressed. The report portrays a statewide landscape of separate and unequal rules in election jurisdictions across the state. It says local and statewide election officials — and the private companies they hire — aren't interested in cooperating to make the system more transparent and equitable. And the party hierarchy that commissioned this report dismisses the work of its activists and loyal volunteers who worked before and after the 2004 race for electoral justice.
Is that any way to prepare for 2006 or 2008? Read the report at www.democrats.org and decide for yourself if the DNC learned the real lessons of 2004 in Ohio.
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Posted by: haystack1317 on Jul 12, 2005 1:12 AM
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It's as if the Democrats have become the nation's ombudsmen. They listen to grievances and look for solutions by which no one will be offended. They pat themselves on the back for their forthrightness. When are they going to wake up? The other side plays with death, violence, fraud, and theft. Do you have to descend to that level to fight back? No, but you might consider temporarily ignoring your membership in the PETA when a Doberman is leaping at your throat.
In an effort to prove that our system still works, the DNC lets our system disintegrate at every turn. The system works because it can fix itself, not because it never breaks. Not one Democratic senator stood with the members of the House who sought to challenge fraudulent election results in 2000 or 2004. If these citizens won't fulfill their responsibility to fix the broken system, they are proving just the opposite of what they intend. It's time for real, legitimate action and to hell with good manners. If the Democrats can't do it, let's find those who will.
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» RE: DNC? The nation's ombudsmen
Posted by: GG
» RE: DNC? The nation's ombudsmen
Posted by: Guy
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Posted by: gramps on Jul 12, 2005 3:34 AM
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"Fascism is the marriage of corporation power and state power--Benito Mussolini
If we can't get a third party we should organize committees of correspondence for another American Revolution
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Posted by: apodapa on Jul 12, 2005 4:28 AM
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» RE: Democrats are wimps and I'm sick of them
Posted by: GG
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Posted by: sausage on Jul 12, 2005 6:42 AM
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A large measure of the party's decline can directly be laid on this pack of Rockefeller Republicans in donkey suits. Though Rockefeller Repubs are preferable to the current Republican reationaries, that is not who or what I thought I was voting for all these years.
If the Dean-led DNC cannot weam the party of FDR, Harry Truman, Henry Wallace, JFK and LBJ off the big business/big money tit and start speaking up for the victims of corporate crime (i.e. all of us who work for a living) it is doomed.
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» Earth to Dem hope-holders: "Dems are dead, Jim." WE MUST ACT.
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» RE: arth to Dems:"Change or die!"
Posted by: Bigteam
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Posted by: brs04wsc on Jul 12, 2005 8:31 AM
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1. The liberal agenda will always get drowned out by war
2. The public sucks, becasue they always allow the liberal agenda to get drowned out by war
The dems have an unpopular message: that we shouldn't be at war. The cons will always beat this message until the war gets REALLY ugly and there's no end in sight, like in Vietnam. People are just too easily seduced by this idea that opposing any war waged by the US is being anti-American and/or anti-US troops. I think that anyone who thinks disagreeing with the course of one's country is ipso facto being AGAINST one's country must be a moron, as the two are obviously quite different. But that's what we have here: what message from the dems or anyone else is going to make these people listen? The wells are poisoned at every turn.
That said, the dems ARE more or less a sad sack. They had a chance to stand up for what's right before this war started, and they chose to be Republican Lite (TM) instead. And please don't tell me that folks like Kerry were mislead by Bush et al.'s faulty intelligence reports. The veracity of those reports were in question at the time. IOW, if I knew that it was all BS, the Dems should have known as well. (but rmember the rush, lest we be nuked NOW? That was great right there....)They interpreted being against the war as political suicide, and fell in line. For that , I blame them.
Still, what line's going to work here? The repubs are basically saying "If you don't do what we want , you hate your country AND you're going to die. But it's up to you...." History has shown: this line works. IT takes ALOT of body bags before the people who are seduced by it start scratching their collective head and ask "Why are we doing this again?" So ultimately, George Carlin's right: the public sucks.
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Posted by: jeffrey7 on Jul 12, 2005 8:47 AM
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Shutdown all Black Projects in and out of country.
Make all drugs perscriptionable,release nonvoilent offenders.
Convert Defense Spending to Schools,Healthcare, Environment and Housing.
Put Social Security and AFDC in 'Always Funded' programs.
Make Foriegn Policy Doctors,Farmers,and Engineers not
Army, Air Force, Marines.
Make Free Trade,Free Trade.
If there's no-one out there with a set,that's willing to stand-up for The People,come get me mine's big enough for all of us.
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» RE: Try this One
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» RE: Try this One
Posted by: royrogers
» RE: Try this One
Posted by: brs04wsc
» RE: Try this One
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» RE: Try this One
Posted by: royrogers
» RE: Try this One
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» RE: Try this One
Posted by: royrogers
» RE: Try this One
Posted by: brs04wsc
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Posted by: monkeywrench on Jul 12, 2005 10:29 AM
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I volunteered for the Kerry campaign for the first time in my half-century life, and I felt like a dupe and an a**hole when the courageous war veteran wimped out, letting the Swift Boaters ream him for 3 weeks, and then setting a record in the 100-yard dash to get to the mike to concede. WHY? Was the attraction of the corporate slop-trough just too enticing to walk away from, or did the Bushitters sit "powerful" Dems in a corner somewhere and read them chapter & verse on how to avoid having careers and personal reputations destroyed?
At any rate, I have been a Democrat for my entire life, but after their panty-waisted performance this year, I'm thinking of going independent. Oh, and all I get from my Dem leadership, both in the mail and over the internet, are plea's for money thinly disguised as political "alerts" and "position statements." Until the Party of Wimps grows a new set of cohones and stands up to this twerp in the White House, they've lost my loyalty, and certainly my money – which I have much less of these days thanks to their aquiescence.
It's not too hard to figure out what the real game is about, is it? How sad. For Democrats. For the future of America.
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Posted by: mcginn on Jul 12, 2005 10:47 AM
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If we are serious about election fraud, we must pursue the perpetrators in the justice system (which is supposed to be blind) and not in the political system (which stinks). If you can't detect the smell, read the DNC report again.
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Posted by: aurishi on Jul 12, 2005 10:53 AM
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Posted by: Campesino on Jul 12, 2005 10:54 AM
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This is not true. The Chairman of the Franklin County Board of Elections, William A. Anthony, is a Democrat. In fact, he is the Chairman of the Franklin County Democratic Party.
In a recent article that appeared in the Columbus Dispatch, Chairman Anthony said long lines were not caused by the allocation of machines, a process controlled by a Democrat supervisor, he added, but by the high voter turnout, the overall lack of voting machines, and a ballot that included more than 100 choices for voters.
This is in a county where two of the three county supervisors are Democrats. Can't they get their act together?
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» RE: Get Your Facts Straight
Posted by: mobilone
» RE: Get Your Facts Straight
Posted by: outsidea
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Posted by: monkeywrench on Jul 12, 2005 10:57 AM
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Concentrating on the usual crowd control issues in the election – itself an indictment of a broken system – lets them APPEAR to be doing something positive, while maintaining the illusion that if we just "get out the vote" more effectively, everything will be peachy.
No, it won't. Because if vote tabulation is controlled by private companies, as it was in the last election, it won't matter HOW many of us go to the polls; the polls won't count. We're looking at the end of the electoral process in America, the end of democracy, and all the Dems can offer are bromides.
Remember what that "champion of freedom," Joseph Stalin said: "He who votes decides nothing: he who counts the votes decides everything."
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Posted by: Lindie on Jul 12, 2005 10:59 AM
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I'm also something of an activist: I supported Kerry, and am still reeling with what felt like betrayal over my party's response to the voter intimidation and disenfranchisement antics of Republican supportors which adversely impacted elections in Ohio, Washington, Pennsylvania and Illinois. Fritakis and Rosenfeld are right - the report on the Ohio elections is an insult. Messrs. Fritakis and Rosenfeld are more charitable than I, however.
I have been suspecting DNC collusion with the GOP for a long time now, and the report on Ohio only re-inforces my belief.
It's as if the DNC made a pass at investigating what happened purely for form's sake. Not wanting to be seen as indifferent to the outrage of all those who were disenfranchised, inconvenienced, and intimidated, they made a half-hearted attempt to SEEM as if they cared that so many abuses occurred, while putting a minimum of time, effort, and attention into finding out what really happened or putting forth any solutions or tactics for dealing with it in the future. Perhaps the DNC really doesn't care?
I recently 'watched' the democratic national committee (DNC) force candidates out of races in Rhode Island, Pennsylvania, and Ohio, who were much more in touch on issues of interest to the voters (health care, getting OUT of Iraq, schools, our children, women's rights, soaring energy costs, drowning economy), in favor of more palatable (to them) "Republican Lite" candidates.
I can no longer deny the evidence - it seems that those who are deciding direction for my party are secretly supportive of the monsters running our country, and are ensuring no change or improvement in our country's circumstances occurs. They act with what seems to be a desire to not to offend the Republican-run corporations, to not raise any issues of substance which require real discourse, and to be seen to take the (perceived) moral high ground by ignorring the country's issues and its own constituencies' concerns.
Well, you know what they say, "the road to Hell is paved with good intentions".
Peace.
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» RE: Are we sure the DNC isn't in league with the republican party?
Posted by: brs04wsc
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Posted by: ddrew2u on Jul 12, 2005 12:24 PM
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$4 (w/o tax): FDR’s – at 25% of today's income level, per capita.
$5: Clinton’s (same as FDR's w/tax)!
$6: Bush I’s -- at 80%.
$7: Eisenhower’s -- at 40%.
$8: Nixon’s -- at 60%.
$9: LBJ’s -- at 50%.
*************************************
President Nixon signed an $8/hour minimum wage bill in 1974 -- to go into effect immediately -- when the general income level was 60% of today's.
At that time, Nixon was also promoting his version of a national health insurance plan – an employer mandate version, more market oriented than Ted Kennedy’s competing, single-payer version -- not because of any market ideology on his part; he just thought a less radical approach would sell more easily. Had Nixon lasted out a normal second term, the only question might have been which national health insurance program would been signed into law.
I just caught Nixon on a, 1992, Larry King interview: it was so refreshing to hear a national political figure state flatly that Israeli settlements in the West Bank were an unworkable mistake (now that America has traded skyscrapers for settlements, I guess time has so proven him right).
What today’s Democratic Party needs is leadership well to the left of any of its recent or current presidential aspirants – who wont hesitate speak up about their social welfare policies: relative "flaming liberals" in the mold of Richard M. Nixon. :-0
Denis Drew :-)
Chicago
denis.drew@netzero.com
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Posted by: acoustic_planet on Jul 12, 2005 1:00 PM
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this seems obvious, but not as many people send letters of complaint as we would like to think. also, just about every democrat or political "other" i know is disappointed in the dnc, but the democrats still dont seem to realize just how much they are failing their constituents.
maybe a way to get the democrats in line is if we force them to act by demanding answers from our own party. after you write your letter, pass out a few stamps to friends and ask them to do the same. write your letter NOW:
Democratic National Committee
430 S. Capitol St. SE
Washington, DC 20003
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Posted by: expat in tokyo on Jul 12, 2005 5:20 PM
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safe corrective of abuses which are lopped by the sword of
revolution where peaceable remedies are unprovided--I deem
[one of] the essential principles of our Government, and
consequently [one of] those which ought to shape its
administration." --Thomas Jefferson
Peaceable means are no longer available. The "opposition party" is not even close to that. They suck on the same breast as the Republicans. Our right to vote and change the system in a peaceful and civilized way has been currupted.
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Posted by: DerekLarsson on Jul 12, 2005 5:36 PM
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This information needs to get into the hands of Howard Dean. I know Dean himself is genuinely concerned about electronic voting issues and wants real reform to occur.
However, he has apparently been fooled for the moment by Donna Brazile into thinking that no fraud occurred in 2004 (who is part of the inside-the-beltway crowd and has no true integrity on this subject).
If Dean can be educated, he will come around and get serious about the issue - but right now he has been duped by this whitewash report.
So, please send this well written critique and an executive summary to Howard Dean and make sure that it really gets in his hands for careful consideration.
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Posted by: scsmith on Jul 12, 2005 8:02 PM
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Posted by: Kajamian on Jul 13, 2005 1:45 AM
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-- again!
It would be interesting to hear from that crazy li'l banty rooster again! At least I think he'd tell the truth. And his charts and graphs would be a refreshing change from the current "reporting" we've been getting!
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Posted by: cleanbean on Jul 13, 2005 2:38 AM
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Computer expert, Harri Hursti, was able to hack the system 3 different ways. It seems Dbold put an executable program into the card which has no business or reason to be there other than to enable vote manipulation. As this can be programmed to execute on any date, time, or an event, testing the card itself will not expose the program (ie: simply putting it through its paces). The new conservative's buzzword, "parallel testing", as the cure-all to security fears (randomly testing machines at the polls), is worthless, as most vote manipulation occurs when the cards are inserted into the tabulation machines. Even then, on the surface, everything looks okay with no evidence of changes.
For the story and the technical report, please go to:
linked text
Since this serious security breach has already been exposed, any elections board or county registrar concerned with the integrity of their Dbold optical scan system may be willing to allow a similar examination of the memory cards used in the 2004 election. Federal law mandates retaining vote records for 22 months after a federal election, although some may interpret this to mean only paper records.
We need people to request an examination of local or nearby counties that used Dbold optical scan systems. If you know an honest city council member, a respected member of the community, enlist their support. Or your church. For detailed instructions, please go to the BBV forum "Actions You Can Take".
Perhaps if enough of us made a coordinated effort to find some evidence of fraud, such as a memory card with this program use still in it, it could make a huge difference.
Dbold's response to BBV's hack, was to chastise Ion Sancho and inform him they could no longer guarantee the security of his machines because he allowed unauthorized access to them. Ha,Ha,Ha,Ha,Ha! ROTFLMAO!
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» RE: equest Memory Card Exam in Your County!
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Posted by: sensitiveguy on Jul 14, 2005 3:29 PM
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Remember Im always here to help!
Thank you!!
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