Californians CAN VOTE OUT ANTI - PET LEGISLATORS!!!
Posted: Tue Feb 05, 2008 4:06 am
Critical. Please read now, before you go to the poles. Thank you
Art and Dana Spencer
PLEASE CROSS POST
>
> As luck would have it, California will have an opportunity on Tuesday
> February 5 to help rid the state legislature of some of the worst
> proponents of anti-dog and anti-cat legislation. It is not just
> constituents in their legislative districts who can vote these extremists
> out. Every registered California voter has the opportunity to vote them
> out.
>
> Now is a critical time for those who oppose the radical Animal Rights
> agenda to make it clear to politicians that we are a powerful
constituency,
> and that legislators who pander to the extremist AR agenda will lose
their
> jobs. We can send letters and faxes to make our case, but what matters
> most is how we vote.
>
> A NO vote on Proposition 93 is a vote to make sure Lloyd Levine terms out
> at the end of 2008. Levine is the sponsor of the infamous AB 1634
> mandatory spay/neuter bill.
>
> A NO vote on Proposition 93 is a vote to make sure Fabian Núñez terms out
> at the end of 2008. Núñez is the Speaker of the Assembly. Had Núñez not
> twisted arms before the "do over" vote in the Assembly, AB 1634 would
have
> died for good last Spring.
>
> A NO vote on Proposition 93 is a vote to make sure Loni Hancock terms out
> at the end of 2008. Hancock sponsored a failed bill to ban the several
> thousand year old tradition of field coursing with hounds.
>
> A poll a few days ago showed Proposition 93 in a statistical
> tie. Californians are waking up to the fact that Proposition 93 is
> bad. Polls a few months ago had shown overwhelming support for it. But
> the more Californians learn about Prop 93, the less support it has.
>
> We only have two days remaining to spread the word.
>
> If every Californian dedicated to preserving our rights as dog and cat
> owners votes NO on Proposition 93 on February 5, and spreads the word to
> others to do the same, that could be the decisive factor.
>
> There are plenty of other good reasons to vote NO on Proposition 93:
> - it is dishonestly worded to make it sound like it toughens California's
> term limits, when in reality it weakens them
> - the leadership that is promoting Proposition 93 promised it would be
> paired with reform of California's corrupt and broken redistricting
> process, but they broke that promise
> - it has a sweetheart clause that allows even longer terms for Núñez and
> many others
> - newspapers on the left and the right oppose Proposition 93
> http://www.signonsandiego.com/uniontrib ... ottom.html
> http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.c ... 6UF359.DTL
>
> Laura Sanborn
> http://saveourdogs.net/
>
Art and Dana Spencer
PLEASE CROSS POST
>
> As luck would have it, California will have an opportunity on Tuesday
> February 5 to help rid the state legislature of some of the worst
> proponents of anti-dog and anti-cat legislation. It is not just
> constituents in their legislative districts who can vote these extremists
> out. Every registered California voter has the opportunity to vote them
> out.
>
> Now is a critical time for those who oppose the radical Animal Rights
> agenda to make it clear to politicians that we are a powerful
constituency,
> and that legislators who pander to the extremist AR agenda will lose
their
> jobs. We can send letters and faxes to make our case, but what matters
> most is how we vote.
>
> A NO vote on Proposition 93 is a vote to make sure Lloyd Levine terms out
> at the end of 2008. Levine is the sponsor of the infamous AB 1634
> mandatory spay/neuter bill.
>
> A NO vote on Proposition 93 is a vote to make sure Fabian Núñez terms out
> at the end of 2008. Núñez is the Speaker of the Assembly. Had Núñez not
> twisted arms before the "do over" vote in the Assembly, AB 1634 would
have
> died for good last Spring.
>
> A NO vote on Proposition 93 is a vote to make sure Loni Hancock terms out
> at the end of 2008. Hancock sponsored a failed bill to ban the several
> thousand year old tradition of field coursing with hounds.
>
> A poll a few days ago showed Proposition 93 in a statistical
> tie. Californians are waking up to the fact that Proposition 93 is
> bad. Polls a few months ago had shown overwhelming support for it. But
> the more Californians learn about Prop 93, the less support it has.
>
> We only have two days remaining to spread the word.
>
> If every Californian dedicated to preserving our rights as dog and cat
> owners votes NO on Proposition 93 on February 5, and spreads the word to
> others to do the same, that could be the decisive factor.
>
> There are plenty of other good reasons to vote NO on Proposition 93:
> - it is dishonestly worded to make it sound like it toughens California's
> term limits, when in reality it weakens them
> - the leadership that is promoting Proposition 93 promised it would be
> paired with reform of California's corrupt and broken redistricting
> process, but they broke that promise
> - it has a sweetheart clause that allows even longer terms for Núñez and
> many others
> - newspapers on the left and the right oppose Proposition 93
> http://www.signonsandiego.com/uniontrib ... ottom.html
> http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.c ... 6UF359.DTL
>
> Laura Sanborn
> http://saveourdogs.net/
>