Date: Wed, 21 Oct 1998 09:36:59 -1000 From: Mia H H Lam Subject: [Fwd: Fw: PRESS RELEASE: House Republicans brag they killed hate crimes bill] (fwd) From: "lizbrie" To: "lilian" Subject: Fw: PRESS RELEASE: House Republicans brag they killed hate crimes bill Date: Tue, 20 Oct 1998 14:23:51 -1000 Clearing the Emotional Body http://home1.gte.net/lizbrie/emotional "If you want to live like a Republican, you'd better vote like a Democrat" -Harry Truman End the Starr madness-- Vote Democratic in November- (& Lingle) & take three other Democrats to the polls. Please vote No and No- Mahalo- -----Original Message----- From: John Aravosis To: Recipient list suppressed Date: Tuesday, October 20, 1998 1:04 PM Subject: PRESS RELEASE: House Republicans brag they killed hate crimes bill WIRED STRATEGIES For Immediate Release Oct 20, 1998 - 6:25PM EDT Contact: John Aravosis, 202/328-5707, john@wiredstrategies.com HOUSE REPUBLICANS BRAG THEY KILLED HATE CRIMES BILL Contradict Sen. Lott's claim that bill would die because of no time Washington, DC - In a document just obtained by Wired Strategies, the House Republican Conference (an arm of the US House of Representatives Republican leadership) is taking credit for having "stopped" the hate crimes bill. The House leadership document contradicts claims from Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott's staff that the Hate Crimes Protection Act would not pass because Congress had run out of time. Millions of Americans, and citizens of the world, reacted in shock, sadness and anger at the recent torture and death of 21-year-old college freshman Matthew Shepard. Shepard was abducted, pistol-whipped, strung up as though crucified, and then left to die for 18 hours on a cold Wyoming road two weeks ago. In a spontaneous show of anger and support, nearly 100 vigils have taken place around the US and Canada to honor Shepard, highlight the menace of hate crimes, and demand that Congress immediately pass hate crimes legislation. Concerned individuals across the US and from as far as Zimbabwe, Australia, and Russia sent emails to the United States Congress, the Wyoming Governor, and Web sites devoted to Matthew Shepard's memory, expressing their concern about the Shepard case, and the need to pass hate crimes legislation. In addition, Americans nationwide, and in countries as far as Hong Kong, telephoned US members of Congress over the last several days to demand passage of the bill. The House document attacks the hate crimes bill as being a part of "the President's big-government agenda," and calls the death of the legislation "a win for conservative priorities." Under a section entitled "Reinventing Big-government -- Presidential Priorities the Congress Stopped", the House leadership lists: "'Hate crime' proposals that criminalize motive rather than punish violent crime." In a phone call this past Friday, Senator Lott's staff told a supporter that the legislation would die because it was simply too late to bring it up this year - the staffer gave no indication of the partisan strategy that now seems to be the reason for the bill's death. The decision to kill the legislation came on the heels of a new Time/CNN poll released last Saturday finding that 75% of Americans think the problem of violence against homosexuals is serious across the country. "The House leadership has dishonored the memory of Matthew Shepard for partisan political gain," said John Aravosis, an Internet consultant who has been maintaining a Web site about the Shepard case . "It's incredible that House Republicans would brag about killing a bill that protects the disabled, women and gay people from beating brutalized by hate," he added. "Hate is not a family value, but it seems to be a conservative one," continued Aravosis. "This wasn't a partisan issue, it was about the savage murder of a kid that shocked millions of Americans, both Republicans and Democrats," Aravosis added, "Is that all Matt's death meant to Gingrich - a chance to slam the President? Is he that out of touch?" The House Republican Conference document can be found on the Internet at: . ************************************************************** Get the latest on the Matthew Shepard anti-gay hate crime case at the Matthew Shepard Online Resource center: The site includes: * latest news on the case * action center to: email Congress; email Matthew's family; donate money * info on anti-gay hate crimes * photographs from the DC candlelight vigil - Oct. 14 * email subscription list * email links to major and local newspapers * links to other useful sites * online bulletin board to share your views on the case To subscribe to the email update list, visit and use the easy online subscription form. Generally I only send one email per day. This site is sponsored for free by Wired Strategies Political Internet Consulting . "The opportunity to be threatened, humiliated and to live in fear of being beaten to death is the only 'special right' our culture bestows on homosexuals." - Diane Carman, Denver Post, October 10, 1998 ---559023410-758783491-908983620=:23519--