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5 novembre 2008 3 05 /11 /novembre /2008 12:02
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5 novembre 2008 3 05 /11 /novembre /2008 10:53
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5 novembre 2008 3 05 /11 /novembre /2008 00:00
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4 novembre 2008 2 04 /11 /novembre /2008 10:28
Election Day Notice: The video you're about to see portrays events that haven't happened... yet.

It was prepared just for you. But if you go vote today you can make sure this joke doesn't become a reality.

http://www.cnnbcvideo.com/index.html?nid=NxGPAm5DWnshZd51hmjmsjQyOTQx&referred_by=5376188-gN7t6zx

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4 novembre 2008 2 04 /11 /novembre /2008 08:28
- Voici l'image en question, il s'agit  d'une 'drinking
fountain' réservée aux noirs pendant la ségrégation:
 
- image en bas à droite :
 
 
- sur la page de droite( en haut à gauche) ce n'est pas la marche sur Washington de 1963  mais la
"déségrégation" des écoles, et en particulier , Little Rock , Arkansa, 1957.
La jeune femme s'appelle Elizabeth Eckford

http://www.worldsfamousphotos.com/little-rock-desegregation-1957.html
 
- émeutes de Birmingham :
L'image se trouve à http://www.lewrockwell.com/jarvis/jarvis52.html

The New York Times placed this picture, three columns wide, above the fold
on its front page with the headline: "DOGS AND HOSES REPULSE NEGROES IN
BIRMINGHAM." The picture was also flashed across the nation and generated
immense sympathy for the demonstrators. ...

The young man in the picture, Walter Gadsden, was a member of one of the
families that refused to take part in the demonstrations. He was simply
watching the events. "
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19 octobre 2008 7 19 /10 /octobre /2008 19:43

15.How different are they? http://newsroom-static.mcclatchyinteractive.com/creatives/elections/wheretheystand

 

 

Main issues

Barak Obama

John Mc Cain

Taxes (impôts)

wants to take from the wealthiest and give to the poorest yes   no

wants to cut some of them

yes   no

Abortion (avortement)

for         against

for         against

Gun control

for         against

for         against

Iraq War

for         against

for         against

Health Insurance

wants to create one for children yes   no

wants to create one for children

yes   no

 

Common positions

1 __________________________________

2 _________________________________

3 _________________________________

 

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16 octobre 2008 4 16 /10 /octobre /2008 23:11
http://www.commoncraft.com:80/election
transcript: Electing a US President In Plain English

The following is a transcript to the video "Electing a US President in Plain English"

Every 4 years, Americans who are 18 or older have a big responsibility. Our votes decide who becomes the president of the United States. Unfortunately the US election system isn't that simple. This is electing a US President in Plain English.

It's easy to imagine every US citizen's vote being counted together on election day. But this is not the case. US elections are not decided by the total or popular vote, but individual states.  Let me explain.

It starts with your vote. On election day you’ll vote for president and their vice president. You get one choice. Then, all the votes in your state are counted.  The candidate with the most state-wide votes becomes the candidate your state supports for president. This happens across the country until each state has selected their candidate.

We end up with most of the 50 states and the District of Columbia voting to support 1 candidate each.  But there's a problem.   We can't elect a president by just counting up the choices of these states - US states are different.

Consider this: California has about 36 million people, Kansas has less than 3 million. We need a way for California's choice to have more influence on the election because the state has more people. The question becomes - how do we make sure each state has the right amount of influence on the election?

Well, we need to account for the population of each state.

As an example, Let's consider my home state of North Carolina... Like every state, it is divided up into congressional districts that are based on population. North Carolina has 13 districts, California has 53 and Kansas has 4. When it comes to a state's influence on the election, the number of districts matters most. More population = More districts =  More influence.

The influence a state has in the election is measured by the number of "electors". This number comes from the number of districts in a state plus the number of U.S. senators - which is always 2. North Carolina has 15 electors, California has 55.

When a candidate wins the voting in a state, they win that state’s number of electors. That's why big, populous states can be so important to candidates – their electors add up quickly.  And the number of electors is what really matters. Here’s why…

If you add up the electors of all 50 states and the District of Columbia, there are 538 in total. The goal on election day is to win the majority of 538 – or 270 electors. Once a candidate wins enough states to reach the 270 majority, they have won the election and become the president elect.

So, let's recap - Your vote helps your state choose a single candidate. That candidate receives all the electors from your state. The candidate who can win enough states to reach 270 total electors wins the national election and becomes the president elect.

Then, on the following January 20th, the president elect is sworn in as the next president of the United States. Yay.

It all starts with your vote. Make it count.

I'm Lee LeFever and this has been Electing a US President in Plain English.

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13 octobre 2008 1 13 /10 /octobre /2008 23:58
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12 octobre 2008 7 12 /10 /octobre /2008 20:54
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11 octobre 2008 6 11 /10 /octobre /2008 12:13
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