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demokatgurrl Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon May-19-08 02:30 PM
Original message
Help- Obama endorsements
Can anyone post a link to Obama's major (e.g., superdelegates, governors, senators) endorsements? I am having an argument with a friend who thinks no women have endorsed Obama.
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NightWatcher Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon May-19-08 02:31 PM
Response to Original message
1. here's the Super Delegate list
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slick8790 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon May-19-08 02:31 PM
Response to Original message
2. Two prominent women governors who endorsed Obama
Gov. Sebelius of KS
Gov. Napolitano of AZ
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dana_b Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon May-19-08 02:31 PM
Response to Original message
3. www.demconwatch.blogspot.com
I believe that's the one that people here like
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BlooInBloo Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon May-19-08 02:31 PM
Response to Original message
4. Uh.... NARAL? (Just to aggregate a bunch of women.)
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demokatgurrl Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon May-19-08 02:34 PM
Response to Reply #4
10. OOh, thank you, I forgot all about that ! and thanks to everyone! n/t
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HCE SuiGeneris Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon May-19-08 02:32 PM
Response to Original message
5. Here:
Edited on Mon May-19-08 02:33 PM by BushDespiser12
http://demconwatch.blogspot.com/2008/01/superdelegate-list.html


DNC John Davies (AK)
Rep. Artur Davis (AL)
Stewart Burkhalter (AL)#
Del. Eni FH Faleomavaga (AS)
Theresa Hunkin (AS)
Gov. Janet Napolitano (AZ)
Rep. Harry Mitchell (AZ)
Rep. Raul Grijalva (AZ)
DNC Charlene Fernandez (AZ)
Rep. Anna Eshoo (CA)
Rep. Xavier Becerra (CA)
Rep. Barbara Lee (CA)
Rep. Adam Schiff (CA)
Rep. George Miller (CA)
Rep. Henry Waxman (CA)
Rep. Howard Berman (CA)
Rep. Linda Sanchez (CA)
Rep. Zoe Lofgren (CA)
Rep. Lois Capps (CA)
Rep. Pete Stark (CA)
DNC Hon. Eric Garcetti (CA)
DNC Norma Torres (CA)
DNC Jeremy Bernard (CA)
DNC Mary Ellen Early (CA)
DNC Alexandra Gallardo-Rooker (CA)
DNC Steven Alari (CA)
DNC Inola Henry (CA)
DNC Edward Espinoza (CA)
DNC Vernon Watkins (CA)
DNC Crystal Strait (CA)
William Quay Hays (CA)#
Lou Paulson (CA)#
Rep. Ed Perlmutter (CO)
DNC Dan Slater (CO)
Debbie Marquez (CO)
DNC JW Postal (CO)
DPL Roy Romer (CO)
Federico Pena (CO)#
Sen. Chris Dodd (CT)
Rep. Chris Murphy (CT)
Rep. John Larson (CT)
DNC Stephen Fontana (CT)
DNC Martin Dunleavy (CT)
Rep. Rosa DeLauro (CT)
Anthony Avallone (CT)
Don Williams (CT)#
Rob Carver (DE)#
Toby Condliffe (DA)*
DNC Liv Gibbons (DA)*
DNC Brent O'Leary (DA)*
DNC Connie Borde (DA)*
DNC Christine Marques (DA)*
Mayor Adrian Fenty (DC)
Sen. Michael Brown (DC)
Sen. Paul Strauss (DC)
Rep. Eleanor Holmes Norton (DC)
DNC Dr. James Zogby (DC)
DNC Arrington Dixon (DC)
DNC Jeffrey Richardson (DC)
DNC Anna Burger (DC)
Yvette Alexander(DC)#
Harry Thomas Jr.(DC)#
DNC Anita Bonds (DC)
DNC Larry Cohen (DC)
Rep. Robert Wexler (FL)
DNC Allan Katz (FL)
DNC Joyce Cusack (FL)
Rep. Kathy Castor (FL)
Dan Gelber (FL)#
Rep. Sanford Bishop (GA)
Rep. Hank Johnson (GA)
Rep. John Lewis (GA)
Rep. David Scott (GA)
Rep. John Barrow (GA)
DNC Mary Long (GA)
DNC Jane Kidd (GA)
Jaime Paulino (GU)
Sen. Daniel Akaka (HI)
Rep. Neil Abercrombie (HI)
Rep. Mazie Hirono (HI)
DNC Dolly Strazar (HI)
DNC R. Keith Roark (ID)
DNC Hon. Gail Bray (ID)
DNC Grant Burgoyne (ID)
DNC Jeanne Buell (ID)
Gov. Rod Blagojevich (IL)
Sen. Barack Obama (IL)
Sen. Dick Durbin (IL)
Rep. Melissa Bean (IL)
Rep. Jerry Costello (IL)
Rep. Danny Davis (IL)
Rep. Luis Gutierrez (IL)
Rep. Phil Hare (IL)
Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. (IL)
Rep. Bobby Rush (IL)
Rep. Jan Schakowsky (IL)
Rep. Bill Foster (IL)
Rep. Dan Lipinski (IL)
DNC Constance Howard (IL)
DNC Margaret Blackshere (IL)
DNC Hon. Emil Jones Jr. (IL)
DNC Hon. Iris Martinez (IL)
DNC Tom Hynes (IL)
DNC Willie Barrow (IL)
DNC Michael Madigan (IL)
DNC John Rednour (IL)
DNC Steve Powell (IL)
DNC Darlena Williams-Burnett (IL)
DNC Margie Woods (IL)
DNC Carol Ronen (IL)
Richard Daley (IL)#
Barbara Flynn Currie (IL)#
Todd Stroger (IL)#
Rep. Andre Carson (IN)
Rep. Baron Hill (IN)
Rep. Joe Donnelly (IN)
Rep. Peter Visclosky (IN)
DNC Cordelia Lewis Burks (IN)
DNC Connie Thurman (IN)
DNC Joe Andrew (IN)
Gov. Chet Culver (IA)
Rep. Bruce Braley (IA)
Rep. Dave Loebsack (IA)
DNC Michael Fitzgerald (IA)
DNC Sarah Swisher (IA)
DNC Richard Machacek (IA)
Gov. Kathleen Sebelius (KS)
DNC Larry Gates (KS)
DNC E. Lee Kinch (KS)
DNC Randy Roy (KS)
Mark Parkinson (KS)#
Rep. John Yarmuth (KY)
Rep. Ben Chandler (KY)
DNC Ben Jeffers (LA)
Ray Nagin (LA)#
Rep. Tom Allen (ME)
DNC John Knutson (ME)
DNC Marianne Stevens (ME)
Rep. Elijah Cummings (MD)
DNC Michael Cryor (MD)
DNC Lauren Glover (MD)
DNC Karren Pope-Onwukwe (MD)
DNC Janice Griffin (MD)
DNC Mary Jo Neville (MD)
DNC John Gage (MD)
DNC Greg Pecoraro (MD)
Parris Glendening (MD)#
Gov. Deval Patrick (MA)
Sen. John Kerry (MA)
Sen. Ted Kennedy (MA)
Rep. William Delahunt (MA)
Rep. Michael Capuano (MA)
DNC John Walsh (MA)
DNC Margaret Xifaras (MA)
DNC Raymond Jordan (MA)
DNC David O'Brien (MA)
DNC Alan Solomont (MA)
DNC Paul Kirk (MA)
Rep. John Conyers (MI)
DNC Lauren Wolfe (MI)
DNC Robert Ficano (MI)
DNC Eric Coleman (MI)
DNC Virgie Rollins (MI)
Sen. Amy Klobuchar(MN)
Rep. Jim Oberstar (MN)
Rep. Keith Ellison (MN)
Rep. Tim Walz (MN)
Rep. Betty McCollum (MN)
DNC Mee Moua (MN)
DNC Ken Foxworth (MN)
DNC Brian Melendez (MN)
DNC Donna Cassutt (MN)
DNC Nancy Larson (MN)
Rep. Bennie Thompson (MS)
DNC Johnnie Patton (MS)
DNC Everett Sanders (MS)
Sen. Claire McCaskill (MO)
Rep. Russ Carnahan (MO)
Rep. Lacy Clay (MO)
Mark Bryant (MO)
Susan Montee (MO)#
DNC Ed Tinsley (MT)
DNC John Melcher (MT)
DNC Jean Lemire Dahlman (MT)
Sen. Ben Nelson (NE)
DNC Vince Powers (NE)
DNC Steven Achelpohl (NE)
DNC Frank LaMere (NE)
DNC Kathleen Fahey (NE)
DNC Audra Ostergard (NE)
Rep. Steve Rothman (NJ)
Rep. Donald Payne (NJ)
DNC Christine "Roz" Samuels (NJ)
DNC Donald Norcross (NJ)
DNC Dana Redd (NJ)
DNC Steven Horsford (NV)
DNC Teresa Benitez-Thompson (NV)
Rep. Carol Shea-Porter (NH)
Rep. Paul Hodes (NH)
DNC Hon. Martha Fuller Clark (NH)
Gov. Bill Richardson (NM)
Sen. Jeff Bingaman (NM)
Fmr DNC Chair Fred Harris (NM)
DNC Brian Colon (NM)
Laurie Weahkee (NM)#
DNC Marianne Spraggins (NY)
Rep. G.K. Butterfield (NC)
Rep. David Price (NC)
Rep. Mel Watt (NC)
Rep. Brad Miller (NC)
DNC Everett Ward (NC)
DNC Dannie Montgomery (NC)
DNC Joyce Brayboy (NC)
DNC Jeanette Council (NC)
DNC Jerry Meek (NC)
Sen. Kent Conrad (ND)
Sen. Byron Dorgan (ND)
Rep. Earl Pomeroy (ND)
DNC Jim Maxson (ND)
DNC Renee Pfenning (ND)
DNC Mary Wakefield (ND)
Dan Hannaher (ND)#
DNC David Wilhelm (OH)
DNC Sonni Nardi (OH)
DNC Mark Mallory (OH)
DNC Rhine McLin (OH)
DNC Enid Goubeaux (OH)
Dave Regan (OH)#
Gov. Brad Henry (OK)
DNC Kitti Asberry - (OK)
DNC Mike Morgan (OK)
DNC Kalyn Free (OK)
Reggie Whitten (OK)#
Rep. Earl Blumenauer (OR)
Rep. Peter DeFazio (OR)
Rep. David Wu (OR)
Sen. Bob Casey (PA)
Rep. Patrick Murphy (PA)
Rep. Chaka Fattah (PA)
DNC Carol Ann Campbell (PA)
DNC Leon Lynch (PA)
Gov. Aníbal Acevedo Vilá (PR)
Dr. Celita Arroyo de Roques (PR)
Rep. Patrick Kennedy (RI)
DNC Patrick Lynch (RI)
DNC Waring Howe Jr. (SC)
DNC Carol Fowler (SC)
DNC Wilbur Lee Jeffcoat (SC)
Inez Tenenbaum (SC)#
Sen. Tim Johnson (SD)
Fmr Sen. Tom Daschle (SD)
Rep. Stephanie Herseth Sandlin (SD)
DNC Jack Billion (SD)
DNC Sharon Stroschein (SD)
DNC Nicholas Nemec (SD)
Rep. Jim Cooper (TN)
Rep. Steve Cohen (TN)
DNC Lois DeBerry (TN)
DNC Will Cheek (TN)
DNC (Rep.) Eddie Bernice Johnson (TX)
Rep. Chet Edwards (TX)
Rep. Al Green (TX)
Rep. Lloyd Doggett (TX)
Rep. Charlie Gonzalez (TX)
DNC Al Edwards (TX)
DNC Rep. Hon. Yvonne Davis (TX)
DNC Moses Mercado (TX)
DNC Senfronia Thompson (TX)
DNC Roy LaVerne Brooks (TX)
DNC John Patrick (TX)
DNC Wayne Holland Jr. (UT)
DNC Bill Orton (UT)
Kristi Cumming (UT)#
Sen. Patrick Leahy (VT)
Rep. Peter Welch (VT)
DNC Ian Carleton (VT)
DNC Chuck Ross Jr. (VT)
DNC Judy Bevans (VT)
Gov. Tim Kaine (VA)
Rep. Bobby Scott (VA)
Rep. Jim Moran (VA)
DNC Jennifer McClellan (VA)
DNC Joe Johnson (VA)
Rick Boucher (VA)
Gov. John P. deJongh, Jr. (VI)
Cecil Benjamin (VI)
DNC Kevin Rodriguez (VI)
DNC Carol Burke (VI)
Rep. Adam Smith (WA)
Rep. Brian Baird (WA)
Rep. Rick Larsen (WA)
DNC Pat Notter (WA)
Gov. Christine Gregoire (WA)
Rep. Jim McDermott (WA)
DNC Dwight Pelz (WA)
Sen. Jay Rockefeller (WV)
Sen. Robert Byrd (WV)
Rep. Nick Rahall (WV)
Gov. Jim Doyle (WI)
Sen. Russ Feingold (WI)
Rep. Gwen Moore (WI)
Rep. David Obey (WI)
Rep. Ron Kind (WI)
Rep. Steve Kagen (WI)
DNC Stan Gruszynski (WI)
DNC Jason Rae (WI)
DNC Joe Wineke (WI)
DNC Melissa Schroeder (WI)
DNC Awais Khaleel (WI)
DNC Lena Taylor (WI)
Gov. Dave Freudenthal (WY)
DNC Peter Jorgenson (WY)
DNC John Millin (WY)
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Cant trust em Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon May-19-08 02:33 PM
Response to Reply #5
9. Well that was a pretty easily debunked talking point.
Thanks.
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HCE SuiGeneris Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon May-19-08 02:35 PM
Response to Reply #9
11. Glad to help!
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babylonsister Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon May-19-08 02:32 PM
Response to Original message
6. Here's a list...
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EmperorHasNoClothes Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon May-19-08 02:32 PM
Response to Original message
7. Don't forget Oprah and Mrs. Terminator
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Aloha Spirit Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon May-19-08 02:40 PM
Response to Reply #7
14. OH yeah, and Caroline Kennedy's NY Times article!
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CakeGrrl Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon May-19-08 02:32 PM
Response to Original message
8. Is your friend aware of the NARAL endorsement
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Aloha Spirit Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon May-19-08 02:38 PM
Response to Original message
12. Here's a good youtube video... remember the NOW endorsement?
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hokies4ever Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon May-19-08 02:38 PM
Response to Original message
13. "no women have endorsed Obama"
Does your friend even know who Barack Obama is? What a pathetic lack of political knowledge. Not trying to be condescending, but it is rather shocking.
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Imagevision Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon May-19-08 02:42 PM
Response to Original message
15. Warren Buffet (the richest man in the world) today endorsed Obama...
(Huffington Post
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Coexist Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon May-19-08 02:51 PM
Response to Original message
16. a good endorsement below - but Susan Rice is the best one of all.
from Patricia M. Wald was Chief Judge, United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit; United States Judge, International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia; Member, President’s Commission on U.S. Intelligence Capabilities Regarding Weapons of Mass Destruction.


I have spent more than 40 years of my near-80 in public service as a federal judge, international judge, Justice Department official, and public interest lawyer. A veteran of the woman’s movement since its infancy in the 1960’s, an ardent Democrat, and an equally ardent supporter of women’s rights-to-choose, to work, to live as we see fit, and yes, one day to elect a woman President, I hail the advances in my life-time that have resulted in Senator Clinton’s dramatic bid for our nation’s highest office.

But legions of women my age have fought for the opportunity to be judged on our skills, talents and abilities, not on our gender. Perhaps we were naive, but we believed if we were allowed to enter the game alongside men, we would prove our worth. That is the standard by which, I believe, Senator Clinton’s candidacy should now be judged.

Which is prelude to why I support Barack Obama and why, with a troop of wonderfully gritty older women, I spent 8 days on the icy streets of Cedar Rapids, Iowa – with a return to the hustings in Delaware last week -- campaigning for Senator Obama.

As someone who cares deeply about transformation of the country in which my grandchildren will live and flourish, I have carefully assayed the dueling claims of Senator Clinton and Senator Obama to lead the nation. Senator Clinton proclaims a decisive advantage in experience that notably embraces her days as First Lady in the Clinton Administration of the 90’s as well as her more recent term in the Senate. While the Clinton administration had much to be proud of, it bore responsibility for troubling policies I encountered on the bench that contributed to overwhelming state and federal prison populations and streamlined the harmful process of committing youthful offenders to adult institutions.

Senator Clinton’s Senate career has frequently shown political expedience. Her acceptance of the Bush Administration’s rationale for going to war in Iraq without reading the National Intelligence Estimate, and her rejection of a modest proposal approved by the U.S. Sentencing Commission retroactively to reduce the harsh penalties for crack cocaine, hardly evidenced uniquely seasoned leadership qualities or demonstrated a bold force for change.

I find Senator Obama’s record fully as impressive as Senator Clinton claims for hers. His years organizing and unifying poor communities in Chicago gave him on-the-ground knowledge of conditions that a new President will surely need in tackling the still intractable issues of race and poverty. He has been an unswerving supporter of women’s rights to choose, despite the Clinton campaign’s misrepresentation of that record. He fought in Illinois for children’s health insurance and tax credits for working class families. As someone whose career has been in law enforcement; I admire especially his unremitting honesty and his respect for the law and its processes.

Senator Obama advocated ethics reform legislation, that was labeled by the Washington Post as "the strongest ethics legislation to emerge from Congress yet". His opposition to the Iraq War even as others fell into lock-step behind a flawed and deceptive strategy, testifies to his mature judgment.

Much has been written about the hope and inspiration that Senator Obama brings to the young, but his words resonate with older voters as well. For me, these are not vague and amorphous qualities. I recall a time in the not-too-distant-past when many of my generation passionately believed in an alliance of Government and the people for positive social change. We sought out visionary leaders who could appeal to our inner angels. When Robert Kennedy said in 1968, "I dream of things that never were and ask why not," he voiced our deepest longings, calling on us to go forth together -- black, white, Latino, poor, rich, young, old, male, female -- to challenge injustice and poverty.

Too often in the 40 years since, our political leaders have divided and polarized us. Our sights have been blurred and misdirected, our youth dispirited and politically apathetic. Today, Barack Obama offers us a road map to a common cause: "In the face of a politics that’s shut you out, that’s told you to settle, that’s divided us for too long . . . can be one people, reaching for what’s possible."

My grandchildren and their peers need not be seared by our failures and our mixed memories. I want them to be stirred by the same idealism that once stirred my generation. We should not deny them that chance. For all Senator Clinton’s talents, skills and accomplishments, Barack Obama provides the greater hope.

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Coexist Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon May-19-08 02:53 PM
Response to Reply #16
17. also - Feminists for Obama:
http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/NYfeministsforpeace/

In the coming elections, it is important to remember that war and peace are as much "women's issues" as are health, the environment, and the achievement of educational and occupational equality. Because we believe that all of these concerns are not only fundamental but closely intertwined, we will be casting our vote for Senator Barack Obama as the Democratic nominee for President of the United States.

Since the terrorist attacks of September 11, we have watched with shock and sorrow as our country has become mired in war. The resulting tragedy for our own soldiers, their immediate families and for the people of Iraq has been incalculable.

Less obvious, but no less grave has been the impact on our domestic institutions and economy. With a defense budget of half a trillion dollars and expenditures now averaging $12 billion a month for wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, resources that might have been used for health care, housing, education, repair of infrastructure, relief of poverty and community development have been drained away.

We urgently need a Presidential candidate, who understands that "pre-emptive" attacks on other countries and the reliance on military force have diminished rather then strengthened our national security. And we urgently need a Presidential candidate whose first priority is to address domestic needs. We do not believe that Senator Hillary Clinton is that candidate

We base our judgment on her seven-year record as the Senator from New York. As a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, she has carefully identified herself as a supporter of a strong, enlarged and proactive military. In 2002, she voted to authorize the "use of force" against Iraq, while voting against an amendment that would have mandated further diplomacy. In subsequent years, she expressed enthusiastic support for the war effort, objected to fixed timelines for the withdrawal of U.S troops and until last summer voted for the "unconditional funding" of the war.

Under pressure from the Democratic base, Senator Clinton has recently issued numerous statements about bringing the troops home "responsibly" But her actual plan would leave tens of thousands of Americans soldiers in Iraq over a period of many years. Her record of embracing military solutions and the foreign policy advisers she has selected make us doubt that she will end this calamitous war.

Choosing to support Senator Obama was not an easy decision for us because electing a woman President would be a cause for celebration in itself and because we deplore the sexist attacks against Senator Clinton that have circulated in the media. However, we also recognize that the election of Barack Obama would be another historic achievement and that his support for gender equality has been unwavering.

In backing Senator Obama, we are mindful of the inconsistencies in his voting record and the limitations of his own plans for withdrawal. Yet it is noteworthy that at a time when this position was politically unpopular and when he was aiming for national office, Barack Obama opposed the U.S. invasion of Iraq and has spoken out against the war ever since. This puts him in a far better position to articulate a clear challenge to a Republican opponent.

We are also moved by the positive tone of the Obama campaign, the tremendous energy it has released across the country, the dramatic engagement of young people and the impetus for change that his candidacy embodies.

We are speaking out now because we cannot afford to elect another President who will continue the aggressive, interventionist policies of the present.

Signed

(partial list, still in formation, institutional affiliations are for identification purposes only)

To view additional signatures, click the "signatures" tab at the top of the petition page.

Janet Abu-Lughod, Graduate Faculty, New School, emerita
Lila Abu-Lughod, Institute for Research on Women and Gender, Columbia University
Rev. Patricia Ackerman, environmentalist
Meena Alexander, Poet, Hunter College, CUNY
Frances Anderson, Progressive Democrats of America
Laura Anker, American Studies, SUNY/Old Westbury
Electa Arenal, writer, translator
Ilana Attee, clinical psychologist
Caron Atlas, arts & culture consultant
Eleanor J. Bader, teacher and writer
Eva-Lee Baird, peace activist
Ellen Baker, high school teacher
Valerie Barr, Union College
Rosalyn Baxandall, State University of New York/Old Westbury
Nan Bauer-Maglin, City University of New York, emerita
Seyla Benhabib, Yale University
Carolyn Patti Blum, human rights lawyer
Cynthia Bogard, Hofstra University
Aranzazu Borrachero, Queensborough Community College
Marsha Borenstein, Major Owens Communications Services Center
Rosalind Boyd
Ellen Bravo, feminist activist and author
Cynthia Brown, writer
Pamela Allen Brown, University of Connecticut/Stamford
Kim Bryan, registered nurse
Alice Bucker
Mary Ann Bunten, retired housewife
Candace C. Carponter, lawyer
Veronica Casano, retired social worker
Kathleen Chalfant, actor
May Chan, UNITE HERE, Vice President
Ellen P. Chapnick, Dean for Social Justice Initiatives, Columbia Law School
Kathy Cicerani
Erin Clermont, writer/editor, Veteran Feminists of America
Lorraine Cohen, LaGuardia Community College
Sandra Coliver, human rights lawyer
Louise Fischer Cozzi, Jewelry Designer
Judy D’Angio, Executive Secretary
Sally Davidson, Mother of Iraq Veteran, Military Families Speak Out
Dana-Ain Davis, Queens College
Rev. Holly Haile Davis
Thulani Davis, writer
Ann Decker, Art Director
Victoria de Grazia, Columbia University
Diane Dreyfus, environmental activist
Erika Duncan, writer
Sue Donnelly, peace activist
Sandra Dunn, translator, educator
Barbara Ehrenreich, writer
Gina Eichenbaum-Pikser, student nurse-midwife
Zillah Eisenstein, Ithaca College
Carolyn Eisenberg, Hofstra University
Ronnie Eldridge, former City Council member
Kate Ellis, Rutgers University
Julie Elson, state worker retired
Kathy Engel, poet
Sally Fisher, HIV / VAW Activist
Michelle Fine, Graduate Center at City University of New York
Louisa Floyd, lawyer
Mary Louise Frampton, Faculty Director, Center for Social Justice, US Berkeley School of Law
Nanette Funk, Brooklyn College
Marlene Gerber Fried, Civil Liberties and Public Policy Program, Hampshire College
Lin Goodwin, professor
Katherine Gallagher, human rights attorney
Judi Gardner, middle school home & careers teacher
Reena Geevarghese, peace activist
Celia Gerard, artist and teacher
Joan P. Gibbs, Esq. National Conference of Black Lawyers
Stephanie Gilmore, Trinity College
Linda Gnat-Mullin, Energetic Empowerment
Tami Gold, Hunter College
Stephanie Golden, free-lance author
Nancy Goldner, psychotherapist, Returning Veterans Response Network
Linda Gordon, New York University
Mary Gordon, writer
Vera Graaf, filmmaker
Farah Jasmine Griffin, professor and writer
A Lin Goodwin, professor
Carol Gruber, William Paterson University, emerita
Lynne Haney, New York University
Sheila Hanks
Saidiya Hartman, Columbia University
Melinda Hass, psychoanalyst
Barbara Hawkins, Teachers College, Columbia University
Lena Hayes, teacher and youth advocate
Jane Hirschmann, community organizer
Katherine Hite, Vassar College
Joan Hoff, professor and presidential scholar
Carol Horwitz, lawyer
Rebecca Horwitz, teacher
Martha Howell, Columbia University
Ruth Hubbard, Harvard University (retired), peace activist
Carol Huston, peace activist
Margo Jefferson, writer
Randi Johnson, writer
Sally Jones, peace activist
Daphne Joslin, William Paterson University of New Jersey
Anneliese Z. Kamran, graduate student, Graduate Center/CUNY
Sherry Kan, NY Metro Area Join Board, UNITE HERE
Evelyn Fox Keller, professor/MIT
Donna Kelsh, Educator
Alice Kessler Harris, Columbia University
Mona Khalidi, Columbia University
Frances Kissling, Radcliffe Institute
Cheryl Klein, book editor
Laura Kogel, LCSW, psychotherapist, faculty, The Women's Therapy Centre Institute
Lucy Koteen
Tamar Kraft-Stolar, criminal justice advocate
Nancy Kricorian, writer
Susan Kricorian, artist & educator
Jane Kurinsky, LMSW, peace Activist
Anna Lappé, author/activist
Tanya Laurer, artist
Diane Green Lent, photographer
Gail Lerner, peace activist
Gloria Levitas, formerly Queens College/CUNY
Andrea Libresco, Hofstra University
Sandy Livingston, writer
Barbara Machtinger, Bloomfield College
Holly Maguigan, New York University School of Law
Karen Malpede, writer
Emily Martin, professor, anthropology, New York University
Vicki McFadden, mother of Iraq vet and peace activist.
Elizabeth A. McGee, social sector consultant
Oseye Mchawi, Center for Law and Social Justice, Yoruba Society of
Brooklyn, Inc.
D. H. Melhem, poet
Margaret Melkonian, Hague Appeal for Peace
Ellen Meyers, educator
Eliza Migdal, teacher/writer
Maria E. Montoya, New York University
Esther Moroze, peace activist
Leith Mullings, Graduate Center/ CUNY
Cheryl Mwaria, Hofstra University
Paula Nesoff, LaGuardia Community College
Mary Nolan, New York University
Judy O'Brien, educator
Susan O’Malley, Kingsborough Community College
Mojubaolu Olufunke Okome, Political Science/Women’s Studies, Brooklyn College
Lynn Otty, peace activist
Patricia Paley, school social worker
Gail Pellett, filmmaker
Patricia Paley, school social worker
Rosalind Petchesky, Hunter College & the Graduate Center, CUNY
Jamie Peters
Linda Penn, psychologist
Dr. Charlotte Phillips, pediatrician
Katha Pollitt, writer
Alexandra Ponce de Leon, Media Research Analyst, Universal McCann NY
Dr. Linda Prine, reproductive rights activist
Amy Quinn-Suplina, community peace & justice activist
Rachel Pecker
Marcuse Pfeifer, retired art dealer
Frances Fox Piven, Graduate Center/CUNY
Elizabeth Pochoda, Writer
Alice Radosh, research psychologist, retired
Janet Randall, Northeastern University
Margaret Randall, poet
Rayna Rapp, anthropologist, New York University
Marci Reaven, historian
Judith Reppy, Cornell University
Nina Reznick, lawyer
Jennifer Romanello, Grand Central Publishing
Nancy Romer, Brooklyn College
Constancia Dinky Romilly, registered nurse, retired
Esther Rowland, Barnard College Emeritus
Sandra St. Victor, artist
Susan Sarandon, actor
Martha Saxton, Amherst College
Donna Schaper
Ellen Schrecker, Yeshiva University
Willa Shalit, artist, activist
Adrianne Shropshire, activist
Lucy Sikes, retired graphic designer
Adele Simmons, retired
Alice Slater, lawyer & peace activist
Marjorie Siegel, Teachers College, Columbia University
Betty Smith, International Publishers
Judith Stacey, New York University
Gretchen Stromberg, senior citizen
Dr. Joan Sturgis, physician
Meredith Tax, writer
Jean Tepperman, journalist
Tinka Topping, educator
Melissa Van, peace activist
Andrea A. Vasquez, American Social History Project, The Graduate Center/CUNY
Lise Vogel, Rider University, emerita
Ha My Vu, teacher
Kerry Washington, actor
Sandy Weinbaum, non-profit administrator
Barbara Weinstein, New York University
Cora Weiss, U.N. Representative, International Peace Bureau
Michele Westervelt, school aide & military mom
Joan Wile, author
Maggie Williams, William Patterson University
Bethany Yarrow, singer
Rosalie Yelen, peace activist
Susan Yohn, Hofstra University
Marilyn Young, New York University
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