Is it Florida, the state where the GOP's White American Voting Preference Initiative was first tested, or Ohio, where it was perfected?
Are Florida politicians like Katherine Harris doing enough to promote Tom DeLay's market-based legislative techniques, or are Ohio officials like Bob Ney, Bob Taft, and Ken Blackwell leading the way?
Is the Florida law allowing people to shoot anyone who frightens them the best example of applying Our Leader's values at the state level, or does this Ohio law do a better job of it:
A recently enacted law allows county prosecutors, the state attorney general, or, as a last resort, alleged victims to ask judges to civilly declare someone to be a sex offender even when there has been no criminal verdict or successful lawsuit.
The rules spell out how the untried process would work. It would largely treat a person placed on the civil registry the same way a convicted sex offender is treated under Ohio's so-called Megan's Law.
The person's name, address, and photograph would be placed on a new Internet database and the person would be subjected to the same registration and community notification requirements and restrictions on where he could live.
A civilly declared offender, however, could petition the court to have the person's name removed from the new list after six years if there have been no new problems and the judge believes the person is unlikely to abuse again.
I can't decide. Maybe you can help:
A helmet tip to reader Joane.
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We'll try dumping haloscan and see how it works.