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While she’s relieved that the Violence Against Women Act finally become reinstated yesterday, Elizabeth Colbert-Busch is definitely unhappy that it took so long.

And that all of the Republican congressmen from South Carolina voted against VAWA makes it even worse, she says.

“I am horrified by the complete disconnect between the danger that women in South Carolina face, and how their Republican representatives voted,” said Colbert-Busch in a statement released this afternoon.

This reinstatement follows a two-month relative absence of VAWA, which had been in effect since 1994, and only needed formal renewal last year.

In May 2012, however, the Republican-led U.S. House of Representatives attempted to change VAWA following its Senate renewal, seeking to remove inclusion of programs for Native American, LGBT and immigrant victims of domestic violence.


When the Senate refused the House’s variation, followed by the House later blocking any vote on its renewal, VAWA officially expired on Jan. 3, 2013.

When readmitted to the Senate in February, eight Republicans including South Carolina’s Tim Scott attempted to block VAWA from coming to a vote, but it eventually was passed and sent to the House, which finally reinstated the act yesterday.
Voting against this renewal, however, were Reps. Joe Wilson, Jeff Duncan, Trey Gowdy, Mick Mulvaney and Tom Rice. Both Scott and Sen. Lindsey Graham voted against the Senate version on Feb. 12.

“These are the very same politicians who are always claiming that they have South Carolinians’ best interests at heart,” said Colbert Busch. “Try telling that to the families of the 39 women—and 13 men—who were killed by their partners in South Carolina in 2011.”

An average of 36,000 South Carolina women are victims of domestic violence every year, according to the state Attorney General, and the state currently ranks second-highest in murders by domestic violence. One of every eight women in South Carolina suffers physical abuse in relationships at least once.

Since first passage of VAWA in 1994, the number of women killed by intimate partners decreased by 34 percentdomestic violence against men dropped 46 percent, and the rate of all domestic violence in the U.S. fell 67 percent

 
 
Rick Horowitz from MPTV’s “Interchange” tells how both major parties are humoring the Tea Party in D.C., and why they shouldn’t anymore.

The longer we continue to “humor” them by overlooking their “symbolic” gestures and statements, the worse off we’ll be in the long run, says Horowitz. 
“How much damage can they do?” Horowitz asks slyly in closing. And you know what? We came very close to finding out.

This video was first released on July 24, right before the crisis on budget and default came to a head two days later. The ordeal in Congress was then carelessly and senselessly extended until the very last moment; only late this morning, just 12 hours before the string holding our country together would have been axed, was it finally resolved. And it was the Tea Party assembly in congress that made damn sure it got extended to that point, too.

And if it didn’t leave a bad-enough taste in the mouths of all Americans, we South Carolinians are left with even more bitterness stuck under our tongues.  Our state’s House representatives joined up under the Tea Party tent to do all they could to stop any progress, even getting attention from national media, which described their behavior as “South Carolina vs. the world.”

South Carolina voters should keep this in mind as the 2012 election season nears, and should remember Horowitz’s key advice: “Don’t let them get away with it.”
 
 
Call it an itchy trigger finger, maybe. But no matter how you look at it, a weapons manufacturer in Columbia, SC just got caught in poorly-timed gaffe.

Following the recent shooting of a Democratic U.S. representative from Arizona, and with national media drawing connotations between that tragedy and conservative Republicans and Tea Partiers, Palmetto State Armory started a new promotional campaign honoring a Republican who is well known for public tirades issued against Democrats.
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An AR-15 (image from www.surplusbunker.com)
“Palmetto State Armory would like to honor our esteemed congressman Joe Wilson with the release of our new ‘You Lie’ AR-15 lower receiver,” read the company's website, according to The Columbia Free Times.

The rifle, an assault model class, is engraved with Wilson's now infamous "you lie" interjection, shouted during Pres. Obama's 2009 congressional address on health care.

“Only 999 of these will be produced, get yours before they are gone!” read the promotional text.

Wilson is U.S. representative for South Carolina's 2nd Congressional District, which stretches south from Columbia to Hilton Head Island.

In an emailed response to Free Times on January 11, PSA president Jamin McCallum stated, “The only reaction I have to the Arizona shooting is sorrow for the victims and their families and a disbelief that a human being could carry out an act like this.

“Our hearts go out to the victims and their families. The loss of life is a tragic event and we should do our best to support those who are grieving.”

The page describing this promotion is no longer available on PSA's website.

(A link to the company's radio ad read by Glen Beck is still available on the home page, though.)