Tuesday, July 31, 2012

FOXNews.com: Author, Commentator and Politician Gore Vidal Dies

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Author, Commentator and Politician Gore Vidal Dies
Aug 1st 2012, 05:53

LOS ANGELES –  In a world more to his liking, Gore Vidal might have been president, or even king. He had an aristocrat's bearing -- tall, handsome and composed -- and an authoritative baritone ideal for summoning an aide or courtier.

But Vidal made his living -- a very good living -- from challenging power, not holding it. He was wealthy and famous and committed to exposing a system often led by men he knew firsthand. During the days of Franklin Roosevelt, one of the few leaders whom Vidal admired, he might have been called a "traitor to his class." The real traitors, Vidal would respond, were the upholders of his class.

The author, playwright, politician and commentator whose vast and sharpened range of published works and public remarks were stamped by his immodest wit and unconventional wisdom, died Tuesday at age 86 in Los Angeles.

Vidal died at his home in the Hollywood Hills at about 6:45 p.m. of complications from pneumonia, his nephew Burr Steers said. Vidal had been living alone in the home and had been sick for "quite a while," Steers said.

Vidal "meant everything to me when I was learning how to write and learning how to read," Dave Eggers said at the 2009 National Book Awards ceremony, where he and Vidal received honorary citations. "His words, his intellect, his activism, his ability and willingness to always speak up and hold his government accountable, especially, has been so inspiring to me I can't articulate it."

Along with such contemporaries as Norman Mailer and Truman Capote, he was among the last generation of literary writers who were also genuine celebrities -- regulars on talk shows and in gossip columns, personalities of such size and appeal that even those who hadn't read their books knew their names.

His works included hundreds of essays, the best-selling novels "Lincoln" and "Myra Breckenridge" and the Tony-nominated play "The Best Man," a melodrama about a presidential convention revived on Broadway in 2012. Vidal appeared cold and cynical on the surface, dispassionately predicting the fall of democracy, the American empire's decline or the destruction of the environment. But he bore a melancholy regard for lost worlds, for reason and the primacy of the written word, for "the ancient American sense that whatever is wrong with human society can be put right by human action."

Vidal was uncomfortable with the literary and political establishment, and the feeling was mutual. Beyond his honorary National Book Award, he won few major writing prizes, lost both times he ran for office and initially declined membership into the American Academy of Arts and Letters, joking that he already belonged to the Diners Club. (He was eventually admitted, in 1999).

But he was widely admired as an independent thinker -- in the tradition of Mark Twain and H.L. Mencken -- about literature, culture, politics and, as he liked to call it, "the birds and the bees." He picked apart politicians, living and dead; mocked religion and prudery; opposed wars from Vietnam to Iraq and insulted his peers like no other, once observing that the three saddest words in the English language were "Joyce Carol Oates." (The happiest words: "I told you so").

Ralph Ellison labeled him a "campy patrician." Vidal had an old-fashioned belief in honor, but a modern will to live as he pleased. He wrote in the memoir "Palimpsest" that he had more than 1,000 "sexual encounters," nothing special, he added, compared to the pursuits of such peers as John F. Kennedy and Tennessee Williams. Vidal was fond of drink and alleged that he had sampled every major drug, once. He never married and for decades shared a scenic villa in Ravello, Italy, with companion Howard Austen.

In print and in person, he was a shameless name dropper, but what names! John and Jacqueline Kennedy. Hillary Clinton. Tennessee Williams. Mick Jagger. Orson Welles. Frank Sinatra. Marlon Brando. Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward. Tim Robbins and Susan Sarandon.

Vidal dined with Welles in Los Angeles, lunched with the Kennedys in Florida, clowned with the Newmans in Connecticut, drove wildly around Rome with a nearsighted Williams and escorted Jagger on a sightseeing tour along the Italian coast. He campaigned with Eleanor Roosevelt and Harry Truman. He butted heads, literally, with Mailer. He helped director William Wyler with the script for "Ben-Hur." He made guest appearances on everything from "The Simpsons" to "Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In."

Vidal formed his most unusual bond with Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh. The two exchanged letters after Vidal's 1998 article in Vanity Fair on "the shredding" of the Bill of Rights and their friendship inspired Edmund White's play "Terre Haute."

"He's very intelligent. He's not insane," Vidal said of McVeigh in a 2001 interview.

Vidal also bewildered his fans by saying the Bush administration likely had advance knowledge of the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks; that McVeigh was no more a killer than Dwight Eisenhower and that the U.S. would eventually be subservient to China, "The Yellow Man's Burden."

Christopher Hitchens, who once regarded Vidal as a modern Oscar Wilde, lamented in a 2010 Vanity Fair essay that Vidal's recent comments suffered from an "utter want of any grace or generosity, as well as the entire absence of any wit or profundity." Years earlier, Saul Bellow stated that "a dune of salt has grown up to season the preposterous things Gore says."

A longtime critic of American militarism, Vidal was, ironically, born at the United States Military Academy in West Point, N.Y., his father's alma mater. Vidal grew up in a political family. His grandfather, Thomas Pryor Gore, was a U.S. senator from Oklahoma. His father, Gene Vidal, served briefly in President Franklin Roosevelt's administration and was an early expert on aviation. Amelia Earhart was a family friend and reported lover of Gene Vidal.

Vidal was a learned, but primarily self-educated man. Classrooms bored him. He graduated from the elite Phillips Exeter Academy, but then enlisted in the Army and never went to college. His first book, the war novel "Williwaw," was written while he was in the service and published when he was just 20.

The New York Times' Orville Prescott praised Vidal as a "canny observer" and "Williwaw" as a "good start toward more substantial accomplishments." But "The City and the Pillar," his third book, apparently changed Prescott's mind. Published in 1948, the novel's straightforward story about two male lovers was virtually unheard of at the time and Vidal claimed that Prescott swore he would never review his books again. (The critic relented in 1964, calling Vidal's "Julian" a novel "disgusting enough to sicken many of his readers"). "City and the Pillar" was dedicated to "J.T.," Jimmie Trimble, a boarding school classmate killed during the war whom Vidal would cite as the great love of his life.

Unable to make a living from fiction, at least when identified as "Gore Vidal," he wrote a trio of mystery novels in the 1950s under the pen name "Edgar Box" and also wrote fiction as "Katherine Everard" and "Cameron Kay." He became a playwright, too, writing for the theater and television. "The Best Man," which premiered in 1960, was made into a movie starring Henry Fonda. Paul Newman starred in "The Left-Handed Gun," a film adaptation of Vidal's "The Death of Billy the Kid."

Vidal also worked in Hollywood, writing the script for "Suddenly Last Summer" and adding a subtle homoerotic context to "Ben-Hur." The author himself later appeared in a documentary about gays in Hollywood, "The Celluloid Closet." His acting credits included "Gattaca," "With Honors" and Tim Robbins' political satire, "Bob Roberts."

But Vidal saw himself foremost as a man of letters. He wrote a series of acclaimed and provocative historical novels, including "Julian," "Burr" and "Lincoln." His 1974 essay on Italo Calvino in The New York Review of Books helped introduce the Italian writer to American audiences. A 1987 essay on Dawn Powell helped restore the then-forgotten author's reputation and bring her books back in print. Fans welcomed his polished, conversational essays or his annual "State of the Union" reports for the liberal weekly "The Nation."

He adored the wisdom of Montaigne, the imagination of Calvino, the erudition and insight of Henry James and Edith Wharton. He detested Thomas Pynchon, John Barth and other authors of "teachers' novels." He once likened Mailer's views on women to those of Charles Manson's. (From this the head-butting incident ensued, backstage at "The Dick Cavett Show.") He derided Buckley, on television, as a "crypto Nazi." He was accused of anti-Semitism after labeling conservative Norman Podhoretz a member of "the Israeli fifth column." He labeled Ronald Reagan "The Acting President" and identified Reagan's wife, Nancy, as a social climber "born with a silver ladder in her hand."

In the 1960s, Vidal increased his involvement in politics. In 1960, he was the Democratic candidate for Congress in an upstate New York district, but was defeated despite Ms. Roosevelt's active support and a campaign appearance by Truman. (In 1982, Vidal came in second in the California Democratic senatorial primary). In consolation, he noted that he did receive more votes in his district in 1960 than did the man at the top of the Democratic ticket, John F. Kennedy.

Thanks to his friendship with Jacqueline Kennedy, with whom he shared a stepfather, Hugh Auchincloss, he became a supporter and associate of President Kennedy, and wrote a newspaper profile on him soon after his election. With tragic foresight, Vidal called the job of the presidency "literally killing" and worried that "Kennedy may very well not survive."

Before long, however, he and the Kennedys were estranged, touched off by a personal feud between Vidal and Robert Kennedy apparently sparked by a few too many drinks at a White House party. By 1967, the author was an open critic, portraying the Kennedys as cold and manipulative in the essay "The Holy Family." Vidal's politics moved ever to the left and he eventually disdained both major parties as "property" parties -- even as he couldn't help noting that Hillary Clinton had visited him in Ravello.

Meanwhile, he was again writing fiction. In 1968, he published his most inventive novel, "Myra Breckenridge," a comic best seller about a transsexual movie star. The year before, with "Washington, D.C.," Vidal began the cycle of historical works that peaked in 1984 with "Lincoln."

The novel was not universally praised, with some scholars objecting to Vidal's unawed portrayal of the president. The author defended his research, including suggestions that the president had syphilis, and called his critics "scholar-squirrels," more interested in academic status than in serious history.

But "Lincoln" stands as his most notable work of historical fiction, vetted and admired by a leading Lincoln biographer, David Herbert Donald, and even cited by the conservative Newt Gingrich as a favorite book. Gingrich's praise was contrasted by fellow conservative Rep. Michele Bachmann, who alleged she was so put off by Vidal's "Burr" that she switched party affiliation from Democrat to Republican.

In recent years, Vidal wrote the novel "The Smithsonian Institution" and the nonfiction best sellers "Perpetual War For Perpetual Peace" and "Dreaming War: Blood for Oil and the Cheney-Bush Junta." A second memoir, "Point to Point Navigation," came out in 2006. In 2009, "Gore Vidal: Snapshots in History's Glare" featured pictures of Vidal with Newman, Jagger, Johnny Carson, Jack Nicholson and Bruce Springsteen.

Vidal and Austen chose cemetery plots in Washington, D.C., between Jimmie Trimble and one of Vidal's literary heroes, Henry Adams. But age and illness did not bring Vidal closer to God. Wheelchair-bound in his 80s and saddened by the death of Austen and many peers and close friends, the author still looked to no existence beyond this one.

"Because there is no cosmic point to the life that each of us perceives on this distant bit of dust at galaxy's edge," he once wrote, "all the more reason for us to maintain in proper balance what we have here. "Because there is nothing else. No thing. This is it. And quite enough, all in all."

Vidal is survived by his half-sister Nina Straight and half brother Tommy Auchincloss.

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FOXNews.com: Al Qaeda Gaining Despite Losses

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Al Qaeda Gaining Despite Losses
Aug 1st 2012, 04:27

Western strikes on Al Qaeda have shown progress in taking out the terror group's core in Pakistan, but affiliates still are increasing "operational capabilities," the State Department said in releasing its annual Country Reports on Terrorism.

Highlights of the 2011 report include the death of Usama bin Laden and Al Qaeda's relative lack of influence on the so-called Arab Spring revolutions in the Middle East, the State Department's top counterterrorism official, Daniel Benjamin, said Tuesday.

He warned, however, that the United States has "no illusions" that further progress against terrorism will be easy or quick, and certain Al Qaeda affiliates remain a troubling threat.

"The report's narrative notes, among other things, the continued weakening of the Al Qaeda core in Pakistan, but it also demonstrates that the Al Qaeda affiliates, while also suffering losses, increased their overall operational ability," Benjamin said. "And this is particularly true of Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula."

"So for all the counterterrorism successes that we've seen against Al Qaeda and its affiliates, the group and violent extremist ideology and rhetoric continue to spread in some parts of the world."

The report also notes the threat from other terror groups, including the Lebanese-based Hezbollah, which is "engaging in their most active and aggressive campaigns since the 1990s," Benjamin said. He also noting that Iran "remains the pre-eminent state sponsor of terrorism in the world."

The report counted more than 10,000 terrorists attacks in 70 countries in 2011, which resulted in more than 12,500 deaths, though that measurement is down from 2010. The worst regions for terrorist attacks are South Asia and the Near East, and most of the victims are Muslim.

In fact, Benjamin noted that 64 percent of all attacks worldwide occurred in just three countries, Afghanistan, Iraq and Pakistan, though the numbers logged in the first two declined from 2010 to 2011.

The rise of Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula is one of the most alarming trends in terrorism.

"That's a group that benefited from the long political transition, the turmoil that was going on in Yemen," Benjamin said. "And I'm optimistic because in President Hadi we have a very committed, very reliable partner now. ... So while the group did exploit that period of uncertainty, we think the trend lines are going in the right direction now in Yemen."

He also said officials think the number of Al Qaeda fighters participating in the bloodshed in Syria remains rather small, though there remains the risk of unaffiliated foreign fighters traveling to the country and posing the threat of greater violence.

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FOXNews.com: Tea Party Favorite Pulls Off Upset in Texas GOP Race

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Tea Party Favorite Pulls Off Upset in Texas GOP Race
Aug 1st 2012, 02:42

AUSTIN –  Tea party darling Ted Cruz convincingly defeated the Republican establishment favorite, Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst, in Texas' runoff election Tuesday, capturing the GOP nomination to replace retiring U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison as fiercely conservative voters shook one of America's reddest states to its political core.

The race had been closely watched nationally as one of the nation's most-vivid contrasts between the GOP mainstream and grassroots, conservative activists. But as results began to pour in, it turned out to be no contest. Cruz grabbed early leads in key cities around the state where Dewhurst had once enjoyed stronger name recognition, fundraising and political organization just weeks earlier.

Overseeing the state Senate from the powerful lieutenant governor's post since 2003, Dewhurst was long considered a slam dunk in his race with Cruz, the former state solicitor general and son of a Cuban immigrant. Dewhurst had the endorsement of much of Texas' Republican mainstream, including Gov. Rick Perry, who despite his failed run for president was still widely popular back home. He also had a $200 million personal fortune he could dip into at will and did, loaning his Senate campaign at least $24.5 million.

But Cruz has a fiery stage presence that made tea party supporters across the state swoon, and received millions from national, conservative organizations which targeted Dewhurst as too moderate. Even though the lieutenant governor oversaw some of the most-conservative state legislative sessions in Texas history and helped speed the passage of laws requiring women to undergo a sonogram before having an abortion and voters to show identification at the polls, he also occasionally compromised with Democratic lawmakers to keep the legislative agenda moving.

Meanwhile, former Democratic state Rep. Paul Saddler easily bested perennial candidate Grady Yarbrough to capture his party's nomination and face Cruz in November's general election, but Cruz begins that race the overwhelming favorite.

Cruz memorized the U.S. Constitution while in high school and successfully painted his opponent as wishy-washy -- even though they actually disagree on little, either politically or ideologically.

The 41-year-old Cruz had never run for political office but bolstered his political credentials arguing in front of the state Supreme Court as the longest-serving solicitor general in Texas history.

Cruz's father Rafael is a pastor outside Dallas. He fought with Fidel Castro's rebels in Cuba before Castro took power and eventually embraced communism, and the elder Cruz fled to the U.S. with nothing but $100 sowed into his underwear.

Texas Republicans aren't used to losing: The state has not elected a Democrat statewide since 1994. But Cruz attacked Dewhurst from the right, and the lieutenant governor's campaign had no real answer.

The state primary was pushed back from Super Tuesday to late May due to a legal fight over redistricting maps drawn by the GOP-dominated Legislature. The 66-year-old Dewhurst beat Cruz by 10 percentage points in the primary but fell about 70,000 votes short of the majority needed for an outright win in a nine-Republican field vying for the party's nomination.

Besides Perry and other state GOP big guns, Dewhurst was endorsed by former baseball great Nolan Ryan. Dewhurst also won the endorsements of former Dallas Mayor Tom Leppert, who finished third in the Republican primary, and ex-NFL running back and ESPN commentator Craig James, the primary's fourth-place primary finisher.

None of it was enough.

Cruz got millions from national tea party groups and other conservative organizations including the Washington-based Club for Growth. He was endorsed by ex-Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, radio talk show host Glen Beck, U.S. Sens. Jim DeMint of South Carolina and Kentucky's Rand Paul, as well as former GOP presidential hopeful and Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum.

At a morning campaign stop in Houston, Cruz said he heard from voters statewide interested in changing what they view as insider-politics in Washington.

"That's the way the democratic process is supposed to work. It's not supposed to be a bunch of guys in a smoky room in Austin picking the next senator," Cruz added.

Just blocks away a few hours later, Dewhurst said, "This is a tough race, but if we remind voters I'm the only true conservative in the race," we can win, Dewhurst said, promising to "turn Washington upside down" if elected.

Natache Reeves, a 42-year-old nurse from the Dallas-Fort Worth suburb of Grapevine, said she voted for Cruz because he had Palin's support and was less likely to restrict handgun use.

"I love Sarah Palin, and she's backing Ted Cruz," Reeves said. "I pretty much agree with everything that rolls out of her mouth."

But Cruz wasn't for everyone. Frank Martinez of Dallas said despite finding Dewhurst's campaign ads "very mean" he couldn't support Cruz, even though they share Cuban roots.

"I think (Dewhurst) has more experience, and he's not a lawyer. So the ad worked," said Martinez, 54, who is unemployed after a workplace accident two years ago left him disabled.

Cruz has drawn comparisons to Indiana, where state Treasurer Richard Mourdock defeated incumbent Sen. Richard Lugar in the Republican primary. But in Texas, the nation's second-most populous state, a win by a tea party-backed candidate is likely to resonate even more.

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FOXNews.com: White House Sorry for Churchill Bust 'Confusion'

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White House Sorry for Churchill Bust 'Confusion'
Aug 1st 2012, 01:43

The White House apologized Tuesday to Fox News contributor Charles Krauthammer for lambasting him over saying President Obama removed a bust of Winston Churchill from the Oval Office – an act that Krauthammer had argued was symbolic of the president's failure to appreciate the United States' close allies.

White House Communication Director Dan Pfeiffer said in his apology that his comments on the official White House blog – including one dismissing Krauthammer's claim as "ridiculous" – were the result of "internal confusion" about two Churchill busts.

"I take your criticism seriously and you are correct that you are owed an apology," Pfeiffer wrote in an email that Krauthammer asked be made public. "There was clearly an internal confusion about the two busts and there was no intention to deceive."

In the apology, Pfeiffer wrote that he lashed out in the blog because he thought Krauthammer, in his Washington Post op-ed piece last week, was repeating the false argument that the president removed the bust and that the move showed his failure to appreciate the special relationship between England and the United States.

In his post, Pfeiffer wrote that he does not bother dealing with "a rumor that's so patently false" but felt compelled to issue a "fact check" on Krauthammer's charge in the column.

"This is 100% false," Pfeiffer blogged. "The bust still in the White House. In the Residence. Outside the Treaty Room."

The post also included an official White House photo of Obama showing British Prime Minister David Cameron a Churchill bust, which turned out to be the other one.

The British Embassy in Washington then released a statement saying there had been two busts in the White House, prompting Pfeiffer to update his blog post by noting the embassy was correct.

The one Krauthammer had referenced had been loaned to President George W. Bush after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks and was in the Oval Office. It was returned after his presidency.

The other, which had been in the White House for decades, was the one Pfeiffer had referenced in the photo.

"I clearly overshot the runway on my (blog) post," Pfeiffer wrote in the apology. "A better understanding of the facts on my part and a couple of deep breaths at the outset would have prevented this situation."

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FOXNews.com: McDonnell Touts Surplus, As VP Speculation Grows

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McDonnell Touts Surplus, As VP Speculation Grows
Jul 31st 2012, 23:44

Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell is touting his state's ability to do something many other governments could not -- end the year with a surplus, for three years running. 

In times of budget strain and pain, the state's record begs a question. What's Virginia doing right? 

McDonnell cited several keys to Virginia's financial success during years of tough economic times, including a focus on economic development and job creation. "That is what's driving the economic surplus," he said.

But the governor also stresses another rule in Richmond which hasn't quite made its way to Washington. McDonnell says he told state Cabinet members and agency leaders early in the year to maintain quality service and pay their bills but don't spend all of the money in their budgets – something the federal government has failed to do.

"That's what Washington does," he said. "That's why they have trillion-dollar deficits. There's a lack of discipline."

The rosy budget news, meanwhile, has allowed McDonnell to raise his stature as a potential vice presidential contender on the Mitt Romney ticket. While touting the state's finances this week, the governor rapped President Obama and Congress for their fiscal shortcomings. 

McDonnell said Monday that Virginia has finished fiscal 2012 with roughly $129 million more in the general fund that forecasted. The state finished with a $311 million general-fund surplus in fiscal 2011 and a $220 million surplus in fiscal 2010.

He said the state's unemployment rate of 5.7 percent, well below the national average of 8.2 percent, has resulted in a steady flow of income and sales taxes.

The state also is expected to report in mid-August as much as $100 million in savings and account balances left over from agencies, based on numbers from previous years.

As for Washington, McDonnell was especially critical of the massive, across-the-board spending cuts that will soon kick in because Congress failed to negotiate a balanced-budget deal.

"They basically hung the Sword of Damocles over everybody's head," he said.

McDonnell made clear dramatic cuts are need and blamed both political parties and chambers of Congress for the current budget crisis. However, he appeared most critical of Obama.

"The president has been invisible," he said, "a bystander on this issue."

The 58-year-old governor has appeared numerous times on the campaign trail with Romney.

McDonnell said this spring he was not a potential candidate, but over the past several weeks he has instead said he will not discuss the issue.

Still, McDonnell is on several short-lists for the job, with the Romney campaign recently mentioning his name and expected to make a pick within the next few weeks.

Virginia's general fund pays for such core state services as public safety, health care and aid to public schools.

The surpluses, however, don't represent year-over-year growth.

Collections for the fiscal year that ended in June 2009 were $14.3 billion, a 9.2 percent drop from almost $15.8 billion for the previous budget year just as Wall Street began a frightful slide.

One year later, fiscal year 2010 collections dipped to $14.2 billion, the smallest general revenue yield since 2006.

The rebound began in fiscal 2011, when collections barely topped $15 billion. Monday's report means general revenues are about at their 2008 levels, McDonnell said.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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FOXNews.com: Race Into Space: China Plans 2013 Moon Landing

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Race Into Space: China Plans 2013 Moon Landing
Jul 31st 2012, 23:44

China has announced plans to send an unmanned rocket to the moon in 2013, an effort to further the country's ambitious space program -- but Beijing faces serious competition to plant the next flag on the moon.

The official China News Service said that the Chang'e Three orbiter will carry out surveys on the surface of the moon, according to a report on Reuters -- catching up to a U.S. achievement from 45 years ago.

The communist country tested a new rocket engine Sunday that uses liquid oxygen and kerosene, which will power future missions to the moon, according to news reports.

If successful, China's probe would be the first craft to land on the moon as part of a mission since the Soviets managed it in the 1970s. The country also said it plans to land a man on the moon, a feat only achieved by the United States, most recently in 1972, the AFP noted.

"I think it's well within China's capability and budget," Chen Lan, an independent space analyst, told the AFP of next year's planned mission.

Neither the Russians nor the U.S. is currently capable of landing a man on the moon. Since the end of the space shuttle era, NASA's has focused its eyes on a new spacecraft for manned exploration of space, the Orion multipurpose vehicle, which won't be ready until 2017 at the earliest.

But China will nonetheless face stiff competition from a growing private space industry in the U.S. and elsewhere. The industry has its eyes on the moon and the cash that can be extracted from rocks and craters.

Astrobotic Technology announced plans in May for an ice prospecting robot, Polaris, to be launched to the Moon on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket like the one that successfully lifted this spring from Cape Canaveral. That vehicle is set to launch in 2015, the company said.

Moon Express has announced plans to piggyback on private space cargo flights, using them to carry its lunar landers and mining platforms to the moon.

"People ask, why do we want to go back to the moon? Isn't it just barren soil?" Jain told FoxNews.com last year. "But the moon has never been explored from an entrepreneurial perspective."

And a host of other companies from a variety of countries are competing for a $30 million prize from Google to reach the moon's surface, a competition called the Lunar X Prize.

One country no longer in the battle: Russia, which has said manned missions are no longer a priority.

Indeed, the country recently sold four 1970s-era Soviet Almaz program three-crew capsules and two Russian Salyut-class 63,800-pound space station pressure vessels to spaceflight firm Excalibur Almaz, which plans to sell about 30 seats between 2015 and 2025, for $150 million each.

Green cheese indeed.

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FOXNews.com: GSA Scandal Really 77 Times Bigger?

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GSA Scandal Really 77 Times Bigger?
Jul 31st 2012, 21:44

Remember Jeff Neely, the government official photographed living it up in a hot tub at a Las Vegas conference? 

"He was the tip of the iceberg," says Rep. John Mica, R-Fla. 

Mica's committee is now looking into wasteful spending at as many as 77 other General Services Administration (GSA) conferences -- all uncovered in documents obtained by Fox News. 

The documents, obtained through a Freedom of Information Act request, show the extent to which GSA dumped money into questionable conferences, sometimes with little or no record of spending. They also show that while the GSA was hosting lavish affairs, they were also doling out bonuses to their party guest employees. 

One of the more troubling conferences was held in 2010 in Crystal City, Va., where GSA employees within the Federal Acquisition Service spent hours drumming in what administrators billed as a "team-building" exercise. 

But while lawmakers first uncovered that conference earlier this month, documents obtained exclusively by Fox News show the event was the setting for millions of dollars worth of bonus handouts. 

According to the records, more than 3,700 employees received bonuses averaging about $1,000 apiece at the conference. The cost to taxpayers was $3.6 million -- minus the cost of the drumsticks, and the consultant who headed up the exercise. 

Practices like this have drawn the ire of government watchdogs. 

"The private company that hands out bonuses and rewards far beyond its ability to pay is going to be out of business. In the government, it seems to matter less because so many people seem to qualify," said Tom Schatz, of Citizens Against Government Waste. 

Fox News' FOIA request found several GSA conferences have no record of spending -- no receipts and no way to account for the cost associated with travel and conference spending. 

"It wouldn't surprise taxpayers to learn that these kinds of omissions occur at every agency. The lack of accountability is so bad that it's impossible to fire anyone," Schatz said. "It takes a hot-tub scandal to get rid of people at these agencies." 

Firing more GSA employees may be exactly what Mica, chairman of the House transportation committee, has in mind when he opens a new round of hearings Wednesday on the lavish GSA conferences. 

"They tried to do everything they could to cover up the October  2010 Las Vegas fiasco. Now, we're hearing there are dozens more. We're going to drag in all the parties involved and get to the bottom of this scandal," Mica told Fox News. 

Questioned about the lack of accountability, a GSA spokesman sent a written response to Fox News which said: 

"As of April 2012 all spending for events, including training conferences, leadership events, team building exercises, award ceremonies, were suspended. The 2010 awards ceremony was an annual event and has been in existence going back to 2002. Under the new GSA leadership these events and this type of spending are not tolerated." 

But Mica wants to inquire if, indeed, some of the wasteful spending practices have continued even after the departures of some administrators who had a hand in the profligate conference spending. "This is very disappointing. Some replacements may be involved in latest scandals so that complicated our investigation," Mica said. 

Still, Mica contends that that GSA's out-of-town conference spending pales in comparison to the taxpayer money wasted on 14,000 vacant or underused properties that GSA oversees. It is part of GSA's job to manage those properties and, when possible, sell them. "The underutilized assets that are sitting idle, wasted and abused cost taxpayers in the billions," Mica said. 

To help demonstrate that waste, The House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee will hold a field hearing  next week  at a vacant federal courthouse in Miami.  

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FOXNews.com: The Result's In: Did Phelps Earn Record 19th Medal?

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The Result's In: Did Phelps Earn Record 19th Medal?
Jul 31st 2012, 21:44

LONDON –  Michael Phelps broke the Olympic medals record Tuesday with his 19th as the United States romped to a dominating win in 4x200-meter freestyle relay at the London Games.

With 19 career medals spanning three Olympics, Phelps moved one ahead of Soviet gymnast Larisa Latynina, who got her haul in 1956, 1960 and 1964. And he finally got his first gold of these games, bouncing back from the disappointment of settling for silver when he glided at the end of the 200 butterfly earlier Tuesday.

The United States team of Ryan Lochte, Conor Dwyer, Ricky Berens and Phelps on the anchor leg won in 6 minutes, 59.70 seconds. France took the silver in 7:02.77, while China was third in 7:06.30.

Phelps now has 15 golds, two silvers and two bronzes.

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FOXNews.com: Romney: Media Avoiding Issues, Focusing on Gaffes

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Romney: Media Avoiding Issues, Focusing on Gaffes
Jul 31st 2012, 20:34

Mitt Romney, in an interview with Fox News, accused the media of attempting to "divert" attention from more substantive issues by harping on his so-called gaffes overseas.

"I realize that there will be some that in the fourth estate ... who are far more interested in finding something to write about that is unrelated to the economy, to geo-politics, to the threat of war, to the reality of conflict in Afghanistan today, to nuclearization of Iran," Romney told Fox News' Carl Cameron, after wrapping up his final event in Warsaw, Poland.  

With the candidate heading home after a weeklong tour across three countries, the Republican presidential candidate expressed frustration with the way some of his remarks have been portrayed by both the media and Democratic campaign operatives. Delivering the most outright criticism of the Obama administration since he landed on foreign soil, Romney said: "They'll instead try to find anything else to divert from the fact that these last four years have been tough for our country. They've been years of tumult and war and we need to see a better direction taken on the part of our nation."

Romney also specifically responded for the first time to remarks  he made at a fundraiser in Israel Monday implying that Israel's economy is stronger than Palestine's because of culture. The comments were branded as "racist" by some Palestinian leaders, but Romney denied he was being culturally insensitive.  

"I'm not speaking about it, did not speak about the Palestinian culture or the decisions made in their economy." Instead, he said he's pointing out "that the choices that a society makes has a profound impact on the economy and the vitality of that society."

The fallout from the remarks spilled over into Tuesday as he was finishing a tour of the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier and a memorial for Pope John Paul II in Warsaw. Despite the somber nature of the moment, U.S. reporters shouted questions at him and were told in colorful language by a Romney aide to show respect.

In the interview with Fox News, the GOP candidate maintained that he was "very pleased" with his trip -- which spanned six days and made stops in Great Britain, Israel and Poland -- despite the reports of foreign fumbles.

He sat down with at least a dozen foreign leaders in all three nations, yet his official meetings seemed overshadowed by media reports of missteps.

On his first day in Great Britain he became something of the British press' whipping boy when he questioned the readiness of the U.K. to host the Olympic Games. Headlines read, "Who invited you?" and "Mitt, the party-pooper."  

Romney left Warsaw Tuesday afternoon Boston-bound. He will return to the States campaigning in high gear and to speculation of an impending vice presidential pick announcement.

Though he wouldn't offer a timeline or even a hint as to who the pick may be, the candidate did tell Fox News about a new app called "Mitt's VP," which allows people to be find out via mobile phone the moment he announces.

While overseas, Romney kept largely to his word and refrained from criticizing the president directly, yet he told Cameron that he will not be so restrained when he gets back home.

"I can assure you that when I land tonight, I will be back to my old and direct contrasts," he said.

Fox News' Nicole Busch and Carl Cameron contributed to this report. 

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FOXNews.com: Rahm Grilled by Churches Over His Chick-fil-A Stance

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Rahm Grilled by Churches Over His Chick-fil-A Stance
Jul 31st 2012, 20:34

Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel has ticked off the flocks by criticizing Chick-fil-A.

Days after the big city boss blasted the chicken chain over its president's stance on same-sex marriage, an influential Baptist minister and Cardinal Francis George of the Archdiocese of Chicago struck back. The religious leaders, who support the traditional view of marriage, were incensed at Emanuel's claim that "Chick-fil-A's values are not Chicago's values."

"Do not disrespect us...We, too, are Chicago," the Rev. Charles Lyons of the Armitage Baptist Church thundered from the pulpit Sunday.

Is the City Council going to set up a 'Council Committee on Un-Chicagoan Activities' and call those of us who are suspect to appear before it?

- Cardinal Francis George, Archdiocese of Chicago

Cardinal Francis George also criticized Emanuel's stance, asking in the Catholic Chicago Blog if everyone who did not agree with Emanuel faced a similar fate.

"Must those whose personal values do not conform to those of the government of the day move from the city," George wondered. "Is the City Council going to set up a 'Council Committee on Un-Chicagoan Activities' and call those of us who are suspect to appear before it?"

The controversy began when a Chicago Alderman Proco Joe Moreno said he would block the restaurant from opening a location in his ward, citing recent comments by Chick-fil-A President Dan Cathy. When asked about the company's values, Cathy was quoted saying he was "guilty as charged" for being "supportive of the family -- the biblical definition of the family unit." 

Cathy also said on a radio program: "I think we are inviting God's judgment on our nation when we shake our fist at Him and say 'we know better than you as to what constitutes a marriage,' and I pray God's mercy on our generation that has such a prideful, arrogant attitude to think that we have the audacity to define what marriage is about."

As officials in other cities, including Boston, San Francisco and New York, blasted Chick-fil-A over Cathy's beliefs, the company issued a new statement over the weekend.

"The Chick-fil-A culture and service tradition in our restaurants is to treat every person with honor, dignity and respect -- regardless of their belief, race, creed, sexual orientation or gender," the statement read. "We will continue this tradition in the over 1,600 restaurants run by independent owner/operators. Going forward, our intent is to leave the policy debate over same-sex marriage to the government and political arena."

But Lyons had a warning for anyone who tries to impose their values on his congregation.

"If the thought police come to Armitage Baptist Church, we will meet them at the door respectfully, unflinchingly, willing to die on this hill, holding a copy of the Sacred Scriptures in one hand and a copy of the U.S. Constitution in the other," Lyons said in the sermon.

Legal experts note that politicians, preachers and anybody else are entitled to their opinions on same sex marriage, which polls show the country is evenly split on. But they told FoxNews.com that it is disturbing that elected officials would threaten to use their power to block a company from doing business in their community because of a difference of opinion with people who work for the company.

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FOXNews.com: Cops: Mom Killed Kids,Self as Dad Sat Reading

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Cops: Mom Killed Kids,Self as Dad Sat Reading
Jul 31st 2012, 18:45

The deaths of a mom and her two children, all shot as her husband allegedly sat reading in their two-story home in an affluent St. Louis suburb, are being treated as a murder-suicide though a probe continues.

Mitch Murch, of Glendale, Mo., called police Monday morning after gunshots rang out in his family's red-brick home shortly before 11 a.m. Monday, Fox affiliate KTVI-TV reported. When police arrived, they found Catherine Murch, 42, dead and the couple's son and daughter, ages 11 and nine, also shot. Murch was performing CPR on the boy, police said.

"There is a current active investigation of the incident to try to determine what exactly happened and the sequence of events."

- Glendale Police Sgt. Bob Catlett

He told police he "thought it was coming from outside, so he ran to his front door and saw his wife lying in the kitchen, his son was lying in a side room and his daughter was in the second story of the home," Glendale Police Sgt. Bob Catlett told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.

Police recovered a weapon from the home but did not find a suicide note, according to the station. 

Catlett said investigators believe the woman killed the children before turning the gun on herself, although Murch was taken into custody and questioned before being released.

In a statement released later, Catlett said: "There is a current active investigation of the incident to try to determine what exactly happened and the sequence of events."

Catherine Murch was pronounced dead at the scene. Her son, Mitchell Murch III, was pronounced dead at St. Louis Children's Hospital, and her daughter, Mary Claire, was pronounced dead at Mercy Hospital St. Louis in Creve Coeur.

The Major Case Squad of Greater St. Louis was activated, and the St. Louis County Police Department's crime scene investigators assisted at the scene. Catlett said he was unaware of any previous calls to police at the home, according to the paper.

Catherine Murch was a registered nurse, according to the newspaper.  The children attended Mary Queen of Peace School in Webster Groves, and the family was active in the parish, according to the Rev. Bob Reiker.

"We're just trying to piece it together and come to grips," Reiker told the Post-Dispatch.

Hours after the shootings, on Monday night, mourners filled Mary Queen of Peace Catholic Church in a service for the three.

Bob Goessling, who attends Mary Queen of Peace, told the Post-Dispatch he attended several retreats with Mitch Murch, and his fifth-grade daughter was in the same class as Murch's son.

"This is going to devastate this community," Goessling said. "The wife and husband were extremely outgoing and well-liked. They were very spiritual and into their church community."

The shooting came two days after a Massachusetts man shot his 7-year-old daughter to death and critically injured his 9-year-old son before killing himself. That man, Daryl Benway, 41, of Oxford, had recently separated with his wife, lost his job and indanger of being foreclosed on, according to reports. The boy, Owen Benway, was still clinging to life in UMass Memorial Children's Medical Center.

Click for more from Fox2Now.com

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FOXNews.com: NPR Analyst: Romney Trip Meant to Excite White Vote

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NPR Analyst: Romney Trip Meant to Excite White Vote
Jul 31st 2012, 18:45

NPR analyst Cokie Roberts claimed on air that Mitt Romney's stop in Poland was meant to excite "ethnic white voters." 

The comment Monday came as the Republican presidential candidate landed in Poland for the final leg of his three-country tour. 

Roberts, also an analyst with ABC News, inferred that the visit is essentially a bid to attract former Reagan Democrats, especially "descendants" of Polish people. 

"You remember well the Reagan Democrats, those ethnic white voters who had been Democrats for many years, turned out for Ronald Reagan and have been fairly predictable Republicans since then," Roberts said. "Now, it's a smaller percentage of the population, of the voting population than it used to be, but white voters are still much more Republican than any other group in the electorate. 

"They went for McCain in 2008 by 55 percent, and I think that, you know, getting those ethnic voters excited is really what Romney has in mind here. It's more for the folks at home, the descendants of the people that he will be speaking to in Poland," she said. 

Indeed, Poland has a strong Catholic population and the trip could be aimed in part at appealing to some of those voters in the U.S. 

But Romney's visit has been typically portrayed as having more context to it than a bid for Polish-American support. While in Poland, Romney has stressed the alliance between Poland and the U.S., in an implicit dig at President Obama's allegedly accommodating policies toward Russia. 

Plus Romney used an address in Warsaw to herald Poland's free-market policies that helped the country break from the doctrine of Communism, in turn promoting the economic policies he has made a centerpiece of his campaign.

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FOXNews.com: Deadly Russian Roulette Tears Apart Small Town

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Deadly Russian Roulette Tears Apart Small Town
Jul 31st 2012, 16:43

Scott Hammond doesn't blame the 15-year-old boy accused of killing his only son during a game of Russian roulette at a sleepover in a small Pennsylvania town earlier this month. Instead, he prays for him.

The rural community of Everett, population 2,000, has been devastated by the death of Neal Hammond, also 15, in an incident that forever damaged three families – Hammond's, the shooter's and that of the boy who brought the gun to the slumber party. But instead of bitterness and anger in a town where nearly everyone knows everyone, the awful tragedy has spurred an outpouring of compassion, starting with the dead boy's family.

"Cole has been in our hearts since this happened because he and my son were very, very close," Scott Hammond said of Cole McConoughey, who has been charged with aggravated assault and could face homicide charges in the death of his best friend. "I know it's been weighing on him heavily and we've been praying for him every day."

"My wife and I have been praying for that poor boy. I don't want to see him face any jail time."

- Scott Hammond, father of boy killed in Russian roulette

The tragic shooting came at almost the same time a gunman opened fire in a Colorado movie theater, killing 12. But in the basement of the McConougheys' Riverview Road home, there was no demonic intent, only the naive bravado of three teenage boys fascinated by the .38 caliber Smith & Wesson one brought to the party.

The gun was left unloaded in a basement drawer, the third boy, who has not been named and who also faces charges, told police. As midnight drew near and they talked about things boys talk about, McConoughey allegedly took the gun and two bullets out of the drawer. He spun the revolver's cylinder, loading and unloading bullets -- "pointing the gun and joking around," police said.

"Let's play Russian roulette," the boy allegedly heard McConoughey say, according to court documents.

A moment later, McConoughey allegedly pointed the gun at Hammond's head. "He pulled the trigger thinking it was going to click," police said. 

Neal Hammond was struck in the right temple and died the next morning, July 20, at 9:30 a.m.

Bedford County District Attorney Bill Higgins said there was no indication of any "altercation, animosity or ill will" between the boys.

"This is a tragic example of the consequences of the irresponsible handling of a firearm," Higgins said in a statement. "Sadly, this is a situation that could have easily been avoided by adhering to two basic firearm safety measures -- always assume a gun is loaded, and never point a firearm at a target you do not intend to shoot. My heart goes out to the family and loved ones of the young man who lost his life."

Investigators say another teen brought the revolver and bullets to the sleepover before McConoughey pointed the gun at Hammond's head and pulled the trigger. Higgins, who could not be reached for comment, said McConoughey has been charged with aggravated assault as an adult. But that charge will be upgraded to homicide, Higgins told the Altoona Mirror, and whether the boy will face a third-degree murder or a manslaughter charge will depend upon an ongoing investigation, he said.

Whatever the outcome, Scott Hammond, 41, who works with at-risk youth in Pennsylvania's Bureau of Juvenile Justice Services, hopes McConoughey doesn't serve time for his son's death.

"Cole's pain has been a burden on us since the day it happened," he said. "My wife and I have been praying for that poor boy. I don't want to see him face any jail time."

Hundreds of mourners flooded First Christian Church last Wednesday to honor Hammond, a popular wrestler and football player who would have entered his sophomore year at Everett Area High School next month. Rev. Robert Robertson said Hammond was remembered as a "laid back," altruistic teen who transformed into a tenacious "scrapper" once on a wrestling mat.

"He was a character, a good, likable kid," Robertson told FoxNews.com. "He had many friends."

Elsie Meloy, a secretary at the church, said a "feeling of hope" pervaded the service packed with Hammond's classmates and teammates.

"I've never seen that many people in the church for a funeral and I've been here for 30 years," Meloy told FoxNews.com. "Neal was just a kind young man who liked everyone he met."

Higgins has said charges are expected against other people, but declined to elaborate. An attorney for McConoughey, who was released after posting bail and is due to appear in court next month, reportedly wants the case moved to juvenile court -- as does Scott Hammond.

"I know that this kid could get help in a juvenile facility," Hammond said of McConoughey. "I don't think he'll get the help he needs in an adult facility."

For now, Hammond said he and his wife Georgina will rely on their faith to help them digest the "freak accident" that killed their son. And Hammond won't paint firearms as the villain in the killing either, as Neal "knew about guns" from his father's experience as a hunter.

"I don't really blame anybody, it was a freak accident," Hammond said. "I don't have any hard feelings toward either youth or anybody. It was just an accident."

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FOXNews.com: Gay marriage rises as wedge in 2012 race- Bakery refuses to make gay wedding cake

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Gay marriage rises as wedge in 2012 race- Bakery refuses to make gay wedding cake
Jul 31st 2012, 16:43

Throughout the presidential campaign, Fox News will be breaking down the key issues and giving viewers an in-depth look at the positions of President Obama and presumptive GOP nominee Mitt Romney. This article in the AEHQ Issues series focuses on gay marriage.  

The Democratic National Committee made headlines this week with the announcement that for the first time, it is moving to include a plank supporting same-sex marriage in the party's convention platform. 

It appeared to be a bit of an "in your face" to the host state, North Carolina, which just voted by 61 percent for a constitutional amendment to ban gay marriage. 

The Democratic Party, though, has been emboldened since President Obama reversed course and came out in favor of same-sex marriage in May. 

In the 2012 presidential race, both candidates are trying to appeal to their base on the issue. While Obama is the first sitting Democratic -- or Republican -- president to endorse gay marriage and in turn use that in his re-election race, Republican Mitt Romney's task may be to convince GOP voters he's firmly in the opposite camp on the issue. As governor of Massachusetts, he opposed gay marriage, but briefly entertained the idea of civil unions when the state courts ordered same-sex marriages to go ahead. 

Either way, gay marriage is arguably a bigger wedge in this year's presidential race than it ever has been thanks to the president's endorsement. 

Obama has energized the LGBT lobby and Hollywood, raising millions of dollars off the announcement for his campaign. 

"When the president came out in support of freedom to marry, he was doing what we elect presidents to do," said Evan Wolfson, president of Freedom to Marry.  "He was showing the moral leadership of standing up for the full protection and dignity of every American under the Constitution." 

In embracing this wedge issue, though, Obama has not only contrasted himself with many conservatives, he has also managed to created deep divisions within his own party. On Tuesday, the Coalition of African-American Pastors launched a national campaign to withdraw support for Obama over same-sex marriage. Rev. William Owens, who is leading the campaign, complains that the President "threatens the stability of the family, especially the black family." 

Owens said Obama has ignored the coalition's request for a meeting and today vowed, "We will see that the black community is informed that the president is taking them for granted while pandering to the gay community." 

Such talk could be an indication that the president may run into difficulty in close swing states like North Carolina. "Key Democratic constituencies do not support same-sex marriage," said Brian Brown, president of the National Organization for Marriage.  "And I think that you are going to see a real lack of support for President Obama from them and then folks in the middle." 

Romney may be angling for some of those votes. But while some conservatives are still anxious over where he actually stands, NOM's Brian Brown needs no convincing. 

"If you go back to Massachusetts, people say no, no he wasn't strong on the issue", Brown told Fox News. "If you actually look at what he did, he stood up for a state constitutional amendment.  He fought so that the people could vote." 

In Massachusetts, the issue never went to a vote.  In other states it did.  Twenty-nine currently have constitutional amendments banning gay marriage.  Many of those states, including North Carolina, also ban "marriage equivalents" like civil unions. 

Four other states -- Washington, Minnesota, Maine and Maryland -- have put the question on the November ballot in some form.  Recent polls suggest that all of those states could vote in favor of same-sex marriage, which gives supporters reason to believe that the tide may be shifting in America. 

"Republicans, too, are moving in the direction of support," Wolfson said.  "Young Republicans, like young Democrats, young independents, young people across the spectrum overwhelmingly support the freedom to marry." 

It isn't just young Republicans who are changing their minds. Conservative David Blankenhorn fought fiercely for Prop 8, California's measure to ban gay marriage.  In June, he wrote an op-ed in the New York Times with the headline: "How My View On Gay Marriage Changed".  Blankenhorn is now fully in favor of same-sex marriage. 

"As a marriage advocate," he told Fox News, "I feel that I can do more to strengthen the institution now by accepting gay marriage than by continuing to oppose it."  Blankenhorn says the public debate has come down to the question of whether the nation should support and recognize the dignity of homosexual love.  "And to me - the answer to that question is yes." 

On the campaign trail, Romney doesn't talk much about the issue, leaving statements of "support for traditional marriage" to significant speeches like his appearances at Liberty University and the NAACP convention. Brown appreciates the support, though he wishes Romney -- and his fellow Republicans -- would talk more about it. 

"There are plenty of Republican strategists in this town -- inside the Beltway that want to run from this issue. They think it is too divisive. They don't want to bring it up -- they don't want to talk about it," he told Fox News. 

Brown is determined to make same-sex marriage a major issue in the fall campaign.  Ironically, it may be the split in the Democratic Party that fuels the debate more than anything Republican candidates are planning.

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