The vet warned us that they’ll start loosing their baby teeth. This morning, Vince found Mimi and Trudy licking at the carpet and found this tooth! We’re not sure whose it is, but Vince thinks it’s Mimi’s.
I just set up a Flickr account and promise to put up more photos of the girls. I’m debating on upgrading the account. Anyone have advice on using Flickr? Is it worth upgrading? What I love about it is how very widget and RSS friendly they are. They even have geo-feeds for geo-mapping photos.
I spent a couple of hours Saturday cleaning up the road leading into our neighborhood while Vince was at work. I filled seven large 55 gallon trash bags full of about seven months worth of other people’s garbage. I say seven months worth because that’s about when Vince and I last cleaned it up.
We’re doers.
A lot of people stopped to thank me, which was awesome. One guy took the trash bags away. Awesome. Another guy stopped and said he had “hoped” him and his son could get out there and do it when it got warm enough. One guy thanked me and told me he had “hoped” the county would do more to keep it clean. It got me thinking a lot about hope and how little people’s hope gets things done. If you think about it, you see the most desperate expressions of hope in some of the worst neighborhoods where I guess everyone is collectively hoping that someone else will get things done and make things better. And hope never gets it done.
Besides the abundance of Marlboro cigarette packs, McDonalds and Taco Bell trash, and various beer bottles, the most common items were numerous 16 oz. plastic bottles of Mt. Dew and Chick-fil-A garbage. What kind of person tosses their garbage out of their car window in their own neighborhood?
I got my answer. Hopers.
Scattered along the road were various pieces of mail that all went back to one man who lives several houses down from us. After I was done, I drove by the address to see who it was, and I was shocked to see it was the guy who thanked me and talked to me about hoping the county government would do its job.
Between the Mt. Dew, Chick-fil-A garbage and this guy’s personal trash, I don’t think our neighborhood could handle seven more months of hope. In the end, it took a doer to clean up this mess.
NAACP Chairman Julian Bond speaks out against Obama’s effort to put party rules ahead of counting the votes of 2.3 million Democratic votes in Florida and Michigan.
“The Obama campaign miscalculated on this issue and should have stood with Michigan and Florida given their strong African American populations. Had Obama won these states, I am sure many people would be supporting this change in the rules.” [NAACP Chairman Julian Bond - 02-14-08]
Former Democratic presidential candidate and civil rights leader Rev. Al Sharpton joined Barack Obama’s effort to make sure the Democratic presidential primary votes of 2.3 million Democrats in both Florida and Michigan do not count.
“I firmly believe that changing the rules now, and seating delegates from Florida and Michigan at this point would not only violate the Democratic party’s rules of fairness, but also would be a grave injustice.” [Rev. Al Sharpton - 02-14-08]
The right of every American’s vote to be counted when selecting who will lead our nation as President is one of the most precious constitutional rights we have. It’s a right many of our brave armed service members gave their lives to protect.
So why is Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama saying “No, You Can’t!” to more than 2.3 million Democratic voters in Florida and Michigan who voted in Presidential primaries? The answer is simple. Obama believes the constitutional rights of Democrats in Florida and Michigan should come second to the will of the Democratic National Committee in Washington.
Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama honored their agreements to not campaign in both states. In the absence of television ads and typical campaign noise that litters the political landscape, an unprecedented, historic record number of Democratic voters turned out to the polls and casted their votes for the person they believe will rise to the difficult challenges our country now faces.
Rather than stand up to his own national party’s attempt to disenfranchise Florida and Michigan voters, Obama first sided with the DNC and now suggests he wants a do-over. His personal preference is to completely scrap the votes that were cast and replace the primary process with caucuses. Obama’s choices are not sitting well with millions of Democrats who remember Republican attempts to stop counting the votes for President in Florida’s 2000 election. A U.S. Supreme Court decision in Bush v. Gore to stop the vote count led to one of the worst Presidencies in American history.
If Obama is not willing to stand up to his own party when his own party is wrong, how can we expect him to translate hope into political reality in Washington?
Here is what Americans are saying about the DNC’s attempt to disenfranchise 2.3 million voters in Florida and Michigan.
“The Obama campaign miscalculated on this issue and should have stood with Michigan and Florida given their strong African American populations. Had Obama won these states, I am sure many people would be supporting this change in the rules.” [NAACP Chairman Julian Bond]
“You can’t undo an election with a caucus, and especially you can’t undo an election where 1.7 million Florida Democrats have gone to vote in a secret ballot and replace it with a caucus that maybe 50,000 people would show up. It’s a basic underpinning of our democracy, and it is a basic underpinning of a constitutional right to vote and to have that vote counted.” [FL Senior Sen. Bill Nelson]
“I think that the people of Michigan and Florida spoke in a very convincing way, that they want their voices and their votes to be heard. The turnout in both places was record-breaking and I think that that should be respected.” [Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton]
by Christian Grantham - 11:43 pm February 15, 2008
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) says the votes of more than 2.3 million Democratic votes cast in both the Florida and Michigan primaries should not count in the party’s selection of the Democratic nominee for President of the United States.
Pelosi had one more stunner in the interview: She said the Florida and Michigan delegates should not be seated if those delegates would decide the nomination.
“Well, I don’t think that any states that operated outside the rules of the party can be dispositive of who the nominee is. That is to say they can’t make the difference because then we would have no rules,” she said. [Pelosi: Don’t overrule the voters - San Francisco Chronicle - 02-15-08]