
Kristi Yamaguchi announced that SWDOI will be back !!!
12/12/2015

Kristi Yamaguchi announced that SWDOI will be back !!!
12/12/2015
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On this day in 1940, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, who first took office in 1933 as America’s 32nd president, is nominated for an unprecedented third term. Roosevelt, a Democrat, would eventually be elected to a record four terms in office, the only U.S. president to serve more than two terms… read more »
Twenty-one people are shot to death at McDonald’s » 1984
Incident on Chappaquiddick Island » 1969
Soviet Union agrees to grant Hanoi economic aid » 1955
Truman signs second Presidential Succession Act » 1947
Spanish Civil War breaks out » 1936
Allies begin major counter-offensive in Second Battle of the Marne » 1918 WW1
In America, too many of us fall into the trap of thinking: “Poverty is terrible but there’s nothing we can do about it.”
Today, the Half in Ten Education Fund — dedicated to cutting poverty in half in 10 years — introduced a new project called talkpoverty.org dedicated to demonstrating that exactly the opposite is true: we know how to dramatically reduce poverty. The website is a hub where people can learn about poverty in America and what we can do to reduce it.
It also serves to unite and strengthen the antipoverty community, bridging the gap between local and national voices, between grassroots activism and policy work, and between those who are struggling and those who are more economically secure. At the site, you can find basic data and interactive maps about poverty in America; hear from people living in poverty and people dedicated to the fight against poverty; and get involved with local, state and national organizations to take action.
Celebrity chef, food activist, and head judge on Bravo’s Top Chef Tom Colicchio helps kick off the site with one of it’s first posts: “It’s time to #VOTEFOOD.” He traces his history as a chef: from not thinking about hunger and poverty, to attempting to offer food “at a more democratic price point” than his fancy restaurants, to raising money for organizations combating hunger, to finally starting the activist network Food Policy Action. He writes:
As soon as one legislator loses their job over the way they vote on food issues, it will send a clear message to Congress: We’re organized. We’re strong. Yes, we have a food movement, and it’s coming for you.
Former governor Ted Strickland (D-OH), the President of CAP Action, recalls his own personal story of growing up in poverty and always remembering those less fortunate than himself. “It’s un-American, frankly, that you can work and work and work and not get out of poverty,” he concludes.
National figures aren’t the only voices, however. Another featured post is by Sherita Mouzon, a member of Witnesses to Hunger and a Peer Mentor for the Salvation Army in Philadelphia. She writes:
My scars run long and deep—they will always be there. The long lasting effects of trauma stick with you. But I refuse to let my past dictate my future. My memories keep me humble. I’m shaped not by the commonly accepted “fact” that since I grew up in poverty I have to live in poverty now. Instead, I’m shaped by the idea that while you can’t change the past, you can change the future.
Talkpoverty.org melds these activists’ voices with an extensive data set of poverty indicators and demographic data, as well as interactive maps like the one below:

CREDIT: Talkpoverty.org
In addition to blog content and data, the website will include:
Head over and check it out now!
BOTTOM LINE: 46 million Americans live in poverty, including more than one in five children. We need to have an informed conversation about how to dramatically reduce poverty in this country, and low-income people themselves should play a leading role. By listening to those who are living in poverty and those who are fighting poverty every day, we can grow the movement we truly need to ensure that all Americans have a fair shot at economic prosperity.
-This legislative session, Jay secured crucial victories for our kids:
Jul. 15, 2015 –
Gov. Inslee gets Washington moving again with major transportation investments
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My name is Joy Nelson and my brother Thomas Nelson is serving a 10 year sentence for a non-violent crime. I started this petition on his behalf — here is his story in his own words:
I went to prison for corruption, the only thing I felt confident about was that my three children were in great hands. While I served 10 years for breaking my constituents’ trust as mayor of a town in Louisiana, I knew that my trustworthy wife would provide for our children and shape them into good, productive members of society. But that solace came to an end on September 23, 2012, the day my family was involved in a devastating car accident that left my wife and one of our three young children incapacitated, possibly for the rest of their lives. Now, the only person who is able to take care of my wife and children is me.
Just before the accident, the Bureau of Prisons (BOP) had amended its Compassionate Release Program to permit the release of an inmate whose spouse becomes incapacitated. So when this tragedy struck, I requested release — not complete freedom, but home confinement — to care for my spouse and children. It has twice been denied, despite the fact that prison wardens, staff and medical professionals all support my release.
I need the BOP to grant my request for a Compassionate Release, so I can serve the rest of my time on house arrest and care for my family.
The Compassionate Release law states that the welfare of an incarcerated person’s family must be central in considering a request for release. Legal assessments have determined that no other family member is capable of, or available to, care for my infirmed wife and kids besides me. This law was written to cover cases just like mine.
I am a first-time offender. I’m serving a sentence for a non-violent crime, in a low-security prison camp with no bars, no fences. My status as a model inmate has been confirmed by my Unit Team staff and warden. The warden approved my request for Compassionate Release and forwarded it to the BOP General Counsel in Washington for final approval, and that is where it was inexplicably denied, twice.
Meanwhile, I am borrowing money to pay a caregiver for my wife, whose severe traumatic brain injury has left her permanently incapacitated. She often cannot tell our children apart, let alone take care of their daily needs.
Please join me in asking the BOP to honor its own program statement, and permit my Compassionate Release to home confinement. My wife and my children are in trouble, and this program may be their last hope.
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