by whitehouse
President Obama discusses the fundamental issues at stake for our Nation, and how we can restore a sense of security for people who are willing to work hard and act responsibly in this country. April 3, 2012.
by whitehouse
President Obama discusses the fundamental issues at stake for our Nation, and how we can restore a sense of security for people who are willing to work hard and act responsibly in this country. April 3, 2012.
“The function of education, therefore, is to teach one to think intensively and to think critically. But education which stops with efficiency may prove the greatest
menace to society. The most dangerous criminal may be the man gifted with reason, but with no morals.”
— Martin Luther King, Jr., The Purpose of Education
just another rant …
We all might agree that in an election year the most important thing most voters on the fence should be asking themselves is which politician running for office has been the most authentic, has not just your list of things in mind but that of your family, friends, co-workers and those who are now in need. We know the middle and lower class have been routed and that is on the list of targets the Party of NO has as a mission. I ask you to stop and think about what President Obama has tried to do or has done for ALL Americans not just for a select few like we have seen coming from the Republican Party. The choice for President2012 in my opinion is obvious. Yes, I will support Barack Obama for a 2nd term but it is not because I am a person of colour though I admit no one not one Teapublican person opposing President Obama has minorities in mind; we are all a second thought a group of invisible people who as newt says need paychecks not food stamps and or entitlements. Well, some may know this now since he forced it upon us, but there are more Caucasian people on food stamps than African Americans and or people of colour. if you are a Woman, the war waged against us by Teapublicans has become personal for me and given what this Party of No claims; to be for less government one must search for a codebook to find out exactly what that means and what is it they want from the middle and lower classes because it ain’t equality. I wonder, do they expect us to accept separate but equal. Whatever It is; it is utterly apparent that “these people” feel, act, or negotiate nothing like our parents conservative politicians and here’s hoping We the People do not have to experience what they all have been jabbering about because it does not sound sane efficient or address what all Americans need to move into the 21st Century. I watch, listen, and wonder what kind of education these conservative Teapublican candidates for President have received or have they just become more jaded more narrow minded, as they got older as they appear. I think a President must be willing to fight for the rights of everyone especially for those in need. I still cannot and probably will not forget what Eric cantor and Santorum said to women about health care. It definitely made me realize why I vote for the Democratic Party more often than not. I am no expert and I do not play one or pretend to be one; I just have a lot to say or rant about. In my need to reach out to those who may still be wondering who should be our next President. I ask them to compare and contrast President Obama against the Teapublicans who claim to want to “restore America”“, take back our country”, or insist on if they do get into the WH, that all Americans will conform to their “Family Values” platform. After hearing what they do not want to do for “We the People”, please think about family friend’s co-workers or neighbors who will be negatively affected by this type of attitude and the consequences of such a way of thinking and or living.
The best possible chance for our Democracy to continue forward VOTE for … BarackObama2012
Other News …
DNC Chair Assesses NH Primary, Looks Forward
Administration Holds Jobs Forum
The NW is either experiencing climate change …it’s Winter and not a snow flake in sight let alone real cold air. I guess all that nasty hot air coming from the mouths of Teapublicans running for President has raised its ugly head of lies I mean skewed, maybe manipulated information they all seem to be giving to Americans, has flowed toward us. We have yet another day and night filled with wicked weather with odd high temperatures, the wind has yet to calm down and the rain is washing away foundation, which is so northwest weather but can do much damage. So, be careful out there.
Given all that is happening in the World a quote from Martin Luther King Jr. is so appropriate right about now. People are dying for the right to speak freely, for a better life and human rights …no one speaks to life’s struggles better than MLK jr and as we move into a New Year let us all find keep or continue the audacity to have hope to change and work hard to give Barack Obama a second term.
“Human Progress is neither automatic nor inevitable even a superficial look at history reveals that no social advance rolls in on the wheels of inevitability. Every step toward the goal of justice requires sacrifice, suffering, and struggle; the tireless exertions and passionate concern of dedicated individuals without persistent effort, time itself becomes an ally of the insurgent and primitive forces of irrational emotionalism and social destruction. This is no time for apathy or complacency. This is a time for vigorous and positive action.” – MLK Jr.
Other News …
C-SPAN’s New Hampshire Primary Coverage Begins at 8pm ET
President Announces Resignation of Chief-of-Staff; Budget Director Jack Lew to Fill Post
A Look at the Future of the Internet
“C-SPAN letter to Chief Justice Roberts on TV camera coverage of health care case”
After a day and night filled with wicked weather, the odd high temps, the wind has yet to calm down and the rain; reportedly more in the last 72hrs than in 24days; which is so northwest weather but can do much damage. So, be careful out there.
Given all that is happening in the World a quote from Martin Luther King Jr. is so appropriate right about now. People are dying for the right to speak freely, for a better life and human rights …no one speaks to life’s struggles better than MLK jr and as we move into a New Year let us all find keep or continue the audacity to have hope to change and work hard to give Barack Obama a second term.
“Human Progress is neither automatic nor inevitable even a superficial look at history reveals that no social advance rolls in on the wheels of inevitability. Every step toward the goal of justice requires sacrifice, suffering, and struggle; the tireless exertions and passionate concern of dedicated individuals without persistent effort, time itself becomes an ally of the insurgent and primitive forces of irrational emotionalism and social destruction. This is no time for apathy or complacency. This is a time for vigorous and positive action.” – MLK Jr.
Oct 1, 2011 by whitehouse
President Obama discusses the letters he receives every day asking for action on jobs and calls on Congress to pass the American Jobs Act right away to cut taxes, create jobs and provide a win for the American people.
President Barack Obama delivers remarks at the Human Rights Campaign Gala atYesterday, President Obama addressed
the 15th Annual Human Rights Campaign National Dinner at the Washington
Convention Center in Washington, DC. In his speech, the President stressed his
commitment to the cause of equality over the past two and a half years, and his
continuing support moving forward.
Now, I don’t have to tell you that we have a ways to go in
that struggle. I don’t have to tell you how many are still denied their basic
rights — Americans who are still made to feel like second-class citizens, who
have to live a lie to keep their jobs, or who are afraid to walk the street, or
down the hall at school. Many of you have devoted your lives to the cause of
equality. So you know what we have to do; we’ve got more work ahead of us.
But we can also be proud of the progress we’ve made these
past two and a half years. Think about it. Two years ago, I stood at this
podium, in this room, before many of you, and I made a pledge. I said I would
never counsel patience; that it wasn’t right to tell you to be patient any more
than it was right for others to tell African Americans to be patient in the
fight for equal rights a half century ago. But what I also said, that while it
might take time –- more time than anyone would like -– we are going to make
progress; we are going to succeed; we are going to build a more perfect
union
And so, let’s see what happened. I met with Judy Shepard. I
promised her we would pass a hate crimes bill named for her son, Matthew. And
with the help of my dear friend Ted Kennedy we got it done. Because it should
never be dangerous — you should never have to look over your shoulder — to be
gay in the United States of America. That’s why we got it done.
I met with Janice Langbehn, who was barred from the bedside
of the woman she loved as she lay dying. And I told her that we were going to
put a stop to this discrimination. And you know what? We got it done. I
issued an order so that any hospital in America that accepts Medicare or
Medicaid -– and that means just about every hospital -– has to treat gay
partners just as they do straight partners. Because nobody should have to
produce a legal contract to hold the hand of the person that they love. We got
that done.
I said that we would lift that HIV travel ban — we got that
done. We put in place the first comprehensive national strategy to fight
HIV/AIDS.
Many questioned whether we’d succeed in repealing “don’t
ask, don’t tell.” And, yes, it took two years to get the repeal through
Congress. We had to hold a coalition together. We had to keep up the pressure.
We took some flak along the way. But with the help of HRC, we got it done. And
“don’t ask, don’t tell” is history. And all over the world, there are men and
women serving this country just as they always have — with honor and courage
and discipline and valor. We got it done. We got that done. All around the
world, you’ve got gays and lesbians who are serving, and the only difference is
now they can put up a family photo. No one has to live a lie to serve the
country they love.
Moving forward, President Obama vowed to keep fighting for equality and asked
for help passing a repeal of the Defense of Marriage Act, as well as the
passage of an inclusive employment non-discrimination bill.
I vowed to keep up the fight against the so-called Defense
of Marriage Act. There’s a bill to repeal this discriminatory law in Congress,
and I want to see that passed. But until we reach that day, my administration
is no longer defending DOMA in the courts. I believe the law runs counter to
the Constitution, and it’s time for it to end once and for all. It should join
“don’t ask, don’t tell” in the history books.
So, yes, we have more work to do. And after so many years
— even decades — of inaction you’ve got every right to push against the slow
pace of change. But make no mistake — I want people to feel encouraged here —
we are making change. We’re making real and lasting change. We can be proud of
the progress we’ve already made.
And I’m going to continue to fight alongside you. And I
don’t just mean in your role, by the way, as advocates for equality. You’re
also moms and dads who care about the schools your children go to. You’re also
students figuring out how to pay for college. You’re also folks who are worried
about the economy and whether or not your partner or husband or wife will be
able to find a job. And you’re Americans who want this country to succeed and
prosper, and who are tired of the gridlock and the vicious partisanship, and are
sick of the Washington games. Those are your fights, too, HRC.
So I’m going to need your help. I need your help to fight
for equality, to pass a repeal of DOMA, to pass an inclusive employment
non-discrimination bill so that being gay is never again a fireable offense in
America. And I don’t have to tell you, there are those who don’t want to just
stand in our way but want to turn the clock back; who want to return to the days
when gay people couldn’t serve their country openly; who reject the progress
that we’ve made; who, as we speak, are looking to enshrine discrimination into
state laws and constitutions — efforts that we’ve got to work hard to oppose,
because that’s not what America should be about.
We’re not about restricting rights and restricting
opportunity. We’re about opening up rights and opening up opportunity —
(applause) — and treating each other generously and with love and
respect.
And together, we also have to keep sending a message to
every young person in this country who might feel alone or afraid because
they’re gay or transgender — who may be getting picked on or pushed around
because they’re different. We’ve got to make sure they know that there are
adults they can talk to; that they are never alone; that there is a whole world
waiting for them filled with possibility. That’s why we held a summit at the
White House on bullying. That’s why we’re going to continue to focus on this
issue. This isn’t just “kids being kids.” It’s wrong. It’s destructive. It’s
never acceptable. And I want all those kids to know that the President and the
First Lady is standing right by them every inch of the way. I want them to know
that we love them and care about them, and they’re not by themselves. That’s
what I want them to know.
Every single American — gay, straight, lesbian, bisexual,
transgender — every single American deserves to be treated equally in the eyes
of the law and in the eyes of our society.
I need your help to fight for equality, to pass a repeal of
DOMA, to pass an inclusive employment non-discrimination bill so that being gay
is never again a fireable offense in America.
Finally, the President expressed his hope for a more tolerant, just, equal
America and a more inexorable march towards a more perfect union.
We don’t believe in a small America. We don’t believe in
the kind of smallness that says it’s okay for a stage full of political leaders
— one of whom could end up being the President of the United States — being
silent when an American soldier is booed. We don’t believe in that. We don’t
believe in standing silent when that happens. We don’t believe in them being
silent since. You want to be Commander-in-Chief? You can start by standing up
for the men and women who wear the uniform of the United States, even when it’s
not politically convenient.
We don’t believe in a small America. We believe in a big
America — a tolerant America, a just America, an equal America — that values
the service of every patriot. We believe in an America where we’re all in it
together, and we see the good in one another, and we live up to a creed that is
as old as our founding: E pluribus unum. Out of many, one. And that includes
everybody. That’s what we believe. That’s what we’re going to be fighting
for.
I am confident that’s what the American people believe in.
I’m confident because of the changes we’ve achieved these past two and a half
years -– the progress that some folks said was impossible.
I am still hopeful, because of a deeper shift that we’re
seeing; a transformation not only written into our laws, but woven into the
fabric of our society.
It’s progress led not by Washington but by ordinary
citizens, who are propelled not just by politics but by love and friendship and
a sense of mutual regard. It’s playing out in legislatures like New York, and
courtrooms and in the ballot box. But it’s also happening around water coolers
and at the Thanksgiving table, and on Facebook and Twitter, and at PTA meetings
and potluck dinners, and church socials and VFW Halls.
It happens when a father realizes he doesn’t just love his
daughter, but also her wife. It happens when a soldier tells his unit that he’s
gay, and they tell him they knew it all along and they didn’t care, because he
was the toughest guy in the unit. It happens when a video sparks a movement to
let every single young person know they’re not alone, and things will get
better. It happens when people look past their ultimately minor differences to
see themselves in the hopes and struggles of their fellow human beings. That’s
where change is happening.
And that’s not just the story of the gay rights movement.
That’s the story of America — the slow, inexorable march towards a more perfect
union. You are contributing to that story, and I’m confident we can continue to
write another chapter together.
Thank you very much, everybody. God bless you.
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