hi Hoosiers! I have been calling some of you up this afternoon as a volunteer from the-state-next-door. It's been fun. When I read my "volunteer" script, it's fun to be able to add "MY Senator," because he is Illinois' junior senator. We are proud of him and everyone I know, young and old, liberal and conservative, feels he is "just what we need right now."
He's smart, energetic, has great judgment, is not beholden to all the lobbiests, and is a good listener. As a teacher, I admire his continuing activism on behalf of teachers and students. He knows that the recipe for success involves families and caregivers in partnership with government programs that work -- not punish.
When you look at what has happened to Iraq and Iraqis as well as Americans who have been killed or maimed in the Iraq War, it makes you wonderful how any Democrat could have supported it. Barack knew it was a losing proposition - why didn't others? It takes guts to oppose a war when you're a junior senator - but he did.
I hope you'll support Barack on or before Tuesday May 6. Remember any registered Indiana voter can vote in the primary. Just bring a picture ID from the state of Indiana or federal government. take care - hasta la victoria!
http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=Superdelegate_Transparency_Project
An interesting read on the Superdelegate issue. I concur w/John Kerry that the Superdelegates will most likely not be an issue, but this certainly speaks to the DNC in PA and their not so passive maneuvering of voters.
Click on PA for a list of the Superdelegates and their pledges.
Time to write letters or make a few calls?
I want to introduce myself: My name is Aaron Tovish; I live in Vienna, Austria, vote in NYC. I have worked on nuclear disarmament issues for over 30 years. This issue intersects strongly with peace and justice issues and energy and environment issues.
I am the International Manager of the 2020 Vision Campaign of Mayors for Peace. M4P is headquartered in Hiroshima, Japan, so I work for its Mayor, Tadatoshi Akiba. M4P and the Mayor have been nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize this year.
You can find out more about the organization and the campaign at our websites:
www.mayorsfropeace.org and www.2020visioncampaign.org
I have a blog (under my name) about nuclear weapons policy, which I encourage you to read and comment upon.
I am not entirely happy with the position Senator Obama has taken on nuclear weapons; it would, in my opinion, benefit from being more farsighted. We have found that our vision of a nuclear-weapon-free world by the year 2020 really inspires people. In the three and a half years of the 2020 Vision Campaign, the membership of M4P has more than tripled, it now stands at 1700 cities in 121 countries and growing fast.
We are all busy, but I will try to do my best to keep up with the group's discussions.