Hi everyone,
This is to share some things I do to schedule my self to achieve my goals.
It also may sound simplistic, but in simple little tasks is how we can move forward. Including my writing of this simple blog. Or step by step. It took me 2 hours to write this message to you. But this blog will last forever, that is called levarage.
1st Get a notebook. You are going to be writing notes.
2nd Schedule your self to design a plan schedule that works for you and your family matters.
3rd Schedule your self to activity upon this plan.
Next Saturday I will give your task for the week. Just remember is about time management. And don't forget to come back here. Bookmark the page now.
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This is the number 1 step for anyone starting an online business, to get your own a web site. Mr Obama did and his business is up and rinning. So do this.
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God Bless America,
Carlos Santiago Scott
(954) 381-0592
SKYPE ID: carlos.santiago.scott
For whatever you do enjoy LIFE... It is a wonderful trip.
Tomorrow, Hillary Clinton will hold two big events in Elyria and Akron, to speak about Barack's plan to strengthen Ohio's economy and help working families struggling in these tough times. She'll make it clear to voters just how necessary the change Barack represents really is, and how the McCain ticket represents four more years of the same Bush Administration policies that have led to such economic strain and hardship.
Details are below, and click the buttons for more information, and to RSVP. See you there!
CHANGE WE NEED RALLY WITH HILLARY CLINTONSunday, Sept. 14th - Doors Open at 11:30 AMLorain County Community College1005 N. Abbe RoadElyria, OHNOTE: This event will be held inside.
CHANGE WE NEED RALLY WITH HILLARY CLINTONSunday, Sept. 14th - Doors Open at 2:00 PMEllet High School Gymnasium309 Woolf Ave (entrance on Berne Street)Akron, OH
Barack has returned to the Buckeye state to talk issues today, and he's starting on a topic that's close to home.
Currently he's at Kent State - Tuscarawas, leading a discussion on women and the economy on a campus that provides numerous flexible courses for students who are working and/or student parents. Barack was raised by a single mom, who was working her way through college when she had him. It's only appropriate that he was introduced at the event today by Gabrielle, a student at Kent State - Tuscarawas and a single mother. Gabrielle's story is one that could change for the better under an Obama administration:
Gabrielle works for the minimum wage at a local bakery, and has at times held multiple jobs to support her family of two. Every rise in the cost of living – from gas to groceries – causes Gabrielle’s budget to stretch even more. Gabrielle would receive real relief under Barack Obama’s economic plan - $3,000 in direct relief as well as lower health care costs, retirement savings incentives and a fairer, simpler tax code. She would receive $2500 from Obama’s increase in the minimum wage from $7.25 to $9.50, and receive a $500 Making Work Pay tax credit.
Read more on Barack's plan for working women and families here.
More from the event to come...
***Are you a single working mom or dad? What do you think of Barack's plan? Let us know in the comments section below!
Barack is back! This Tuesday he'll be holding Town Halls in both Youngstown and Berea, to talk about his agenda to help hard-working families in Ohio. He'll map out a new direction for this country to solve the most pressing problems, from lost jobs to rising gas prices. Here are the details:
TOWN HALL WITH BARACK OBAMA, Tues. Aug. 5th
Austintown Fitch High School4560 Falcon Dr.Youngstown, OH 44515Doors open at 7:15 amLimited on-site parkingThe event is free and open to the public. However, tickets are REQUIRED. Tickets are limited and will be available on a first come, first serve basis at the ticket distribution location listed below: Trumbull County Democratic Headquarters164 High St. NEWarren, OH 44481Sunday 4:00 pm-8:00 pm, Monday 10:00 am - 9:00 pm The Mahoning County Campaign for Change Headquarters5020 Market St.Youngstown, OH 44512Sunday 4:00 pm-8:00 pm, Monday 10:00 am-9:00 pm
Baldwin-Wallace CollegeLou Higgins Recreation Center136 E. Bagley RoadBerea, Ohio 44017 Doors Open: 12:00 PMThe event is free and open to the public. However, tickets are REQUIRED. Tickets are limited and will be available on a first come, first serve basis at the ticket distribution location listed below. Obama Campaign for ChangeParma Office5580 Ridge RoadParma, OH 44129Sunday 4:00 PM – 8:00 PM, Monday 9:00 AM – 2:00 PM
Tax Cut for Working Families
Obama will provide a "Making Work Pay" tax credit of $500 per person, or $1,000 per working family. The Making Work Pay tax credit will completely eliminate income taxes for 10 million Americans.
Simplify Tax Filings for Middle Class Americans
Obama will dramatically simplify tax filings so that millions of Americans will be able to do their taxes in less than five minutes. Obama will ensure that the IRS uses the information it already gets from banks and employers to give tax payers the option of pre-filled tax forms to verify, sign and return.
Experts estimate that the Obama proposal will save Americans up to 200 million total hours of work and aggravation and up to $2 billion in tax preparer fees.
Warren Buffett, the world's third richest person talks about how the wealthy pay a much lower tax rate than the middle class: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3z_UrOKtjHk
OBAMA'08
"Make Work Pay"
Message of the day: Fighting for working families
“I’m just trying to find my way towards the American Dream,” said Claire Natola.
The Meredith resident has come a long way from her blue collar upbringing in Boston as the youngest of six children. Her academic excellence gave her the chance to attend an elite college preparatory school in Boston’s Back Bay, and those four years exposed her to diversity of ethnicities, classes and religions.
Claire went on to Boston University, but dropped out after 2 years because she did not feel ready to commit herself to one path of study. She joined a travel agency and traveled extensively across the United States and Europe. After a few years, she began taking night classes at BU and pursued a degree in art history. Finally, Claire completed an MBA program at UNH and went into business for herself.
Claire provides marketing and administrative services to small architectural firms and construction companies. Although Claire is optimistic about her business’s growth potential, she’s all too aware of the risks of independence. While self-employed, Claire is currently without health insurance and at risk of bearing the costs of an unexpected illness by herself. A recent gall bladder surgery has left her paying $200 a month out of pocket for the next two years. At the same time, she will be paying back her student loans.
“I feel optimistic about our ability to grow as a business,” she said, “but right now I am just an accident or sickness away from some serious financial trouble.”
Today, Claire is working to ensure that the next president has the interest of struggling entrepreneurs like herself in mind by volunteering for Barack Obama at our Laconia office.
“I want Barack Obama in office because Washington as a whole is going to need to change before the American Dream can be put back within reach for everyone,” she said.
Claire is also working for Barack because she has witnessed the damage done to America’s reputation abroad during her travels.
“Barack can make us respected in the world again,” she said, “and I want to feel proud of my government when I am overseas. He will change things on the day he takes office.”
When Denise Short turned 40, she decided that she could not wait any longer to be a parent. She began the adoption process and traveled to China to adopt her daughter Eliza. Denise is now raising Eliza alone while working full-time, and she is shocked by the cost of quality child care.
Still, the Exeter resident and Obama supporter considers herself lucky. She says:
It is much easier for me than many single moms because I have a good job and a flexible schedule, but I am constantly amazed to see what families with working parents are going through. The logistical and financial burdens posed by balancing work and family are overwhelming.
Denise is an editor and writer for an energy engineering company, a job that affords flexibility in her schedule. This flexibility has not eliminated the anxieties of middle class life. Denise cites access to health care as a top concern.
“I paid three thousand dollars out of pocket for a procedure to repair Eliza’s cleft palate,” she said. “My insurer picked up the rest, which went over ten thousand. I am constantly worried about being able to continue to afford good health care coverage for my daughter.”
Raising Eliza on her own is also made easier by the strong support community for adoptive families that exists in Exeter. “This community is extraordinary,” she said. “It is diverse, cohesive and incredibly supportive.”
Denise says, “A president that can be trusted at the head of a more transparent government would give me much more confidence that our political system just might start representing the people it is supposed to serve.”
She added, “I trust Barack to be that president.”
Read more about Barack’s plan to reclaim the American Dream and make government work for middle class families like Denise’s again.
Michelle Obama joined six working mothers at a café in Portsmouth, NH this afternoon to speak about rebuilding a sense of mutual obligation in America. As Michelle said, “We’ve lost this notion that we have a responsibility to each other… we haven’t been asked, in a fundamental way, to sacrifice.”
Michelle explained that this lost sense of community particularly hurts the working families struggling to remain afloat in our global economy. In story after story, the roundtable participants felt that the message coming out of Washington was “You’re on your own.”
Several participants pointed out that stress of working harder and harder to provide for your family means less time for building a strong relationship to your community. As a result, the women felt less connected to the support networks in their own neighborhoods, and less like we as Americans have a common stake in each other.
Michelle said that restoring the American Dream will take a national commitment to providing families with more support.
“People are willing to sacrifice,” she said, “but we have to have leadership that can speak to that vision of community.”
Restoring this sense of national community, Michelle believes, will require all of us to sacrifice for the greater good, and that is going to require a new kind of leadership.
She added:
We are primed as a nation for someone who is going to tell us the hard stuff… We need some hard truth now, and someone who is going to ask us to be different. And then we need to be ready to be lead in that way.
The participants shared stories of how such a sense of community got them through difficult times. Halfway through the roundtable discussion, Kate from Hampton Falls and Diane from Lee discovered a striking commonality: they are both breast cancer survivors.
“You realize when you get in a network, whether it is breast cancer survivors or friendships, the power of the network,” Kate said.
It is infectious, and you realize how much you support each other. And it’s that kind of infectiousness that really strong leadership, inspirational leadership, can bring to us. And that’s why I’m so excited because, for the first time in as long as I can remember, I am inspired.
Las Vegas, NV – Illinois labor leaders supporting Senator Barack Obama came together on a conference call today to discuss Obama’s strong labor record and his longstanding commitment to working men and women. On the call, they described Obama as a tireless fighter for living wages, affordable health care and workers’ rights, citing his work as a community organizer in Chicago and as an Illinois State Senator.
“He comes from us, and he understands our problems,” said Tom Balanoff, President of SEIU State Council and Local 1. “He has consistently stood with working families because he’s from a working family.”
“Every day he was in the State Senate, he was standing up for working people,” said Margaret Blackshere, President Emeritus of Illinois AFL-CIO. “When the steel mills were shutting down, Obama said to me ‘You know, I see the difference when someone belongs to a union and when they don’t. You’re their advocate, and I’m going to be an advocate for all of you.’”
“Barack Obama has been an effective legislator and can work across party lines and with a diverse group of people,” said Henry Tamarin, President, UNITE HERE Local 1. “It’s not flashy, but those of us who worked with him in Illinois saw his effectiveness as a legislator and a leader who was able to bring people together.”
For years, Obama fought alongside unions in Illinois for social and economic justice for working families. As a U.S. Senator, Barack Obama was co-sponsor of the Employee Free Choice Act, which would make it easier for workers to unionize. Obama’s strong pro-labor record was cited by AFSCME Council 31 Executive Director Henry Bayer as one of the reasons AFSCME Illinois voted unanimously to split with AFSCME International and endorse Obama.
“He’s not just a guy who talks the talk, he’s a guy who walks the walk,” said Bayer. “We have a lot of members from rural Illinois, we have a lot of members who are correctional officers, not the kind of people you would ordinarily think would be supporters of Barack Obama, but they support him strongly,” said Bayer. “I think that speaks to the strength of his candidacy.”
Added Tamarin, “What the U.S. Senate run demonstrated is that as he gets exposed to the voting public and people get to know him, he adds on support, he doesn’t lose it. And I think we’re seeing that same dynamic now in the presidential campaign.”
Listen to the full conference call here:
Read Barack’s comprehensive plan to Fight for America’s Workers.
Stacy at Nashua tax fairness roundtable, seated 2nd from the left.
Stacy Hinkley recently had the opportunity to sit down for a roundtable discussion with Barack to discuss tax fairness. She said, “Barack just seemed to be listening really closely to what we were all telling him and absorbing our concerns about an economy that is leaving a lot of people behind.”
The Londonderry resident and mother of two believes that it is increasingly difficult to find jobs with full benefits. Stacy and her family moved from Maine over three years ago because Darren, her husband, changed jobs when his employer closed its Portland facility. Today, she works part-time to bolster the family income and is volunteering for a presidential campaign for the first time.
“I never had a reason to before,” she said, “but so much has gone wrong in this country thanks to the last two presidential elections that I can’t just sit on the sidelines.”
Barack’s positive vision has inspired Stacy to get involved in the primary this year. She believes that the special interests have a stranglehold on our government, holding back progress on issues affecting her family. Stacy also believes that the image of our country has taken a real beating during the Bush Administration.
Stacy makes time in her busy schedule to do her part to bring about change, canvassing and making phones calls whenever she can.
“Obama is committed to beating back lobbyist influence and putting the economy to work for everyone,” she said.
She adds, “And I’d love to see Barack become the face of our country overseas. He really listens to people, and I think that’ll do wonders for us both at home and in the world.”
Fresh on the heels of rocking the house at the Iowa Jefferson-Jackson dinner, Barack spent today traveling across western New Hampshire to talk about his plan for reclaiming the American Dream. At each stop, Barack stated that strengthening families and expanding opportunity will be his top priorities as president.
As Barack explained at town hall events during the day:
We don’t call it Barack’s dream, or Joe’s dream or Mary’s dream. We call it the American Dream because, it’s not just a dream we have for ourselves. It’s a dream we have for other people, that we have for each other. That’s part of what makes America. And what we need is that dream, those values, understood and fought for in Washington. And that’s why I’m running for the presidency, because I want to fight for your dreams in Washington.
The day began in Nashua, at the Buckingham Place, a transitional housing unit for homeless veterans. A member of the Senate Veteran Affairs Committee, Barack knows that too many veterans are denied access to the American Dream because of the battle scars they bear, both mental and physical. He cited the statistic that veterans make up 26% of the homeless population as proof of how badly our system has failed those who bravely served our country.
Barack met with Buckingham residents, listening to their stories. One resident and supporter, Roger, told the story of the 36 years he endured with an undiagnosed case of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder after returning from Army service in Vietnam. The father of five and former business owner only recently sought treatment.
"After having nothing to feel optimistic about for so long, I am starting to see a glimmer of hope in Obama,” said Roger.
Next, Barack headed to Walpole for a roundtable discussion with eight working women at L.A. Burdick Chocolate Factory. Each woman had her own tale of dreams deferred or imperiled by rising costs of housing, child care, and health care. Barack affirmed that a 21st Century workforce needs 21st Century solutions, proposing reforms to expand access to paid family leave, promote flexible work time at the state level, and lower the cost of health care.
“We need to recognize that there is a certain stage in the life of a family when families need to have more time together,” Barack said, adding that this recognition will result in happier, more productive employees.
After listening to the concerns of voters in such intimate settings, Barack headed north to Claremont and Lebanon for a pair of “Meet the Candidate” events with over 1,000 voters. Before taking questions from crowds packed into high school gymnasiums, Barack said that he has been fighting on behalf of working families since making the trek to Chicago to work as a community organizer over 20 years ago.
A question from a Dartmouth College professor, Quintus, about globalization provided Barack with the opportunity to discuss the challenges faced by working families from a broader perspective. Barack said that globalization brings both promise and peril for average Americans, but that we cannot, “build a moat around our country.” He added that a president with the strength and integrity to make globalization work for Main Street as well as Wall Street will ensure that the next generation can prosper in a 21st Century economy.
Once the town hall ended, Quintus told me:
He gave a thoughtful and honest answer about the challenges we face. I liked how he was so comfortable in talking about the policies of other countries… he understands both the human and economic side of globalization, and a president with his worldview and willingness to speak frankly is what we need right now.
Last night, over twenty supporters and undecided voters gathered at the home of Obama supporter Joan Jacobs. They traded stories of their own health care experiences and asked questions about Barack’s plan to lower costs and provide access to health care to all Americans.
Health care premiums in New Hampshire rose over four times faster than earnings from 2000-2006. For the many of the families in attendance, it’s a pressing issue.
“My family is fairly comfortable financially, but we are one catastrophe away from being in real trouble,” said Judith from Portsmouth.
Obama policy advisor Rahul Rajkumar was on hand to answer all questions directly and thoroughly, satisfying a crowd used to grilling their candidates on policy minutiae.
Dennett from Portsmouth said, “He really did an extraordinary job and took every question quite seriously. These parties are going to be a real help to people looking for more information on Obama’s plan.”
Watch Barack’s speech on reclaiming the American Dream and read more about his plan here.
This morning, Barack described his vision for reclaiming the American Dream for the middle class. After a lifetime spent fighting for working families as a community organizer, state senator and U.S. Senator, Barack is ready to lead the country towards achieving a 21st Century economy that benefits all Americans.
With the support of grassroots activists like Erica Bickford of Wolfeboro, Barack can bring about real change on behalf of the millions of families working longer hours to keep up with rising costs.
In a state that prides itself on the individualism of its residents, Erica is no exception.
Read More>>
Presidential campaigns in New Hampshire are won or lost in the question-and-answer “town hall” format hosted in gymnasiums, libraries, meeting halls and outdoor venues across the state. Tonight, at The McConnell Center in Dover, Barack energized the crowd of over 600 with his vision and strength, telling voters that he’d be a president “impatient” for change. Judging by the applause and ovations, the crowd knew exactly what he meant.
Barack said he was impatient in the face of decades-long lack of progress on issues affecting the lives of average Americans. He promised to fight for working families to ensure that equality and fairness remains the bedrocks of the American Dream.
He said:
[People] don’t expect government to solve all their problems, they’re not asking for a hand-out. All they hope is that if they are working hard and doing the right thing, that they can find a job that pays a living wage, that they won’t be bankrupt when they get sick, that they will have security and dignity in their retirement, that they will genuinely have a good school for their children and they can send those kids to college even if they’re not well to do. It’s not a lot… [T]hat’s the reason I am running for President, because I want those voices heard in the decisions that are made in Washington.
But understanding the problems we face isn’t enough. Barack said that the American people need a president with the strength and courage to tell the truth, even when it’s unpopular. To sustained applause, Barack pointed to his track record of telling tough truths in uncomfortable settings on the Iraq war, fuel efficiency standards, and economic fairness.
Barack took questions with his characteristic wit and forthrightness, and received a standing ovation when he pledged to review and reverse the Bush Administration executive orders that have expanded executive authority at the cost of our civil liberties.
After the event, Farmington residents Kelly and Kyle, with their toddler Liam in tow, told me that this was their first time seeing Barack in person.
Kyle said, “He’s very honest and direct. That’s the biggest difference between Obama and the other candidates.”
Tomorrow, Barack heads to South Carolina to offer his plan for strengthening families in the new, global economy.
New Hampshire is no stranger to economic upheaval. The closing of the last paper mill in Berlin, NH over a year ago ushered in a new era for the North Country and changed the nature of this historic mill town. The human impact of this kind of upheaval can be seen whenever large employers close their doors. The new economy holds great promise but when factories close it can increase instability and anxiety for working families. As a community organizer, Barack has lived and worked with those whose lives are directly affected by job losses, and he understands the personal toll it takes.
Fresh from college, Barack arrived in Chicago as a community organizer as the city’s industrial base weakened. Folks in his community had grown up expecting good-paying blue collar jobs to be available, but following decades of decline in the steel and meatpacking industries, the future seemed less promising.
In Dreams from my Father, Barack wrote of the residents of his South Side community:
It was when they spoke of the future that a certain disquiet entered their voices. They would mention a cousin or sibling who came by every so often asking for money; or an adult child, unemployed, who still lived at home… The boarded-up homes, the decaying storefronts, the aging church rolls, kids from unknown families who swaggered down the streets—loud congregations of teenage boys, teenage girls feeding potato chips to crying toddlers, the discarded wrappers tumbling down the block—all of it whispered painful truths, told them the progress they’d found was ephemeral, rooted in thin soil; that it might not even last their lifetimes.
Barack worked day-after-day with individuals and families affected by the changes in the economy. He led families to organize themselves to make their voices heard, offering guidance and support along the way.
As he prepares to offer his vision for keeping American families strong in our global economy, Barack brings years of experience of working with communities reeling from economic dislocation.
Berlin paper mill photo from New Hampshire Public Radio.