Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Farmer Daniel Greenfield




Daniel and I often go out on sign duty, posting large 4 x 8 foot signs, a number of which are replacements for those that have been take down by vandels. One of the interesting things I found out about Daniel is that he is the only PhD farmer I know. The other day I got a chance to visit Daniel's farm.

Early Morning Assembly


Three vets met for our Saturday early morning assembly. Willie is a Korean war vet. John and I are Vietnam era vets. All agree that Obama has a great record on veterans benefits. It is absolutely essential that we honor our vets by providing them with first class health care, especially for PTSD. It is absolutely shameful that so many of our vets are homeless, about 25 per cent of all homeless are vets.

In the picture above, notice all the young people. In our office, the entire operation is run by young people.
It is really good to see that our country is in such good hands.

Saturday Walking a Cuyahoga Falls Neighborhood




Willie and I spent Saturday walking another Cuyahoga Falls Neighborhood near the park where we assemble for our walking assignments. One of the interesting people we met was Ed Warner. He has lived in the neighborhood for around 20 years. In that time he has seen many changes as the neighborhood has transitioned from one of older families to younger. He works on road construction as a flagman or pipelayer, whatever is needed. He said that the economy has really hurt him, as work has become more difficult to come by. As a union man he is especially worried about his pension. Now he has began to notice more and more homes up for sale due to bankrupcies, though it is not as bad as in other neighborhoods. Ed is convinced that we can not afford another four more year of the same.


Sometime ago a middeclass income could buy a very nice house in this neighborhood. Not anymore. These people are falling further and further behind.

Thursday, October 9, 2008

Workin' the Phone bank



Phone Bank at Akron Democratic Headquarters
Bert Powers, Phone Bank Coordinator





The phone bank is always waiting for volunteers with time on their hands. Bert is the phone bank coordinator here in the Akron office. I was asking him what attracted him to the Obama campaign. Like many, he mentioned Barack's speech to the 2004 convention that brought down the house. He said that after the primary he was on the bus and as it passed by the campaign office he decided on the spur of the moment to walk in and volunteer. Before he knew it, he was the head coordinator of the phone bank. He trains new volunteers and passes out assignments. When asked what he found most rewarding, he mentioned training new volunteers and meeting new people. He also talked about the very positive environment here in the office. And he said that when he is not here, he feels like he is genuinely missed.

I asked him about his e-mail address that had the words bipolar in it. He is not hesitant to talk about his disability and is a living testament that people with mental illness can have a productive life. He is an incredible advocate for progressive attitudes toward mental illness -- a message reinforced with his contageous joy he brings to each day.

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Who Would Have Known?



Max and Matthew Lesko

For those of you who are insomniacs and have spent the late night hours flipping through the cable channels, you may have come across a fellow with a suit covered with question marks selling his book on government programs that YOU might benefit from.





The fellow with the question mark suit was here at headquarters the other night. It turns out that he is the father of Max, the head field coordinater who runs our operation here. Several days ago Max asked his father to come out here from Washington, D.C. and help out.

Canvassing - Saturday and Sunday

Willie working to convert an undecided voter



Willie


On Saturday morning a group of canvassers assembled at a local park in Cuyahoga Falls and went over the procedures for our work that morning. Another old timer, Willie, and I paired up. Willie has lived in Cuyahoga Falls and Akron most of his life. As he worked for the Ohio Trucking Association, we had much in common. In a previous life I ran dump trucks.

Willie was a good introduction into much of the pain Ohio is feeling due to the financial crisis we have been going through. Most of its industry closed a long time ago as jobs were shipped out of country. The housing market has also been hard hit. Just the other day the Akron Beacon Journal reported the tragic story of a distraught 90 year-old widow, Addie Polk, shooting herself because she was unable to face immanent eviction from her home of forty hears. Fortunately, she survived. And by the next day the mortgage company was shamed into cancelling her debt.

It would seem obvious that the financial interests of the people we were talking with should be with the Democrats, but that was sometimes a tough sell. We ran into one Rush Limbaugh Ditto Head who, though recently unemployed insisted that the folks who brought us to this point of ruin were precisely the ones to get us out. Go figure.

By Sunday evening Willie and I had walked 12 hours. At least this is cheaper than joining a gym.

Democratic Headquarters




On Thursday afternoon I rolled into the Akron Central Democratic Headquarters on 3 Merriman Drive. After being interviewed by the office manager Liz, I was assigned to Brad, one ofthe field organizers. Brad has been assigned to Cayahoga Falls, a blue color neighborhood, which in the past had been known as Caucasian Falls, due to the restrictive covenants in property deeds prohibiting sales to any persons of color. It has changed some since the 1970's, but not much. I was given housing with a family nearby (more about that in a later post).


Here is Brad showing me the territory of Cayahoga Falls.




On Friday Brad got me oriented to our mission and I worked the rest of the day on the phone bank. You have to be able to handle a lot of rejection with equinamity. But we do make a few connections with people ready to be persuaded to Obama and we even manage to recruit a few volunteers. By mid afternoon the parking lot is packed with 30 - 40 cars.




Thursday, October 2, 2008

Thursday, Akron, OH

Well, I finally rolled into town and found the Obama Headquarters. AND was put immediately to work on the phone bank.

After Liz, the person who orients new out-of-state volunteers had time to orient me, she decided that I could best be used working with their other organizer, beginning tomorrow.

The campaign has housed me with a wonderful ardent Democrat and her son, who is a senior in high school. And is as smart as Obama. The colleges are recruiting him! He also has broken about every track record in the league for cross country this year. I'll bet they are after him. Nice to see such a focused young person.

Unfortunately, Akron and the surrounding cities are suffering through a major economic downturn. I can imagine that college hopes are a distant dream for many families here. I can see why Obama's economic message is beginning to resonate here in Ohio.

Tonight we watched the debate. It was great. Form did not win over substance, no matter how folksy. Two snap polls gave it to Joe.

Even my conservative friends are beginning to value competence over party label.

Well, it's late and I'll put up some pictures tomorrow. John

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Wednesday, October 1











It was wonderful t see wind-powered Kansas as I drove through the rolling countryside early in morning.










I stopped by the Eisenhower Presidential Library and Museum on my way through Abilene. When I saw this familiar quotation from President Eisenhower, I was reminded of how great it felt to have a president that people respected.

"Every gun made, every warship launched, every rocket fired signifies, in the final sense, a theft from those who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold and are not clothed. . .This is not a way of life at all. . .Under the cloud of threatening war, it is humanity hanging from a cross of iron." from "The Chance for Peace" Address in 1953. Eisenhower understood that a nation cold, hungry, under educated and poorly housed was a cache of "weapons of mass destruction" hidden in our midst.
I still have my "I Like Ike" button.
Later that evening I listened to a program about a person in Harlem making a real difference in the outcomes for many kids there. The program is called "Baby College." It is a program for parents wanting something more for their children than they have had. Drawing from the latest research on child development, these parents begin learning parenting skills that make a difference. The program includes schools from preschool to 12th grade. Children coming up through this program are now in the third grade, and in one of the poorest parts of the nation have scores on the New York state test that are on par with those of the the most affluent parts of the state. The write up of this program is in a new book, Whatever It Takes. As I heard the testimony of parents in this program, tears of hope flowed down my cheeks. Go get it. There are many signs of hope, even in the midst of Wall Street meltdown.
When I looked at the polls this morning, I saw more signs of hope. Obama up in Michigan, Florida (imagine -- Florida!), Ohio and Pennsylvania. Maybe our job in Ohio will be just bringing the votes we already have and making sure they are counted. That's a lot easier job than having to recruit the votes in the first place.
I'm going to add a couple more pictures from Abilene but I'm not sure where they will end up. Aparently I have two duplicates. But I can't seem to delete the copies. The building is downtown Abilene and the hose is the Eisenhower home. Oh well. Time to hit the road.