8/23/04

Average Joe Buckeye Blitz cont. This morning I met with Bob Olsen who coordinates programs for Presentation Ministries in Peebles, Ohio. He was the “Voice of College Hockey” in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan before feeling spiritually led to come to Presentation Ministries. One of Presentations main goals is to help establish “home based small communites” of Christians meeting weekly for prayer, meals and to share the stuff of life. Each community, and there are many throughout the country, also pick a social justice cause of some sort (pro-life efforts, helping the poor…) to rally around. On site in Peebles, Presentations also does weekend retreats on a variety of topics and has a radio program that is broadcast on some 40 stations around the country. (For more on the ministry, see: www.presentationsministries.com)

8/22/04

Average Joe Buckey Blitz cont. I met with William Smalley in Mineral Springs, Ohio today. He is the president of the Adams County Board of Health. He said schools are often “incubators for disease.” For instance, during flu season the school system here experiences a consistent 12% (or sometimes higher) absentee rate. What’s more, he said studies show one square inch of your average desk top contains 20,000 germs. To combat all this, Smalley said the Adams County School System is going to a vigorous Hand and Desk Washing Program this year, with the hopes of cutting down on medical costs for families (Adams County is one of the poorest counties in the state) and less missed class days for students. I told Smalley our platform leans heavily toward prevention when it comes to Health Care and we would talk about the program around the country, with the hopes other school systems pick up on it.

8/21/04

Average Joe Buckeye Blitz cont. (Saturday afternoon). Up the road from where we’re staying in Peebles, Ohio, the Powered Parachute Wing Association was having a fly-in. Frank Parman from London, Kentucky, told me these ultra-light airplanes — with a multi-colored parachute wing above the craft — cost, on average, $15,000. After watching a few of these take off and land, we took the kids up the road to the Davis Memorial Nature Preserve here with John Brockhoeft and his family. Upon arriving, three families from Wilmington, Ohio, simultaneously emerged from a nature walk. They asked about my platform, and I launched into a ‘stump speech’ of sort (with actual trees around, the whole thing). One of the family members was Steve Gonzales, who is the pastor of the relatively new Covenant Presbyterian Church (“Transforming People and Communities Through Christ.”) And I told the group that was there what we were about. That is, helping transform communities with many more ‘people-helping-people’ projects… “with the sense of community being more like it was in the old days,” I said. After passing out a few buttons, we embarked on a good hour and a half hike along the American Discovery Trail, which intersects with the Buckeye Trail. The Disocovery Tail, I learned, is the only coast to coast, non-motorized recreational trail in the country. According to a website about the Trail, it links communities, cities, parks and wilderness… allowing people to hike, bike or ride horses for an afternoon, or a cross country adventure. (We decided on the afternoon, our Joseph is only six.) But what a fascinating, nature filled afternoon it was seeing the ferns, white cedar trees, wild mushrooms… The kids had a wonderful time. And as I walked along, I couldn’t help but think what a much more educational, wholesome and cost effective way to spend the afternoon, then, say: flying $15,000 aircraft around. Especially when the $15,000 might be much better spent on little kids growing up in the inner cities here, or on kids starving in the Third World…

8/20/04

Average Joe Buckeye Blitz cont. We traveled to West Union, Ohio today where Fr. Ted Kossee of Holy Trinity Church here said he wondered about an American society, with a tremendous nuclear weapons stock pile, that is telling other countries they can’t have the same weapons. (Just prior to the Iraq War last year, I said to an ABC reporter from Toledo: “What if the weapons inspectors were let into, say, Montana? What would they find?”) At the square in West Union, I passed out some flyers and talked to Daniel Williams who said one of his biggest issues is: “…so many of the jobs going overseas.” (Adams County here is one of the poorest counties in the state.) After having our picture taken by the editor of the People’s Defender newspaper here in the shadows of the Court House, we headed to Peebles, Ohio. There a woman said to me that she is adamantly “against abortion.” What’s more, she noted there are some 4,400 abortions a day in the U.S. She said, in reality, this is no different than if people with guns entered four fairly large schools and killed all the students — every day. Given that, she wonders why there isn’t more of an outcry. I wonder that too.

8/19/04

Average Joe Buckeye Blitz cont. We did a whistle-stop event in Chillicothe, Ohio today. I told Chillicothe Gazette City Editor Lori McNelly that: “I’m an average American citizen who’s decided to run for president.” She asked me what I would propose for an economically depressed Ross County. I said Atwood, Kansas has a citizen’s benevolent fund to help neighbors in need, city projects short on tax money, schools that need additional money… Atwood has 1,500 people and the fund is currently at a phenomenal $1 million. I would also look to more local church initiatives to help the disadvantaged, as they have in nearby Bourneville (pop. 300). At another whistle-stop today there, I noticed a sign at a street corner: Food Pantry: If in need, call… Christian Union Church. From Bourneville we went to Bainbridge, Ohio, home of the nation’s first “Dental Museum.” It is at the site of the late John Harris M.D.D.D.S., who had the first American School of Instruction on Dental Surgery, circa 1825. Liz and the kids posed for a picture outside, with tooth brushes in hand and over-exaggerated smiles. Note: A sign in the window of a crafts store in downtown Bainbridge read: “I don’t suffer from insanity — I enjoy every minute.” I told Liz I thought that might be a good motto for the campaign. She smiled, even more exaggeratedly.

8/17/04

Average Joe Buckeye Blitz (cont.) At a whistle-stop event in Lancaster, Ohio (near Columbus), today, I told a reporter from NBC News that we didn’t “pander to anyone.” Then, looking straight into the camera, I winked: “However, I just wanted the people in the Columbus area to know that when I do get to D.C., the first thing I’m going to do is put a big buckeye on the top of the Capitol Building.” A reporter from a Christian radio station also interviewed me on the street today, asking how I’d characterize our platform. I said we look at each issue with a “What Would Jesus Do” mind set. Note: I interviewed Vietnam Veteran Bob Sherman here today as well. He said he contracted diabetes as a result of being exposed to “agent orange.” While he’s been medically covered since 2002 (when the govt. ok’d covering agent covering orange cases, he said), he’s spent almost $60,000 on the condition since the mid-70s. I said as president I’d fight for that money to be compensated him.

8/16/04

Average Joe Buckeye Blitz cont. Just before a whistle-stop event we had planned for Mt. Vernon, Ohio today, Walter O’Dell pulled up in his GEM mini-electric pick up truck. He said since he’s bought one (for $9,500), four other people in town have bought them as well in the past four months. What’s more, his first 800 miles has cost him a mere $11 in additional electricity costs. I told a reporter from Mt. Vernon’s newspaper that we would spread the word about Mr. O’Dell’s electric vehicle purchase across the country — so even more people would buy them, and in turn, the air might become a bit less polluted for everyone. (It is my opinion Mr. O’Dell didn’t just make a socially responsible decision, he made a moral one as well, because we are called to be good stewards of the environment.)

8/14/04

Average Joe Buckeye Blitz cont. In Loudonville, Ohio we met Paula Young who said she’d “never be ‘old.”‘ To keep with the name theme, she said her 23-year-old son is named: Harley (Are you ready for this?) Davidson Young. On a more sober note, the son is a Sergeant in the Army National Guard and is currently in Iraq. Another sobering thing we came across in Loudonville today was a statistic. In the window of Brad Porter’s Driving School in downtown Loudonville is a sign that says: There’s a vehicular traffic death every 13 minutes in America. “That’s 114 people every day,” Porter told me. He added that would be like having a half full commercial airplane go down in this country — every day. “Would you fly knowing that?” He asks. I recently told the Warren, Ohio Chronicle Tribune that, to cut back on these highway deaths, maiming (not to mention pollution levels, and so on), we propose more “Walkable Communities,” a model developed by Dan Burden. These towns feature lower speed limits, wider bicycle lanes, diagonal paths to shorten distances to the center of town… Average Joe truism: “The less people who drive — the less car accidents.”

8/13/04

Average Joe Buckeye Blitz cont. We did a whistle-stop event in Vermilion, Ohio where a gentleman approached me to talk about big businesses influence on politics these days. “Anymore,” he said, “it’s as if you have to read between the oil (pipe) lines.” After the event, we headed south down Rural Rte. 60. In New London we talked to a small group of women on the street and passed out buttons. “This made our day,” one woman said. It made ours too. We then stopped at a small ‘Mom & Pop’ restaurant in the small town of Savanah, Ohio where I stumped with a group of young voters there. “And to think you came to Savanah to talk with us,” said a woman named Lori, who offered to write a letter-to-the-editor of her local newspaper about the campaign. We then headed further south to Loudonville, driving our campaign vehicle slowly around town. A man cooking chicken on a grill in front of Beezers Restaurant here called out that he had seen us on national news recently and thought it was “really cool” what we were doing. I gave him a button to wear while he was cooking.

8/11/04

Average Joe Buckeye Blitz cont. We did a whistle-stop event in downtown Bowling Green, Ohio today and drew, oh, a few less people than John Kerry had drawn when he was in Bowling Green the week before. Go figure. Toledo Blade reporter Jennifer Feehan asked me to sum up what “winning” means to us. I said when we talk about projects we’ve researched from place to place, like the inner city outreach The Point in The Bronx (see previous entry), or Womankind for those in crisis pregnancy, or a wind turbine farm… hopefully a seed gets planted and an inner city youth gets help; or a baby who otherwise wouldn’t be born, does; or the air becomes a little more breathable… we ‘win.’ “Oh, and we’re also trying to ‘win’ the Election as well,” I added.