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saving their (and our) ‘soles’

Vote for Joe Posted on August 13, 2009 by Joe SchrinerAugust 13, 2009

We’ve just made it back home to Cleveland, Ohio, for a pit stop and the next few entries will be catching up on some other highlights from this last tour…  In Holden, New York, we talked with Jean Hach, who was a missionary in the small village of Nyery, Kenya.  Elementary and high school students there were required to wear shoes.  And the poverty was such, said Ms. Hach, that many of the students would walk barefoot to school carrying their shoes.  And they would only wear them in school, so the soles would last…  Several stops prior, I met with Richard Duffee who taught school in both the South Bronx, New York, and in India.  “Third world poverty is a whole different creature,” said Duffee.  “If you get any extra money in the Third World, you spend it on food… because many people there are slowly dying of malnutrition.”  Duffee was so impacted by what he saw in India (families, for instance, living in six-feet wide huts with mud floors and two threadbare changes of clothes…), that he decided on a new income for himself, the “world average income.”  That, by the way, is $9,543 a year.  So every year since 1996, Duffee, who teaches law, has set aside $9,543 for his family of four — and the rest goes to Third World relief funds and other charitable funds.  “Everyone has a right to an equal share of the world’s resources,” he told me.

Norman Rockwell and the Retro Pop Shop

Vote for Joe Posted on August 10, 2009 by Joe SchrinerAugust 10, 2009

We were in Sockbridge, Massachussetts, over the weekend.   Stockbridge is in the Berkshire Mountains and boasts being the home of the National Norman Rockwell Museum.   At one point, I was in the Stockbridge City Building looking at some Rockwell paintings.   A man was standing beside me looking at the paintings as well.   “That (1950s) was such a good era,” he said.   “The line between right and wrong was a lot clearer than it is today.   That all started to change in the ’60s.”   …Later this day in Lee, Massachussetts, we came across the Retro Pop Shop (featuring: “vintage signs, cool memorabilia & more”).   An absolutely  amazing place chocked full of stuff from the ’50s.   I told owner J. Pierre Duhan that we were asking the American public to go back to the ’50s — when there was a slower pace of life, neighbors helped neighbors more, and rotary phones made you actually think about whether you actually wanted to go to the effort of calling someone, or not.   J. Pierre pointed around his shop at the neon pink flamingo, the old Coca Cola trays, stainless steel egg beaters… and said:   “Cool, the ’50s is where I live man.   You have my vote.”   Note:   A local paper here  carried a front page newspaper piece this weekend saying this was the 40th-year anniversary of “Woodstock.”   A time when ‘right and wrong’ started to blur significantly?

 

healthcare prevention, a protest and an ‘assassin’

Vote for Joe Posted on August 7, 2009 by Joe SchrinerAugust 7, 2009

Our tour up Route 1 continues… In Colonial Heights, Virginia, we talked with Ted Du Varney, 68, who has diabetes.   (He actually looks like he’s in his early 50s.)   He now charts everything he eats on a computerized graph and, well, everything he eats is quite healthy now.   He said he’s turned the whole thing into a “game.”   With all this talk about healthcare reform lately, shouldn’t this also include a significant amount of talk about: prevention?…   Traveling further north, we stopped at a beach in Naragansett, Rhode Island, where our kids swam for the afternoon.   The waves were, oh, a little bit bigger (and cleaner) than the ones we see back home at Lake Erie… We then headed further north, where we stood in solidarity with some people protesting abortion in front of a Planned Parenthood office in Biddeford, Maine…   We concluded the Route 1 Tour in Biddeford and headed back west, stopping first in Haverhill, Massachussetts, where I talked at All Saints Church about abortion.   I noted that we’ve crossed the 50 million abortion threshold mark in this country.   By comparison, I said six million people were killed during the Holocaust in Nazi Germany… We then headed further west where we went to the YMCA in Hollyoke, Massachussetts.   While lifting some weights, I over-heard a man in his early 20s talking about his “addiction.”   He said he plays an “Assassin” video game for two to three hours every night.   This, basically, is about “going around and killing people,” he said.   What’s more, he said a new movie is coming out with the plot being about someone playing a similar game, but  they  actually control a real assassin who, basically, “goes around killing people.”   Our culture  is getting  so absolutely nuts it’s unbelievable.

global warming, wind and a parrot named “Kiwi”

Vote for Joe Posted on August 4, 2009 by Joe SchrinerAugust 4, 2009

We continue along our campaign tour of Rte. 1 on the east coast… I gave a talk at St. Ann’s Church in Colonial Heights, Virginia.   I said our lifestyles in America are  significantly fueling  global warming.   And as weather patterns change, more arid countries are already experiencing drought and famine.   I said this would be analogous to us collectively firing slow motion bullets at these other countries.   A “pro-Life” issue?   Sure…   While in Colonial Heights, I interviewed Fr. Lou Ruoff who is the author of the book: Reflections.   At one point, Fr. Ruoff worked  at the Covenant House in New York City.   This is a  transition home for run away youth.   And some of the stories were beyond tragic.   One  12-year-old girl, for instance, was on the run for having killed her stepfather.   So often these days, extreme parental abuse pushes kids over the edge…   While in Colonial Heights, we also went to Henricus Village, which was the first English settlement in from Jamestown.   This was the home of the first hospital in North America and the first college in North America (circa 1619).   Note:   When we started on Rte. 1, we met Terri Sipanzi and his family  at Lucky’s  Ice Cream Place in southern Virginia (just off Rte. 1).   He approached us with a green parrot (“Kiwi”)  on his shoulder.   He and his wife Barb  have the company Precision Windsports, Inc. in Lynchburg, Virginia.    Terri said the business is  in a  tail spin (pun intended) because of the economy  — these kind of hobbies being the first to go from someone’s budget.

Softball with Iran?

Vote for Joe Posted on July 30, 2009 by Joe SchrinerJuly 30, 2009

Catching up on  some of our recent  backroads campaigning…   Just outside Huntington, West Virginia, I interviewed Frank Holcomb from Point Pleasant in Mason County.   He is a retired state trooper.   Several years prior, he had answered a domestic violence call and was shot in the leg.   He became disabled because of the injury and had to retire early.   Officer Holcomb has a wife, two young children and is a member of New Hope Bible Baptist Church.   We talked about how society was becoming more violent as a whole and I said it was my belief those who put themselves in harm’s way day in and day out should be compensated accordingly… While in Huntington, West Virginia, we spent time  on the Marshall University campus.   On Saturday Nov. 14, 1970, the Marshall University football team and staff (75 people in all) crashed just before reaching the Tri-State Airport runway while returning from a game.   Everyone was killed…   While in Huntington, we also talked with Grattan Gannon  .   His wife inherited the “Hatfield Cemetery.”   That’s right, the ‘Hatfield’ of Hatfield’s and McCoy’s fame.   We were told there’s not much fuedin’ going on these days.   In fact, the families get together for an annual softball game each year now.   After hearing this, I couldn’t help but ruminate that maybe that’s the answer to a lot of these current international conflicts (with Iran, North Korea…).   Maybe we should all get together for some softball games.   (And some actually intimate I’m weak on foreign policy.   Ha!)   Note:   Gratten is an absolutely fabulous story teller, the Garrison Keillor of Appalachia, if you will.   And, in ‘down home’ fashion, he  told us  that at one of the funerals at the cemetery, a rather cantancerous Hatfield was on his way to his burial.   He was in a coffin on the back of a pick-up truck.   The cemetery is at the top of a rather steep hill and as the pick-up was climbing it, the coffin slid off and created quite a ruckus.   “See, even dead I knew Jeb was still going to mess this thing up,” one mourner (sort of) was heard to say.

Green Party Convention

Vote for Joe Posted on July 27, 2009 by Joe SchrinerJuly 27, 2009

We headed into Durham, North Carolina, for the Green Party National Convention.   The Green Party, in my estimation, is tremendously forward thinking on  a good number of issues, including the environment.   They are on the cutting edge, for instance, of promoting “green economics.”   That is, the party promotes a shift to much more: renewable energy, local production for local consumption, alternative transportation…   I recently told an online newspaper in Huntington, West Virginia, that I saw climate change as a “pro-Life issue.”   No world, no life…   The Green Party is also quite strong on issues  involving diversity, social justice and grassroots democracy.   Note:   While in Durham, I took our boys to a Saturday night Durham Bulls Minor League Baseball game.   We sat on the lawn beyond the center field fence and had an absolutely great time.   What’s more, it cost only 20 bucks for the three of us (and that included getting a pop in an “official” Durham Bulls big plastic cup).

whirlwind in Huntington, WV

Vote for Joe Posted on July 18, 2009 by Joe SchrinerJuly 18, 2009

We’ve stayed in Huntington, West Virginia (pop. 50,000) the last week amidst a whirlind of activity.   I was interviewed by the online newspaper here and Channel 3 News did an interview during a whistle-stop event we held downtown.   Last Sunday I talked at all the weekend Masses at St. Joseph’s Church about pro-Life issues.   We then met with  columnist Patrick Grace, who is with Huntington’s Herald Dispatch newspaper.   We were on the same page with Mr. Grace when it comes to holding a Consistent Life Ethic.   That is, this sets us against abortion, euthanasia, poverty, pollution and anything else that can end life prematurely… We also stumped in the Jolly Pirate Donut place here with some guys at the counter who had seen the Channel 3 News spot.   One said:   “Whatever you do, don’t say anything against coal as you’re touring West Virginia.”   This still didn’t convince me that speaking against blowing the tops off mountains to get to the coal  isn’t called for.  

Kentucky ‘Hoosiers’ and Post Modernism

Vote for Joe Posted on July 13, 2009 by Joe SchrinerJuly 13, 2009

While in Ashland, Kentucky, we talked with Liz Trabandt, who is in the Kentucky High School Athletic Association Hall of Fame.   She coached girls basketball at nearby Russell High School.   A relatively small school, the girls basketball team twice made it to the Kentucky State Finals.   Ms. Trabandt said it was, to a degree, like the Hoosiers story.   She gave our Sarah, who has played on a Rec. Center team back in Cleveland, some pointers.   The one she stressed most was “practice, practice, practice.”   …We  then traveled further east to Huntington, West Virginia, where  I talked with Joshua Sowards who is a Minister to Youth and Families at First Baptist Church in nearby Kenova, West Virginia (The pastor is  Steve Willis).   Sowards told me they are in the process of planting a church at Marshall College in Huntington.   He said there is  “no surprise” that many people are spiritually lost in our  Post Modern culture.   What’s more, he said even though  much of modern philosophy is  antithetical  to the Gospel message, the biggest reason why people aren’t looking  for God is because there’s a “lack of need.”   That is,  people are often comfortable enough in their lifestyles, etc., that they don’t feel much of  a need to rely on God.      

4th of July

Vote for Joe Posted on July 9, 2009 by Joe SchrinerJuly 9, 2009

We traveled through the rolling hills of northern Kentucky, stopping first in Flemingsburg (pop. 3,100).   On fourth of July, we talked at length with John Dunn and Dwayne Roller, who  were both  in the Armed Services.   Mr. Roller received a Purple Heart during  the Korean Conflict.   And  Mr. Dunn was in Thialand servicing U.S. bombers flying into Vietnam.   (He vividly remembers the intense bombing of Cambodia just before the war ended.)   And while not everyone is on the same page when it comes to, say,  the Iraq War, the Vietnam War — now deceased Defense Secretary Robert McNamara, who was one of the ‘architects’ of the Vietnam War, later expressed misgivings about it –;  we can all be on the same page in regard to recognizing the courage (and just plain guts) those ‘on the ground’ demonstrate during a time of war…   Both Mr. Dunn and Mr. Roller are also extremely active Christians who participate in small covenant communities. And Mr. Dunn also is quite  an astute Bible teacher…   While we were in  Flemingsburg, we also attended the Dunn family annual fourth of July celebration.   It was quintessential Americana, with hot dogs, hamburgers, country music, backyard fireworks and a homemade rocket launcher that fired (Are you ready for this?): potatoes.   In fact this was so   impressive (the potatoes would fly 300 yards or more), our administration  may well  consider putting in a bunch of  scud, oops, I mean ‘spud’  missile silos in, like, Idaho.     Just kidding, sort of.

Green Party and global warming

Vote for Joe Posted on July 6, 2009 by Joe SchrinerJuly 6, 2009

We have temporarily detoured off Route 50 to head for  the annual  Green Party National Convention in Durham, North Carolina, toward the end of the month.   I told a reporter Tonia Rose of The Morehead News   in Kentucky today that I believed global warming is real, an imminent threat (as many scientists are now indicating), and that we have to act aggressively to reverse it — “…so there’s a world for our kids to grow up in.”   I also told Ms. Rose that when it comes to reversing global warming, the Green Party — by far — has the best platform to do this…   While in Morehead, I also talked with Al Evans.   He was in the military and stationed at a nuclear missile base in New Mexico.   “Was it White Sands Missile Base?”   I asked.   “No,” he said.   “It’s so secretive, I still can’t tell you where it is.”   (He was there in the height of the Cold War.)   In regard to the current tension with Iran,  Evans said he sees their nuclear posturing as merely “saber rattling.”   Note:   We have thousands   of nuclear missiles aimed all over the world.   As president, I would scale this back significantly and take some of the savings and earmark them for humanitarian aid into Iran.   Number one, they need the help.   And two, if you start to help a neighbor you’re fueding with, well, this often helps ‘disarm’ the tension.   Common sense.

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