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10/13/08

Vote for Joe Posted on October 13, 2008 by Joe SchrinerOctober 13, 2008

Buckeye Back Road Tour cont.:   We continue to travel about Ohio where Obama and McCain are now in a “dead heat,” according to the Columbus Dispatch today.   Wouldn’t it be fascinating if it stayed that way in Ohio and  our campaign:  impacted the vote?

10/9/08

Vote for Joe Posted on October 9, 2008 by Joe SchrinerOctober 9, 2008

Buckeye Back Road Tour cont.:    During Mass at St. Mary’s      in Lancaster, Ohio, today, Fr. Donald Franks emphasized that it is important for Christians to persevere in prayer, in exercise, in work…  In deference to that, our campaign again headed out into the back roads of Ohio to stump some more.   At the Handle-Bar  & Grill   in  tiny Sugar Grove,    I passed out a flyer and noticed a sign posted behind the bar:   “You will be barred for fighting!”   Once again I have gone — where other candidates would be afraid to go!   We then headed over to the small Hill Grocery Store in Sugar Grove where I passed on another flyer and talked to owner Sue Hill.   Given the Wall Street bailout, she said she wondered what’s happened to help for small businesses like hers.   I said if I was president (the polls notwithstanding) I would, indeed, help small town businesses like hers.   For our plan on this, see… Note:   In the midst of the financial crisis in America, our platform calls for, I believe, a much saner approach to the economy in general.

10/8/08

Vote for Joe Posted on October 8, 2008 by Joe SchrinerOctober 8, 2008

Buckeye Back Road Tour cont.:   We ended our pit-stop in Cleveland and have headed back out onto the back roads of Ohio.   In Wooster, Ohio, farmer Ed Schafrath (brother of former Cleveland Brown Dick Schafrath), told me he once went to a seminar on organic farming.   The presenter started with holding up a handful of soil and then posed a question:   “How many of you think God makes mistakes?”   No hands went up.   The presenter then explained that God put thousands of micro-organisms into a handful of soil, all working together to make the perfect growing environment.   Yet we now pump herbacides, pesticides, fertilizers… into the soil to “improve it.”   Ed said after he heard this presentation, he bacame an organic farmer.   Hard to argue with that, huh.    For more on our agricultural platform…   While in Wooster, we also talked to Eugene Grande, who had recently given a talk on “The Common Good” at St. Mary’s in Wooster.   Eugene said that issues pertaining to the common good include: arms control, the death penalty, the environment, housing, labor and employment, poverty…   He continued that each of these are subjective (according to the Catholic Church) in relation to view points of legislators and the electorate  in regard to  acceptable levels.   However, he said the Catholic Church looks at the following points as always   “intrinsically evil”:   abortion, euthanasia, embryonic stem cell research, cloning, in-vitro fertilization…   Eugene also offered the following in relation to the latter:   “For a growing number of people, absolute beliefs or norms indicate nothing but an inablility to tolerate other peoples’ views and convictions.   History provides evidence that relative standards of morality breed chaos and ultimately the downfall of society.”   By the way, anyone see how the stock market did yesterday?

10/6/08

Vote for Joe Posted on October 6, 2008 by Joe SchrinerOctober 6, 2008

Buckeye Back Road Tour cont.:   We made a brief pit-stop back home in Cleveland last week.    Liz and I painted a couple rooms in the  place next door to put food on the table.   I told a Channel 3 News reporter (the paint still on my hands) that while the other presidential candidates were posturing to appeal to the middle class, I was, well, “painting houses.”   I bowl too.   While at home, I was also interviewed by the Cleveland Catholic Diocesan newspaper.   I said our platform revolved around the underpinnings of Catholic Social teaching, including having a “Consistent Life Ethic” that sets us against: abortion, euthanasia, poverty, pollution, global warming, nuclear proliferation… and anything else that can end life prematurely.   Note: While back in Cleveland this time, we had two bicycles stolen over a period of three days.   Last year we had our campaign vehicle grafittied and a brick was also thrown through the passenger window.   That’s just the kind of neighborhood it can be sometimes.

9/26/08

Vote for Joe Posted on September 28, 2008 by Joe SchrinerSeptember 28, 2008

Buckeye Back Road Tour cont.:   On the current ‘financial crisis’…   Foreclosures seem to be starting a chain reaction.   A homeowner is foreclosed upon when they can’t pay the mortgage anymore.   This begs the  question:   How many people are simply living beyond their means these days?   Sure there’s inflation.   And yes, variable rate mortgages are going up.   So in the face of this,  many could adjust by, say, living more simply, and creatively (like house-sharing).   This should be how we approach the National Debt as well.   That is, the Federal Government should: tighten it’s belt and come up with creative ways to pay it off.   Note:   During a talk I gave to  a group of  Amish in Kidron, Ohio, during Campaign 2004, one man said he had a fool proof answer to  keeping the  National Budget out of the red:   First, we should have someone in D.C. with “a caluculator that works,” he said.   And secondly, we should use this calculator to count up how much tax money has come in in a given year.   “Then we shouldn’t spend any more than what’s come in,” he added.   A lot of people might look at this as tremendously over-simplified, even naive.   But is it?   Maybe it is, indeed,  the simple common sense way we should have been approaching this thing all along.   I think it is.

9/20/08

Vote for Joe Posted on September 20, 2008 by Joe SchrinerAugust 27, 2018

Buckeye Back Road Tour cont.:   In a recap of the last week…  We met with students of St. Paul’s Outreach at Ohio State University in Columbus.   This group of Catholic Christians live in community, pray together every morning, see modesty of dress and chastity as important issues, and witness about their faith at every turn around campus…   And we witnessed about the “pro-Life aspect” of our faith on a busy street near the heart of the OSU campus.   Our family stood on a street corner there holding abortion protest signs to the honks of support and glares of non-support  from those who went by.   “Abortion would end tomorrow if pro-Life people took to the streets en mass and created enough social unrest to stop it.   Just like what happened with the ending of Segregation in the South,”   I said during a talk at St. Rose Church in Perrysburg, Ohio, during an earlier stop…   We then stumped in Delaware, Ohio,  where I talked with a man-on-the-street about the economy.   He said his first mortgage was a one-page document that said the bank was going to loan him so much money and he would have to pay so much money each month in return.   That’s it.   Now those documents are multi-page, small print, extremely complicated (and convoluted) legalese, with all kinds of additional provisions, loopholes, etc..   Extrapolated out, that’s the picture of our economy in general these days.   For instance, the recent stories of all the intricacies of the Federal bail outs, and the tremendously multi-dimensional dynamics of the companies being bailed out, paint a picture of an extremely  complex (and superfluous) behemoth — that needs to go back to a simple, one-page form, metaphorically speaking…   In Prospect, Ohio (pop. small), I put up a campaign flyer at a laundromat and wrote on it:   “The ‘prospects’ look good.”   My wife Liz said that was corny.   “What was corny?”   I asked.   (And we’re doing this all without paid political consultants.)…   I Caledonia, Ohio (pop. 600 and hometown of Warren G. Harding), I stumped at Reeces Market.   In the middle of one of the market’s  aisles was a book-shelf with three generations of family pictures of the owner’s family.   I loved that!   When I approached him, owner Jack Reece was talking to a woman that he’d graduated from high school with here — in 1948.   They were talking about the past.   I said our platform includes placing a lot more emphasis on: heritage…   Last night  our family caught  the  second  half of the Crestline Bull Dogs High School game.    Small town Americana under the lights…

9/15/08

Vote for Joe Posted on September 15, 2008 by Joe SchrinerSeptember 15, 2008

Buckeye Back Road Tour cont.:   Ohio got hit by it’s first (Category 1) Hurricane, ever, yesterday.   Hurricane Ike arrived in the Buckeye State with wind gusts of up to 76 mph.   We were driving our campaign vehicle/camper  when the hurricane hit.   My wife Liz, who is in a  perpetual state of denial about these things, said she thought the wind wasn’t “wasn’t really all that bad” — as big oak and elm trees swayed like bamboo all around us.   In all our years of campaigning (9), except for Montana and North Dakota in January, these had to be the worst conditions we’ve ever traveled in.   We eventually took shelter at a horse farm near Hillsboro, Ohio.   And after the hurricane let up, the kids actually got some informal horse riding lessons to boot (a pun, sort of).   We don’t campaign on Sundays because of religious beliefs, so the horse farm turned out to be a great stop.   Note:   This morning we stumped in Leesburg, Ohio, where we stopped in at Leesburg Hardware (old, dusty wooden floors, the whole small town thing).   I gave owner George Smith $20 for a 39 cent black foam paint brush and told him to keep the change.   It’s so   vital these Mom & Pop small town stores continue to survive in the face of what amounts to the gathering sea of big box retailers.   And what’s to keep any of us from, well,  donating to their cause? For our position on this…

9/12/08

Vote for Joe Posted on September 12, 2008 by Joe SchrinerSeptember 12, 2008

Buckeye Back Roads Tour cont.:   It’s been somewhat of a whirlind since we launched on this final tour through Ohio.   We stopped in Yorkshire, Ohio, where we met with the Kremers and the Smiths, both organic farming families who do everything in line with Catholic Rural Life Association teaching.   They look at how they treat the land as a moral issue…   We then stumped at the Annie Oakley Restaurant — she’s from this area– in Dawn, Ohio, where I put up a campaign flyer that said “…from a straight shooter.”       (I’ve got a million of ’em.)   Further down the road in Greenville, I told The Daily Advocate newspaper that Liz and I are running as your “average concerned Midwestern parents.”   What we’re most ‘concerned’ about is our children inheriting a world of abortion, war, global warming, a nine trillion dollar debt…   Heading further south, we campaigned in West Manchester, Eaton, Gratis, Carlisle, Waynesville and Wilmington.   Then in Blanchester, Ohio, I talked with Jim Thie who did multiple tours in Vietnam spanning 41 months.   He  got a Purple Heart, Bronze Star and cancer (from his exposure to agent orange).   What were we thinking dropping that?… We then headed on to Fayeteville, Mt. Orab, Sardinia and Peebles.   Last night, I met with a group of Amish at a homestead on Tater Ridge Road, just south of Peebles.   We discussed the Irap War (Amish are non-violent and don’t think Jesus would go to war), the economy, and the accelerating breakdown of faith, family and community in America.   The Amish place extreme importance on faith, family and community — and boy   does it show.   One of the men said their lives are “a silent witness.”   I said America would benefit from them being more vocal about it as well.   Note:   The discussion (over homemade ice-cream) last night was lively and I believe I convinced a number of the Amish that I, indeed, was the best presidential candidate.   One problem:   These Amish (because of religious reasons) don’t vote.   Is there any wonder why I’m still, oh, a little behind in the polls?   Of course ever optomistic, we’re just chalking that up to the ‘margin of error.’

9/10/08

Vote for Joe Posted on September 10, 2008 by Joe SchrinerSeptember 10, 2008

Buckeye Back Road Tour cont.:   Barack Obama spoke in Dayton yesterday and John McCain spoke in Lebanon, Ohio, yesterday, some 30 miles south of Dayton.   Meanwhile we split the difference, stumping in Germantown, Ohio, yesterday, which is about halfway between.   Dayton’s Channel 2 News   did a piece on us.   We don’t have a television in the camper so we didn’t see it, but I’ll bet the story contrasted the big   campaigns with the small one.   (Incidentally, we’d be the small one.)…   After his talk, Obama met with employees of the troubled DHL headquarters in nearby Wilmington, Ohio.   We parked for the night in the Wal Mart parking lot just across from the DHL headquarters.   Incidentally, their planes, all   their planes, take off between 4 a.m. and 5:30 a.m.   Talk about loud !   And such  are the trials of the more low budget campaigns.

9/4/08

Vote for Joe Posted on September 4, 2008 by Joe SchrinerSeptember 4, 2008

Buckeye Back Roads Tour cont:   A reporter frm the Wapakoneta Daily News   noted that I would like to see a cutback in lifestyle in America and a shorter work week.   This would free up more time for faith, family and community…   In Kettersville, Ohio (pop. small), I stumped at the K-Village Restaurant   with a group of area farmers.   One of their bumper stickers said:   OPEC… Drill This!   Ethanol from Ohio corn… We then stopped in New Bremen, Ohio, home of the Great American Bicycle Museum.   Instead of all this talk about “drilling,” maybe we should be, oh… bicycling.   A friend of mine back in Bluffton has a bicycle sticker that says:   Question internal combustion.   Has anybody done that (except the Amish of course)?   Note:   Last week I talked with Loretta Dieringer who helped start   the ecumenical Hands of Grace in Fulton County, Ohio.   A non-profit, Hands of Grace   has an adult day care for people who otherwise would have a hard time getting out.   Volunteers also visit shut-ins and do lawn work, house cleaning and the like.   They also take people for groceries, to the doctors and so on.

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