Sunday, July 11, 2010
Friday, June 25, 2010
Thursday, June 24, 2010
Tuesday, May 4, 2010
What a Day!
I want to remember a few things in the future. Among them: Today, Tuesday, May 4, was the most visually beautiful day I can remember. The sky was a vivid, cloudless blue. The trees and grass were vivid green. It was unbelievable.
On the less than beautiful side, today Americans are still dealing with the 2-week old disaster posed by 200,000 barrels of oil a day being belched from the sea floor in the Gulf of Mexico.
Also, over the weekend, a Pakistani-American tried to set off car bomb in Times Square. That even dominates CNN news coverage.
Also, Michael Brown (of Katrina fame) accuses the Obama administration of acting slowly in the Gulf oil crisis because, if the disaster gets really big, everyone will want to shut down Gulf drilling.
On the less than beautiful side, today Americans are still dealing with the 2-week old disaster posed by 200,000 barrels of oil a day being belched from the sea floor in the Gulf of Mexico.
Also, over the weekend, a Pakistani-American tried to set off car bomb in Times Square. That even dominates CNN news coverage.
Also, Michael Brown (of Katrina fame) accuses the Obama administration of acting slowly in the Gulf oil crisis because, if the disaster gets really big, everyone will want to shut down Gulf drilling.
Labels:
"car bomb",
"Gulf of Mexico",
"Times Square",
Obama,
oil
Wednesday, April 21, 2010
Thursday, March 4, 2010
Wednesday, March 3, 2010
Morning outside my window in Hot Springs, AR
Morning dawns in Hot Springs as me and my homies get ready to go to the Convention Center for the state EAST Conference.
Sent via BlackBerry by AT&T
Tuesday, March 2, 2010
Friday, February 26, 2010
Descriminated Against -- Is the passport application process a gender descrimination issue?
Sent via BlackBerry by AT&T
The picture above shows me so stunned after applying for a U.S. Passport that I could hardly drive. I actually sat in the car for half an hour BECAUSE I knew I could not drive.
I was so full of hope, so excited to be going to Haiti to help the people who have suffered so much.
I was surprised and elated when a local Baptist ministry offered to let me accompany them to Haiti to do good works during Spring Break. Now I am stunned and so shocked I hardly know what to do.
Door to Passport Office at Rogers Post Office
I entered the passport office with all my documents...I thought. Then, the passport official told me the US Government would probably not accept my birth certificate because it is old and torn, although completely legible, just torn at the creases where it was folded. She, the passport official, also told me that my passport request might be denied because I did not have the page in my divorce decree that said my married name could revert to my maiden name.
My Big Book of Documents
I left with the knowledge that I probably would not be going to Haiti afterall. The passport official did agree to send my documents to Washington, D.C., but she refused to let me expedite them with a private company because, she said, my departure date was 20 days away, and she was allowed to return my documents to me only if my departure date were less than 14 days away.
With the exception of the worn birth certificate, the entire passport application process is a GENDER DESCRIMINATION ISSUE. Men don't usually change their names; women do it all the time, with every marriage.
If I am denied -- as the passport official said I probably would be -- I plan to spend my life fighting to make politicians see that the passport application process is a civil rights issue -- women have to provide much more proof than men.
IF MY PASSPORT IS DENIED, SOMEBODY GIVE ME THE NAME OF A LAWYER AND TELL ME WHO TO SUE!!!!!
The picture above shows me so stunned after applying for a U.S. Passport that I could hardly drive. I actually sat in the car for half an hour BECAUSE I knew I could not drive.
I was so full of hope, so excited to be going to Haiti to help the people who have suffered so much.
I was surprised and elated when a local Baptist ministry offered to let me accompany them to Haiti to do good works during Spring Break. Now I am stunned and so shocked I hardly know what to do.
Door to Passport Office at Rogers Post Office
I entered the passport office with all my documents...I thought. Then, the passport official told me the US Government would probably not accept my birth certificate because it is old and torn, although completely legible, just torn at the creases where it was folded. She, the passport official, also told me that my passport request might be denied because I did not have the page in my divorce decree that said my married name could revert to my maiden name.
My Big Book of Documents
I left with the knowledge that I probably would not be going to Haiti afterall. The passport official did agree to send my documents to Washington, D.C., but she refused to let me expedite them with a private company because, she said, my departure date was 20 days away, and she was allowed to return my documents to me only if my departure date were less than 14 days away.
With the exception of the worn birth certificate, the entire passport application process is a GENDER DESCRIMINATION ISSUE. Men don't usually change their names; women do it all the time, with every marriage.
If I am denied -- as the passport official said I probably would be -- I plan to spend my life fighting to make politicians see that the passport application process is a civil rights issue -- women have to provide much more proof than men.
IF MY PASSPORT IS DENIED, SOMEBODY GIVE ME THE NAME OF A LAWYER AND TELL ME WHO TO SUE!!!!!
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