Tuesday, November 4, 2008
Teresa McCoy says "My Son Is Why We Fight So Hard"
Teresa McCoy
Posted November 3, 2008
There are times when words almost fail. This is one of those times.
I wanted to take this opportunity to say how much Barack Obama's campaign has meant to me, and how much it's changed my outlook and my life.
I came to this campaign in late August, not knowing what to expect. I had never done anything like this, but I knew that it was time to get off the couch and do something to change my corner. (so to speak) You see, it was my chance to do something to help my son.
James has PTSD. For those who don't know what that is, it's called Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, and it came directly from Iraq. Fallujah, to be exact. James fought proudly there for sixteen months. He did so without reservation because he wanted to serve his country. It's all he ever wanted to do. I signed the papers for him to be able to accomplish his goal before he ever left high school. I now wish I hadn't done so, but our country called him and I knew that I couldn't stand in the way of that. He was raised to respect his country and his flag, and he fought courageously for America, and he had friends who died for it. He lost his best friend on that battlefield, and the experience profoundly changed and marred his young life.
Our nations military not only sent James to Iraq, but the army sent his family to war with him. We were beside him in spirit, and we counted the days until he got home. There were times when we wondered if the day would ever come that he would come home to us, and when it finally did come, we were ecstatic. Little did we know that when they sent our son home, he would only be a shell of his former self. The light in his eyes was gone, and I know that as much as we love him, and as much as we try to understand, we're never going to see our James again. The innocent young man who went off to war is gone, and he is never coming back.
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Vietnam veteran tells of ongoing battle with PTSD
Vietnam veteran tells of ongoing battle with PTSD
KTAR.com - Phoenix,AZ,USA
Vietnam veteran tells of ongoing battle with PTSD
November 3rd, 2008 @ 7:02am
by Bob McClay/KTAR
A Sun City man who fought in Vietnam is still in a battle -- every day he lives with post traumatic stress disorder.
The closest most people get to combat is watching movies like "Saving Private Ryan."
For Jerry McNelly, that was real life. Forty years later, he still suffers from PTSD.
McNelly said a psychologist has helped him deal with the problem and he wishes he had seen her earlier.
"From the bottom of my heart, I wish I had had this prior to my two failed marriages," he said, adding that his ex-wives can share some stories.
"They'll talk about the sleepless nights, me waking up on my side of the bed and the sheet is so wet we have to change the sheets because I've had cold sweats. Walking the floor all night long because I'm looking out the windows and drapes, which is called perimeter check."
PTSD -- McNelly refers to it by the initials -- affects people in different ways.
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Korean War ex-POW found peace with PTSD
Kansas City Star - MO,USA
Ed Slater: After captivity in Korea, and suffering more after the war, he found peace.
By LISA GUTIERREZ
The Kansas City Star
Ed Slater’s family “did what we did to get what we could get” during the Depression. So for the bad boy from Quincy, Ill., it was reform school or the military
He chose the Army.
So here he was, scared out of his 20-year-old mind, separated from his infantry unit, lost in the Korean countryside.
He wandered two weeks without food before begging for rice from a Korean peasant woman. He ate it up.
He heard the triggers as North Korean soldiers rushed him.
Click-click-click-click-click.
In the summer of 1950 Ed Slater became a victim of what historians call the North Korean atrocity mill.
As a prisoner of war, this son of a plumber learned what flesh sounds like when it’s pounded, what a human head looks like after struck by a bullet, what anguish feels like.
The cries came from his own mouth.
“I thought I was going crazy,” he says. “I was sleeping in bars, sleeping in parks. I knew something was very wrong with me.”
He had post-traumatic stress syndrome, and it took a Veterans Administration psychiatrist and Prozac to treat it.
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PBS:Medal of Honor history and Dr. Mary Edwards Walker
PBS film highlights Medal of Honor’s history and its recipients
Providence Journal - Providence,RI,USA
PBS film highlights Medal of Honor’s history and its recipients
07:06 AM EST on Monday, November 3, 2008
Medal of Honor, a PBS documentary that will air nationwide Wednesday at 9 p.m., will present powerful stories of those who have received our nation’s highest military honor.
Produced and directed by Roger Sherman, the 90-minute film traces the medal’s history from its inception, during the Civil War, and profiles Sgt. Paul Smith, the first combatant in the Iraq war to receive it.
Among others profiled in the film are a Holocaust survivor who singlehandedly defended a hill from an advancing enemy force in the Korean War; a Navy SEAL who saved the lives of two comrades by swimming for two hours, while injured, to bring them to safety; and a Marine at Iwo Jima who alone silenced seven Japanese bunkers with a flamethrower.
Only one Medal of Honor has been awarded to a woman: Mary Edwards Walker, a Civil War doctor captured and imprisoned as a spy by the Confederates. Her medal was revoked after the war, when the criteria were tightened so it could be awarded only to active-duty soldiers in battle. Walker, however, refused to give it back.click above for more
Married for better or worse, couple bridge Democratic and Republican sides
When they married 39 years ago, Tom and Barbara Sims took each other for better or worse, in sickness and health. But those vows mentioned nothing about presidential campaigns. He knew when they met at she was a diehard Republican. And she was well aware he was a passionate Democrat.
Troubles reported in voting
NJ/Willingboro Machines Broken
Posted: 06:46 AM ET
From Beth Elliott
(CNN) – Broken machines in Willingboro, New Jersey, have led to disruptions in voting, according to Joe Dugan, chairman of the Burlington County Election Board. Voters at Pennypacker Park Elemenary School have been given emergency paper ballots as a mechanic works on the machines, Dugan said. He added that he expects the machines to be up and running soon.
VA/Fairfax County Machine Problems
Posted: 07:30 AM ET
From Marsha Walton
Paper ballots will be used until machines in Fairfax County are fixed.
Fairfax County, Virginia (CNN) — General Registrar Rokey Suleman said a handful of memory cards did not work when machines were started this morning. He tells CNN that new memory cards have already been sent out to those precincts with problems. He said a "very, very small number of machines" were affected, and voters at those locations could use paper ballots instead until the problem was corrected.
VA/Richmond: Machines down, no paper ballots
Posted: 07:34 AM ET
From CNN Correspondent Dan Lothian
Paper ballots are now being used in Richmond after complaints that none were available.
RICHMOND (VA) - Voting machine problems at the Math and Science Center in Richmond have forced the county to switch to paper ballots at the location.
The board of elections tells CNN the location is using paper ballots after five of seven machines broke down. Callers to the CNN Hotline originally said there were no paper ballots. But the Board of Elections now says they have started using the ballots and are in the process of deploying more equipment.
NC/Raleigh Voter Issues
Posted: 08:40 AM ET
From Beth Elliott
Raleigh scanners are having trouble handling ballots that are wet from rain dripping off of soaked voters.
Raleigh, NC (CNN) - A soggy and delayed start to the voting day in a Raleigh, North Carolina, precinct, after some confusion at the polling station. Wake County Board of Elections director Cherie Poucher reported there were problems this morning at the Barwell Road Community Center (formerly the Ebenezer Church Road precinct). She confirmed that the chief judge forgot to take the ballots out of her grandson's truck when being dropped off this morning. The elections director says the truck drove away, and the judge wasn't able to track down her grandson. The Board of Elections delivered new ballots and voting began at 7:06am, 36 minutes behind schedule. Approximately 300 people were waiting in line.
IN/Lake County Lines and Problems
Posted: 09:30 AM ET
From Marsha Walton
(CNN) - Voting machine problems and some delays are reported in Lake County, Indiana, just across the state line from Chicago.
Damian Rico, communications director for the city of East Chicago, Indiana, said at one precinct in Riley Park, two machines were down for about 15 minutes when the polling place opened. Both machines are up and running now.
Voting machine breakdowns lead to long lines
Posted: 09:41 AM ET
Residents wait in line to vote Tuesday morning in Annandale, Virginia.
(CNN) – Voting machines were breaking down or simply not deployed in adequate numbers in some polling places Tuesday morning, slowing balloting as Election Day dawned.
Watch: Last push in Colorado
Long lines were seen in rainy Richmond, Virginia, where Henrico County switched to paper ballots at the Math and Science Center after five of seven machines broke down.
Callers to the CNN Voter Hotline originally said there were no paper ballots. But Virginia's State Board of Elections said the center has started using the ballots and the board is in the process of deploying more equipment.
Record number of voters expected to deluge polls
Voting problems surfaced in several areas early Tuesday when people turned out in droves as balloting commenced along the Eastern Seaboard and in mid-Atlantic states. Voters needed to use paper ballots because of problems with electronic voting machines in some New Jersey precincts. And in New York, Board of Elections spokeswoman Valerie Vazquez-Rivera said many people began lining up as early as 4 a.m. at some polling places to avoid long lines, leading to erroneous reports that some sites were not opening on time.
Long lines, a few glitches as Election Day dawnsOptically scanned ballots, new to many voters, create a paper trail in case a tight race or voting irregularities once again puts Florida in the national spotlight.
But paper ballots slow things down, as do provisional ballots, which should be more frequent this go-around, because of the state's "no match, no match'' voter identification law and 2-million new voters who have been added to the rolls since the last presidential election.
Just minutes after the polls opened at 7 a.m. minor problems with machines cropped up, according to voters and reporters making spot checks at polling places.
In Clearwater, Betty Mayeux said ballot scanners were not working at her polling place, 229 Drew St. She was told she could wait for the scanner to be fixed or she could leave the ballot to be scanned later. She left the ballot.
At Crest Ridge Gardens Community Center, Tracy Walker said she waited for two hours, only to be told just before 7 that the machines were not working. By then, more than 100 people were in line, she said.
"I'm frustrated. Why didn't they know this two hours ago,'' she said. "I wanted to make sure I got in by 7 o'clock so I could get to work.''
In Palm Beach County, officials said some machines at the 450 polling locations are not accepting ballots because voters are not filling out the second page, which contains proposed amendments to the Florida Constitution.
Obama family together for voting
Obama votes in Chicago 1:13
Sen. Barack Obama casts his vote at an elementary school in Chicago.
http://www.cnn.com/video/#/video/politics/2008/11/04/vo.il.obama.votes.cnn
History in hands of voters
Americans are voting in one of the most historic U.S. elections. Democrat Barack Obama could become the first African-American president. Republican John McCain could become the oldest president elected to a first term. Sarah Palin could become the first woman elected vice president. Record voter turnout also is predicted. full story
It reminded me of all the years taking my own daughter when I voted. It never mattered what the New England weather was like, she was always excited to go.
I have not met many people who said they were not voting but when I was having my hair cut, the young stylists told me she was not voting. Her mother was never involved in politics she told me. As we talked, it was clear the stylist had not paid attention to this election. We've had many conversations in the past about different topics. We talked about the Lifetime series Army Wives, which character did what and when. We talked about other TV shows, which she knew it great detail. Yet when it came to the direction this country is going in, what matters to her own future, she clearly had not been involved. Then she said what too many say "My vote really wouldn't matter anyway."
I told the stylists about how I had taken my own daughter, beaming with pride vote for the first time. We waited in line for her to vote. My husband and I had already voted in early voting in Florida. She wasn't sure what to do, so I gladly brought her to cast her first vote. As we approached the table for her to check in, the man behind the table grinned "Oh, first time voter?" I'm sure I must have been glowing when I said "Yes, she is." He greeted my daughter and congratulated her, then told me to go and sit down. I wanted to stay behind her but he said it was up to her if I did or not. She looked up at me and said, "I'll take it from here. Go sit down."
I had never imaged how I would feel the first time my daughter voted. "I'll take it from here" came after over 20 years of watching me make it to vote no matter what else was going on. From primaries to the general election, she was there at my side. Then it was time for here to "take it from here" and vote on her own. It had not occurred to me how many other parents never bothered to have their own children involved in their own futures. She had seen me reading the newspapers and watching the news on TV, reading what ballot measures meant for months before the election. My daughter did the same thing preparing to vote for the first time, deeply involved in studying what the candidates say and what is factual.
Parents involved in the election process, even if they are not fully involved in politics or dedicated to one political party over another, will decide if their children will take an active role or not simply by what they do. We can inspire them. It's great to lead the way so they are prepared to take it from here. We have a responsibility and all of us should do whatever it takes to get them to take their vote seriously. If you have not voted yet, do whatever it takes to do it. Stand in line for as long as it takes and then tell your children, your vote was worth it.
Even in this tiny town, they voted.
Obama wins in earliest vote in tiny N.H. towns.
Dixville Notch, Hart's Location 1st officially to announce Election Day results
DIXVILLE NOTCH, N.H. - Barack Obama came up a big winner in the presidential race in Dixville Notch and Hart's Location, N.H., where tradition of having the first Election Day ballots tallied lives on.
Democrat Obama defeated Republican John McCain by a count of 15 to 6 in Dixville Notch, where a loud whoop accompanied the announcement in Tuesday's first minutes. The town of Hart's Location reported 17 votes for Obama, 10 for McCain and two for write-in Ron Paul. Independent Ralph Nader was on both towns' ballots but got no votes.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/27528804/
Monday, November 3, 2008
How can some McCain supporters be so lazy?
"Life has to be respected at all stages" "Freedom comes at a cost" "If Obama is elected it will show the world America doesn't respect life or the truth" but this woman has just lied because she repeated lies.
The internet is available to all and if they wanted to know if they were being lied to by the McCain campaign and GOP hacks, all they had to do was invest some time and look it up to see what was real or not. One woman said she got an email from Meet The Press claiming Obama
"wants to change the national anthem and the American flag. All this woman had to do was see if it really did come from Meet The Press or at least pay attention.
A guy with no teeth was complaining about people need to work if they want to eat because he works hard. Stranger than strange. Another complained about redistributing the wealth because she works hard. So did a lot of people who lost their jobs, ran out of unemployment and need help but she shouldn't care about any of us because she has a job.
If they want to talk about healthcare then they need to talk to someone who had to file for bankruptcy because of medical bills even though they did the right thing, had insurance that wouldn't cover the bills. They need to actually listen to Obama talking about his Mother dying of cancer and fighting with an insurance company that wouldn't pay, or the millions of other stories across this country from people who did the right things, worked hard, took care of their families and need, just for once, some Republican to decide that the American people do matter after all. We need a member of the "Right wing defenders of Christianity" to finally acknowledge what Christ said and did not say and then finally figure out what the founding fathers had to say about what kind of nation this was supposed to be.
All the nonsense that came out of the people being interviewed on this video should bow their head in shame and then beg to be forgiven for lying about things they had the opportunity to find out what was true and what were lies. These people are un-Godly and not even close to being what Christ said a Christian should be. They have replaced God with greed and selfishness. No wonder they are so angry. They would rather hate than pay attention. Can the really be that attached to the Republican label? If they haven't figured out what their party did to this country, they really need to stop being so blind and invest some time in learning. They really sound possessed. It's not as if they say they like McCain or even try to defend what McCain has done, but they just repeated lies about Obama. What else can we expect from people with no problem at all in their mind about what kind of president McCain would be or Sarah Palin!
As an Obama Victory Seems Increasingly Likely, Conservatives Are Getting Panicky and Unhinged
By Harry Hanbury and Patricia Foulkrod, American News Project. Posted November 3, 2008.
A snapshot of the freaked-out views and conspiracy theory fears of supporters at a John McCain rally in Columbus, Ohio.
At a recent rally for John McCain in Columbus, Ohio, ANP asked McCain supporters a simple question: If Barack Obama is elected president, what will it say about America? One woman, who claims that Obama wants to change the flag and the national anthem, demonstrates the lasting power of a debunked anti-Obama chain e-mail.
click post title for the video
When I went to Ohio, I'm glad I didn't meet people like this there. I would have flown back home right away~!
I think I just found my answer in this. They are like the Know-nothing Party!
Thanks to Sarah Palin, We Get to See the Cruelness of the GOP as It Really Is
By Larry Beinhart, AlterNet. Posted November 3, 2008.
Palin has helped reveal to the public pit-bull snarl that rouses GOP supporters to cry out, "Traitor!" against Obama, and "Kill him!"
It was Jesus Christ, if Matthew is to be believed, who said, "Love thine enemy." It is in that spirit that I write this belated valentine to Sarah Palin.
Sarah, I love you for having revealed unto the media the snarling heart of the beast that is the base (and the soul) of the Republican Party. Yes, you have the lipstick and the heels, not to mention the calves and bosoms, that send Republican men into swoons, but you have more; the pit-bull snarl that rouses your supporters to cry out, "Traitor!" against Obama, and "Kill him!"
George Bush kept those folks in their kennels, ran as a "compassionate conservative," and always masked his most heinous plans in double speak. Bush the Elder, Ronald Reagan, and even Richard Nixon never explicitly ran on hate and fear of "the other." They used words that were coded enough that it was possible to pretend that they were true.
But now the beast is loose.
The Republican Party likes to remember Abraham Lincoln. And so they should. It's a nice memory and brings credit to them. As does the accidental ascension of Teddy Roosevelt, environmentalist and basher of corporations. Back in the 1950s and '60s, their party included such figures as Dwight Eisenhower -- whose reputation grows ever better in retrospect -- Nelson Rockefeller, who built New York's state university system, and New York City mayor John Lindsey.
But there is another strand that runs through their history.
Back in the 1840s, there was a group called the Know Nothings. They were against immigrants and for real Americans. ("Real American" did not then, as it does not now, refer to Indians; it refers to descendants of English immigrants.) The movement was based on fear. Irish and German Catholics were going to take over. They would take orders from the Pope-in-Rome (one word). Their values were not "our values." They drank. Their nunneries were virtual brothels and when the nuns had babies they practiced infanticide.
go here for more
http://www.alternet.org/election08/105807/thanks_to_sarah_palin%2C_we_get_to_see_the_cruelness_of_the_gop_as_it_really_is/
Florida ‘Gators for McCain’ Chair Resigns, Votes For Obama
By Matthew DeLong 11/3/08 12:29 PM
You know it’s not looking good for Sen. John McCain when the head of the University of Florida’s more than 1,000-strong “Gators for McCain” announced his resignation yesterday and said he had voted for Sen. Barack Obama.
According to The Independent Florida Alligator, the university’s daily student newspaper, Josh Simmons, chairman of the “Gators for McCain,” attended an on-campus rally featuring Democratic vice presidential nominee Sen. Joe Biden yesterday, not as a protester but as a supporter.
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Short cut turned deadly for Maine Soldier at Fort Drum
Short cut turned deadly
Updated: 11/03/2008 04:31 PM
By: Amy Ohler
WATERTOWN, N.Y. -- A short cut for dinner turned deadly Sunday evening for one Fort Drum soldier. According to Jefferson County Sheriff John Burns, two soldiers, Justin Kennie of Maine and Jason Wood of Texas, decided to walk across Interstate 81 from the Salmon Run Mall. Burns says the two were headed to Buffalo Wild Wings. Once in the south bound lane, a car struck Kennie, killing him on impact. That incident then sparked two other wrecks involving four vehicles.
"Basically, it was due to people paying attention too much to what was going on in the opposite lane of travel and not paying enough attention to driving their vehicle," said Darrin Pitkin, State Police Captain.
Seven people were injured in the accidents. Six were transported to Samaritan Medical Center in Watertown. Donald McNeil was transported to Upstate Medical Center in Syracuse for critical injuries.
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