Connecticut
May Municipal Elections
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Mon, 04/23/2007 - 14:41This morning, I received an email inviting me to attend an evening of phonebanking for the municipal elections in Woodbridge which happen on May 7th.
I went and checked on the Connecticut Elections Wiki and found that there are around 15 municipalities in Connecticut that have their elections on May 7th. There isn’t a lot of information about what is going on with these elections, so it might be great if we could get people from any of these towns to let us know who the candidates are, what the issues are, and why we should go to one town or another to help get out the vote.
Then, based on this, it would be great if we could get a bunch of people out to help with local elections.
(Cross posted at MyLeftNutmeg)
Hiking at the Wadsworth Falls
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sun, 04/22/2007 - 13:13This was the photo sent from my cellphone at the Wadsworth Little Falls, during our hike. Stop by at Flickr and blip.tv to see other photos and videos from the hike, as well as from the bowling birthday party Fiona went to yesterday.
Jim Himes for Congress
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Thu, 04/19/2007 - 15:27Yesterday, Jim Himes filed with the Federal Election Commission (FEC) to set up a campaign to run for Congress against Rep. Chris Shays yesterday. Reports about Jim’s campaign can be found in the mainstream media at Stamford Advocate (and the Greenwich Time and the Hartford Courant), the Connecticut Post, The Stamford Times (and Wilton Villager and Norwalk Hour), The Journal-Inquirer, Channel 30, and The Associated Press (Via channel 8).
Constitutions and Debts
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Thu, 03/29/2007 - 14:01Twenty years ago today, the people of Haiti voted to adopt a new constitution to “Ensure their inalienable and imprescriptible rights to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness; in conformity with the Act of Independence of 1804 and the Universal Declaration of the Rights of Man of 1948.”
Yet having a new constitution is not enough when you are saddled with debt. Earlier this month, Rep. Maxine Waters introduced H. Res 241, “Urging multilateral financial institutions to cancel completely and immediately Haiti's debts to such institutions, and for other purposes”, aka the Haiti Debt Relief Bill.
Jubilee USA is urging its supporters to contact their Representatives in Congress today, to become co-sponsors of this bill.
For those of us who live in the Constitution State, I can think of no better way of living up to our heritage and celebrating Haiti’s constitution than contacting our Representatives and urging them to become co-sponsors of H.Res 241.
“Right up her ass”
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sun, 03/25/2007 - 09:31It is hard to imagine that I graduated from Mount Greylock Regional High School in Williamstown, MA, thirty years ago this June. Mount Greylock is a great school in a great town, but I rarely reflect back on my experiences there.
One experience, however, has come to mind twice this week for different reasons. It is one of the most memorable experiences I had, one which taught me so much more than many other hours in the classroom.
The year was 1972. America was mired down in an unpopular war abroad. Many people considered the man sitting in the White House a crook. In many ways, it was a year not much different than today.
Back then, there was a draft, and people found different ways to avoid the draft. I had a bunch of longhaired teachers, whom everyone said had become teachers to avoid the draft. Williamstown was a fairly liberal town, so they got away with things they might not have in other towns.
Miranda is now in eighth grade and is reading Lord of the Flies for school. I remember the day that my eighth grade teacher passed out copies of Lord of the Flies to our class. He said he had an important lesson for us and asked us to turn to page 123. I don’t remember the page exactly, but it seemed like a strange place to get introduced to the book we would be reading. About a third of the way down, there was a phrase that had been crossed out by a black magic marker.
“This is called censorship”, the teacher explained. He spoke about how people had complained about the language in the book and gotten the school to cross out the phrase. Visions of teachers, in the teachers lounge, crossing the phrase out in book after book and muttering about the idiocy of the school administration came to mind.