Today is an Important Day!
Today, November 4th, 2008, could be one of the most important days in politics in my lifetime. I have been following the election coverage, debates, and final moments of the campaign from spanish television in many parts of the latin world. Last night I sat in my little $15 hotel room in the attic of a hotel in Cuenca, Ecuador glued to the CNN coverage, happy to finally be able to watch in English!
About 4 months ago, when I was still living in Honduras, I sent in my request for an absentee ballot to the Fairfax Co, Virginia registration board anticipatin that it would be awaiting my arrival the first week in September when I was home. Unfortunately, it was too late. About a week after I began travelling, the ballot arrived at my parents house where they were able to send it to my friend Mauricio at his home in California, so that he could bring it to me when we met up in his hometown of Medellin, Colombia. Once in Medellin we hunted down a no. 2 pencil in order that I could vote. I was not going to risk having my vote not count based on incorrect graphite. Upon Mauricio´s return to the USA, he mailed in my ballot to arrive on time in Virginia. And I can´t tell you how glad I am today to say that I voted, that I took that time and went through a 4 month process so that my vote would be included in today´s ballot count. Not many people are willing to take even the time to go to the polls and wait in line on a cold fall day, but with this I urge you to go out and vote, and let me tell you why I think that today, more than ever, it is important that you do...
Last night I heard John McCain say something very critical. He said, ¨Barack Obama wants to spread the wealth. I want to create wealth.¨ In that moment, watching from my little attic space ina hotel in Ecuador, I thanked John McCain for sending those words out to people not only in the USA but to all corners of the world watching the election coverage. Because, more so than in any election I have been alive for, this year the election in the USA is not just about the United States of America, it is about every human being alive in this world. This election is not about the USA, it is not about us as Americans, it is a global issue. And to share the wealth is just what we need to be reminded of if we are going to CHANGE the state of the world.
I am currently reading a book by Jeffrey Sachs called ¨The End of Poverty¨ - in which he talks about the UN Millenium Goal of ending extreme poverty by 2025. As Jeffrey Sachs puts it, we in the western world have the ability with our financial and human resources to put an end to suffering in the developing world. Sadly enough though, we choose not to do it. Think about it. We have the power to CHANGE the world, to put an end to people dying from disease, to improve people´s access to water, food, housing, and healthcare. We have the resources to provide life saving drugs and mosquito nets to people dying of malaria and AIDS. BUT, we choose to neglect those people, we determine who we think should live, who is deserving of aid. But above all, we choose that our lives remain comfortable, free of pain or suffering, cold or hunger, before we reach a hand out to a single one of those persons in need. All, when we have that ability in our hands. This is not just an issue affecting Africa although the greatest number and percentage of people living in extreme poverty are in Africa; this is a global issue.
Over the last 2.5 years I have lived in Honduras and travelled to Guatemala, El Salvador, Costa Rica, Panama, Colombia, and Ecuador. Only Colombia being a country above the extreme poverty line. I have seen the global problem in the faces and words of every person I meet. I have worked with people who are hungry because the rains have ruined their crops -- we worked with them to find access to new markets, with children who can´t fend for themselves -- Grace Church sent funding, who are cold because they only had a 3 sided house and a tarp to cover them -- we built them a house, who can´t afford healthy food and medication for Diabetes -- my parents sent in help, too. I offered my own mosquito net to a family who needed it more than I did, I held the hands of a mother and sister who cried watching their son and brother who had committed suicide dying in a public hospital without hope for a better future. I sat at the bedside, prayed with families and went to funerals of people who were dying and eventually died of cancer because of chemicals used in nearby fields for vegetables exported to the United States. I layed sick in bed with Dengue for 10 days and read in the newspaper of children and adults who were dying of the same fever that struck me, all because they lacked the care that I as a westerner was receiving. And Honduras is not considered to be a developing country in the most extreme sense of poverty.
Today the world ways in. It is a vote for America with a global impact. Our vote today impacts the whole world. Last week I sat next to an old Ecuadorian woman who was obviously sick and dying, had not bathed, and had no money to pay her $0.75 bus fee. I gave another homeless woman the bread I had just bought at the bakery because she didn´t have 25 cents sufficient enough to put a temporary end to her persistent hunger. Every town I have visited on my travels, I have been asked by locals to support Obama. Every person I meet on the bus or in hostals is tied into this election today. Only in Colombia did I meet one McCain supporter, but other than that, each and every person I have met is tied into this election today because they know that it means on a global level. For the last 4 days I have been travelling with 4 new friends -- Ed, a Canadian man, June, an English woman, Otavio the Brazilian, and Daniel, a Spaniard - and never was I more proud to be able to say to them to that I got my vote in for today´s elections! My fear, as always, is that the republicans will find some way to take the election. We saw it happen 4 years ago, 8 years ago. Today, we must not let that happen. We must remember the vote is not about US, today we must think about something much greater.
I originally thought I wanted to be surrounded today by Americans, having a nice dinner and a drink while watching as the polls closed and the election results came flowing in. I thought I wanted to watch the election coverage in english and take a break from having to pay attention to spanish and give my mind a rest for once. But as it turns out, tonight I will be watching the results with a canadian and an english woman who have just as much invested in the outcome as you and me, but aren´t able to cast their ballot. Tonight I will watch the coverage in spanish, because now is not a time to rest or to relax, it is a time when we need to work even harder than ever to insure we make the right decisions for the future, not only of the US, but for the entire world. Tonights decision is about humanity and will test whether we as Americans still have it. You may or may not agree with me. You may or may not have ever had a cold shower or worse no water for bathing. You may or may not have ever been hungry or uncomfortable. You may or may not have ever had experiences like those I mentioned above, nor the opportunity to actually do something about it...until today. Please go vote!
I voted for Obama today, but I do not envy him. The role that the next president will play is not an easy one. The challenges are not going to be easily overcome. Today, I voted for Obama because I know that he can inspire in each of us the action necessary to work together so that we really can create CHANGE. I did not vote for Obama, I voted for are all of the people in the world today who have not been afforded the opportunity that I and my family and friends have. I voted for Clementina and her 53 children. I voted for Dunia who died alone of AIDS. I voted for Mariano who will get worse without proper income, diet, and medication. I voted for Hector and his 8 brothers and sisters and 23 neices and nephews who deserve better education and jobs. It is only by the Grace of God that I ended up who I am, and even so, I do not deserve any better than the people I mention above, the people who have touched my lives and made me realize what today is all about. Along with Obama today, I ask each of you...BE the CHANGE!
About 4 months ago, when I was still living in Honduras, I sent in my request for an absentee ballot to the Fairfax Co, Virginia registration board anticipatin that it would be awaiting my arrival the first week in September when I was home. Unfortunately, it was too late. About a week after I began travelling, the ballot arrived at my parents house where they were able to send it to my friend Mauricio at his home in California, so that he could bring it to me when we met up in his hometown of Medellin, Colombia. Once in Medellin we hunted down a no. 2 pencil in order that I could vote. I was not going to risk having my vote not count based on incorrect graphite. Upon Mauricio´s return to the USA, he mailed in my ballot to arrive on time in Virginia. And I can´t tell you how glad I am today to say that I voted, that I took that time and went through a 4 month process so that my vote would be included in today´s ballot count. Not many people are willing to take even the time to go to the polls and wait in line on a cold fall day, but with this I urge you to go out and vote, and let me tell you why I think that today, more than ever, it is important that you do...
Last night I heard John McCain say something very critical. He said, ¨Barack Obama wants to spread the wealth. I want to create wealth.¨ In that moment, watching from my little attic space ina hotel in Ecuador, I thanked John McCain for sending those words out to people not only in the USA but to all corners of the world watching the election coverage. Because, more so than in any election I have been alive for, this year the election in the USA is not just about the United States of America, it is about every human being alive in this world. This election is not about the USA, it is not about us as Americans, it is a global issue. And to share the wealth is just what we need to be reminded of if we are going to CHANGE the state of the world.
I am currently reading a book by Jeffrey Sachs called ¨The End of Poverty¨ - in which he talks about the UN Millenium Goal of ending extreme poverty by 2025. As Jeffrey Sachs puts it, we in the western world have the ability with our financial and human resources to put an end to suffering in the developing world. Sadly enough though, we choose not to do it. Think about it. We have the power to CHANGE the world, to put an end to people dying from disease, to improve people´s access to water, food, housing, and healthcare. We have the resources to provide life saving drugs and mosquito nets to people dying of malaria and AIDS. BUT, we choose to neglect those people, we determine who we think should live, who is deserving of aid. But above all, we choose that our lives remain comfortable, free of pain or suffering, cold or hunger, before we reach a hand out to a single one of those persons in need. All, when we have that ability in our hands. This is not just an issue affecting Africa although the greatest number and percentage of people living in extreme poverty are in Africa; this is a global issue.
Over the last 2.5 years I have lived in Honduras and travelled to Guatemala, El Salvador, Costa Rica, Panama, Colombia, and Ecuador. Only Colombia being a country above the extreme poverty line. I have seen the global problem in the faces and words of every person I meet. I have worked with people who are hungry because the rains have ruined their crops -- we worked with them to find access to new markets, with children who can´t fend for themselves -- Grace Church sent funding, who are cold because they only had a 3 sided house and a tarp to cover them -- we built them a house, who can´t afford healthy food and medication for Diabetes -- my parents sent in help, too. I offered my own mosquito net to a family who needed it more than I did, I held the hands of a mother and sister who cried watching their son and brother who had committed suicide dying in a public hospital without hope for a better future. I sat at the bedside, prayed with families and went to funerals of people who were dying and eventually died of cancer because of chemicals used in nearby fields for vegetables exported to the United States. I layed sick in bed with Dengue for 10 days and read in the newspaper of children and adults who were dying of the same fever that struck me, all because they lacked the care that I as a westerner was receiving. And Honduras is not considered to be a developing country in the most extreme sense of poverty.
Today the world ways in. It is a vote for America with a global impact. Our vote today impacts the whole world. Last week I sat next to an old Ecuadorian woman who was obviously sick and dying, had not bathed, and had no money to pay her $0.75 bus fee. I gave another homeless woman the bread I had just bought at the bakery because she didn´t have 25 cents sufficient enough to put a temporary end to her persistent hunger. Every town I have visited on my travels, I have been asked by locals to support Obama. Every person I meet on the bus or in hostals is tied into this election today. Only in Colombia did I meet one McCain supporter, but other than that, each and every person I have met is tied into this election today because they know that it means on a global level. For the last 4 days I have been travelling with 4 new friends -- Ed, a Canadian man, June, an English woman, Otavio the Brazilian, and Daniel, a Spaniard - and never was I more proud to be able to say to them to that I got my vote in for today´s elections! My fear, as always, is that the republicans will find some way to take the election. We saw it happen 4 years ago, 8 years ago. Today, we must not let that happen. We must remember the vote is not about US, today we must think about something much greater.
I originally thought I wanted to be surrounded today by Americans, having a nice dinner and a drink while watching as the polls closed and the election results came flowing in. I thought I wanted to watch the election coverage in english and take a break from having to pay attention to spanish and give my mind a rest for once. But as it turns out, tonight I will be watching the results with a canadian and an english woman who have just as much invested in the outcome as you and me, but aren´t able to cast their ballot. Tonight I will watch the coverage in spanish, because now is not a time to rest or to relax, it is a time when we need to work even harder than ever to insure we make the right decisions for the future, not only of the US, but for the entire world. Tonights decision is about humanity and will test whether we as Americans still have it. You may or may not agree with me. You may or may not have ever had a cold shower or worse no water for bathing. You may or may not have ever been hungry or uncomfortable. You may or may not have ever had experiences like those I mentioned above, nor the opportunity to actually do something about it...until today. Please go vote!
I voted for Obama today, but I do not envy him. The role that the next president will play is not an easy one. The challenges are not going to be easily overcome. Today, I voted for Obama because I know that he can inspire in each of us the action necessary to work together so that we really can create CHANGE. I did not vote for Obama, I voted for are all of the people in the world today who have not been afforded the opportunity that I and my family and friends have. I voted for Clementina and her 53 children. I voted for Dunia who died alone of AIDS. I voted for Mariano who will get worse without proper income, diet, and medication. I voted for Hector and his 8 brothers and sisters and 23 neices and nephews who deserve better education and jobs. It is only by the Grace of God that I ended up who I am, and even so, I do not deserve any better than the people I mention above, the people who have touched my lives and made me realize what today is all about. Along with Obama today, I ask each of you...BE the CHANGE!
4 Comments:
At 1:22 PM, Anonymous said…
Your blog entry on the importance of this election is important to many of us. Your perspective from South America makes the election's importance clearer.
Senator Obama has reignited for many in my generation a light that was doused in June 1968 when my generation's Barack Obama (Robert Kennedy) was assassinated. One of RFK's favorite quotations was a paraphrase of something from George Bernard Shaw: "Some men see things as they are, and ask why. I dream things that never were, and ask 'why not?'"
We've waited 40 years for this election. Others (like a 91 year old African American woman noted in the paper yesterday; she's been going door to door encouraging others to vote today) have waited even longer.
Love you,
Dad
At 11:00 PM, Anonymous said…
You see the man as compasionate? Let me tell you whats more likely to happen since this man is pro-abortion. He is going to tax the energy companies to death in the name of global warming. He is going to empower the terrible threat of abortion in our Supreme courts should he get oportunity to do those appointments and will do so in the name of Choice. He will try to create a gestapo in the name of "proving we can make a difference". He is going to do a distribution tax in the name of "spreading the wealth". He is going to look really good in the name of "overcoming white supremacy" in the eyes of some blacks. He is going to be a misunderstood "symbol" of peace to those of us who are not racist. When he is through making us believe in a character he does not really have, he will keep all the money with our taxes, leave us defensless without a solid police force because of his gestapo, and then call on the terrorists to kill us all. The problem is we have the internet and don't seem to be using it. The bottom line is, why do you see a man who is pro choice on abortion as compasionate?? Isn't that a red flag to you? Isn't that a bad omen to you? You think after being fooled by personal relationships that you woln't be fooled by a president you hardly know??
At 11:04 PM, Anonymous said…
I believe in peace. I am a pacifist. Look hard. Obama is not as compasionate as you think. I voted for Mcain because in Palin I saw reall compasion. In Obama I saw empty promises because he kept changing his tune. Yet we seem to have fallen for him like somone who has never dated before and expects everything to go well or at least good.
At 11:06 PM, Anonymous said…
Some man named Obama came walking up to us in a dark ally and said, "Im a nice Guy" and we melted.
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