Samuel Joseph Wurzelbacher, better known as "Joe the Plumber," has formed a congressional campaign committee and filed a statement of candicacy, according to the Federal Election Commission's website.
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The statement of candidacy isn't online yet, but it lists Wurzelbacher in Ohio's Ninth District, which has been held by Democrat Marcia Kaptur since 1983. Wurzelbacher floated the idea he might challenge Kaptur in 2010, and there have been rumors recently that he might consider a run.
If you think folks like Joe have had their 15 minutes of fame, and we've seen the last of them, you'd be wrong. Joe apparently liked his brief time in the limelight and wants more. I'm curious about the finances behind the kick-off of Joe's campaign for the House of Representatives.
If you were smart, you'd probably spend
more time stretching, he said & I said, If
I were really smart, I'd probably spend
more time just sitting in the shade
drinking lemonade
...will you tell me the time? How much longer will it be till I am able to unsubscribe to websites on my Google Reader? Your video about how to set up Google Reader is clear and easy to follow, but when I try to unsubscribe to a site, I cannot succeed. I unsubscribe to several blogs almost daily, and the sites disappear until I go offline, but when I go online again, like ghosts from the past, they are back. These are sites which are no longer active and blogs which have new names or new website addresses. You see, I have no further use for them, and I want them gone when I unsubscribe. Please!!!
UPDATE: I seem to have successfully unsubscribed to the unwanted blogs on my reader for now. My virtual friend, Renz, suggested that I check to see which blogs I was following on Blogger. I tried to delete the blogs I wanted to be rid of there, but I could find no way, but there was a function which allowed me to hide them from my list. Once I'd hidden all the blogs I wanted gone, I went back to Google Reader, clicked on 'Manage subscriptions', checked the box for all the blogs I wanted off my list, clicked 'unsubscribe' at the top of the page, and they were gone. I'm not an optimistic person, so I can't quite believe the unwanted subscriptions are gone forever, but last night and today, they are not there. Thank you, Renz.
This process may not work for everyone, but I hope it helps a few of you out there.
UPDATE 2: Well, that didn't take long. The unwanted blogs are back in my Google Reader. They say nothing is forever, but once in my Google Reader, always in my Google Reader. There you have it.
UPDATE 3: Finally, finally the unsubscribed blogs are out of my Google Reader. The difficulty arose from fact that at the same time I was subscribing to the feed of blogs in Google Reader, I began following certain blogs on Blogger. When I unsubscribed from the sites on Google Reader, I was still following them on Blogger. The fix included not only the 'unsubscribe' function on Google Reader but also the 'stop following' function on Blogger. I'll quote my friend Renz's words on the instructions for how to stop following a site on Blogger.
OK, on Blogger Dashboard there's this box called "Reader" - it lists the blogs you are following and on the right shows you current posts. At the bottom of the box is the prompt to "manage" - and click on that. The pop up lists the blogs you are following - to the right of each one is "settings" - when you click on that you get an individual pop up for that blog and in it you find "stop following" - click on that and confirm witht he prompt. You should be done following then.
Then, I went back to Google Reader and unsubscribed to the sites once again. Voila! The deed was done!
I realize that not everyone will be helped by these instructions, but I hope a few people will. In the end, the difficulty was not with Google Reader but with the double subscriptions. I thank Renz for his patience with me and his suggestions to try this and try that before arriving finally at my goal of unsubscribing to the websites.
Hundreds of people, young and old, black and white, marched with signs held high and slogans spewing. It was a disjointed group: upbeat, angry, courteous, displeased, but united in unhappiness with the current economic and political climate. If there was a singular message shared among the masses, it centered on a simple idea: The status quo has got to go.
The "Occupy NOLA" protest and march was one of dozens of social actions held recently across the country, offshoots of a larger ongoing demonstration on Wall Street in New York City.
Looks great doesn't it? I wish we had been there. Grandpère and I went to New Orleans yesterday, but we did not arrive at Lafayette Square until 3:00PM. By then the gathering at Lafayette Square in front of the Federal Building was over, and the group had moved on to Duncan Plaza in front of City Hall...the story of my life. The rally at Lafayette Square was tentatively scheduled to begin between 3:00 and 4:00 in the afternoon when the marchers arrived. Alas, the march went faster than was expected, and the marchers arrived at the square at around 1:00PM.
Once we left home, we had no further access to the internet, what with being technologically old-timey and all. The details of the march were, no doubt, Tweeted and Facebooked, but we had no connection.
At Lafayette Square, we ran into a couple of stray marchers, and we decided to share a cab to Duncan Plaza, which was only about a mile away, but still.... When we arrived at Duncan Plaza, there were around 150 people left of the crowd, mostly spread out on the grass around the plaza.
A General Assembly of Occupy NOLA was held in Duncan Plaza later yesterday evening, and occupiers who were camping out spent the night in the plaza.
Below you see the signs which are homemade, not professional signs paid for by the Koch Brothers.
This nice guy in the red shirt was one of our taxi partners.
When GP saw TV cameras, he became antsy and wanted to leave. He did NOT want me on TV. I didn't particularly want to be on TV, but if the camera captured me, I would not have cared.
The visit to the scene of the protest was my thing, not his thing, and he was kind enough to accompany me. Being a democracy of two we had to negotiate our way through the process, as we each had our say, and then we arrived at consensus. I prevailed upon him to let me stay a while longer to talk to a few more people.
Below are some of the folks with whom I chatted as long as Grandpère would permit.
Some of the responses to my question, 'Why are you here?'
I've been waiting to do this for 10 years! There is so much that is wrong in this country, and no one is watching out for the 99%.
We want the 1% to pay their fair share of taxes.
One man wanted the police chief in New Orleans fired. He wanted me to know why there were so many criminals in NO. He said, 'Too many black people have no hope.'
We are the majority in the country, and no one is listening to us.
The big banks and the corporations run the country, and their executives get richer as the middle class and the poor get poorer.
The police accompanied the protestors during the march, and relations between the two groups were cordial. A few policemen were across the street from the plaza, but they apparently saw nothing to police. Today, Mayor Mitch Landrieu paid an impromptu visit to the people in the plaza and chatted with them. It was not a photo op. You can follow the latest updates on the Occupy NOLA Facebook page.
“When you look at someone to determine whether they’d be the right person for public office, look at who they lay down with at night and what they believe,” Santorum said.
Rick's is a mind that blows mine. Rick's body may leave the bed and the bedroom, but seemingly his mind stays behind.