Thursday, February 23, 2012

Ask The Candidate Yourself!!!

There is a very crucial election on the horizon in 2012. Campaigning for the presidency is intensifying and voters are trying to determine which candidate best represents what they want for the country. Super Tuesday is not very far away so there is a need to gather as much information as possible in order to make an informed vote . Some of the candidates, especially on the Republican side, are not as widely known as perhaps they need to be in order to garner the votes they want and need in order to become President.

Those voters are seriously researching the positions of the various candidates have a new tool available to them. Using the website “askthecandidates2012.com”, they can conduct a virtual interview
of the individuals running for the office. It is a simple website to use. Pictures of the various candidates appear on the page, waiting to be asked what they propose on a wide range of issues. So a user can go and click on a picture, and then type in a question and get the answer from the candidate themselves.

Once the question has been asked, the website draws from its artificial intelligence program direct quotes from the various candidates to answer the question that has been typed. So the voter gets to hear in the very words of the candidate what he or she has to say on a given subject or issue. So an interested voter can take his or her time in evaluating positions of all the candidates, and then going to the voting booth confident that he or she is making a good choice.



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Don't Stop Too Soon!

I wonder how many potentially great projects do not become great simply because those involved give up on the idea because initial results were not very impressive. Many years ago a friend and brother in Christ suggested that we (the congregation where we both worshiped) host an International Students Luncheon on the campus of the community college where he taught and coached. He proposed we do this near Thanksgiving, since those students would not have a family nearby with whom to share the holiday.

We made some plans and recruited some others to assist. We promoted it on the campus. We had lots of food. We were excited. But that first event had only eleven students attend. They were grateful and we made a few friends. But it was not nearly the kind of result we had envisioned.

But being stubborn men, we decided that we could do better the second year, if we took better measures to spread the news and let others know what we had to offer. And we were right. We had about 20! Again we were disappointed.

I moved away from that town a few months before attempt number three, but my friend continued. I was aware that the name of the event was changed. Eventually it was moved to a time between Thanksgiving and Christmas. And a component to feed those in need was added. But still there were not a great number of participants, for a while.

I got to visit with my friend today. And I was overjoyed to hear of developments over the past few years. A teacher in an elementary school initiated a food drive in her class, and the food was donated to the project on the community college campus. That has grown to include food drives in seven other elementary and high schools in the district. And another congregation has come into work with the original one.

Last year the event fed over 500 people, and 125 families were assisted with Christmas needs.

Think about that. What would those folks have done if the project had been shelved because we only had eleven folks attend the first luncheon? It surely makes me appreciate those folks who keep doing what they can. And it makes me want to keep doing what I can.


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