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| Hello, my name is Andrew Perez! | ||
| We the People, Yes We Can! | ||
| Short Biography: Born and raised in New York City, I've been interested in politics and government all my life, thanks to the example set by my father. A child of immigrants, he taught me that taking an active role in ensuring that our government lives up to the founding principles of America is our most important civic responsibility. I'm 51 years old, married, and share a nice old house on Queen Anne with my wife, Georgia, and our dog, Enzo. I've lived in Seattle since 1995 and currently work for a technology startup at their downtown headquarters. | |
I'm just old enough to remember what it was like to live in an America that looked to the future with a sense of anticipation and excitement, a time when anything seemed possible. That included making progress on long-standing problems of race, poverty and social inequity that had gone unresolved for many years, in some cases since the founding of the republic. That anticipation began to ebb because of unreasonable expectations, unfulfilled promises, and an ill-advised and unpopular war. It was finally shattered forty years ago by assassination, escalating civil unrest and that seemingly unending war. Since then, the America whose promise seemed unlimited has been replaced by an America whose government -- through deceit, propaganda and, more recently, outright fear mongering -- has increasingly worked to the benefit of the few, while the interests of We the People have been given, at best, lip service or, more typically, have simply been ignored. Today, America finds herself bogged down in another ill-advised and unpopular war, confronting the devastating effects of a government firmly in the grip of special interests, and in desperate need of new leadership. I've learned through the only teacher worth having, hard-won experience, that the keys to leadership are having a vision and telling the truth about what it will take to achieve it. Four years ago, a man came forth from Illinois and described his vision for America; a vision rooted in the ideals of another man from Illinois, "that government of the people, by the people, for the people shall not perish from the earth," and that filled me with the hope that here was someone who embodied Robert Kennedy's ideal: "Some men see things as they are and say why? I dream things that never were and say, 'Why not?'." I've waited forty years to find a political leader who embodies those values; a leader who is willing to challenge America to do the hard work needed to restore them to their rightful place in our nation's heart so that we may continue the founders' work to establish a more perfect union. That leader is Barack Obama. I would be honored to serve as your delegate at the Democratic National Convention. |
| I was just in Raleigh, North Carolina, working on the get-out-the-vote effort with some friends whom I'd volunteered with in Houston, Texas, earlier this year. It was so good to walk into the Obama headquarters in Raleigh, right down the street from the North Carolina State Capitol, and see Sammi, David and Deborah, among so many others. I've been fortunate enough to have had a number of special moments in my very small slice of the campaign. I thought the enthusiasm and dedication I saw in Texas among the roughly fifty volunteer students from Morehouse and Spelman Colleges was special. Those remarkable young people pulled up at the door at Obama HQ in downtown Houston late on Saturday morning after an all-night, sixteen-hour bus ride from Atlanta. They spent the rest of Saturday knocking on doors, slept on sofas, air mattresses and bed rolls in volunteer-provided housing, then canvassed at more than twenty churches on Sunday morning before resuming their door-knocking rounds in the afternoon. They returned to HQ for a quick meal before getting back on the bus for their overnight return to Atlanta, making sure to time their departure so they wouldn't miss class on Monday morning. I can only imagine the looks on their friends' faces back in Georgia when they heard the answer to the usual Monday morning question, "So, what did you do this weekend?" I thought the excitement I saw in the face of a strapping young man in Raleigh who answered the door in response to my knocking was special. When, after learning that his mother was still at work, I asked him if he had voted yet, he laughed and told me he was only fifteen years old. Believe me when I tell you it was a very easy mistake to make -- he was much bigger than me, and I'm 6"3" and well over 200 lbs. As I was leaving, I reminded him to be sure to register to vote when he turned 18 so that he'd be able to vote to re-elect President Obama. His face lit up at the thought of that with a smile that was simply electric! But while I got to shake Sen. Obama's hand at the rally in Houston on the night before the Texas primary; and while I spoke with several hundred voters at an elementary school in Houston on primary day, asking them to return that evening for second half of the Texas Two-Step (and was speechless when more than five hundred people showed up for that evening's caucus); and while I knocked on more than one hundred doors and made more than one hundred fifty phone calls over my two days in Raleigh; it was the last thing I did on Tuesday afternoon in Raleigh that truly brought home to me why this campaign is so important. A woman by the name of Hazel Edgerton had called Obama HQ and asked if it was possible to get a ride to her polling place after she got home from work. Her request somehow landed on my desk, so I called Ms. Edgerton to make arrangements to meet her. It was only when I began to describe the color of my car that I learned she was blind and that her daughter would be meeting her after work to go home with her. At the appointed time I knocked on her door, was greeted by Ms. Edgerton, and was introduced to her daughter, six-year-old Sabrina. Sabrina was more than a little shy, but she was also surprisingly determined to help her mother. The three of us drove to the polling place, which was in a church about a mile down the road, and together made our way inside. The poll workers were simply wonderful and made quick work of explaining the rules regarding how I could help Ms. Edgerton fill out her ballot. Once we were done, we brought the completed form to the ballot box and Sabrina carefully placed it into the optical reader. Our work at the polls now finished, I brought the Edgerton family back home, where Ms. Edgerton and I exchanged thank yous, hers in response for my driving and mine in response for having been given the privilege of doing so. It was then that Sabrina finally spoke up: she thanked me for taking her mother to vote, shook my hand, and said good-bye. I've been thinking a lot about Hazel and Sabrina Edgerton since then. Like families all across this country, the Edgertons are working hard to make a life for themselves, a task that has grown significantly more challenging under the current administration. But they haven't given up. Sabrina meets her mother after work and helps to make sure they get home together safely, which is quite a big responsibility for a six-year-old. Hazel made it a point to vote -- she was determined to vote -- so that her voice, and through her, her daughter's voice, would be heard. The Edgerton family has given me a great gift. They have shown me that Sen. Obama's vision for America, that we must all be here for one another, lives in all our hearts. I suppose this story is in some small way my North Carolina variation on Ashley Baia's experience in Florence, South Carolina, which Sen. Obama described at the conclusion of his March 18th speech in Philadelphia. There is a young, twenty-three year old white woman named Ashley Baia who organized for our campaign in Florence, South Carolina. She had been working to organize a mostly African-American community since the beginning of this campaign, and one day she was at a roundtable discussion where everyone went around telling their story and why they were there.... I am here because of Hazel and Sabrina. |
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ajperez56 |
Latest page update: made by ajperez56
, May 12 2008, 1:44 AM EDT
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