I just finished watching Iron-Jawed Angels. If you have never seen that movie, I highly recommend it. It's available right now on demand if you have HBO or through Netflix.
It is one of those movies that truly makes you realize what women went through in the 20s to get the nineteenth amendment to the Constitution. I can't help but admire all those women for working so hard so that their daughters, granddaughters and great granddaughters would be able to vote. And I can't help but shudder to think about all those women who dismiss the opportunity to become part of history every year on election day.
I couldn't wait to turn 18 so that I could vote. In the 12 years since I have never missed an election day. I love closing the curtain behind me and turning the little levers and voting for the candidates I feel will best serve me and the country that I live in. I don't understand people who don't vote every year. Why would you miss the opportunity to be part of history. No matter how small you feel, every vote counts.
This year more than ever, it is so important to get out and vote. No matter what your political views, go out and cast your vote.
This last point is nowhere more important than if you support the environment, universal healthcare, women's rights, gay rights, etc. Please, please, please, get off your couch and cast your vote for Obama this year. I am looking forward to Tuesday in a way my Election-Day-loving self has never looked forward to before (I can't figure out if that sentence makes sense, I think I'm getting a head cold). I know when I turn that little lever, or touch that screen or whatever I need to do this year, I am going to get a warm fuzzy feeling in my stomach that I have never felt before, because I am confident I am voting for the best candidate the DNC has to offer.
HP Ink Cartridge Hack: Save plastic and ink
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This will be a short post. More of a rant, actually. And hopefully useful to
at least one person out there. Last night I discovered Hewlett Packard’s
schem...
5 hours ago
7 comments:
You wrote: everything in science is considered a theory because it is impossible to prove something beyond a shadow of a doubt. You can find evidence to support it and be pretty sure it's true, but you can never prove it because there may be some argument you haven't thought of. The theory of gravity is just that, the theory of evolution, the theory of relativity. Pretty much everything you know is a theory. We accept them as law because of the overwhelming evidence in favor of them, but we will never be able to know for sure. That's how science works, so get your facts straight before you run off at the mouth next time.
facts and science...that is funny. Okay let me start off by saying, why do you get to run your mouth off, but I don't? That just sounds wrong.
Let me ask you have you investigated both sides of global warming in depth? I bet you haven't.
Take this theory for instance, if there is proof against it then would that mean it's a farce? I think so, and there is a lot of evidence against it. Most research done today for this theory, does not hold any value when compared to the theories against it. Check it out.
Latte
since your comment made no sense I'm not going to dignify it with more of a response than this: if you don't believe in evolution I would only expect you to believe other crackpot ideas like global warming is a farce. There is a lot of evidence against a lot of things, but not everything can be taken at face value. Dig a little deeper and you would understand this. But I don't expect someone like you to ever understand this, since you can't look past what's in front of your nose.
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