Rasta Nicks Forum Rasta Nick's Forum - rastafarian - Reggae - Haile Selassie
February 09, 2012, 05:20:15 AM
Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
Did you miss your activation email?

Login with username, password and session length
Rasta Nicks Forum and Rasta-man.co.uk are privately funded. Please help keep Rasta Nicks Forum and Rasta-man.co.uk running by making a donation via Pay Pal - it's fast, free and secure!
Or ya could just buy some seeds
Google Custom Search
News: Fill out member map and profile.
Rasta Nick's Forum - rastafarian - Reggae - Haile Selassie  
   Home   Help Member Map Donations Login Register  

lowryder seeds

or go to www.jahseed.com

Subject Statistics
Topic: please help rebuild the gulf coast Replies: 0 posts
Read 434 times 0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
Pages: [1]
  Print  
Author Topic: please help rebuild the gulf coast  (Read 434 times)
0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
ke
Veteran User
*****
United States

Karma: 17
Offline Offline

Gender: Male
United States United States

Posts: 799


 

OS:
Windows XP
Browser:
Microsoft Internet Explorer 7.0




Ignore
« on: August 20, 2008, 08:29:03 PM »

Dear Friend,
Three years after Hurricane Katrina, there's finally a bill in Congress that will give Katrina survivors a fair chance to rebuild their lives. But it won't become law if enough representatives don't stand up to support it.

The Gulf Coast Civic Works Act would hire 100,000 Gulf Coast residents and evacuees, providing them with training and jobs to rebuild their homes and communities. It started as nothing more than a good idea, but after thousands of ColorOfChange.org members called on Congress to support the plan, and after years of persistent activism from students and Gulf Coast organizations, it now has a real chance of bringing some justice to the Gulf.

Even though it's come this far, it will take massive public pressure on each member of Congress to get the bill passed. If we want justice for Katrina survivors, we need to make our voices heard now as the media focuses its attention on the third anniversary of Hurricane Katrina.

I've signed on with ColorOfChange.org to tell my member of Congress to co-sponsor the Gulf Coast Civic Works Act, will you join us?

http://www.colorofchange.org/gulfcoast/?id=2031-476884


The Gulf Coast Civic Works Act represents a powerful shift from what's currently happening in the Gulf. It calls for hiring 100,000 Gulf Coast residents to rebuild New Orleans and the surrounding region. They'll be provided with temporary housing and job-training and will build and repair houses, schools, parks, and other civic buildings.

The idea behind the Gulf Coast Civic Works Project is not new. During the Great Depression, the federal government believed it had a responsibility to ensure that those hit hardest did not fall through the cracks. It also knew that those Americans wanted a hand up, not a handout. So, in 1935, Congress created a program to hire out-of-work Americans to get things done to benefit their communities.

It's a plan that makes sense--for displaced survivors, for the communities of the Gulf Coast, for the nation as a whole. It provides an opportunity to invest in Americans while reversing the most glaring problems that plague current rebuilding plans: gentrification, government waste, and massive corporate profiteering. It would revitalize the Gulf Coast's economy while rebuilding its infrastructure, and it's a model that could be applied to solve similar problems across the country.

Learn more and please join us by calling on your representative to co-sponsor the Gulf Coast Civic Works Act. It only takes a minute:

http://www.colorofchange.org/gulfcoast/?id=2031-476884


Thanks.

Logged

"each one teach one"-M1 from Dead Prez
Rasta Nicks Forum
   

 Logged
Pages: [1] K-Detection © 2007
  Print  
 
Jump to:  

seedsman
Powered by MySQL Powered by PHP © 2007 rasta nick's forum Powered by SMF 1.1.16 | SMF © 2011, Simple Machines Valid XHTML 1.0! Valid CSS!
Page created in 0.673 seconds with 26 queries.

Google visited last this page February 05, 2012, 11:46:06 PM