Showing posts with label Rosa Parks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rosa Parks. Show all posts

Friday, March 1, 2013

Her Head Is Held High

The following is from Congressman Rush Holt's newsletter:

On tours of the U.S. Capitol, one of the most popular stops is Statuary Hall: a large, two-story chamber that, for more than five decades, served as the meeting place for the U.S. House of Representatives. These days, the room serves as an exhibit of statues honoring many of America’s most prominent historical figures: Samuel Adams, Helen Keller, Ronald Reagan, George Washington, and many more.

On Wednesday, a new figure took her place among the giants.

Rosa Parks, the civil rights icon, was honored in a new statue made possible by an act of Congress that I cosponsored in 2005. She is depicted sitting down, in recognition of her most famous act of civil disobedience – yet in stone as in life, her head is held high.

I was joined at the statue’s unveiling by Trenton’s own civil rights icon: Edith Savage-Jennings, who has blazed trails ever since she helped lead the desegregation of Trenton’s movie theaters as a teenager. Edith and Rosa Parks were close friends; in fact, in 1993, Rosa walked Edith down the aisle at her wedding.

Few people know that Rosa Parks was, among her many roles, a staffer in the United States Congress. She served in Representative John Conyers’ Detroit office from 1965 until she retired in 1988. To me, her service as a staffer underscores both her dedication and her humility. I have no doubt that, if she had chosen, Rosa Parks could have been elected to Congress and would have been a towering figure among lawmakers – yet she chose a different form of service, one that was quieter but just as meaningful. Her life story reminds us that there is always a way for one to serve.

One Step Closer to Affordable Health Care for All

Earlier this week, Gov. Christie announced that New Jersey will take advantage of the health care reform law to expand Medicaid coverage to nearly 300,000 more New Jerseyans. Not only will this expansion provide greater health security for many in New Jersey, but it also will result in substantial health care savings.

One of the reasons I supported health care reform is because it was designed to provide every American a comprehensive and affordable health insurance option. This week’s announcement brings us one step closer to that goal.

Indeed, after some hesitation, many governors – Republicans and Democrats alike – are recognizing that implementing the Affordable Care Act is in the interest of their state’s residents. Some holdouts remain, but it has become apparent to most that health care reform is here to stay and that states should take advantage of the law where it helps and work to improve the law where there are shortcomings.

Collaboration Matters

Earlier this week, the U.S. House Committee on Government and Oversight Reform held a hearing to examine how federal agencies fund employee travel.

In light of reports in recent years of wasteful spending on federal conferences, this is an important area for oversight. Yet as I emphasized in my testimony to the committee, we must also work to preserve the many benefits of appropriate travel, which can include greater collaboration and innovation.

As a scientist, I know firsthand how important scientific conferences and meetings can be. The informal conversations, as well as the formal presentations and poster sessions, lead to new ideas and discoveries. This is not just idle speculation: a recent anti-cancer drug, for instance, was made possible only by the collaboration between scientists from three laboratories that took place at conferences.

Federal support for collaboration can be an investment in innovation and economic development.

Sincerely,

Rush Holt
Member of Congress

Friday, August 24, 2012

One Term More


"... Jefferson wrote, "The greatest good we can do our country is to heal its party divisions and make them one people." The Founding Fathers wouldn't have tolerated 21st century Tea Party polemics. No matter the nation's crushing ills or deep political divide, the framers chose to govern, not obstruct

Having brought forth a nation conceived in liberty and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal, you've got to wonder:

Are there any levelheaded Republicans left to remind untethered Tea Party apostles – notably those washed up on the shores of the Potomac – that incendiary rhetoric, hysterical white populism and a reckless disregard for the unalienable rights of others is not a government of, by or for the people?

Misogynistic, homophobic, radically regressive and ideologically unhinged with little apparent interest in governing and no appetite for compromise or common ground, that Grand Old Party's out-of-order, a consequence of preposterous partisan pandering, legislative belligerence…and all that tea. 

To the extent any nominal independent expenditure can underscore the titanic distinctions between candidates, parties and platforms – from ALEC-influenced legislatures codifying colossally misguided stand-your-ground laws to muddleheaded McCarthy-mimicking Members of the House calling colleagues Communists – ours will, we hope, attract the attention of an inquisitive electorate and contribute to a more reasoned electoral outcome.

At the end of the day will unruly Republicans simply be too tone-deaf to hear the people sing? We'll know when tomorrow comes." - Don DeMesquita




for more info go to www.onetermmore.com

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

55 Years Ago Today Rosa Parks Refused To Give Up Her Seat

55 years ago today down in Montgomery Alabama, Rosa Louise Parks, a 42 year old department store seamstress refused to listen to a bus driver that ordered her to give up her seat on the bus in order make room for a white passenger.

Her action sparked the legendary Montgomery bus boycott of 1955 and marked the true beginnings of the civil rights movement. It was a turning point in the history of this country and race relations and it should always be remembered.

a good place to learn more about Rosa Parks and the early civil rights movement is the Scholastic webpage that is dedicated to her life and the struggles of the civil rights movement of the 1950's and 1960's.