
250 Days #B4uVote choose hope over despair + engagement over apathy + kindness over indifference = love over hate #RealRealty #BeThe1st #GA123 #1Bethesda #2r1wm #CelestialCoach

250 Days #B4uVote choose hope over despair + engagement over apathy + kindness over indifference = love over hate #RealRealty #BeThe1st #GA123 #1Bethesda #2r1wm #CelestialCoach


Good morning to you all! 🌞 There comes a moment, often when you least expect it, when everything falls into place. And in that moment, you’ll find yourself grateful for your resilience, for not giving up. Blessings are indeed on the horizon. Have faith in that. Remember, there are doors that only open to us by the grace of a higher power, doors that remain open unless we choose to close them. Keep believing, keep pushing forward. . #BeThe1st#RealRealty #Election2024 #GA123 #2r1wm#CelestialCoach

Let’s embrace this, folks: #LetTheChildOut. It’s important to remember that no matter how old we get, how far we’ve climbed in our professional careers, or the heights of accomplishment we’ve achieved, it’s crucial to let ourselves laugh and embrace a bit of silliness. Give yourself permission to play. Let that inner child of yours come out and truly savor the joys of life. #BeThe1st #RealRealty #GA123 #1Bethesda #2r1wm #CelestialCoach#MoreThanAvote
Good Morning! 🌞
A meaningful life is not being rich, being popular, being highly educated...

Good Morning! 🌞
A meaningful life is not being rich, being popular, being highly educated, or being perfect. It's about being real, being humble, being able to share ourselves and touch the lives of others.
Every day begins new choices #RealRealty#1Bethesda #BeThe1st #GA123#2r1wm
“LIVE for LIFE, but let live everybody.” — Marvin Gaye
My Grandmother taught me to “stand up for what you believe. Don’t be afraid to ask, and sometimes fight, for what you believe is right.” Her point was that we all should act consciously and deliberately to create the society in which we want to live.
I remember the anxiety I had the first-day teaching. I showed up early to the classroom to upload the assignment, class rules, and homework on the smartboard. It took an hour to learn how to input data in the system and another 30 minutes to add the bells and whistles. Before this day, I had spent a year getting ready for this moment, so I knew this was going to be my best training ever. The lesson plan was simple; I wanted to teach on the racial divide in America today, linking slavery, reconstruction, and other historical markers to the present state of students of color. Lastly, I was going to do what I always did when I was training staff as a campaign manager — add a few “stern reminders about their performance” to keep their attention. Well, that was the plan.

I guess the adage is true “it’s a plan until you get punched in the mouth.”
The second the bell rang, the students entered the classroom demanding a snack. The problem was that I didn’t know where the food was kept in the room, how to administer the water break protocol, or how long to allow students to eat. I wasn’t even sure feeding them was appropriate. So, I ask a trusted student in the class (my son) if this was a routine request, and he assured me that it was. Students who are “in need” are allowed to have morning snacks in the classroom on days when the cafeteria closes early. Today the cafeteria had an emergency, but I felt passionate about their performance on the upcoming test, so I pushed through. I jumped right in with my “drill, kill, education dump” style lesson plan. As a result, my son and his classmates sat through an entire lesson and did not learn anything. Was that the correct decision?
No. While I didn’t listen to the students, and didn’t continue to advocate for their right to have a snack, we both suffered. I look back at that moment and realize that the lesson plan was more about me than my students. I wanted to cover the content for the test, but I wasn’t thinking about the issues facing these students. Even worse, I failed to connect how their current problems relate to the lesson I was attempting to teach. Sure, for scholars with exceptional concentration, interest, and memory, it worked out. For most of the students who live in financially insecure households, it was hard for them to learn while hungry.
Just under 53% of this community is unemployed — 20% employed part-time before the pandemic.
Thanks to my Grandmother’s wisdom, leadership development training, and lots of hard work, I learned to listen to my students and promote self-advocacy. First, I talk far less while teaching and never go longer than twenty minutes without hearing from them. Also, I see my job as preparing students for real-life experiences, so I have incorporated that in my approach — education, civic, and financial independence.
For example, today, I would help them analyze the institutions addressing wealth inequality during the “pandemic economy” and the Freedmen’s Bureau during Reconstruction. I would ask if the failure to enact “40 acres and a mule” is responsible for the increase in America’s financially insecure communities today? I would encourage them to envision what our neighborhoods would look like today without the compromise of 1877. Would the economic inequality of people of color be less if we all voted?
Then I would push them to take action using an active learning model — integrating evidence-based data while making associations to the correlations applicable to their lives. As a teacher, I now know that making a connection between income inequality and voting increases their attention and memory and makes the lesson relevant.
Elections are an excellent place to make a connection:
Voting is the most effective way of addressing critical issues that impact financially insecure communities–minimum wage, access to quality education, housing, healthcare, and food security. However, people living on the margins of society and grasping for a ladder of hope and opportunity find it hard to invest time in voting.
My students understood what I overlooked. We must first address their educational, civic, and financial “needs and wants” first to participate in the transactional experience of learning thoroughly. I do this now, but I wish I could go back to that classroom and teach those students that they must stand up for what they believe. Don’t be afraid to ask and fight for what you know is right. It’s important to remember that your ultimate objective is to create a nation where everyone in need of assistance receives it and leads a life of respect, dignity, and opportunity.
To be continued …
Kirk Clay is the President of Capitol View Advisors — a collaborative acting on its values in creative and strategic ways to connect communities with the information and resources they need to support and further their aspirations.
By Kirk Clay
Analyzing Ohio’s Voters and Making Final Four Predictions
I have to admit, I love it when the March Madness season comes around. There is something about completing bracket sheets for both the Women’s and Men’s NCAA Basketball Tournaments and developing a strategy for my favorite teams to go all the way. The best part is identifying all of the opportunities for “cinderellas” or “underdogs” to win games they are not supposed to win.
As we get closer to the final four teams and realize that there are simply too many long shots for our favorite teams to survive the entire tournament, we scrap the entire bracket and start all over again. The trick is to gather as many statistics as possible and choose the best path forward. Sometimes, we have to follow our heart and go with our gut instincts.
Watching the excitement of the “First Four” match up in Dayton reminded me of Ohio’s recent “Big Four” electoral impact events. I began to ask myself, “what did Representatives Kaptur, Kucinich, Schmidt, and the “Underdog” Congressional hopeful Joyce Beatty all have in common?” They all were affected by Congress’ abysmal 10% approval rating.
Does the results of their Congressional bids reflect the voters’ gut instincts? Clearly, there is a sentiment that Washington’s obstructive behavior–like the current fiasco over judicial vacancies, the stalled transportation bill, and the assault on women’s healthcare–will not be rewarded in 2012.
As our economy continues to recover and U.S. manufacturing is becoming this years “Cinderella story,” voters are becoming hopeful. Toledo added about 1,800 manufacturing jobs last year and more are coming this year with General Motors and Chrysler committing to hiring over 1,600 people by 2013. Correspondingly, unemployment has fallen to 7.9% and manufacturing now comprises 18.3 percent of Ohio’s economy. We now see that middle and working-class voters are rejecting the old strategy of “wining by demonizing the opposite party on a bumper sticker.” In November, they may counter 2010’s dysfunctional hate wave with a wave of “economically coherent” leaders.
To win the heartland, politicians have to revive Franklin Roosevelt’s “Lunch Pail / Hard Hat Coalition.” In fact, a modern coalition which includes progressive Whites, Latinos, African Americans, Asians, Native Americans, Unions, and Young Voters is the best path forward.
Remember the 2006 elections when Governorships and Senate seats flipped to blue in Ohio, Colorado, Virginia, Pennsylvania, and Missouri? That was the “Lunch Pail Coalition” in action. A significant factor in the election outcomes were Voters of Color (VOC). For example, look at Ohio’s Cuyahoga County. That county, which includes Cleveland, was 12% of the vote share while VOC were 14% of the electorate.
This dynamic has played a significant role in Ohio where African American mayors have been elected in the seven major cities of Cleveland, Columbus, Cincinnati, Toledo, Dayton, Youngstown, and Mansfield. Ohio voters have always been able to come together through a “Lunch Pail / Hard Hat Coalition” and elect candidates of color.
Looking forward to November 2012, I remain hopeful. Although the 2010 census data shows Ohio losing two Electoral College votes, cities like Columbus grew by 10.6% to 787,033. This increase gives Columbus more than 145,000 “key” Voters of Color. That means the Democratic Primary winner Joyce Beatty, who is the first African American Congressperson from central Ohio to make it to the primary, can win in November.
Beatty has already demonstrated the impact of the “Lunch Pail Coalition” in Ohio’s new 3rd Congressional District by mobilizing the second largest VOC voting block of Ohio’s sixteen congressional districts. Her strategy to embrace the heart of the coalition by targeting high performing VOC precincts like the Southside, Northeast, and Eastside gave her strong voter support in precincts like 35-B, 17-F and 28-E. What’s more, Beatty won all but one of the twenty highest-turnout precincts in the district and received 15,231 votes district wide.
As the big dance towards November begins, it’s important to keep in mind that middle and working-class voters are not interested in obstruction by Congress. Why should they? Ohio has increased its manufacturing jobs by about 4 percent since June, 2009. That’s 24,600 jobs for working families. Imagine how many more new jobs could be created if Congress worked together? As Beatty said on election night “our voice will be part of doing new things.” We want our political leaders to get something done.
I agree. Voters have little patience for bumper sticker solutions. We always root for the underdogs, even if that means voting for a slate of bracket busters. That’s popping the clutch.
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Kirk Clay is Senior Advisor at PowerPAC