We have another location to add where people can go to sign petitions or pick them up for circulation. This one is in the Northeast.
10105 Dyer. They are there Monday -Friday from 7:30 am to 5:30 pm and Saturday from 8:00 am to 1:00 pm.
Thursday, April 19, 2012
Sunday, April 15, 2012
There are three new locations El Paso voters can go to sign recall petitions. They are listed below.
Far East: 12460 Weaver Road Horizon City
North East/Central: 1776 American Way(behind the Radisson Hotel on Boeing.)
West Side: 4026 Mesa, Suite B (behind Comos Restaurant.)
I want to thank these voters who have volunteered their locations to help in this effort. I also want to encourage everyone to tell your friends, family and neighbors about the recall. The vote does not belong to just one person, it belongs to us all. If it is lost, we all lose it.
Far East: 12460 Weaver Road Horizon City
North East/Central: 1776 American Way(behind the Radisson Hotel on Boeing.)
West Side: 4026 Mesa, Suite B (behind Comos Restaurant.)
I want to thank these voters who have volunteered their locations to help in this effort. I also want to encourage everyone to tell your friends, family and neighbors about the recall. The vote does not belong to just one person, it belongs to us all. If it is lost, we all lose it.
Saturday, April 14, 2012
Citizens of El Paso,
Today from 3-5 PM we will be at the Tax Day event at the Amphitheater located at 9700 Girl Scout Way in the Northeast. Girl Scout Way is off Transmountain between Rushing and Kenworthy. I will have petitions there.
Today from 3-5 PM we will be at the Tax Day event at the Amphitheater located at 9700 Girl Scout Way in the Northeast. Girl Scout Way is off Transmountain between Rushing and Kenworthy. I will have petitions there.
Tuesday, April 10, 2012
This blog was created as an information distribution point in the ongoing effort to recall John Cook, the Mayor of El Paso, Texas. This blog is where info will be passed on as to the dates, times and locations where concerned citizens can sign petitions. I am also soliciting volunteers to help get signatures for the petitions. Anyone wishing to volunteer or contact me for any reason can reach me at recallepmayor@gmail.com I will not accept any monetary or in kind contributions. I will only accept help in legally obtaining signatures on the petitions. I am initiating this recall as a private citizen and not as a member of any organization. Also, I do not speak for anyone but myself. Contrary to what our Mayor and several of our city council members have
said about those who support a recall of the Mayor, I am not a bigot or a
hate monger. I am an average citizen. I retired from the Army a couple
of years ago after serving over 30 years in defense of our great nation.
I have served on the DMZ in Korea, in Germany during the Cold War as
well as in Kosovo, Iraq and Afghanistan. I have seen what happens to
people who have lost any voice in how they are governed and I refuse to stand by and allow that to happen here. At least not without a challenge. No matter how people feel about the referendum that overturned the domestic partner benefits, it was done legally and in accordance with the city charter. It was also upheld by a judge on appeal. If the Mayor and four City Council Members can disregard the vote of the citizens of El Paso once, the question has to be asked , "what will they do next?" Abraham Lincoln said ours is "a government of the people, by the people and for the people." It is not a government "of the few, by the few and for the few." The Mayor has said that overturning the referendum was the right thing to do because other city workers besides domestic partners would have lost their health coverage also. That is disingenuous at best. The law that allows the city council to overturn an ordinance, Article III,Section 3.9, C.3. states: the city council may amend, extend, or repeal any ordinance previously
adopted. If the referendum had unintended consequences, Mayor and City Council should have respected the will of the voters, leaving in place the repeal of the domestic partner benefits and amending the ordinance to eliminate the unintended consequences. That would have been the right thing to do. This is not an anti homosexual issue and it is not an anti John Cook
issue. It is an issue where the incumbent used the position of
his office to further an agenda that he was not voted into office to
pursue and that the voters of El Paso soundly rejected at the ballot
box. A little known fact many people are not aware of is the referendum
the voters approved that overturned the domestic partner benefits had
the highest percentage of registered voters participating than any non
presidential election in years. A higher percentage voted in that
referendum than voted for Governor, U.S. Congress or our municipal
elections. As a matter of fact, more El Pasoans voted for the referendum
that voted for the Mayor and all City Council Members combined. This
information can be verified by going to the El Paso city government
elections website. Again, this is contrary to what many people have been saying, including some in our local media. I would like to conclude this post with two thoughts. The first is a quote from English philosopher Edmund Burke who said, ‘The only thing necessary for the triumph [of evil] is for
good men to do nothing.’ All one has to do is look around and see this is just as true today as it was in Edmund Burke's day. Violence has exploded across our border in Mexico and within our own country. You cannot turn on the news or pick up a paper and not find a story about a shooting or some other horrific event. Additionally, I have seen more stories of corruption here in El Paso in the last couple of years I have lived here than I could ever have imagined. It's time for good people to stand for what is right and defend our democratic republic. It may not be perfect but it's the best thing going this side of Heaven and it is definitely worth defending. The second thought is a story shared by Dr. Erwin Lutzer,Pastor of Moody Church for 30 years, wrote a
book entitled “When A Nation Forgets God.” In his book, Dr. Lutzer shared an account
from an eyewitness of how some church members reacted to the Nazism of their
times:
“I lived in Germany during the Nazi Holocaust. I considered
myself a Christian. We heard stories of what was happening to Jews, but we
tried to distance ourselves from it because what could we do to stop it. A railroad
track ran behind our small church and each Sunday morning we could hear the
whistle in the distance, and then the wheels coming over the tracks. We became
disturbed when we heard the cries coming from the train as it passed by. We
realized that it was carrying Jews like cattle in the cars. Week after week the
whistle would blow. We dreaded to hear the sound of those wheels because we
knew that we would hear the cries of the Jews in route to a death camp. Their
screams tormented us. We knew the time the train was coming, and when we
heard the whistle blow, we began singing hymns. By the time the train
came past our church, we were singing at the top of our voices. If we heard
the screams, we sang more loudly and soon we heard them no more.” And then the eyewitness shared with Pastor
Lutzer, “ Although years have passed, I still hear the train whistle in my
sleep. God forgive me, forgive all of us who called ourselves Christians and
yet did nothing to intervene.”
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)