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claypool4prez Donating Member (324 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-14-08 03:24 PM
Original message
IMPORTANT ------- DFA Grassroots All-Star
Edited on Mon Jan-14-08 03:32 PM by claypool4prez
Hello,


This is Mike Cooper, a former intern for Howard Dean's Democracy for America.


And I'm asking you like minded individuals, from the bottom of my heart, to take two minutes and help me and Roy Carter, the candidate I now work for.


Today DFA is launching their 2008 Grassroots All-Star campaign to select the person running for U.S. Congress that best exemplifies DFA values, civic responsibility, and the courage to stand up in districts and areas usually controlled by the bad guys.

I left DFA, and beautiful Vermont, to return to North Carolina and work for a man named Roy Carter, because the first time I met Roy he told me, "Mike I don't know if I'm going to win, I don't know much about politics and this will be the hardest thing I've ever done in my life, but I know one thing, it's the most important thing I've ever done, I have to do this, and I'd be ashamed not to. I can't sit back another day and watch another one of my former students die in Iraq."

Please, if you get a chance go to democracyforamerica.com and vote for Roy, because when he wins, in the reddest district in NC, it will send shockwaves across this country and it will prove that a run of the mill person with no money, law degree, or political background can still win an election in this country.

Vote for Roy!!!!!!!!!!!!


Here is some info:

Roy Carter, the youngest of three children, grew up in rural North Carolina and has lived nearly all of his life in various North Carolina mountain communities.

The son of Marion "Bill" Carter, a tobacco farmer, and Jessie Buckner Carter, an assembly-line worker, Roy was raised in a home that valued strength of character above worldly possessions.

Poor in almost every other way, Roy Carter had a childhood rich in the traditional Democratic values of hard-work, fellowship, love and prayer.

Politics and the Democratic Party have always been integral to Roy's life. With his father passionate about politics and actively involved with his local Democratic Party, Roy learned early on the importance of participating in our political process and the responsibility that comes with that.

It is that same sense of purpose and responsibility that now calls Roy Carter into public life.



Family, faith and athletics played key roles in Roy's upbringing, providing him a solid foundation on which to survive tragedy, achieve his goals and grow into a man of character and integrity.

Roy regards his mother, his older brother Billy and his high school football coach Clyde Peek, as the greatest influences in his life. Roy was only ten years old when Billy, an outstanding high school athlete, died tragically of cancer at the age of seventeen. Although his life was short, Billy inspired his little brother to work hard at achieving his goals, persevering through tough times while appreciating each day.

Despite working on the family farm, Roy was a three sport letterman in High School and excelled on the football field. The teamwork, discipline and brotherhood of football appealed to Roy and it quickly became his passion.

On the advice of his mentor, Coach Peek, Roy followed his passion to East Tennessee State University. At that time, ETSU offered lower tuition than in-state schools, thus affording low- income students like Roy the opportunity of a college education.

Roy worked his way through school, often commuting over the mountain in an old car, determined to fulfill his dream of earning a college degree. His determination was further fueled by the prayer and encouragement of his mother Jesse who believed Roy capable of achieving anything that he set his mind to. Sadly, Jesse did not live to see her youngest son graduate in 1968 as a brain aneurism claimed her life midway through Roy's college career.

Informed by his experience, Carter strongly believes that low interest loans and need-based grants must be expanded in order to allow all young people the opportunity of a higher education.

In 1965, Roy married Patricia Burleson of nearby Barnardsville, N.C. Upon graduation Roy embarked on a coaching and teaching career that has spanned forty years.

Pat, also a career educator, recently retired after twenty-two years as an elementary school teacher.

Married forty-three years, Roy and Pat have three children: Todd Carter, Andrea Carter Gimlin, Stacey Carter, and son-in-law Wiley Gimlin. They have a grandson, Tristen Carter Gimlin and will be welcoming a granddaughter to the family in December 2007.

Roy has dedicated his life thus far to educating young people, motivating them to achieve their goals and being a positive, affirming influence in their lives. Throughout his career as Educator, Football Coach and Athletic Director, Roy has always considered community involvement crucial to student success.

That brings us up to 2007.

To best put it, picture a handful of good ole' boys - country folk if you will - sitting in rocking chairs on a back porch, conversing over a variety of subjects from sports, and local social gossip to finally politics. The discussion then began to center around Rep. Virginia Foxx (R) and the despicable job she's done representing the fifth district of North Carolina(voting against giving aid to Katrina victims, the Voting Rights Act, etc..).

Roy and his buddies speculated as to who would have the courage to step up and run against Foxx in 2008. But none of them could really think of any worthy names, or local officials, who would consider it.

So there, sitting in that rocking chair, at his farm high up in the mountains of North Carolina, Roy Carter made the decision of his life.

"I'm a gonna do it," announced Roy to his friends.

"Do what," responded one man.

"I'm gonna run for Congress," said Roy.

"But you have no experience in that politics," retorted the man.

"Don't have to. I know the difference between right and wrong, and that's all that should matter," Roy proclaimed.

----

The rest as they say is history.

Here is a man, who has never run for any office in his life, following a proud career of service in the classroom and on the football field, laying everything on the line. And he's doing that because he grew tired of watching his students end up either in poverty or in a desert foxhole.

He has no career aspirations, and wouldn't use this as a stepping stone.

He's told his staff that this is about principles. If he wins he's going to vote with his conscious: to bring the troops home, take on corporations, clean up campaign finance, bring back paper ballots, push for minimum wage increase, and college for everyone.

He won't let a president, a speaker or even a majority leader tell him how to vote. He's doesn't want to go to Congress to make friends, he has enough back home in the sticks of NC, he only wants to go to Congress to look out for them. And to prove that an average man, with no money, no law degree, who taught high school science, can still win an election in this money/media driven political spectrum.




"Roy Carter for Congress, Roy Carter for Progress"
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claypool4prez Donating Member (324 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-14-08 03:31 PM
Response to Original message
1. and vote for two more of your choosing
And you can vote for two more candidates for House, ones closer to your area, just remember to make Roy one of your three.


You can vote on the front page of democracyforamerica.com
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claypool4prez Donating Member (324 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-14-08 03:40 PM
Response to Reply #1
2. one more thing
Roy Carter's opponent, Virginia Foxx, went on the radio yesterday and said that the American economy is in the best shape its ever been.

That's just a small taste of what we're dealing with in NC-5. But there is hope, here is a recent cover story in The Nation about our district: http://www.thenation.com/doc/20070813/moser



So keep us in your thoughts if you can. And help Roy make history.
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