In our Cub Scout pack, we have been discussing getting a service
project going, and in actuality, we have been working on it personally
for a while now. When I went to a leadership and planning meeting in
our council for an upcoming Cub Weekend Campout, it was brought up
about wanting a simple service project for the Scouts that weekend in
which to participate. A few ideas were tossed about but we were a bit
more pragmatic and prepared with the concept since we were already
planning it.
The idea we had for a service project is simple. A lot of people
travel, stay at hotels, get free samples in the mail, etc. of toiletry
items. Nursing homes, homeless shelters, women's shelters, halfway
houses, etc. have need of these basic items. I personally have
collected an entire box full of these items. Items such as toothpaste,
razors, toothbrushes, small bar soap, shampoo, conditioner, hand
lotion, and the like are often needed and are easy to obtain. Whenever
I stay in hotels, I get more of these than I personally ever use. My
dentist gives me a small toothpaste sample and toothbrush every six
months that I rarely use, since I have an abundance of these items in
the house. Homeless shelters and women's shelters in particular have
said that they prefer the travel size items since most people who stay
are short term.
Well, the idea struck a chord with the council director and it looks
like the entire Tuscarora Council will be having boys participate in
this project. October 18-21 is our camping weekend, and so is our
target for the large collection day. In our pack, we had planned on
this being an ongoing project.
If you would like to help out with this project, feel free to pass
along any travel items, samples you get in the mail, hotel provided
toiletries, etc. on to John Dolan, Sharon, or myself. We already have
established contacts with a few organizations and they have expressed
the need and willingness to receive donations. Of course, anything you
may pick up besides travel items would also be appreciated and welcomed.
Below is a picture of just some of the items I have collected over the
past few years that have filled a Moist and Meaty dog food box.
Anything you can help out with would be appreciated.
"I don’t take stuff like that personally," Barber told reporters as supporters stood behind him. "He can have his opinion. We believe in freedom of speech. We have a responsibility to correct him."
Rep. Michael Speciale, R-Craven, along with all other state lawmakers, received an emailed version of a statement last week by Barber on proposed voter ID legislation.
In the statement, Barber calls voter ID initiatives "national propaganda efforts by the far-right to justify the obvious tactic to suppress the votes of minorities, youth, disabled and the elderly," and urges Republican legislative leaders to abandon their push for such a law in North Carolina.
WRAL News obtained the email Speciale sent in response, in which he accused Barber of tarnishing the "proud history" of the NAACP.
"You do minorities and the elderly a disservice when you assume that they are incapable or incompetent to the point that they cannot provide a photo ID to vote," Speciale wrote. "Your comments, both today and in the past are racist and inappropriate, therefore, I request that you remove me from your email list."
Speciale did not respond to calls and emails for comment or clarification.
"It’s like he picked up a book from the '50s or '60s and regurgitated the same answers from that day, instead of listening to what we’re saying," Barber said Friday. "He sent that as a way to try to divide and conquer, and it won’t work."
Barber and NAACP Vice President Curtis Gatewood turned the tables on lawmakers during their news conference, charging that the General Assembly is racist.
"If a policy is going to have a disparate impact upon blacks (and) minorities, we're going to call it what it is," Barber said. "That is why we call it systemic racism."
House Majority Leader Edgar Starnes said the reasons for voter ID legislation are getting lost amid the charges and counter-charges.
"I call on all members of the legislature and of groups with an interest in this issue to focus on policy rather than on emotion. Issues as important as this often generate emotional reactions," Starnes said.
Separately, remarks by NAACP attorney Al McSurely during the news conference regarding the origin of Speciale's email caused another dust-up.
"I don’t really think he wrote this letter. I think he gave it to one of his Civitas people and said, ‘Let’s go after Rev. Barber,'" McSurely said.
Civitas and Dallas Woodhouse, state director of Americans for Prosperity-North Carolina, whom McSurely also mentioned, both released statements Friday, calling on McSurely to retract his statement.
“It is appalling that McSurely, an attorney and therefore an officer of the court, would make such an utterly false claim,” Civitas President Francis De Luca said in a statement. “He has no basis for making that charge: He made it up out of whole cloth. He should retract this lie immediately.”
"I had nothing to do with this email, nor did Americans for Prosperity. To infer that I am responsible for the content of this email is a lie and Mr. McSurely knows it," Woodhouse said in a separate statement. "I intend to hold Mr. McSurely responsible in front of the State North Carolina Bar for his unethical conduct."