WhiteKnot.org: Everyone Should Have The Right To “Tie The Knot.”


By Jueseppi B.

 

whiteknot-logo-long

 

 

 

Be Visible. Wear a White Knot to support marriage equality, and full equal rights under the law for everyone.

 

Gay, straight, or otherwise…help make full equality a reality by wearing a White Knot and telling people why you are wearing it. Wear it to work, to school, to your place of worship. Wear it every day to raise awareness and start conversations.

 

Tell someone today that equal rights are important to everyone. Spread the word that all loving couples deserve the same legal rights, benefits, and respect that civil marriage bestows.

 

Get White Knots

 

Make White Knots

 

Donate

 

 

White Knots are now worn in 37 countries around the world.

 

Equality Newswire

 

 
 
 
 
White Knot Resources and Tools
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Get Involved
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
On Facebook….White Knot
 
 
 
 
Gay_flag.svg
 
 
equalityforall
 
 
doma_repeal
 
 
qvegs
 
 
for-all
 
 
Marriage_Equality_ribbon_by_marriageequality.71195908_std
 
 
550529_10150942275766101_18343191100_12022422_1143727267_n
 
 
130326-scotus-gay-marriage-its-time
 
 
bgs667hcaaif0pq
 
 
 
 
blogger4peacelogo
 
 
 
obama-logo-head (3)
 

Soul Destruction By Ms. Ruth Jacobs


 

Written By Ruth Jacobs…..C&P By Jueseppi B. ( ° ͜ʖ ͡°)

 

sd-front-border

 

 

Soul Destruction

 

I am writing a series of novels entitled Soul Destruction, which expose the dark world and the harsh reality of life as a call girl. The first novel in the series, Soul Destruction: Unforgivable, will be released on 29 April 2013 by Caffeine Nights. I studied prostitution in the late 1990′s, which sparked my interest in the subject. As well as drawing on my research and the women I interviewed for inspiration, I also have firsthand experience of many of the topics I write about such as post traumatic stress disorderobsessive-compulsive disorder, depression, abuse in childhood, rape, and drug and alcohol addiction. In addition to my fiction writing, I am also involved in non-fiction for charity and human rights campaigning in the areas of anti-sexual exploitation and anti-human trafficking.

 

In 1998, I was researching prostitution for a dissertation examining psychological and social issues and theories of crime. Spending time in London’s underworld, some of my friends were call girls, and three of them kindly agreed to participate in video interviews with me.

 

I had much in common with my friends and many other women in prostitution. 75% of women in prostitution have been sexually and physically abused as children, 70% have experienced multiple rapes, 67% meet the criteria for post-traumatic stress disorder, and 95% have issues with problematic drug use.

 

I suffered sexual assaults as a child, I had been raped twice in my twenties, though only once at the time of this project, and I had post traumatic stress disorder, which I still suffer from today. And in those days, I was a drug addict, an intravenous user of heroin and crack.

 

As well as interviewing my friends, I also used accounts from other women in prostitution between the 1970′s to the 1990′s. This was because there was a lack of firsthand information at the time. The few books available on the subject were mostly written by people who neither had firsthand experience of prostitution nor used interviews or accounts from women in prostitution.

 

One of the video interviews I had conducted and fully transcribed back in 1998 was published on Amazon in 2012. The woman interviewed was a very dear friend of mine. She is referred to as Q. Because Q and I were so close, I am sure that is what enabled her to be so open in her interview with me. Her words show how prostitution affected her psychologically, emotionally and socially. As she is no longer alive, all the royalties from that short publication,In Her Own Words… Interview with a London Call Girl, are donated to Beyond the Streets, a charity working to end sexual exploitation.

 

The other women I interviewed, referred to as R and S, though also friends of mine, were guarded. There was much more I knew about their lives and their feelings about their work, shared when we were out at nightclubs and indoors smoking crack, than they disclosed in front of the camera.

 

I had and still have an understanding and compassion for the need to hold back. I was in my own denial back then. I presented as a happy junky to the outside world, and they too presented happy – ‘happy hooker’ being a popular term. But I have never known a happy hooker as I have never known a happy intravenous user of heroin and crack.

 

Having since been in contact with a number of exited women, I have become aware that the trauma from prostitution is usually not felt until after exiting. Before then, like XLondonCallGirl says, you live in denial, and like Q said in her interview, you live in a fantasy-land. I was with them in my own fantasy-land and in my own denial.

 

Denial and dissociation are part of a protection/coping mechanism that enables the women to carry on with a veneer of toughness, the appearance of being a ‘happy hooker’, and without falling apart. On the outside being a call girl may well appear to be glamorous, but on the inside, it is not. It can take years to recover from, and I am sure many never fully recover, certainly from the women I know.

 

As well as dispelling the ‘happy hooker’ myth, I hope with my novels and my non-fiction work to change the stigma much of society has against women who work in prostitution. They are often judged and looked down upon. These women have mainly had painful and tormented childhoods and traumatic present lives. For most, they do not choose prostitution, but prostitution chooses them. These women and equally women who say they choose prostitution deserve to be seen and respected as any other women.

 

Soul Destruction: Unforgivable is dedicated to Q.

 

Enter the bleak existence of a call girl haunted by the atrocities of her childhood. In the spring of 1997, Shelley Hansard is a drug addict with a heroin habit and crack psychosis. Her desirability as a top London call girl is waning.

 

When her client dies in a suite at The Lanesborough Hotel, Shelley’s complex double-life is blasted deeper into chaos. In her psychotic state, the skills required to keep up her multiple personas are weakening. Amidst her few friends, and what remains of her broken family, she struggles to maintain her wall of lies.

 

During this tumultuous time, she is presented with an opportunity to take revenge on a client who raped her and her friends. But in her unbalanced state of mind, can she stop a serial rapist?

 

Soul Destruction: Unforgivable is released 29 April 2013. Available worldwide from all major online retailers in paperback and e-book. Pre-orders are available direct from Caffeine Nights.

 

 

Soul Destruction – Call Girl Book & Diary Series

 

Published on Jul 3, 2012

Soul Destruction website: http://www.soul-destruction.com

Soul Destruction: Unforgivable

Enter the bleak existence of a call girl haunted by the atrocities of her childhood. In the spring of 1997, Shelley Hansard is a drug addict with a heroin habit and crack psychosis. Her desirability as a top London call girl is waning.

When her client dies in a suite at The Lanesborough Hotel, Shelley’s complex double-life is blasted deeper into chaos. In her psychotic state, the skills required to keep up her multiple personas are weakening. Amidst her few friends, and what remains of her broken family, she struggles to maintain her wall of lies.

During this tumultuous time, she is presented with an opportunity to take revenge on a client who raped her and her friends. But in her unbalanced state of mind, can she stop a serial rapist?

 

 

 

 

Further information and contact details:

Ruth Jacobs’s Amazon author pages – USA and UK.

 

Soul Destruction website.

 

Author website.

 

 

About The Author: Ms. Ruth Jacobs…..

 

 
 
 
Ruth Jacobs studied prostitution in the late 1990′s, which sparked her interest in the subject. Her Soul Destruction series of novels expose the dark world and the harsh reality of life as a call girl. She draws on her research and the women she interviewed for inspiration. She also has firsthand experience of some of the topics she writes about such as post traumatic stress disorder, and drug and alcohol addiction.
 
 
Soul Destruction: Unforgivable, Ruth’s debut novel, follows Shelley Hansard, a heroin addicted, crack psychotic, London call girl who gets the opportunity to take revenge on a client who raped her. Soul Destruction: Unforgivable will be published in April 2013 by Caffeine Nights. Ruth’s second novel, Soul Destruction Diary: Inescapable, can be read on her website http://www.soul-destruction.com. The story follows Nicole O’Connell, Shelley Hansard’s closest friend in the first book, as she travels to Sydney, Australia, in the hope of breaking her heroin habit. The diary charts Nicole’s time there – the numerous people she meets and the situations, some dangerous and life threatening, in which she finds herself.
 
 
In 2012, Ruth published In Her Own Words… Interview with a London Call Girl, which is available to download from Amazon. All the royalties received from this publication are donated to Beyond the Streets, a charity working to end sexual exploitation.
 
 
To download from Amazon.co.uk for 77p follow this link http://amzn.to/P992RY and for 99c from Amazon.com follow http://amzn.to/Qo3SZD. It is also available worldwide. Contact: ruth@soul-destruction.com. More information on the Soul Destruction series can be found at http://www.soul-destruction.com. Ruth’s author website is at http://www.ruthjacobs.co.uk.

 
 
 
 
 
 
blogger4peacelogo
 
 
 
obamabottomlogo2
 

Remarks By President Barack Hussein Obama At The DNC Event


 

By Jueseppi B.

 

B56536_BETHSINGER_FLAG

 

 

 

 

Remarks by the President at DNC Event

 

April 24, 2013
Private Residence
 
 
 
8:06 P.M. CDT
 
 
 
THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you, everybody.  Thank you.  Thank you so much.  Well, let me begin by thanking Naomi and Larry for opening up this extraordinary home to all of us.  It is wonderful to see them again.  And they’ve been such longtime supporters.  They were there back in the day when many of you could not pronounce my name.  (Laughter.)  But they’ve just been great friends and are active on so many fronts.  Obviously, Larry is labor and Naomi is management — (laughter) — as is true in our household as well.  (Laughter.)  But we really appreciate them and their very impressive sons.  
 
 
 
I also want to acknowledge Henry Munoz who’s here and is just doing an outstanding job as our finance chair of the DNC.  Where’s Henry?  There he is.  (Applause.)  Thank you, Henry.  And I understand that the former mayor of this great city, Ron Kirk, is still around.  So, everybody, give a big round of applause to Ron.  (Applause.)  
 
 
 
Obviously this has been a tough couple of weeks for the country.  I have spent time in Boston and have been inspired by the incredible resilience of that city in the wake of such a horrific tragedy; had a chance to visit with some of the victims of the explosion and talk to the families of some of the folks who were lost.  And then tomorrow I’ll be attending a memorial service for the tragedy that took place in West, Texas, and have a chance to visit with some of those families.  
 
 
 
And there’s no words that are satisfactory when you’re confronting these kinds of losses.  And families cope, they do their best, but obviously their lives are transformed by this.  And so I don’t want to pretend that somehow you can put a positive gloss on those kinds of events.  On the other hand, what is remarkable is the strength and the courage and the fellowship that you see in people when they’re confronted with these kinds of challenges.  And in Boston, what you saw was not just the character of an extraordinary American city, but it was also the character of a nation.
 
 
 
There is something about tough times that brings out the best in us, and all the petty differences and the divisions of race and class and religion and political persuasion all seem to fade away.  And I remember, as I was driving from the airport to the memorial service in Boston, I was with Deval Patrick – outstanding Governor of Massachusetts and a great friend who handled the whole situation as well as anybody could — and we agreed that wouldn’t it be something if we could just somehow capture and sustain that spirit beyond tragedy.
 
 
 
That’s kind of a cliché.  We talk about this a lot. 
We talked about this after 9/11; we talk about it after a natural disaster like Sandy.  We’re all struck by how we come to each other’s aid, and these huge waves of empathy come forward and people are willing to do anything for strangers because they understand there but for the grace of God go I.  And they also understand that there’s something fundamental that binds us together as Americans, and that we love this country, and this country is simply a collection of incredible people — our fellow citizens.
 
 
 
And that idea of citizenship, the idea that we don’t just have obligations to ourselves — we do; we have obligations obviously to our families and our immediate circles.  But we have also an obligation to something larger than ourselves; that our orbit of concern extends to a child somewhere in a border town in Texas who is struggling to get a decent education.  And it extends to a senior citizen somewhere in Maine that is trying to figure out how they can get enough heating oil to get through a winter and have enough to eat at the same time.  And it extends to the young immigrant who just came here and is trying to find their way in California.  And it applies to a single mom in New York who is going back and has gotten her education and is looking for some decent daycare.  That all of us have a stake in their success, and all of us have a stake in a country that expresses this incredible quality of compassion and concern and fellow feeling not just in our churches or our synagogues or our mosques or our temples, not just in our workplaces or our neighborhoods or our Little League, but also expresses itself through our government.
 
 
 
And the reason I think all of you are here is because you believe that, too.  And the Democratic Party at its best tries to give expression to that.  The Democratic Party doesn’t always get it right and this is not a feeling that is unique to Democrats. I’m really looking forward to attending the Bush Library opening tomorrow, and one of the things I will insist upon is that whatever our political differences, President Bush loves this country and loves its people and shared that same concern and was concerned about all people in America, not just some, not just those who voted Republican.  I think that’s true about him and I think that’s true about most of us.
 
 
 
But what’s also true is that policy matters.  How we express that best part of ourselves is a matter of significant debate and it’s a matter of votes, and it’s a matter of legislation and budgets, and how we’re allocating resources and how we’re prioritizing what we think is important.  And although I couldn’t be prouder of the work that we’ve done over the last four years, we all know we’ve got a lot more work to do on that front.  
 
 
 
Middle-class families all across America are struggling to get by.  And things have stabilized since the crisis in 2008, but for a lot of folks, they’re still just barely keeping their heads above water.  There are millions of kids across this country who are still poorly educated or malnourished, or don’t have any place to go outside of school.  And for them, college is just a distant dream.  They can’t even imagine the prospect of actually creating a life for themselves that’s similar to what they see on television, or maybe just walking down the streets of Dallas.  It’s like looking through a pane of glass.
 
 
 
We have made enormous strides when it comes to broadening equality in this country.  And I could not be prouder of the work that we’ve done under my administration to make sure that we have a strong civil rights division, that we ended “don’t ask, don’t tell,” that we’re championing the rights of the LGBT community, that we’re making sure that women are getting paid the same as men for the work that they do.  But we all know that in all kinds of interactions, large and small, there are people out there who aren’t getting a fair shot, still aren’t getting a fair deal, still aren’t being treated the way we would want ourselves to be treated.  And government has something to say about that.  
 
 
 
We have enormous challenges like climate change that our easy to ignore in the short term, and yet I think most of us here want to make sure that the next generation is bequeathed the same incredible bounty, this amazing land of ours, that we inherited from our parents and our grandparents.  
 
 
 
So we’ve got a lot of work to do.  And unfortunately, right now Washington is not — how do I put this charitably?  (Laughter.)  It’s not as functional as it should be.  It could do better.  And when you think about the work that we’ve been able to do over the last four, four and a half years, some of it, happily, has been bipartisan.  There have been times where we’ve been able to tackle issues together.  And particularly when it comes to national security and keeping America safe, I think that there’s been some convergence among Democrats and Republicans that we have to act wisely overseas and we’ve got to make sure that we’re supporting our troops when they come home, and we’ve got to take every step that we can to guard against terrorist acts, but we’ve also got to do so consistent with our Constitution and rule of law.
 
 
 
But when it comes to domestic policy, when it comes to budgets, when it comes to action that is translating into real change for people day to day, the fact of the matter is, is that when Democrats were in charge of the House we were able to make sure that 30 million people get health care, and that people who have health care have the kinds of protections they need from insurance company abuse and are getting the kind of preventive care that’s going to drive our health care costs down over the long term.
 
 
 
The fact of the matter is, is that when Democrats were in charge we were able to rein in some of the excesses of Wall Street in a way that assures long-term stability in the financial system and makes it a lot less likely that we end up seeing the kinds of taxpayer bailouts that not only weren’t fair but aren’t good for our economy.  The fact is, is that when Democrats were in charge, that’s when we were able to make sure that we got “don’t ask, don’t tell” ended.  And so who’s setting the agenda and who’s running the show in Congress makes a difference.
 
 
 
And I’m going to spend the next year and a half doing everything I can to try to bring the parties together around some basic, smart, common-sense agendas that in past years haven’t even been particularly partisan — making sure that we’re balancing our budget — or making sure that we’re bringing down our deficits and managing our budgets in a way that doesn’t just load up the entire burden on seniors or students or the poor, but asks a little bit from everybody.  
 
 
 
And making sure that we can still invest in things like early childhood education, and making sure that we’re investing in research and science so that we can continue to maintain our cutting-edge internationally; rebuilding our infrastructure so that we continue to have the best infrastructure in the world.
 
 
 
These are not things that, in the past at least, have been Democrat and Republican.  I come from the “land of Lincoln,” and it turns out that was the first Republican President’s agenda as well.  He wanted to build railroads and locks and dams, and he started the National Foundation for Science, and started land-grant colleges because he understood that we have a free market and the genius of America is unleashing the capacities of our people.  But he also understood that there’s a role for government to play to make sure that everybody is getting a fair shot; to make sure that there are ladders of opportunity; to make sure that everybody can realize their full potential.
 
 
 
So these aren’t Democratic ideas; these are American ideas. Unfortunately, they’ve gotten caught up in some partisan politics.  And we’re going to do everything we can over the next year and a half to break through that.  
 
 
 
So, occasionally, I may make some of you angry because I am going to reach out to Republicans.  I’m going to keep on doing it.  Even if some of you guys think I’m a sap, I will keep on doing it — (laughter) — because I think that’s what the country needs.  But what I also believe in is that when Democrats have the opportunity to set the agenda, then we don’t have a country where just a few are doing really, really well; we’ve got a country where potentially everybody has a chance to do well if they’re willing to work hard and if they’re willing to take responsibility.
 
 
 
That’s what we’re fighting for.  That’s why you’re here.  And I hope that all of you recognize that despite the fact that I’ve got a lot of gray hair and I don’t look exactly like I did the first time I came to Dallas as a potential Senate candidate, the same passion and the same values that motivated me then are the values that motivate me now; and that we win elections to give us the possibility of actually getting stuff done on behalf of the American people.  We don’t win elections just to have a party on Inauguration Day, and we don’t win elections just so we’ve got a title on our door, and we don’t win elections just because it’s sport.  We win elections so that we have the possibility of delivering for the American people.  And delivering means sustained work after the election.  
 
 
 
So I can’t do that by myself.  I can only do it with you.  And as Larry helpfully reminded me, I understand that Texas is a so-called red state, but you’ve got 10 million Democrats here in Texas.  And beyond the fact that there are a whole lot of Democrats in Texas, there are a whole lot of people here in Texas who need us, and who need us to fight for them.  And I don’t know about you, but I intend to fight for them as long as I have the honor of holding this office and probably a little bit after that as well.  
 
 
 
Thank you very much, everybody.  (Applause.) 
 
 
 
 
END
8:23 P.M. CDT
 
 
 
 
 
gg
 
 
 
michelle_obama_2016_bumper_sticker__34989
 
 
blogger4peacelogo
 
 
nitt_action_blog_image
 
 
obamabottomlogo2
 

Announcing the 2013 White House Science Fair


 

By Jueseppi B.

 

science_fair_blog

 

 

 

 

Announcing the 2013 White House Science Fair

 

Uploaded on Apr 19, 2013

Visit WhiteHouse.Gov/ScienceFair on April 22nd to see live coverage, interviews and highlights from the 2013 White House Science fair.

 

 

 

 

 

Watch Live: 2013 White House Science Fair

 

Megan Slack
Megan Slack

April 20, 2013

 

 

On Monday, April 22, President Obama will host the 3rd Annual White House Science Fair and celebrate the student winners of a broad range of science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) competitions from across the country.

 

This year’s Science Fair will showcase students projects such as economically-viable algae biofuel, a robot that paints with watercolor, a computer program that improves cancer detection and many more.

 

To learn more about the White House science fair, check out the video above, and be sure to tune in Monday, April 22 starting at 11:30 am EDT, right here at wh.gov/sciencefair, to watch the event live.

 


 

Learn more:

 

 

 

Ed. note: Watch the Science Fair live in this blog post (wh.gov/sciencefair), or at wh.gov/live, beginning at 11:30 am EDT on Monday, April 22, 2013.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
EARTHDAYBANNER_1
 
 
 
blogger4peacelogo
 
 
 
obamabottomlogo2
 

The Daily Word From Barack & Michelle’s House: The 2013 Easter Egg Roll


By Jueseppi B.

 

 

p032411ck-0022

 

 

The 2013 White House Easter Egg Roll

 

 

Kid President Helps Launch White House Easter Egg Roll 2013 With President, Michelle Obama

 

Published on Apr 1, 2013

President Obama, first lady Michelle deliver remarks before kicking off White House festivities.

 

 

 

 

 

Today, the President and First Lady will host more than 30,000 people from all 50 states on the South Lawn of the White House for the 135th annual Easter Egg Roll.

 

Check out the complete Easter Egg Roll line-up, and go to WH.gov/live to watch additional live streams, including a feed from the Storytime Stage.

 

 

2013 White House Easter Egg Roll: President Obama Reads to Kids

 

Published on Apr 1, 2013

President Obama reads “Chicka Chicka Boom Boom“, written by Bill Martin Jr. and John Archambault, at the 2013 White House Easter Egg Roll.

 

 

 

 

It’s nice to see one of the busiest, most important people on the planet taking time out to do something like this for kids.

 

 

 

Read All About The festivities For Today…..

 

Let’s Move! White House Social: 135th Annual Easter Egg Roll Is Monday, April 1st, 2013!!

 

Happy Easter From Barack’s House

 

 

 

Watch Live and Follow Online: The 2013 Easter Egg Roll

 

Today, the President and First Lady will host more than 30,000 people from all 50 states on the South Lawn of the White House for the 135th annual Easter Egg Roll. The curated live stream (above) is new this year, and features historic facts about egg rolls past and will highlight select events throughout the day. 

 

Check out the complete Easter Egg Roll line-up, and go to WH.gov/live to watch additional live streams, including a feed from the Storytime Stage, where this year’s readers include NASCAR’s Danica Patrick, Minnesota Viking Adrian Peterson, Elmo, Abby, Gordon and Rosita from Sesame Street, the full cast of Super Sprowtz, The Wanted, and actress Quvenzhané Wallis, or you can tune in to the Rocking Egg Roll Stage to see performances from Jordin Sparks, Austin Mahone, Coco Jones, Sesame Street, and The Wanted. You can also watch cooking demonstrations of healthy family favorites from top chefs at the Play with Your Food station, and of course you can follow all the day’s action on social media using the hashtag #EasterEggRoll or on Storify.

 

 

In Case You Missed It

 

Here are some of the top stories from the White House blog:

 

Weekly Wrap Up: “The Promise of America” 
Here’s a quick glimpse at what happened last week on WhiteHouse.gov.

 

 

Weekly Address: President Obama Offers Easter and Passover Greetings 
President Obama uses his weekly address to mark a sacred time for the millions of Americans celebrating Easter and Passover, and he calls on everyone to use this time to reflect on the common values we share as a nation.

 

 

In Miami, President Obama Talks About his Plan to Put People to Work Rebuilding America 
Despite strong efforts to fix our broken national infrastructure over the past four years, much work needs to be done if we are to prove to the world that there is no better place to do business than in the United States.

 

 

Today’s Schedule

 

All times are Eastern Daylight Time (EDT).

 

9:30 AM: The President and receives the Presidential Daily Briefing.

 

 

10:30 AM: The First Family attends the 2013 White House Easter Egg Roll.

 

 

A Special Message From the President

 

Published on Apr 1, 2013

April 1, 2013 – The White House releases a special video message from the President. Learn more at http://wh.gov

 

 

 

 

 

03eggroll-pg-horizontal-extralarge-4_3_r536_c534

 

2013-02-22.easteregg-thumb-620xauto-50753

 

130401_easter_egg_roll_5_ap_328_605

 

165178951_620x435

 

130319082954-easter-egg-roll-story-top

 

AP12040911439_620x350

 

p032411ck-0022

 

Politics_ObamaRemarks_401_480x360

 

 

 

 

12:30 PM: Press Briefing by Press Secretary Jay Carney.

 

 

 

Speeches and Remarks

 

April 01, 2013

 

 

Remarks by the President and First Lady at the 2013 White House Easter Egg Roll

 

South Lawn
 
10:48 A.M. EDT
 
 
 
THE PRESIDENT:  This is Jessica Sanchez, everybody!  Give her a big round of applause.  (Applause.)  Kid President — give Kid President a big round of applause.  (Applause.)  The Easter Bunny is here.  Give the Easter Bunny a big round of applause.  (Applause.)  
 
 
 
 
It is wonderful to see all of you.  And I just want to say welcome.  You guys brought the great weather.  It was a little shaky this morning, but all of you did a great job sending a message upstairs, and now we’ve got beautiful weather. 
 
 
 
 
And I now want to introduce the star of the Obama family, my wife, the First Lady, Michelle Obama.  (Applause.)   
 
 
 
 
MRS. OBAMA:  Thank you, Mr. President.  Thank you, Kid President, Robbie Novak.  Isn’t he wonderful?  (Applause.)  Robbie, we’re so proud to have you here.  You have been so inspiring.  I can’t imagine that there’s anyone who hasn’t seen your video, right?  You make us all want to work hard and be better.  That’s right.  So you’re going to spend a little time in the Oval Office just fixing things up for this President, aren’t you?  All right, well, it’s good to have you here.
 
 
 
 
And it’s great to have everyone here this morning.  We are so excited.  The Easter Egg Roll is the biggest event that we have here on the South Lawn of the White House each year.  Today we’re going to have more than 30,000 people who will pass through this yard in celebration of nutrition and health and activity.  And we could not do this if it were not for all of our wonderful volunteers, our staff, all of the terrific performers and athletes who have taken time out of their lives and their busy days to make this important.  So we need to give all of them a round of applause for all their hard work.  (Applause.)  Yes, indeed!  
 
 
 
 
So today, we want you to have a great time.  We want you to run around.  We want you to go over and see the White House Garden.  We want you to learn about making tasty, healthy food.  We’re going to come down and do some Easter egg roll.  We’re going to read some stories.  But overall, we want you guys to have a good time and keep moving and be healthy.  And, kids, eat your vegetables, okay? 
 
 
 
 
All right, you all, take care.  We’ll see you down there.  Bye-bye.  Thank you.  (Applause.)  
 
 
 
 
END
10:51 A.M. EDT
 
 
 
 
527538_3297557136274_530686939_n
 
 
 
blogger4peacelogo
 
 
 
DAP-EMAIL-HEADER-4
 
 
 
obama-logo-head (3)
 
 
 
Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 14,524 other followers

%d bloggers like this: