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Katie December 3, 2005 - 1:34pm. |
To overcome these stereotypes, Lawless feels that more women should be involved in the process of running for office. It is important not to be deterred by a lack of fundraising money or of name recognition; just get in there. Her campaign has been a grassroots effort with youth and energy. People in Rhode Island have been supportive of it: "More than 95 percent of the comments have been positive. I can count on one hand the total number of people who have been rude to me," said Lawless.
Also, women and men alike need to move past the stereotypes to the real questions the issues. The race for Lawless has been "gender neutral:" "the issues that matter are education, jobs, and healthcare," she says. "Everyone should have the opportunity to have an education. Healthcare is a basic human right. A woman is entitled to the full range of reproductive options. People really want leadership on these issues, regardless of gender."
Another challenge for Lawless was not knowing what to expect in a campaign. "Imagine not being invited to a party, crashing it, and then introducing yourself to every single person in the room. That's how I felt at my first campaign party. At that point," she says, "you realize - it's all you. But, the learning curve is steep. It's sink or swim."
Balancing It All
How does someone balance a campaign with a full-time job or a family? Jennifer's week includes teaching in the morning, making fundraising calls and meetings in the afternoon, and speeches or other events in the evening. "I'm at it all day every day," she says, "but it's been a synergistic effort. Over one hundred students have volunteered for the campaign." Jennifer did have some tips for balancing her work and her campaign: "It's necessary to remember that you can't think of it all. Also, you should realize that everything will take much more time than you plan. Before the campaign, I was the type of person that needed to plan everything or to arrive five minutes early. But now, it's important to be flexible."
Congresswoman [Insert Your Name Here]
Jennifer Lawless hopes to serve as a role model for other women considering running for office. According to Lawless, the essentials of running for office are: a little bit of flexibility, a lot of determination and upbeat energy, and a whole lot of passion for the issues. "If someone can't articulate why they want to run," says Lawless, "then they shouldn't. It's a question of what makes you wake up in the morning. I'm passionate about the issues and about improving the status quo in Rhode Island. If you really want to make a change, running for political office is the best way."
For more information about Jennifer Lawless's campaign, visit her website at "www.lawlessforcongress.com":http://www.lawlessforcongress.com
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technoratiNow the pure practical reason lays down only formal laws as principles to regulate the exercise of the will; and therefore abstracts from the matter of the act of will, as regards the other qualities of the object, which is considered only in so far as it is an object of the activity of the will nipple.

Robyn Flipse
Mike Brown the REMIX
Katie Reynolds
Brad Karsh
Maria Pascucci
In other words, a maxim to this effect--were it to become law - that any object on which the will can be exerted must remain objectively in itself without an owner, as res nullius, is contrary to the principle of right.Hence the reason for the strictness of punishment for any deviance whatsoever from the social rule: laws must be obeyed to the utmost in order that no cracks are allowed to appear in the system or its inhabitants.Reason wills that this shall be recognised as a valid principle, and it does so as practical reason: and it is enabled by means of this postulate a priori to enlarge its range of activity in practice.