Wish we could see more people like this in the world today

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PITTSBURGH, Pennsylvania (AP) -- Just as he's done for more than two decades, Albert Lexie gets out of bed at 5 a.m. every Tuesday and Thursday, takes two buses to the Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh and makes his rounds -- offering shoe shines for $3.

Also every Tuesday, Lexie goes to an office building about three blocks from the hospital and hands over his weekly donation -- shoeshine tips, gifts from customers and contributions -- to the hospital's Free Care Fund.

Lexie's efforts make about $10,000 every year, and he's donated more than $89,000 since February 1981 to the fund, which helps pay for medical care to pediatric patients regardless of their families' ability to pay.

Most people who know Lexie say he's a man of routine and a man of goals. Ultimately, he wants to raise more money than Jerry Lewis, the actor whose Labor Day telethons raise money for the Muscular Dystrophy Association.

"It's like I say all the time, 'Jerry's got his kids and I got mine, and they're all right here in Pittsburgh,"' Lexie told a regular customer, Dr. Michael Painter, as he buffed the pediatric neurologist's brown wingtip shoes.

Lexie is something of a celebrity around Pittsburgh's Oakland neighborhood, where the hospital is located, and in the Westmoreland County community where he lives.

On a recent donation drop, the 61-year-old, wearing a worn red button that says, "Please Help Albert's Kids," handed over bundles of change and bills collected from his customers and donation canisters left in businesses.

Lexie's shoe-shining career started about 46 years ago, when he was 15 and made his first shoeshine box in a high school shop class. He soon started to travel from store to store in the communities near his home and even opened a shop for a short time.

Around that time, Lexie got in the habit of watching an annual telethon that benefits the hospital. Hoping to one day meet the local news anchor who hosted the telethon, he decided a generous donation might do the trick.

As his donations grew, officials invited him to shine shoes in the hospital. Donations and the attention they garnered seemed to snowball from there.

Last month, the hospital honored Lexie by giving him a custom-made cart to replace the 30-pound box he still occasionally lugs around the sprawling building.

"You know when Albert is in a department because everyone is walking around in their socks, waiting for their shoes to be shined," hospital spokeswoman Melanie Finnigan said.

http://us.cnn.com/2003/US/Northeast/09/24/shoeshiner.ap/index.html
 

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Guys like this are real men and real role models.

Good Thread.
 

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The typical reactions to this kind of story bug me somewhat for a few reasons. Let me explain...

Firstly, let me say I have nothing against such a guy and I respect his right to do whatever he wants with his life and his money.

But to call him a hero and spread the word about what a great guy he is WITHOUT doing something tangible in a similar fashion is both hypocritical and evil IMO.

If you write an article like that for a major media organization you are effectively telling the public that to be good people, this is what THEY should be doing. You only have the right to do this if this is also what YOU are doing. Otherwise you are a flaming hypocrite.

At the very least you owe the readers an explanation as to why you are not following your own advice. There may be a good explanation but anytime you give implicit advice which you yourself are not following, you owe your audience an explanation since this a very valid question that will naturally get asked.
 

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Joe Schmoe is a writer and hunts down these "feel good" stories.

he then sells these stories to newspapers.

the newspapers buy these stories to boost newspaper circulation.

when newspaper circulation goes up the advertising departments charge more money for ads.

the stores that advertise in the paper have to charge more money for their products because of the increase in ad rates.

Jerry Springer and Rosie O'donal explote people to make money too.
 

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<BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><font size="-1">quote:</font><HR>Originally posted by STRUT888/FISHHEAD:
Always better to give than to accept!!<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>

Yes Sir
 

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I know what Darryl said may at first seem mean but he's absolutely right.

First, great that this guy is doing that - seriously.

Secondly, the media publishes these stories because human interest stories help sell newspapers. The media seriously doesn't give a shit if anyone is inspired by the story, unless of course that will be another human interest story they can publish. The media is not a church, it is a for-profit business, which is why you see murder, accident and fire stories in the first 5-10 minutes on your local news - not because those stories are indicative of how life is all over, but because they know it attracts an audience. They distort reality because it is profitable to do so, and people like to be safely titillated at the misfortune of others.

The media also absolutely delights in printing all kinds of fuc-king health tips, results of medical trials and other advice - a great deal of which is later proved to be false or inaccurate. Things that make you feel guilty - that you're not as dedicated as Albert, that you don't have the perfect physique, the right clothes, the right deoderant, the right toilet bowl deoderizer, enough bulk in your diet, the fact you're not eating 5 servings of fruits and vegetables a day (tip - one liter of grain alcohol = 8 servings of vegetables), a safe car, happy family, etc. The ONLY thing I usually believe is factual in a newspaper is the date on the front page, and even THAT I check sometimes against my calendar.

And speaking of hypocritical, I'd love to know how many fat cat hospital administrators, board members and doctors at that hospital, as well as the Pittsburgh elite, have voluntarily agreed to match Albert's hard-earned donations each year - did the reporter ask anyone about that?
 

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