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Politics : HOWARD DEAN -THE NEXT PRESIDENT?

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To: coug who wrote (811)12/5/2003 5:24:56 AM
From: elpolvo  Read Replies (2) of 3079
 
coug-

BTW.. One of the main things on OUR agenda is to make sure ALL voting machines used in the elections leave a PAPER TRAIL.. FOR our GOOD now.. AND for the FUTURE...

i'd rather vote online...

but if you're worried, the way to make a paper trail
is to vote early or absentee with a mail-in ballot.
many, many will vote this way... so remember... the
2004 election is in OCTOBER.

vote early, and vote often.

if you went to the meet-up last night then you must have
gotten the "common sense" pamphlet, eh?

deanforamerica.com

(text below)

*************************************************

addressed to the Citizens of America by
Gov. Howard Dean, M.D.
December 2003
www.DeanForAmerica.com

“We have it in our power to begin the world over again.”
Thomas Paine

Over two hundred years ago, Thomas Paine wrote a pamphlet that would
light the fire that forged our nation. He called it “Common Sense.”
Passed from hand to hand, patriot to patriot, it was a call to action
for those Americans who believed their government had to change. It
spelled out the values of a new republic. And King George III—who had
forgotten his own people in favor of special interests—was replaced by
a government of, by and for the people. America was born.

Like those early patriots, we face a growing threat to our liberty and
justice in America today. Thomas Jefferson and James Madison spoke of
the fear that economic power would one day seize political power.

That fear is now being realized—under the Bush administration,
pharmaceutical companies draft our Medicare laws. Oil executives sit in
the Vice President’s office and write energy bills. A majority of the
reconstruction contracts in Iraq goes to corporations headed by
campaign contributors to the president.

In the last six years, despite massive corporate scandals and the crash
of the NASDAQ, the financial services industry managed to find almost
$168 million to influence the political process. A pharmaceutical and
health products industry that can’t afford to sell our seniors cheaper
prescription drugs did manage to find $60 million to influence our
elections. And the national debt has exploded to the point where it
will cost the median American family $26,000—because the president ran
up the largest deficit in the history of our country in order to pass
$3 trillion worth of tax cuts tilted toward his campaign contributors.

In the matter of war and peace, there was virtually no debate by either
party before the invasion of Iraq. The Bush administration uses fear to
rally people to its causes. Our nation, once looked to as a beacon of
hope from around the globe, now is looked at with suspicion and
distrust.

Most alarming, our political process is in crisis, as the majority of
Americans turns away from the most fundamental duty of
citizenship—voting.

America is better than this. The time has come once again to take our
country back. This pamphlet, like Thomas Paine’s, is a declaration of
values and a call to action for a new generation of American patriots
-- Common Sense for a New Century.

- 1 -

Where We Are

“Are the special privilege boys going to run the country, or are the
people going to run it?”
Harry Truman

Our country is on the wrong track, and the reason is clear: our
government is no longer serving the interests of the people.

The takeover of our politics by what Truman called the “special
privilege boys” has been a decades-long process, but it has culminated
with the Bush administration. Our executive branch has become a private
club for large corporate interests.

Increasingly, large multinational companies write the rules of our
economy in Washington, DC for their own profit, while the American
people are left to compete for lower wages.

Meanwhile, the executive branch has been consolidating more and more
power for itself, running roughshod over the checks and balances our
founders established. In October of 2002, our Congress abdicated their
power and responsibility to declare war. The political process failed,
and now we are paying the price.

The Patriot Act takes away too many rights from ordinary
Americans—rights we had come to expect. Nor should John Ashcroft be
allowed to detain American citizens without charge and without legal
representation.

We are losing our role as a world leader. John Fitzgerald Kennedy said,
“The United States, as the world knows, will never start a war.” But
President Bush has made that truth a lie. This president has
implemented a foreign policy characterized by dominance, arrogance and
intimidation. His brand of diplomacy has driven a deep wedge into the
alliances and the security organizations we established to safeguard
our freedoms and our safety.

The problem is simple: those at the top are gathering more and more
power for themselves, and taking more and more power away from everyone
else.

But it doesn’t have to be this way. Theodore Roosevelt said it best,
“Every special interest is entitled to justice full, fair and
complete....but not one is entitled to a vote in Congress, to a voice
on the bench or to representation in any public office.”

The American people have a history of proving that the most powerful
interest of all is the common interest.

- 2 -

Where We Have Come From

“Laws and institutions must go hand in hand with the progress of the
human mind.”
Thomas Jefferson

Our history has been the story of change. The struggle to live up to
our founding ideals—justice and equality—has been an ongoing one. When
we have seen injustice and inequality in our institutions and our laws,
the American people have risen time and again to challenge them.

When the majority of Americans awoke to the injustice of slavery, our
citizens decided that no moral future existed for a Republic that
allowed the ownership of our fellow human beings.

And once slavery had been abolished, the country went on to guarantee
the rights of women.

As America developed its industrial potential, the work of many began
to yield vast riches for the few. Industrial barons began to dominate
the economic and political systems, subjugating the interests of the
people to their own narrow benefit.

The people again rose to the challenge with the birth of the modern
labor movement. They fought to put government back on the side of the
people, and passed laws to allow the government to deliver a series of
landmark reforms, including child labor laws, the forty-hour work week,
worker safety laws, and the minimum wage. These measures brought new
meaning to the concept of equality—an equality of opportunity.

Later that century, the people came together to fight against racial
segregation, joining the Freedom Ride to bring down the barriers to
voting, participating in countless demonstrations to protest injustice,
and gathering for the March on Washington to hear the Rev. Martin
Luther King, Jr. dream of a day when “the sons of former slaves and the
sons of former slaveowners will be able to sit down together at a table
of brotherhood.”

And now we enter a new era. After a few decades of relative peace and
prosperity, we are beginning to see that our system is once again out
of balance, and the interests of the people are not being served. It
should not be this way; as Thomas Jefferson said, “Public offices were
[not] made for private convenience.”

Our path for the future is clear: it is the path that generations
before us have taken. It is to change America the only way it can be
changed—through the people.

When our country goes wrong, it is our duty to set it right.

- 3 -

Where We Can Go

“Common sense is seeing things as they are; and doing things as they
ought to be.”
Harriet Beecher Stowe

The American people have a capacity for great things. We must once
again set ourselves on a course to achieve them—based on those values
that have sustained America throughout the centuries:

Justice. In a just America, money should not determine the limits of
any American’s future, or deny any American the medical advancements
that can save and sustain life. Health insurance, prescription drugs
and higher education can be accessible and affordable for everyone.

Fairness. Our tax burden today falls most heavily on hard work, while
wealth is taxed less. We subsidize corporations that are polluting our
environment or sending jobs overseas. But we can restore fairness to
our tax code—rewarding hard work, ensuring that wealth pays its fair
share, and penalizing waste.

Fairness also demands that we address the disparity between the incomes
of women and the incomes of men. Closing the wage gap will benefit all
Americans.

Progress. Today, technologies exist that can form the foundation of our
economy for the next century. We should invest aggressively in them,
just as when our nation invested in railroads, rural electrification,
and in public highways.

We can create a new energy economy, relying on sources that will never
run out, including solar power, wind power, ethanol and biomass. Doing
so will reduce our dependence on foreign oil and create new jobs for
decades to come.

Moral Leadership in the World. Harry S. Truman said, “The only
expansion we are interested in is the expansion of human freedom and
the wider enjoyment of the good things of the earth in all countries.
The only prize we covet is the respect and good will of our fellow
members of the family of nations. The only realm in which we aspire to
eminence exists in the minds of men, where authority is exercised
through the qualities of sincerity, compassion and right conduct.” That
is the American role in the world that we can restore.

Self-Government. We can reform our republic—restoring a democracy in
which every person has a voice and our government works for the benefit
of all the people.e Community. We have an obligation to one another
as Americans and as human beings. America will be stronger when we
recognize that we are dependent on each other, responsible for each
other, and connected to each other.
- 4 -

How We Get There

“Let each person do his or her part. If one citizen is unwilling to
participate, all of us are going to suffer. For the American idea,
though it is shared by all of us, is realized in each one of us.”
Barbara Jordan

Only through the action of each of us, working together in common
cause, can great change happen in America.

A year ago, the Dean campaign began as a traditional candidacy for the
presidency. We hoped to talk about health care for all, and fiscal
responsibility that would benefit everyone. But this campaign has grown
above and beyond a discussion of the important issues that concern us.
It has become a movement that is allowing the American people to
reclaim their political process.

We are not funded by a few large corporate interests giving millions,
but by millions of people giving a few dollars. We are relying on
millions of Americans to get involved in this election by making phone
calls, sending emails, writing letters, knocking on doors, and voting.

This movement offers the American people an opportunity to take back
the White House, the Congress, our state legislatures, and our local
governments. But this can only be done if you claim your
responsibilities and your duties as a citizen.

No one is going to change America for you. You must participate to make
it happen. There are three things you can do right now to begin
reclaiming our country:

1
Join more than half a million Americans who have signed up for our
cause by visiting www.deanforamerica.com or calling 1-866-Dean-4-US.

2
Urge your friends to get involved. Ask them to find others to join us
in our efforts. Pass this pamphlet along to your neighbors, friends,
and coworkers. Only the full participation of the American people can
restore our democracy.

3
Join the $100 Revolution. This President is raising $200 million from
corporate interests in order to buy this election. But we can match the
forces of the special interests by getting 2 million Americans to
contribute $100 each to our campaign. If you can’t afford $100, give
$10 and find nine people to do the same, or give $25 and reach out to
three others. Visit www.deanforamerica.com/revolution or call
1-866-Dean-4-US today.

Our lives are busy and our burdens are many, but together we can revive
our democracy. We must renew our commitment to better inform ourselves
and others; to question our elected leaders; to conduct a dialogue with
our neighbors; and to vote in each election.

To stand up when injustice is done.

To protest when rights are jeopardized.

To unite for the common good.

To fight for what we know is right for our country.

We must do so because, in the words of Thomas Paine: “The sun never
shined on a cause of greater worth.”

Join today.

- 5 -

It Begins Today

“The summer soldier and the sunshine patriot will, in this crisis,
shrink from the service of their country; but he that stands it now,
deserves the love and thanks of man and woman.”
Thomas Paine

If you are one of the millions who wish for the government to be taken
from the hands of the powerful few and restored to the people; if you
are one of the millions who wish for a future built upon justice,
fairness, progress, and community; if you are one of the millions ready
to declare, “America is better than this” – then help build the
greatest grassroots campaign of the modern era.

1
Make copies of this pamphlet -- distribute it to everyone you know and
leave it in public places for others to find.

2
Get ten Americans to join our cause by signing their names below.

3
After the pamphlet is full, please mail it to the following address:
Dean for America - P.O. Box 1228 - Burlington, VT - 05402

******************************************
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