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Politics : HOWARD DEAN -THE NEXT PRESIDENT? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Raymond Duray who wrote (1071)12/17/2003 11:14:35 AM
From: Raymond Duray  Respond to of 3079
 
DEAN's "guns, God, and gays," SPEECH:

December 7, 2003 - Prepared for Delivery - Governor Howard Dean - Columbia, South Carolina

In 1968, Richard Nixon won the White House. He did it in a shameful way --
by dividing Americans against one another, stirring up racial prejudices and
bringing out the worst in people.

They called it the "Southern Strategy," and the Republicans have been using
it ever since. Nixon pioneered it, and Ronald Reagan perfected it, using
phrases like "racial quotas" and "welfare queens" to convince white
Americans that minorities were to blame for all of America's problems.

The Republican Party would never win elections if they came out and said
their core agenda was about selling America piece by piece to their campaign
contributors and making sure that wealth and power is concentrated in the
hands of a few.

To distract people from their real agenda, they run elections based on race,
"guns, God, and gays," dividing us, instead of uniting us.
But these politics
do worse than that -- they fracture the very soul of who we are as a
country.

It was a different Republican president, who 150 years ago warned, "A house
divided cannot stand," and it is now a different Republican party that has
won elections for the past 30 years by turning us into a divided nation.

In America, there is nothing black or white about having to live from one
paycheck to the next. Hunger does not care what color we are.

In America, a conversation between parents about taking on more debt might
be in English or it might be in Spanish, worrying about making ends meet
knows no racial identity.

Black children and white children all get the flu and need the doctor. In
both the inner city and in small rural towns, our schools need good
teachers.
When I was in medical school in the Bronx, one of my first ER patients was a
13-year-old African American girl who had an unwanted pregnancy. When I
moved to Vermont to practice medicine, one of my first ER patients was a
13-year-old white girl who had an unwanted pregnancy.

They were bound by their common human experience.

There are no black concerns or white concerns or Hispanic concerns in
America. There are only human concerns.

Every time a politician uses the word "quota," it's because he'd rather not
talk about the real reasons that we've lost almost 3 million jobs. Every
time a politician complains about affirmative action in our universities,
it's because he'd rather not talk about the real problems with education in
America - like the fact that here in South Carolina, only 15% of African
Americans have a post-high school degree.

When education is suffering in lower-income areas, it means that we will all
pay for more prisons and face more crime in the future. When families lack
health insurance and are forced to go to the emergency room when they need a
doctor, medical care becomes more expensive for each of us.

When wealth is concentrated at the very top, when the middle class is
shrinking and the gap between rich and poor grows as wide as it has been
since the Gilded Age of the 19th Century, our economy cannot sustain itself.

When wages become stagnant for the majority of Americans, as they have
been for the past two decades, we will never feel as though we are getting
ahead.

When we have the highest level of personal debt in American history, we
are selling off our future, in order to barely keep our heads above water
today.

Today, Americans are working harder, for less money, with more debt, and
less time to spend with our families and communities. In the year 2003, in
the United States, over 12 million children live in poverty. Nearly 8
million of them are white. And no matter what race they are, too many of
them will live in poverty all their lives.

And yesterday, there were 3,000 more children without health care -
children of all races. By the end of today, there will 3,000 more. And by
the end of tomorrow, there will be 3,000 more on top of that.

America can do better than this.

It's time we had a new politics in America -- a politics that refuses to
pander to our lowest prejudices. Because when white people and black people
and brown people vote together, that's when we make true progress in this
country. Jobs, health care, education, democracy, and opportunity. These are
the issues that can unite America. The politics of the 21^st century is
going to begin with our common interests.

If the President tries to divide us by race, we're going to talk about
health care for every American.

If Karl Rove tries to divide us by gender, we're going to talk about better
schools for all of our children.

If large corporate interests try to divide us by income, we're going to talk
about better jobs and higher wages for every American.

If any politician tries to win an election by turning America into a battle
of us versus them, we're going to respond with a politics that says that
we're all in this together - that we want to raise our children in a world
in which they are not taught to hate one another, because our children are
not born to hate one another.

We're going to talk about justice again in this country, and what an America
based on justice should look like -- an America with justice in our tax
code, justice in our health care system, and justice in our hearts as well
as our laws.

We're going to talk about making higher education available to every young
person in every neighborhood and community in America, because over 95% of
people with a 4-year degree in this country escape poverty.

We're going to talk about rebuilding rural communities and making sure
that rural America can share in the promise and prosperity of the rest
of America.

We're going to talk about investing in more small businesses instead of
subsidizing huge corporations, because small businesses create 7 out of
every 10 jobs in this country and they don't move their jobs overseas -- and
they can help revitalize troubled communities. We're going to make it easier
for everyone to get a small business loan wherever they live and whatever
the color of their skin.

We're going to talk about rebuilding our schools and our roads and our
public spaces, empowering people to take pride in their neighborhood and
their community again.

We're going to talk about building prosperity that's based on more than
spending beyond our means, a prosperity that doesn't force us to choose
between working long hours and raising our children, a prosperity that
doesn't require a mountain of debt to sustain it, a prosperity that lifts up
every one of us and not just those at the very top.

The politics of race and the politics of fear will be answered with the
promise of community and a message of hope. And that's how we're going to
win in 2004.

At the Democratic National Convention in 1976, Congresswoman Barbara
Jordan asked, "Are we to be one people bound together by common spirit
sharing in a common endeavor or will we become a divided nation?"

We are determined to find a way to reach out to Americans of every
background, every race, every gender and sexual orientation, and bring them
-- as Dr. King said -- to the same table of brotherhood. We have great work
to do in America. It will take years. But it will last for generations. And
it begins today, with every one of us here. Abraham Lincoln said that
government of the people, by the people and for the people shall not perish
from this earth. But this President has forgotten ordinary people.

That is why it is time for us to join together. Because it is only a
movement of citizens of every color, every income level, and every
background that can change this country and once again make it live up to
the promise ofAmerica.
So, today I ask you to not just join this campaign but make it your own.
This new era of the United States begins not with me but with you.
United together, you can take back your country.



To: Raymond Duray who wrote (1071)12/17/2003 10:13:19 PM
From: Lizzie Tudor  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 3079
 
Still the economy, but this is important too...

Saddam, So Not Worth It
Dubya, now that you've got your dime-store thug, can you stop the warmongering and death?


By Mark Morford, SF Gate Columnist Wednesday, December 17, 2003

Well gosh golly it took only upward of 500 dead U.S. soldiers (and counting) and more than 2,500 U.S. wounded (and counting) and more than 10,000 dead innocent Iraqi citizens (and counting) and countless tens of thousands of hapless dead Iraqi soldiers (and counting).

And it'll only cost U.S. taxpayers at least a staggering $350 billion along with the complete gutting of our foreign policy and our national treasury and the appalling blood sacrifice of our national pride and our international status and global sense of self-respect.


Oh, and the truth is, it turns out Saddam actually did have some old stashes of weaponry, a bit of rusty, small-scale WMDs, after all -- because we sold them to him, 20 years ago. But they were never any sort of direct danger to America -- or anyone else, for that matter -- and regardless all evidence points to the fact that the stash was completely destroyed more than a decade ago.

Remember that time? Right about when the U.S. hushed up all those sales of biological weapons and computer technology to Iraq? Right about when all those American corporations, from Bechtel to Kodak to AT&T, from Dow Chemical to Hewlett-Packard to IBM and at least 100 more, decided it might be best to begin shredding their records detailing all their Iraq business deals? Hey, why is Donny Rumsfeld shaking hands with Saddam and smiling in this photo? Shhh.

And now, long after his political usefulness to us has expired, we up and invade his unhappy nation and lay waste to the entire region for no justifiable reason, and we inflate his global stature into this massive inhuman Hitler-esque monster when in fact he was really just an old, tired, small-time thug, and now finally Saddam Hussein, the brutal pip-squeak dictator/former beloved U.S. ally who had nothing whatsoever to do with 9/11, has been captured alive. Yay yay go team.

It was a proud moment in American history. Almost as proud as when Dubya secretly flew to Iraq a few weeks back to spend 2.5 hours pretending to serve a fake, inedible plastic turkey to that handful of carefully selected, prescreened soldiers for that Thanksgiving PR stunt that will forever embarrass anyone with any sense of decency and pride -- which is, according to Bush's instant surge in the polls after the photo op, fewer and fewer of us.

As if this changes a single thing. As if Saddam's capture suddenly means BushCo is some sort of nimble or subtly intelligent leader, and that nine months of brutal ongoing gut-busting war was all worth it.

As if we are safer from terrorism. As if we are safer from Karl Rove and John Ashcroft. As if the nation can now stand proud.

Think again. Even Bush himself is not quite so stupid as to go that far. Note how just after Saddam's capture, his army of handlers rushed in to make sure Americans don't expect any lessening of U.S. casualties in Iraq, no slowdown in the number of dead American soldiers or the killing of innocent Iraqis who just happen to be trying to get some clean water or a gallon of fuel when U.S. forces blow another building apart while they're looking for guerrilla insurgents.

Oh yes, Saddam needed to be captured. Oh yes, his capture is a swell thing for the world. Oh yes, Bush desperately needed the ratings boost. But we as a nation have been utterly pulverized with the lie that this war was the only way. We have been slammed for more than two years with relentless hammer of fear and inflated terrorist threats and bogus Orange Alerts, until we all just give in and our resistance crumbles and we say, fine.

Fine, just get it over with, Dubya, go slaughter yet another nearly defenseless nation and catch your impotent bad guy and eviscerate your own country's economy and embarrass us the world over and protect your oil cronies and your military portfolio. Get it over with.

By the way, from Bush Sr. forward (and, yes, that includes Clinton), the U.S. has to date killed far, far more Iraqi civilians than Saddam ever could. Along with the United Kingdom, we've been bombing Iraq almost nonstop for the past decade. Not to mention the more than half a million Iraqi children who've died from lack of medicine or decent health care since the brutal, U.S.-backed U.N. sanctions were imposed 12 years ago. Shhh.

The capture does not justify the savagery, nor the humiliation. Not by a long shot. The ends do not justify the means. Nor do they justify the staggering, steaming pile of BushCo lies about why we went to war in the first place.

Remember those? Remember how not one single motive BushCo gave for launching this insane war has actually been proven true? Does this even matter anymore, the string of falsehoods and treasonous fabrications? Apparently not. This is America's biggest wonder, and its ugliest flaw: a nasty short-term memory.

But whatever. Most lockstep Americans do not care that Saddam was never a threat. Most do not care about how many Iraqi children have died, or that in just the first days of the war, U.S. forces killed far more innocent civilians than were killed by those non-Iraqi terrorists in the WTC (4,300, to be more specific). Most do not care that the other 25 despotic heads of state out there right now who are far worse than Saddam are not, apparently, quaking in their dictatorial boots.

Most Americans do not care that somewhere, Osama is probably cheering (hey, he hated Saddam, too). They do not care that, what with our outward display of savagery, new America-loathing terrorists are being spawned faster than BushCo's war machine can possibly keep up with them.

They care only for waving the bloody flag. They care only for the jingoistic PR spin and the hollow sophomoric neocon punditry of Fox News and enough oil to fuel the Expedition for another year. This is what matters most. Kill 'em all, let Halliburton sort 'em out.

Maybe I'm wrong. Maybe Saddam's capture really will mean an earlier end to this tragic and painful war. Maybe it will mean we can get our soldiers home sooner. Maybe it will mean we can get the U.N. and NATO and our international allies involved in setting up a reasonably stable, noncorrupt government in Iraq, one not so obviously in the back pocket of ExxonMobil and Shell. Whoops, too late.

Maybe now that Saddam's captured, we can begin to focus on what's really important: the mandatory and deliberate ouster of another truly ruinous global threat, a shockingly disastrous political puppet.

After all, Saddam's not the only dreadful world leader who's abused his allies, ravaged his economy, launched two blood-drenched wars in as many years, authorized the bombing of tens of thousands, allowed hundreds of U.S. soldiers to die, cut the benefits of war veterans, poisoned the environment, invoked the name of God to justify it all and smirked away every notion of his obvious ineptitude. Can we send Special Forces to the Oval Office now?
sfgate.com