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To: American Spirit who wrote (75125)5/28/2007 9:58:46 AM
From: jim-thompson  Respond to of 89467
 
gore still looks like a stuffed hog to me....



To: American Spirit who wrote (75125)5/28/2007 3:08:54 PM
From: Crimson Ghost  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
Why I Am Leaving the Democratic Party

By CINDY SHEEHAN

Dublin, Ireland

Dear Democratic Congress,

Hello, my name is Cindy Sheehan and my son Casey Sheehan was killed on April 04, 2004 in Sadr City , Baghdad , Iraq . He was killed when the Republicans still were in control of Congress. Naively, I set off on my tireless campaign calling on Congress to rescind George's authority to wage his war of terror while asking him "for what noble cause" did Casey and thousands of other have to die. Now, with Democrats in control of Congress, I have lost my optimistic naiveté and have become cynically pessimistic as I see you all caving into "Mr. 28%"

There is absolutely no sane or defensible reason for you to hand Bloody King George more money to condemn more of our brave, tired, and damaged soldiers and the people of Iraq to more death and carnage. You think giving him more money is politically expedient, but it is a moral abomination and every second the occupation of Iraq endures, you all have more blood on your hands.

Ms. Pelosi, Speaker of the House, said after George signed the new weak as a newborn baby funding authorization bill: "Now, I think the president's policy will begin to unravel." Begin to unravel? How many more of our children will have to be killed and how much more of Iraq will have to be demolished before you all think enough unraveling has occurred? How many more crimes will BushCo be allowed to commit while their poll numbers are crumbling before you all gain the political "courage" to hold them accountable. If Iraq hasn't unraveled in Ms. Pelosi's mind, what will it take? With almost 700,000 Iraqis dead and four million refugees (which the US refuses to admit) how could it get worse? Well, it is getting worse and it can get much worse thanks to your complicity.

Being cynically pessimistic, it seems to me that this new vote to extend the war until the end of September, (and let's face it, on October 1st, you will give him more money after some more theatrics, which you think are fooling the anti-war faction of your party) will feed right into the presidential primary season and you believe that if you just hang on until then, the Democrats will be able to re-take the White House. Didn't you see how "well" that worked for John Kerry in 2004 when he played the politics of careful fence sitting and pandering? The American electorate are getting disgusted with weaklings who blow where the wind takes them while frittering away our precious lifeblood and borrowing money from our new owners, the Chinese.

I knew having a Democratic Congress would make no difference in grassroots action. That's why we went to DC when you all were sworn in to tell you that we wanted the troops back from Iraq and BushCo held accountable while you pushed for ethics reform which is quite a hoot...don't' you think? We all know that it is affordable for you all to play this game of political mayhem because you have no children in harm's way...let me tell you what it is like:

You watch your reluctant soldier march off to a war that neither you nor he agrees with. Once your soldier leaves the country all you can do is worry. You lie awake at night staring at the moon wondering if today will be the day that you get that dreaded knock on your door. You can't concentrate, you can't eat, and your entire life becomes consumed with apprehension while you are waiting for the other shoe to drop.

Then, when your worst fears are realized, you begin a life of constant pain, regret, and longing. Everyday is hard, but then you come up on "special" days...like upcoming Memorial Day. Memorial Day holds double pain for me because, not only are we supposed to honor our fallen troops, but Casey was born on Memorial Day in 1979. It used to be a day of celebration for us and now it is a day of despair. Our needlessly killed soldiers of this war and the past conflict in Vietnam have all left an unnecessary trail of sorrow and deep holes of absence that will never be filled.

So, Democratic Congress, with the current daily death toll of 3.72 troops per day, you have condemned 473 more to these early graves. 473 more lives wasted for your political greed: Thousands of broken hearts because of your cowardice and avarice. How can you even go to sleep at night or look at yourselves in a mirror? How do you put behind you the screaming mothers on both sides of the conflict? How does the agony you have created escape you? It will never escape me...I can't run far enough or hide well enough to get away from it.

By the end of September, we will be about 80 troops short of another bloody milestone: 4000, and MoveOn.org will hold nationwide candlelight vigils and you all will be busy passing legislation that will snuff the lights out of thousands more human beings.

Congratulations Congress, you have bought yourself a few more months of an illegal and immoral bloodbath. And you know you mean to continue it indefinitely so "other presidents" can solve the horrid problem BushCo forced our world into.

It used to be George Bush's war. You could have ended it honorably. Now it is yours and you all will descend into calumnious history with BushCo.

The Camp Casey Peace Institute is calling all citizens who are as disgusted as we are with you all to join us in Philadelphia on July 4th to try and figure a way out of this "two" party system that is bought and paid for by the war machine which has a stranglehold on every aspect of our lives. As for myself, I am leaving the Democratic Party. You have completely failed those who put you in power to change the direction our country is heading. We did not elect you to help sink our ship of state but to guide it to safe harbor.

We do not condone our government's violent meddling in sovereign countries and we condemn the continued murderous occupation of Iraq .

We gave you a chance, you betrayed us.

Sincerely,
Cindy Sheehan
Founder and President of
Gold Star Families for Peace.



To: American Spirit who wrote (75125)5/28/2007 3:38:47 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 89467
 
Baptism of fire shows Obama can take the heat
________________________________________________________________

By Albert R. Hunt
Bloomberg News
Sunday, May 27, 2007

The presidential campaign of the political newcomer Barack Obama is 100 days old, and David Axelrod, its political mastermind, thinks his candidate is well positioned.

At an outdoor restaurant on an unseasonably warm May afternoon in Chicago, Axelrod acknowledges mistakes made and problems ahead. He believes, however, that there have been far more successes and that the fundamentals favor the freshman Democratic senator from Illinois.

The 2008 American presidential election, he argues, will be about change, or a corrective to the unpopular George W. Bush presidency, just as the 1976 election was about an antidote to Richard Nixon or 1980 to Jimmy Carter or 2000 to Bill Clinton's shortcomings.

"People are looking for a remedy," Axelrod says. "What they don't like about Bush is his stubbornness, excessive partisanship, excessive ideology or catering to special interests. They are looking for civility to re-engage in a national dialogue around a common goal."

Obama has passed the initial tests for that challenge: He and Hillary Clinton raised more money than anyone else, Republican or Democrat, in the first quarter of this year, and he is expected to outdistance everyone this quarter; he's generating the largest and most enthusiastic crowds and corps of volunteers; he has made no major gaffes; and in the polls, he is a solid second nationally.

More important, he is running ahead or within striking distance of Clinton in the early primaries.

Thus, the confidence exuded by Axelrod and Obama campaign aides at the 33,000-square-foot, or 3,065-square-meter, headquarters in downtown Chicago is more than the usual campaign spin. In a "change" election, they believe the political currents are with them.

More than a few disinterested experts concur. "The scope and size of his events are unbelievable," says Bill McInturff, a leading Republican pollster. "It speaks to an inchoate desire for change. In looking at Democratic primary voters, what is striking is Obama dominates the dimension of change. That is a pretty good piece to have on the chessboard in 2008."

To be certain, the first 100 days produced speed bumps. The campaign was drawn into a couple of silly debates with the Clinton camp. Obama trails Clinton in endorsements, and she is doing better than he is among black voters, even though Obama is the first serious African-American presidential hopeful.

Obama also sometimes appears tired and testy and has a penchant for exaggeration. And his audiences, expecting a stirring speaker, can leave one disappointed.

More substantively, in two encounters with the other Democratic candidates, he has been less than impressive. In a Nevada forum, he was thrown off balance when asked why he had no comprehensive health care plan; in a South Carolina debate, he was tepid when asked how he would respond to a terrorist attack, though he later recovered.

A growing number of critics are asking "where's the beef," or meaty substance, in his positions on health care, the economy and national security. Will his inexperience worry voters in the post-9/11 world?

Some seasoned Obama supporters are concerned about how he will handle the combat of a protracted national campaign, including widely expected assaults from the Clinton juggernaut.

Fair comment, the Obama camp responds, and no insurmountable concerns. The less-than-glittering debate performances? He'll get better, and voters aren't gauging debating points, they say.

"In this presidential election, voters want to take your measure," Axelrod says. "They want to check your demeanor, look for grace under fire and make a judgment who they want to be president."

The less-than-stem-winding stump speeches? Obama, who catapulted to national attention with a stirring speech at the 2004 Democratic national convention, is actually more of a natural conversationalist than rousing speaker. The campaign plans a series of town-hall-type forums in states like Iowa and New Hampshire, which they say will showcase his strengths.

The lack-of-substance rap? He recently made a major foreign policy speech and gave an energy address in Detroit that was generally well-received (though it was inexplicably short on fealty to labor in that union stronghold). On Tuesday, he will unveil a broader health care plan, and soon other big domestic and national-security proposals.

What of his inexperience in a post-9/11 world? Axelrod says the Bush administration's failure in the war against terrorists has made it harder for Obama's opponents to use that argument against him. The president, he says, "has cheapened that card."

As for his trailing in the African-American vote, the pollster McInturff says time and exposure will change that. "Obama will do much better than he's polling with African-Americans," he said. "That will create tremendous trouble for Hillary Clinton in Southern primaries."

How to counter Clinton's more impressive establishment and political backing? The Obama campaign points to its outpouring of grass-roots support. He is running circles around the field in "netroots" fund-raising and draws record crowds - the Chicago operation is running weeklong "Camp Obamas," where 50 twenty-something-year-olds are trained and then fan out to important states.

There will be traumatic moments in the months ahead, caused by a miscalculation, a revelation or an effective attack by opponents. There is in every campaign. How Obama reacts under fire may be the most important question in the race.

In this space seven months ago it was suggested the odds were great that this process, often unfair, would trip up any newcomer, including Obama, and that his would be an ill-advised candidacy. That underestimated him. It's now only an even proposition that this "freak show" of scrutiny will do him in.

If it doesn't, he has a better chance than any candidate to be the next president. That includes Clinton, who won't make major mistakes, or any of the Republicans. Obama's fate is largely in his own hands. That is what makes David Axelrod confident.

iht.com



To: American Spirit who wrote (75125)5/29/2007 12:19:04 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 89467
 
Dems: Fight over Iraq war has just begun
______________________________________________________________

By ANNE FLAHERTY
Associated Press Writer
05/28/07

Democrats may have lost the first round with President Bush on ending the war in Iraq since taking over Congress in January, but they say their fight has just begun.

In the months ahead, lawmakers will vote repeatedly on whether U.S. troops should stay and whether Bush has the authority to continue the war. The Democratic strategy is intended to ratchet up pressure on the president, as well as on moderate Republicans who have grown tired of defending Bush administration policy in a deeply unpopular war.

"I feel a direction change in the air," said Rep. John Murtha (news, bio, voting record), D-Pa., chairman of the House panel that oversees military funding.

Democrats looked to the upcoming votes after losing a bruising battle with Bush on an emergency war spending bill. Lacking the two-thirds majority needed to overcome another presidential veto, Democrats dropped from the legislation a provision ordering troops home from Iraq beginning this fall.

Congress passed the revised $120 billion spending bill on Thursday, providing $95 billion for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan through September. The House voted 280-142 to pass the bill, followed by a 80-14 vote in the Senate.

Democratic leaders said they hoped to ready the bill for Bush's signature by this Memorial Day weekend.

Democratic presidential rivals Hillary Rodham Clinton and Barack Obama (news, bio, voting record) both voted against the bill.

"I fully support our troops" but the measure "fails to compel the president to give our troops a new strategy in Iraq," said Clinton, D-N.Y.

"Enough is enough," Obama, an Illinois senator, declared, adding that Bush should not get "a blank check to continue down this same, disastrous path."

Their votes continued a shift in position for the two presidential hopefuls, both of whom began the year shunning a deadline for a troop withdrawal.

Thursday's legislative action capped weeks of negotiations with the White House, which agreed to accept some $17 billion more than Bush had requested as long as there were no restrictions on the military campaign.

"If all funding bills are going to be this partisan and contentious, it will be a very long year," Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell (news, bio, voting record) of Kentucky said.

Democrats said they were successful in moving the war debate forward and would try again when Congress takes up spending bills for the 2008 fiscal year that begins Oct. 1.

"This debate will go on," vowed House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (news, bio, voting record), D-Calif.

"Senate Democrats will not stop our efforts to change the course of this war until either enough Republicans join with us to reject President Bush's failed policy or we get a new president," Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (news, bio, voting record), D-Nev., said.

The Senate will go first when it considers a defense policy bill authorizing more than $600 billion in military spending. Sen. Carl Levin (news, bio, voting record), D-Mich., chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, plans to offer an amendment that would order troop withdrawals to begin within 120 days.

Sen. Robert Byrd (news, bio, voting record), D-W.Va., said he would press to repeal the 2002 resolution authorizing combat in Iraq.

Sen. John Warner (news, bio, voting record), R-Va., said Thursday that if the security situation in Iraq does not improve by mid-July, the president should consider adopting a new strategy there.

"It seems to me it's time for them (Iraqi troops) to ... step up," said Warner, R-Va.

The most critical votes on the war are likely to be cast in September when the House and Senate debate war funding for 2008. The House plans to consider one measure that would end combat by July 2008 and another intended to repeal Bush's authority to wage war in Iraq.

The September votes likely will come after Iraq war commander Gen. David Petraeus tells Congress whether Bush's troop buildup plan is working. Also due by September is an independent assessment of progress made by the Iraqi government.

"Those of us who oppose this war will be back again and again and again and again until this war has ended," said Rep. Jim McGovern, D-Mass.

The U.S. has spent more than $300 billion on Iraq military operations so far, according to the congressional Government Accountability Office.

foxnews.com



To: American Spirit who wrote (75125)5/29/2007 10:42:36 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
Sheehan resigns as war protest leader
____________________________________________________________

Mother of fallen soldier drained by biting criticism and partisan politics

The Associated Press
Updated: 7:36 a.m. MT May 29, 2007
msnbc.msn.com

FORT WORTH, Texas - Cindy Sheehan, the soldier’s mother who galvanized an anti-war movement with her monthlong protest outside President Bush’s ranch, says she’s done being the public face of the movement.

“I’ve been wondering why I’m killing myself and wondering why the Democrats caved in to George Bush,” Sheehan told The Associated Press by phone Tuesday while driving from her property in Crawford to the airport, where she planned to return to her native California.

“I’m going home for awhile to try and be normal,” she said.

In what she described as a “resignation letter,” Sheehan wrote in her online diary on the “Daily Kos” blog: “Good-bye America ... you are not the country that I love and I finally realized no matter how much I sacrifice, I can’t make you be that country unless you want it.

“It’s up to you now.”

Sheehan began a grassroots peace movement in August 2005 when she set up camp outside the Bush ranch for 26 days, asking to talk with the president about the death of her son, Army Spc. Casey Sheehan. Casey Sheehan was 24 when he was killed in an ambush in Baghdad.

Cindy Sheehan started her protest small, but it quickly drew national attention. Over the following two years, she drew huge crowds as she spoke at protest events, but she also drew a great deal of criticism.

‘Heartbreaking conclusions’
“I have endured a lot of smear and hatred since Casey was killed and especially since I became the so-called “Face” of the American anti-war movement,” Sheehan wrote in the diary.

On Memorial Day, she came to some “heartbreaking conclusions,” she wrote.

When she had first taken on Bush, Sheehan was a darling of the liberal left. “However, when I started to hold the Democratic Party to the same standards that I held the Republican Party, support for my cause started to erode and the 'left' started labeling me with the same slurs that the right used,” she wrote.

“I guess no one paid attention to me when I said that the issue of peace and people dying for no reason is not a matter of 'right or left', but 'right and wrong,'” the diary says.

Sheehan criticized “blind party loyalty” as a danger, no matter which side it involved, and said the current two-party system is “corrupt” and “rapidly descending into with nary a check or balance: a fascist corporate wasteland.”

Harsh national assessment
Sheehan said she had sacrificed a 29-year marriage and endured threats to put all her energy into stopping the war. What she found, she wrote, was a movement “that often puts personal egos above peace and human life.”

But she said the most devastating conclusion she had reached “was that Casey did indeed die for nothing ... killed by his own country which is beholden to and run by a war machine that even controls what we think.”

“Casey died for a country which cares more about who will be the next American Idol than how many people will be killed in the next few months while Democrats and Republicans play politics with human lives,” she wrote. “It is so painful to me to know that I bought into this system for so many years and Casey paid the price for that allegiance. I failed my boy and that hurts the most.”

“I am going to take whatever I have left and go home,” Sheehan wrote.

“Camp Casey has served its purpose. It’s for sale. Anyone want to buy five beautiful acres in Crawford, Texas?”



To: American Spirit who wrote (75125)5/30/2007 3:27:33 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 89467
 
Profiles in candor: Carter, Gore dare to speak out
______________________________________________________________

By Floyd J. McKay / Guest columnist

Some presidents or vice presidents have a lot of time after their departure to shape their legacy, and those with a literary bent are particularly prone to the temptation. While most have adhered to a type of gentlemen's agreement not to harshly criticize their successors, Jimmy Carter and Al Gore are finally fed up and speaking out.

Carter left office at 56 and has never stopped producing books as well as humanitarian accomplishments; he is certainly the model of a former president. But in his 80s, his impatience and finally his anger and disgust at the administration of George W. Bush have spilled over, the latest in an interview in which he stated, "I think as far as the adverse impact on the nation around the world, this administration has been the worst in history." Carter later made a partial apology, but the gist of his remarks was clear.

When he campaigned for office in 1976, Carter promised he would never lie to the American people. Certainly, this comment is no lie. America's importance in international affairs began as the 20th century began, and without doubt the Bush presidency has done more to damage our relations abroad than any other. No other president even comes close.

A spokesman for the White House reckoned that Carter was "becoming increasingly irrelevant." They wish. Carter is a Nobel Peace Prize winner, and his work with Habitat for Humanity, fighting disease in Africa and campaigning for honest elections and human rights is beyond reproach. George W. Bush is none of the above.

Carter had his own foreign-policy blunder, of course: He continued the policy of his predecessors and blindly supported the shah of Iran, which continues to plague us in our relations with Iran. But his historic role in the Israeli-Egyptian peace accord was the best thing America did for Israel since President Harry S. Truman helped launch the Jewish state.

His accomplishments give him license to speak out, and he has not been timid. His 2005 book, "Our Endangered Values," lends his moral standing to the American political debate, particularly in regard to separation of church and state. A year later, in "Palestine Peace Not Apartheid," Carter boldly criticized Israelis and Americans as well as Palestinians for their roles in allowing the Middle East to drift in desperation, taking stands no American politician dares to take.

For using the term "apartheid," Carter was pilloried by Zionists, the fate of any commentator who dares to criticize Israel. But media and peace groups within Israel itself have used the term for at least 25 years, to describe their fear of drifting into a state with two separate classes of citizenship. Carter was right in suggesting that Bush has done nothing to advance his "road map," and in fact stood aside while Israel pushed additional settlements into the West Bank.

Jimmy Carter is now 82 and, like many seniors who care about the country their grandchildren will inherit, he is increasingly frustrated by a White House locked down in stubborn mode, at home and abroad. I've been fortunate to spend time with Carter on several occasions over the years, and nothing impressed me more than the steely intensity of his eyes and his impatience with foolish people and foolish policies. This Southerner is no good old boy.

Neither is Al Gore, who would have been president in 2000 if everyone's vote counted the same as Supreme Court justices'. His new book, "The Assault on Reason," goes beyond foreign policy and a searing criticism of the Iraq invasion, and into domestic policy on several fronts. These include climate change, as expected, but also the current president's willful disdain for science, his domestic eavesdropping plan and the Katrina failures. Gore is also searing in his view of the media in general and television in particular, for failing their responsibilities in democratic government.

Carter and Gore were good soldiers in the wake of their defeats, which was particularly hard in Gore's case, but their patience has expired. Gore, unlike Carter, is still young enough for another campaign if Democrats deadlock in those early primaries.

If America under a new president in 2009 begins the long road to reversing global warming, Al Gore, the almost-president, will have a lasting legacy in his favor. Jimmy Carter already has such a legacy in the Camp David peace agreement and in his post-presidential endeavors.

The contrast with George W. Bush — on whose watch an entire nation was dismantled and tens of thousands killed or maimed, while at home the gap widened between the rich and American workers — could not be clearer.

*Floyd J. McKay, a journalism professor emeritus at Western Washington University, is a regular contributor to Times editorial pages. E-mail him at floydmckay@yahoo.com



To: American Spirit who wrote (75125)5/31/2007 7:56:55 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 89467
 
Interviewing Gore: On the Pollution of Our Environment, Our Politics, and Our Souls

By Arianna Huffington

Well-armed with all your great questions, I interviewed Al Gore over the weekend. After talking with him and reading his book, The Assault on Reason (which will debut at #1 in the New York Times on Sunday), it was clear that he is obsessed with two kinds of pollution -- the pollution of our planet, and the pollution of our politics and culture. In other words, the toxicity of the atmosphere and the toxicity of the public sphere.

While I completely agree with his passionate warnings about the dangers from these two pollutions, I believe there is a third: the pollution of our leaders' brains and hearts and souls that affects their spines when they know what is true, right, and in the best interests of the country but fail to stand up for it. After all, leadership has always been about seeing clearly while most around you have their vision clouded by the cultural toxicity Gore rails against.

"It's a problem that George Bush invaded Iraq," Gore told me. "It's a problem that he authorized warrantless mass eavesdropping on American citizens. It's a problem that he lifted the prohibition against torture. It's a problem that he censored hundreds of scientific reports on the climate crisis -- but it's a bigger problem that we've been so vulnerable to such crass manipulation and that there has been so little outcry or protest as American values have been discarded, one after another. And if we pretend that the magic solution for all these problems is simply to put a different person in the office of the president without attending to the cracks in the foundation of our democracy, then the same weaknesses that have been exploited by this White House will be exploited by others in the future."

Gore kept returning to this theme during our conversation: that it's not enough to just throw George Bush and the Republicans out, we need to address the root causes of the rot afflicting our politics. He highlighted some of the elements of the rot, particularly what has happened to our media culture, and the dominant influence of money:

"Money has replaced reason as the wellspring of power and influence in the American political system," Gore told me. "What was revolutionary about the United States of America was that individuals could use knowledge as the source of influence and power on a sustained basis for the first time since the agora [the center of Athenian democracy]... Now that money buys 30-second TV ads, lobbyists, computer banks, and Machiavellian political consultants, the wielding of power depends so much on money and so little on ideas that all of the organizations that Americans have formed to pursue progressive ideas to promote the public interest have been badly weakened."

That's why the Internet is so important to Gore. He sees it as a powerful countervailing force to these poisonous influences. "We need to reengage the America people in the process of democracy," he told me. "We have to convince them that their opinions do matter, that their wisdom is relevant, and that their political power can be used effectively. And the Internet is beginning to bring about some very positive changes in this area -- it's why it is so important that bloggers are now able to hold newspapers and politicians accountable in ways they couldn't even just a few years ago. The E=MC2 of American democracy is John Locke's formulation that all just power derives from the consent of the governed -- and that consent assumes an environment where there can be an open and accessible exchange of ideas."

So here is a modern political leader able not only to reference Locke, Einstein, and the Roman Empire, but to passionately and practically link their ideas to urgent policy decisions being made as we speak -- above all, decisions about Iraq.

While expressing "sympathy" and "compassion" for Democratic Congressional leaders faced with "fragile minorities," "members in politically marginal districts," and "an executive branch whose power has been greatly enhanced," Gore makes it clear that he would not have voted for the latest Iraq-funding-with-no-deadline measure. "I wish it hadn't passed," he adds.

That's where my point about the third kind of pollution -- the inner pollution -- comes into play. Clearly, human beings are not equally affected by pollution -- whether environmental or political. On the environmental front, we know that the better care we take of ourselves, and the stronger our immune systems are, the less vulnerable we are to the multiple poisons we are subjected to. In the same way, some people stand up to public toxicity better than others.

For example, what made Paul Wellstone, even though he was facing a tough re-election battle, immune to the toxic fears that led so many of his colleagues to vote for a war authorization resolution they knew was wrong? As Gore says, "We are all responsible for the decisions our country makes. We have a Congress. We have checks and balances." The fact that these checks and balances didn't work in 2002 -- and are still not fully working in 2007 -- is not just a function of a toxic system. It's also because not enough of our leaders have spiritual immune systems -- what we used to call character --strong enough to withstand the toxicity, including the fear mongering, of a bad system.

Describing our political leaders, Gore said, "We have good people caught up in a bad system." And that's true, but the bad system does not affect good people equally badly. Some of them manage to remain uncontaminated -- or recognize their contamination earlier than others -- and join the fight against the forces polluting their judgment and their courage.

Otherwise, why did Jack Murtha change course on the war in 2005 while Joe Lieberman still can't see through the toxic fog of lies and manipulation?

"Our founders," Gore told me, "had an incredibly sophisticated understanding of human nature. They believed that there is the potential for good and bad in all of us. They had a view very similar to the theologian Reinhold Niebuhr, Martin Luther King's guru, who put forth the idea that we all have the potential for good and bad and that the ways in which we relate to one another, and the conditions within which we live our lives, have a big impact on whether our vulnerabilities for bad or abusive behavior increase or decrease."

An Inconvenient Truth offers powerful insights into the degradation of our planet's eco-system, and The Assault on Reason offers a powerful indictment of the degradation of our political system. If Al Gore doesn't run for president, perhaps his next mission can be a book/movie about the need for each of us to undergo an inner detox that will get rid of all that stands in the way of us seeing clearly and acting courageously -- freeing up both the better angels of our natures and the leadership potential that's within all of us.

As I finished up our interview by asking him the obligatory question about running for president that so many of you charged me with asking (sorry, there was no new answer!), I was more convinced than ever that one of the reasons so many people are urging Gore to run is because they suspect that his recent journey -- including the devastating loss of the presidency -- have strengthened who he is at his core.

Gore is focused on the problems of environmental and cultural pollution, but perhaps his greatest strength as a leader comes from his hard-earned ability to withstand the pollution of the soul.

huffingtonpost.com



To: American Spirit who wrote (75125)6/6/2007 6:51:10 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 89467
 
Obama To Beat Clinton In Second Quarter Fundraising

huffingtonpost.com



To: American Spirit who wrote (75125)6/18/2007 6:49:06 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 89467
 
Best Ideas for Fixing America? Listen to Gore, Bradley

huffingtonpost.com

Posted June 11, 2007 | 06:19 PM (EST)

By Jonathan Alter

As the primary campaign gets rolling, are we going to hear big, bold solutions to our big, hairy problems? The past is not encouraging. Seven and a half years ago--in another America--Vice President Al Gore and former senator Bill Bradley battled for the 2000 Democratic nomination. It got nasty, with Gore playing the heavy. As recounted in Bob Shrum's delicious memoir, "No Excuses" (which is actually full of excuses for Shrum's losing streak as a consultant), the vice president twisted Bradley's ambitious health-care plan until it looked as if Bradley had neglected seniors. At first, Bradley was too aloof and gun-shy for an effective response. Later, he overreached by comparing Gore to Richard Nixon.

Similar hostilities will eventually break out among the contenders in 2008, with fresh ideas and plans little more than cannon fodder. But there's also plenty of countervailing pressure now to confront problems with more than platitudes. Candidates are torn between the need to show some imaginative beef and a fear that if they do, they open themselves up to distortion. For a genuine national conversation on issues beyond the Iraq War, they need to overcome that fear.

Campaign operatives like to argue that worthy-sounding position papers have nothing to do with governing. Not so. While many challenges and specific policy proposals will likely be different after the election, the only way to build a mandate for transformative change is to begin laying the groundwork during the campaign. And we learn something essential about the candidates from the scope of their visions, even if the boldest ideas usually originate outside the presidential campaign, from books by people like Gore and Bradley, now liberated to think big.

Gore has a decent shot at a Nobel Peace Prize this fall, and he's greeted on his book tour with calls for him to run in 2008. A close friend and former top aide, who was unwilling to talk out of school for the record, says the odds of a Gore campaign are still only about 10 percent. The Oscar for "An Inconvenient Truth" and enthusiastic response to his new book, "The Assault on Reason," has not kicked off any contingency planning. In fact, the very reasons he offers in his book for "reason" being under assault are the reasons why he'll likely take a pass. If you want to know how Gore has, as he says, "fallen out of love" with politics, it's all there, in the form of a jeremiad about contemporary society.

Gore starts from a trenchant premise that our means of processing information and finding rational solutions are badly corrupted by television, a theme he has been exploring since college. Without any misplaced nostalgia for a pre-TV age, he argues that the "marketplace of ideas" that grew out of the rise of the printed word and the Enlightenment has been largely supplanted by a medium best suited to stoking fear, which is, he notes, "the most powerful enemy of reason."

The human mind, Gore writes, is now nearly hard-wired to respond to emotional but fundamentally trivial human-interest stories on TV. He cites the pathetic tale of John Mark Karr, who the cable networks strongly suspected was faking his connection to the Jon Benet Ramsey murder case but covered breathlessly anyway. Gore's thesis has been further validated, of course, by the thirst for Paris Hilton's jailhouse saga.

He doesn't say so explicitly, but this older and wiser Gore knows that once he entered the race, his big ideas on climate change and other serious issues would be overwhelmed by a tide of celebrity freak shows and silly discussions of whether he is too brainy and fat to be president. On his book tour, he is repeatedly confessing that his experience in 2000 shows he's "simply not very good" at negotiating that part of politics. This is not false modesty.

The best part of the book is where Gore connects TV's appeal to fear and emotion to the Bush administration's success in assaulting not just science and the realm of fact, but our greatest public monument to reason, the U.S. Constitution. His brutal indictment of what the Bush-Cheney era has done to the country is cogent and convincing. Gore's solution is not to elect him (or anyone else in particular) president, but to move away from a television-based society that's "accessible only in one direction." Without true interactivity, Gore writes, it's much harder to launch the democratic conversation and reasoned deliberation necessary to solve problems. He cites the run-up to the war, but might just as well have been talking about the fear-mongering of the current immigration debate.

Not surprisingly, Gore's great hope for restoring a "well-connected citizenry" is the Internet (which, by the way, he never claimed to invent, merely fund and promote). The subtext of the book is that Gore will run in 2008 only if he genuinely believes the Internet has matured in time to redeem American politics. Otherwise, why risk his new stature as a global elder statesman?

"The Assault on Reason" contains no policy prescriptions, but Gore's big idea these days is to tax pollution, not payroll. If the payroll tax--the biggest tax most businesses and individuals pay--were replaced by a stiff carbon tax, the United States would simultaneously move away from dependence on terrorist-supporting oil thugs in the Middle East and toward a remedy for global warming. This would be a huge change--Social Security, Medicare and unemployment insurance are all currently funded by the payroll tax--and it's unlikely to come any time soon. But Gore wants to get the conversation going, even if TV doesn't lend itself to discussions of tax policy. So far, none of the candidates in either party is talking about taxes at all.

Fittingly, Bradley comes to the same conclusion on the payroll tax in his new book, "The New American Story." Because payroll taxes now account for nearly 15 percent of labor costs, Bradley estimates that shifting away from that structure will draw many of the 24 million part-time workers into the full-time work force, a real boost for both business and the middle class. Like many others, Bradley would compensate by implementing a $1-per-gallon gasoline tax or equivalent carbon tax over five years.

But there's another way to cut emissions that might be more politically palatable than a steep gas tax, which has long been a nonstarter. It's an even bigger idea--a "sky trust," as described briefly in the book "Capitalism 3.0" by Peter Barnes, who argues that the atmosphere is a "commons" that belongs to everyone. A sky trust would be modeled on the way Alaska handles oil revenue or how a waste-management company would operate if it owned dumping rights to the sky. Instead of the proceeds of a steep carbon tax going to the government, where it might be wasted, the "assessments" would go into a huge trust, then sent back to all stakeholders (the public) in the form of a dividend check at the end of the year, the same amount for each person. Those who drive more and are thus assessed more also usually live in parts of the country where the cost of living is lower and the rebate check would go further. And people who cut their carbon footprints would likely end up ahead of the game.

On other issues, Bradley does the hard work of delineating exactly what needs to be done to reform health care, education, pensions and the political process (where he favors public financing and Saturday voting), before showing exactly where the money would come from. The former New Jersey senator builds on the work of Matthew Miller, whose path-breaking book, "The 2% Solution: Fixing America's Problems in Ways Liberals and Conservatives Can Love," explains how Americans can have their cake and eat it, too, by investing as little as two cents on the dollar in a set of rearranged priorities. Rep. Rahm Emanuel and Bruce Reed also have a book out with provocative plans, as does Sen. Chuck Schumer.

Democratic presidential candidates aren't completely hopeless in the fresh-ideas department. Hillary Clinton is pushing universal prekindergarten. Barack Obama has offered a "health for hybrids" deal where government helps the auto companies handle their crushing load of health-care obligations if they promise to invest half of their savings into hybrid cars. John Edwards is wheeling out a proposal to spend $5 billion a year on a cabinet-level department to advance international education, disease prevention and poverty relief, complete with 10,000 American experts enlisted and sent abroad in a new "Marshall Corps," a combination of the Marshall Plan and the Peace Corps.

Chris Dodd is outspoken about restoring the habeas corpus rights of suspected terrorists. Joe Biden is out front in favoring a "no-fly zone" over Darfur and inserting an international peacekeeping mission. Bill Richardson doesn't equivocate on Job One for the next president: "First and foremost, we must repair our alliances."

All this compares favorably to the Republican candidates. The party that once enjoyed a near monopoly on new ideas seems short of them, with the exception of Tommy Thompson's thoughts on preventative health care and Mike Huckabee's plan to stir productive creativity with federal funding for art and music education. John McCain rarely mentions his bill for an enlarged national-service program, nor Mitt Romney his Massachusetts health-care plan. Climate change and ending dependence on foreign oil are barely on the GOP radar at all.

Only one of these folks (or someone not yet in the race) is going to be president. Maybe after they lose, the others can take a leaf from Al Gore and Bill Bradley and get serious about how to fix the country.

*Originally published in Newsweek.



To: American Spirit who wrote (75125)6/21/2007 1:06:17 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
Michael Moore's 'Sicko' Takes On Healthcare

health.usnews.com



To: American Spirit who wrote (75125)6/24/2007 5:37:56 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
If Bush-Cheney Can’t Be Impeached, Nobody Can
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by Glen Ford / June 22nd, 2007

If the Democrats don’t even make an effort to impeach George Bush or Dick Cheney before these criminals’ terms are up, then no president of the United States will ever face punishment for crimes against his own people or humanity at-large. So said David Swanson, of the Internet treasure trove of impeachment information, AfterDowningStreet.org.

Swanson was speaking at a discussion of impeachment at the Take Back America Conference, in Washington, earlier this week. Swanson presented an encyclopaedic list of 12 categories of impeachable crimes committed by the Bush regime - not 12 crimes, but 12 whole categories of crimes, each containing many separate instances and counts of crimes, any one of which is enough to send Bush and Cheney back where they came from before January, 2009. Taken together, the list shows there is no rule of law in the United States - that Bush has effectively destroyed the Constitution as a barrier to executive dictatorship. If laws can be broken at will, there is no law. Congress may as well stop enacting them, and go home, themselves...

dissidentvoice.org