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Before we figure out how to beat the Republicans, we have to come up with some good ideas and a plan.

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Let's Fix This Mess

By Molly Ivins, AlterNet. Posted October 20, 2005.


Before we figure out how to beat the Republicans, we have to come up with some good ideas and a plan.

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I have been collecting material for a series of columns on the peppy topic, "How Do We Fix This Mess?" The news is dandy in that there are a lot of sound ideas being passed around. Really serious messes, like the one this country is in, do not, in my experience, have simple, definitive solutions. And if they do, such solutions are politically impossible. We are looking for progress, not perfection, so anyone who tells you the entire tax code should fit on a postcard is a bona fide, certified, chicken-fried moron.

But listening to the Democratic debate on what to do now, it seems to me some of the brethren and sistren are asking the wrong questions. The question is not, "How Do We Win?" That's a technical question that comes after, "What the Hell Can We Do About This Disaster?"

I personally think some good ideas and a plan should come first -- and to this end, let me chime in on a note of agreement with some Actual Moderates, William A. Galston and Elaine C. Kamarck, a couple of Clintonites still carrying on in that old Third Way that was good enough for Bill C. They are opposed to putting too much stock in the political strategy of "reframing" issues as advised by the linguist George Lakoff. This seems to me merest common sense, and I'm not sure Lakoff himself wouldn't agree.

Frank Luntz, the focus-group king and message-meister who keeps the Republicans all chorusing the same carefully worded talking points, is indeed a large part of the R's win strategy. But I think the reason R's have been successful in selling rotten policies that really hurt people is not so much because of clever wording as because Democrats haven't stood up and pointed out what was happening.

Believe it or not, there is a certain charm to simply telling the truth, and even to telling the truth simply. This emperor isn't wearing any clothes, and the people who are pointing that out now that Bush's approval ratings are at 37 percent, but who were nowhere to be heard when he was at 60 and better, are maybe not the people we should be looking to now.

Which brings us to the Democratic Leadership Council and the Al From-Bruce Reed take on what we should do now. The DLC is regularly condemned as being Republican Lite, but it seems to me its problem is being Light Lite. The From-Reed proposal is security, values, opportunity and reform -- a perfect symphony of the obvious. I do like their Opportunity ideas:

  • Create high-wage jobs by making the United States the top exporter of energy-efficient products;
  • Cut $300 billion in subsidies, and invest it in innovation, education and growth;
  • Pass tax reform to replace 60 tax breaks with four: college, homes, kids, universal pensions.

The problem comes when you look at their reform initiatives -- lobbying reform to close the revolving door and ban partisan gerrymandering. Uh, how about we address the problem that our entire political system is corrupt, that it has been corrupted by corporate money, and that we have government of corporate interests, by corporate interests and for corporate interests -- and that we really need to change that, instead of trying to raise more corporate money than Republicans?

David Sirota, a stout liberal attacking from the other side, decries Partisan War Syndrome, which he defines as beginning with the assumption that substance is irrelevant when it comes to winning elections and "far more damaging to actually building a serious, long-lasting political movement." I like people who think like that.

Bob Borosage, director of the Campaign for America's Future, offers a "Real Contract With America" in the current issue of the The Nation. He has some excellent ideas, and I'll discuss them more later. Like the others, Borosage emphasizes Making America Safe and Real Security for America. What you find across the Democratic spectrum is agreement that the Bushies are hopelessly inept at homeland security. Essentially nothing has been done to protect the ports, and almost no progress has been made on helping first responders and improving public health capacity, despite all that money spent on small towns in Wyoming. The chemical plants are obvious targets -- but heaven forfend that the Bushies should force their dear friends in the chemical industry to spend money on public safety.

For me, the most annoying suggestion being made is that Democrats somehow need to claim or reclaim patriotism or to do something to let folks know that we, too, love our country. I find that hideously offensive. I have always thought the only way to respond to Republican statements and implications questioning the patriotism of non-Republicans is with a good swift blast of venomous anger.

How dare they imply that opposing war in Iraq calls one's patriotism into question? Take the offensive. Anyone who would use that kind of slimy attack sullies America, where dissent is honored, respected and, Lord knows, needed.

The contemptible, petty, little would-be Joe McCarthys need to understand what love of country really means -- love of the highest and best in America. Never to be confused with "pre-emptive war" over nonexistent weapons and certainly not with using "democracy" to sell a rotten, failed war.

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Molly Ivins writes about politics, Texas and other bizarre happenings.

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Voice of reason
Posted by: LPB on Oct 20, 2005 3:04 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Once again, Molly is the voice of reason. Why can't the politicians get it? Molly for president!

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» RE: Voice of reason: LPB Posted by: Basenjis
Telling the truth consistently true family values
Posted by: ShaSpirit on Oct 20, 2005 3:43 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
1. True family values keeps your family/individual's safety net working. How is your safety net and that of the USA, does it work for you or for corporation's?
2. Are you better off now or five years ago?
3. If Gore was president how would our country been different?

One more talking point that bush has win his elections.

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hard to provide leadership when you are intimidated
Posted by: timg98376 on Oct 20, 2005 3:49 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I think that the Democratic party tries too hard to toady to the right wing and their fundamentalist co-conspirators. Sure, actually taking a clear position may get you some heat but it will also get you some support.

The head count of real leaders among the dems is low, most strike me as just typical opportunists looking for a slick angle to trick voters in to re-electing them.

Without a clear, DIFFERENT platform they do pale in comparison to the hard charging, assertive crooks in the Republican party.

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Make that 5 tax breaks
Posted by: lunink on Oct 20, 2005 6:20 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
-college, homes, kids, universal pensions, and healthcare.

Great article as always. Thanks.

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» RE: Make that 5 tax breaks Posted by: Lincoln fan
» Keep it simple Posted by: sambo4
» RE: Keep it simple Posted by: Samantha Vimes
» RE: Keep it simple Posted by: sambo4
» RE: Make that 5 tax breaks Posted by: Samantha Vimes
» RE: Make that 5 tax breaks Posted by: Rod in 83706
» RE: Make that 5 tax breaks Posted by: sambo4
Molly is ahead of her time...
Posted by: sgtmartin1 on Oct 20, 2005 7:52 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
a cooler head when the rest of us are still squirming with delight over the funk into which the GOP has fallen.

Thanks Molly. We do need to think about what we're going to do because we're going to be handed the car keys.

We may never see such an opportunity again. Let's not blow it.

Now, just one more moment of glee: Fitzgerald Issues Frog-Marching Guidelines

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» RE: Molly is ahead of her time... Posted by: Lincoln fan
WOW! Period. End of Sentence.
Posted by: Sojourner on Oct 21, 2005 12:34 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This piece leaves nothing to the imagination and says it all. Maybe something good can come out of Texas, after all.

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Fixing the mess.
Posted by: Lincoln fan on Oct 21, 2005 3:53 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Although this article by Ms. Ivins is inciteful, I do not agree with her 100%. As everybody else who writes about the ills of our government she rightly mentions the tie-in between big money and government. There are four things required to start to clean up the mess. First, political campaigns must be financed only by taxpayers. Second the falsehood of corporate personhood must be abolished. Third, the revolving doors between corporations and government and the military and corporations must be closed. Fourth, bribery by lobbyists must be taken seriously, and stopped. There is a simple tactic to accomplish all of these things. That is a grass roots threat of a voting boycott unless these issues are part of one or both the parties' platforms. Imagine the embarrassment of our politicians if at the next election a million voters wrote in "none of the above". More details at join the revolution

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» RE: Fixing the mess. Posted by: roygib
» RE: Fixing the mess. Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: Fixing the mess. Posted by: timg98376
» RE: Fixing the mess. Posted by: bassman
» RE: Fixing the mess. Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: Fixing the mess. Posted by: BillC
» RE: Fixing the mess. Posted by: judiabbott
» RE: Fixing the mess. Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: Fixing the mess. Posted by: mtburke59
Evangelical Morons of America
Posted by: menckenman on Oct 21, 2005 4:44 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As Mencken said, the fear of ideas is a peculiarly democratic phenomenon, and nowhere so horribly apparent as in the United States. The democrats are, like all politicians, job-seekers who cater to the masses of timorous and superstitious morons who are "moved in vast herds by mob emotions."

Reason, Molly, matters not to the "right-thinker" conformist, whose whole thinking is done emotionally. The massed morons must lose their fear and rightousness, or be overcome in a savage battle. Their mountebanks and charlatans have stolen two presidential elections, and have almost stolen the entire government, supremes included.

Reason must give way to action. The theives and traitors must be turned out, starting at the polling place.

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» RE: vangelical Morons of America Posted by: Shirley Hicks
» Leiberman sucks Posted by: shangrilalad
» RE: Leiberman sucks Posted by: sambo4
» RE: Leiberman sucks Posted by: Wacre
» RE: vangelical Morons of America Posted by: Samantha Vimes
» RE: vangelical Morons of America Posted by: Lincoln fan
What Dems Must Do To Win
Posted by: Angellight on Oct 21, 2005 5:42 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thursday, Oct. 20, 2005, a few Congressional Democrats along with the help of the Black Caucus and a white male Democrat, I forgot his name took to the floor without the Republicans to present their ideas on how to better the U.S. and they pointed out that they were going to tell the public what they stood for, what they were fighting for, what they were trying to get passed although they were in the minority and the Republicans would shoot it down. They took to the floor and we need more of this, them taking to the floor and pursuing their arguments so that the public can get a clear understanding and distincition of the two parties and what they stand for. They need to clearly see that the Rep are working for corporations and big business, while the Dems are working for the people, after all Congress and the Senate were elected by the people to do the people's business.

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» RE: What Dems Must Do To Win Posted by: Lincoln fan
check out Paul Hackett
Posted by: beetruetoyou on Oct 21, 2005 6:26 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Right on Molly!

Check out the article in Mother Jones magazine this month by David Goodman on Paul Hackett from Ohio, the Iraq vet Marine Democrat that nearly stole the election from a Repub in one of the Repubbest state's in the union. He's even got Repub's voting for him and it's because he speaks truth about the morons in the big house and blasts those who imply he and other Dems hate America.

I think we need more of his kind of "scorched earth" rhetoric in the public like "I don't like the sonofabitch that lives in the White House...but I'd put my life on the line for him." He's said to have stated in a debate that the biggest threat to America "is the man living in the White House" and slammed Bush and Cheney as "chicken hawks". He publicly described W's infamous "Bring 'em on" taunt as "the most incredibly stupid comment I've ever heard a president of the United States make. He cheered on the enemy." He is unapologetic, "I said it, I stand by it...Bush is a chicken hawk, okay? Tough shit!" As for the SOB barb, he says Bush "talks the tough talk. He should appreciate that." Why don't more Democrats come out swinging, talking this way? We've got to stop being so DAMN POLITE! It's easy to speak this way on Alternet, are we speaking as forcefully in the real world?

We need to not be afraid of telling someone to f*ck off when they begin spewing the bully venom. The article describes an encounter Hackett has with a good ole boy who comes up and tries to make trouble by saying, "that's low politics, punk" complaining about an ad Hackett put out about his Republican opponent, Jean Schmidt saying "you don't know Schmidt". When Hacket gives a crybaby, "Waaaaaaaa" back to the man the good ole boy spews forth a "stream of epithets." Hacket eventually asks him "What's your fuckin' problem? You got something to say to me? Bring it on!" going nose to nose with the heckler. The man turns around and storms away.

I agree with him that "these guys in the Repub Party adopted this tough-guy language...they're bullies. They're offended when somebody takes a swing back at them." I like his style and think it's highly effective. It's hard to be truthful and polite anymore. The only way to fight bullies is by giving them a dose of their own medicine. The gloves need to come off.

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» RE: check out Paul Hackett Posted by: nanapantyhead
» RE: check out Paul Hackett Posted by: beetruetoyou
dw13
Posted by: daw13 on Oct 21, 2005 6:44 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Howard Dean had it right. What's needed is revolution within the Democratic Party. The DLC isn't republican lite. Its Republican.

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» RE: dw13 Posted by: Basenjis
"Universal healthcare is basic as well"
Posted by: monkeywrench on Oct 21, 2005 9:12 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I agree with Lunink/"Make that 5 tax breaks," but take it one step further: the From-Reed proposal should include universal healthcare as one of the steps to security – and should point out how it would be GOOD for both the american people and for industry (other than the bloated healthcare corpora-spiracy.)

Fact: Toyota has announced that it will build its future North American factories in Canada rather than the United States. Why? In part, because of lower corporate healthcare expenditures there, due to Canada's UNIVERSAL GOV'T. HEALTHCARE SYSTEM!

DUH! Why can't we learn this lesson?

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"Change must come from within The People, and without government"
Posted by: monkeywrench on Oct 21, 2005 9:26 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Molly is right when she says that we have government of corporate interests, by corporate interests, and for corporate interests. The fix is in, folks. The two-party system that was supposed to help ensure the synthesis of ideas from opposing forces has morphed into a "divide-and-conquer" strategy by ONE force: corporate greed.

The opposing force has to come from the people now; there IS NO opposing force within to the facsism that has gripped government. Don't ask me how to get people to care more about the future of their country than they care about the fortunes of Tom Cruise and Katy Holmes, because I don't know how to force people to think and then act; all I know is that until they do, nothing will change.

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Let's Fix this mess.
Posted by: ezermeno on Oct 21, 2005 10:22 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Right again, Molly. Help us. Sometimes I hardly know which way to turn. I go to protests, I sign petitions, I write my Congressional representatives, who NEVER vote the way I ask them to. I try to reason with right-wingers or those who simply don't care - both groups totally ignore me. I managed to get one Letter to the Editor published in Time, but doubt that changed a single mind. Your columns on the other hand, get wide exposure, and we need that exposure as well as your brains and knowledge. Please hold some seminars or something and let us know the best way to take our country back. We need a leader. Please be our leader.

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» RE: Let's Fix this mess. Posted by: Lincoln fan
Molly's got it right
Posted by: MTguy on Oct 21, 2005 10:29 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Fixing the general mess our nation finds itself in is sort of like eating a turkey dinner; you don't shove it in all at once, you tear off a leg and when you're done with that, you go back for another piece.

Progress comes grindingly slow when it comes to the Federal Government. Too much CYA and not enough git 'r done.

Sometimes though, I don't think the voters would recognize a real leader if they saw one.

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» RE: Molly's got it right Posted by: Lincoln fan
Noble sentiments for wrapping fish
Posted by: Bic Pentameter on Oct 21, 2005 1:54 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It makes not a whit of difference how many fine ideas anyone here comes up with until we first do one thing:

THROW THE BUMS OUT.

Then we can re-group, re-think. . whatever. Unfortunately, though, we are a long way from taking our cues from any other significant source. We'll wait til campaign time and struggle with our choices. Nothing short of what would amount to a voter revolution will shake the snakes out of this tangled mess we have.

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Let's fix this Mess - Wipe off the GOoP
Posted by: rwcbanzai on Oct 21, 2005 5:23 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Molly I'm with you. But when was the last time the Dems and GOoPs listened? Been to Washington to lobby twice. The Dems listened but what could they do as the minority party? The GOoPs had us standing in the hallways and never took notes harboring their corporatism interests. Imagine standing in a hallway adding insult to injury in our public building. Even when the Dems get in it's always the status quo and not progressive monopoly trust busting. Washington is a fossilized Museum. Monopolized money is the problem. The Gulf Coast, the marines without armor, the disabled and retired and the most important the working people are being wrung out to die, Oops, I meant dry. Throw the rascals out and elect the common people with public financing. Take out bribery, Oops again, I meant campaign contributions. Imagine... public financing leveling the political monopoly of the parties, when anyone can run with true human values against the moneyed special interests. Stop all personal bribes/campaign contributions. Enforce and imprison all briberers. This one major reform will liberate American Politics. Then we'll see true statesman and public servants listening to constituents and not dictating political corporatism billionaire policies and monopolies. Otherwise, as in the last 200 years "of we the people", the working class are still left crawling on their own.

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Thank You, Molly
Posted by: GreenLibbie on Oct 21, 2005 7:54 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Molly, I was absolutely floored and disheartened last week to read Jamison Foser's rationalization about why we DON'T need a plan (over at MediaMatters.org). This week, you've helped restore my faith that someone left of center does indeed have a clue. "Security, values, opportunity and reform" - this explains NOTHING to the casual listener about what we believe. May I suggest in lieu of the above this 11-point plan for America's future?

- individual liberty
- safety net
- engaged citizenry
- transparent government
- diverse economy
- fair trade
- sustainable practices
- talk first, shoot last (foreign policy)
- religious tolerance
- reproductive freedom and responsibility
- energy independence

These 11 points are not just meaningless words - these are are progressive VALUES, distilled into short, meaningful phrases.

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True Patriotism
Posted by: navistic50 on Oct 22, 2005 7:34 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A wonderful article and truthful in many ways. At first, I thought that maybe the Dems were not responding to this increasing craziness within our government because of difficulties in finding a direction to move. My gut tells me that the reason Dems are slow to move is because they have become invested and are an investment of corporate concerns.

My biggest concern these days though is, who is policing the WH Administration? Mr. Fitzgerald is the closest I've seen to someone in government doing the right thing. It is difficult to protest when our voices fall on the deaf ears of cowards and people who have no intention of being loyal Americans. Much worse, is the fact, (and I am appalled to admit this) is that many so-called Americans are actually helping destroy our country from within due mainly to greed, power, or fear.

My challenge to the Dems is this, quit chasing corporate money, and find the ways and means to help us take back our country. Ever since Reagan was elected in 1980, politics have become more of a television show than real politicians keeping our country healthy and strong.

I applaud Paul Hackett for saying in truth what many of us feel, and I am really tired of the classroom bullies in Washington being allowed to get away with murder, literally. Impeach Bush & Company... The sooner the better

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» RE: True Patriotism Posted by: Lincoln fan
Re. "Let's fix this mess"
Posted by: willymack on Oct 22, 2005 9:15 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm afraid Molly is preaching to the choir.(By the way, I love ya, Molly). She assumes that most of us are as literate, erudite, and intellectually active, as she is. This, sadly, is not the case. Most of our people are pathetic ignoramuses whose minds have atrophied from non-use. The bushies have used this to tragic effect, and will continue to do so unless some major event or events wake them from their sleep.

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Re; Universal healthcare is basic....
Posted by: janakiblum on Oct 22, 2005 10:37 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is confusing why centralization as a means to greater efficiency is considered commendable in corporations but not in government. The concept is the same though the rhetoric used to justify one and denigrate the other is different.

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» so you don't approve of medicare? Posted by: beetruetoyou
Re; Universal healthcare is basic....
Posted by: janakiblum on Oct 22, 2005 10:37 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is confusing why centralization as a means to greater efficiency is considered commendable in corporations but not in government. The concept is the same though the rhetoric used to justify one and denigrate the other is different.

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Different Concepts of Society
Posted by: eclaire on Oct 22, 2005 11:29 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I love Molly's columns. She is outlining what for many of us is the rational way to build a decent society: provide health care (focusing on preventive health care and education), education, living-wage jobs (and the training to perform them well), financial provisions for retirement, and a safety net for the misfortunes of lost jobs, accidents and unavoidable ill health. We desire a healthy, well-educated and secure society that has the training and the leisure to focus on and discuss the major policy issues of good governance.

But, over the last 10 (and more) years, what have we been producing? An increasingly unhealthy, poorly educated and impoverished society. A society that is becoming so dependent on low wage jobs that, with a nod and a wink, our government allows thousands of undocumented workers to toil in the fields and the garment factories (to say nothing of the kitchens, nurseries, and car washes).

The profits of many large corporations, like those of the 18th century cotton and tobacco plantations, depend on an easy source of cheap labor. Cheap labor that does not, or can not, question or revolt against the terms of its employment. We may, as a nation, have abolished slavery, but we have produced an employee pool that has had all other options removed. A pool consisting of workers who are in poor health, have minimal education, are one paycheck away from living on the street, and in the case of the harvesters of our food, can be jailed as illegal aliens if they do not toe the line.

Right now I feel like Sisyphus.

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» RE: Different Concepts of Society Posted by: Lincoln fan
Easy election strategy
Posted by: Smiggsy on Oct 22, 2005 9:00 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The easiest solution to beating the GOP at the next election is very simple - dilute the republican vote. Dems should strategise & need to set up new political parties that cater specifically to the whims of key conservative voters. For one thing - A couple of extreme nutball christian faith based parties - a couple of parties to assist the far right wing loonies and so on. According to some commentors it worked well for Clinton when there were two conservative presidential candidates in his race not so long ago. It would also work in electing liberal reps in both houses of government.

These new parties need not even be faux - As long as the key senior policy advisers of any new far right wing parties were staunch liberals inclined to support the democratic lines in the long term. Ensure those running for election for these groups are ex-democrat & publicise that they are disgruntled with liberals & want to be more patriotic (that should glean a few far right voters. Make it appear like they are trying to defeat the dems when behind the scenes they are actually in coalition. Even if incredibly some new party candidate gets voted in - start a coalition government - many civilised governments across the world are presently governed by coalition parties. Target specific elecorates & then game on. If right-wing idiots are as simple as liberals assume many should fall for it. Plus there would be more voices publicising all the recent GOP scandals in the media.

Thus beat the neocons at their own game. Provide the election funding from traditional democrat sources (plus some from any new right-wing supporters) & hide the money trail extremely well. Then flatly deny any involvement in these new extra parties.

Nothing but a bit of long term planning, effort & hard work involved in this strategy. Worked properly such a strategy would turn right-wing conservatives against themselves.

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Patriotism
Posted by: jehill8 on Oct 23, 2005 7:01 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Mark Twain said it almost as well as Molly, "Patriotism is supporting your country all of the time and your government when it deserves it."

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Human Beings
Posted by: Josf on Oct 23, 2005 3:32 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Control over oil is a battle being fought by people who do not have humanities interests in mind; certainly not in the long term. It is also a safe bet that Americans have become overly dependent upon oil and those who control oil.
There is a clear need to become independent of both oil and independent from the powers controlling oil.
Regime change is on the horizon. The rest of the world is already gaining independence from oil and the central control of oil. Americans can fix the mess we are in - simply, effectively, and independently. Wisdom is the first step.
Is it wise to create a demand and then supply the demand for home energy production?
Think about this question for a moment while I paint a possible future picture.
Ideally the scenario produces a future situation where the alternate energy source market has become fashionable like a popular fad. Ideally our grand children reside in homes that use windmills that generate electricity when the wind is blowing and our grand children reside in homes that use solar panels that generate electricity when the sun is shinning. The ideal home generating system could become much more efficient and have the additional ability to generate hydrogen for storage, sale, and use as another energy source.
Our grand children have, then, a virtual money tree. They are therefore independently wealthy. No longer do our grandchildren require centrally controlled energy sources or centrally controlled monetary credit. No longer do our grandchildren require monetary leadership. Our grandchildren have the means by which they can sit back and let their homes generate electric current for their own use and for sale to others who want more energy and more power.
For example: a new business interest could tap into the electric grid and pay back each person owning a home generating unit. We can create reverse interest. The new business could also build its own wind and solar power generators as the business grows.
The ideal future scenario already exists in miniature. People now have windmills generating wind power and they now sell electric power to the electric company.
The difference between the ideal and reality rests on us and our ability to make wise choices. Our grand children’s futures depend on us.
The powers that be depend upon the power of oil. Is that not painfully obvious?

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» RE: Human Beings Posted by: sambo4
Let's add election reform to the list
Posted by: beetruetoyou on Oct 24, 2005 11:35 AM   
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Molly's ideas are great, as always. Let's add election reform to the list. How about starting with a system where every vote can be traced and COUNTED! Novel idea, imagine that. Maybe one reason people are giving up is because they feel their votes don't matter. When a man (boy) can become president by ONE vote when the popular vote indicated Americans overwhelmingly wanted the other candidate, something stinks. I still haven't gotten over that one.

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Tina
Posted by: tina777 on Oct 25, 2005 11:52 AM   
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Yes Molly you are so true.I recall how funny you were at the P.E.N./Faulkner afternoon mad hatters tea in New Orleans some years back.(at my home in the frand quarter)and also so candid.
Yes the Democrats have a ways to go too.How may I ask can we create a Good Ole Gals club to deal with the Good ole Boy network that seems to plague the inner political congestions that are in continuium, from the Senators(Edwards and others) to other appointed and elected people.
Now that Burt Bacharach is writing lyrics, perhaps we can have him write our Good Ole Gals anthem......love Tina

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molly for pres.
Posted by: god on Oct 26, 2005 9:41 AM   
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right-on molly,if you run for president you got my vote.Hillary clinton is a moreon somr democrats are willing to fight for whats right not whats best politicly.

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heeey molly!
Posted by: ccBallagh on Oct 26, 2005 10:21 AM   
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great article molly!

We need the dems to take an independent stand and go on the record as lashing out against all the illegal and unconstitutional activity that plagues our country's govt. today. The democrats need to take a stand or us free-thinkers will be marginalized as we split between the democratic and independent parties.

COME TOGETHER FOR PEACE AMERICA!!!!

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