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Election 2008

Michael Moore on the Election, the Bailout, Healthcare, and 10 Proposals for the Next President

By Amy Goodman, Democracy Now!. Posted November 1, 2008.


"At this point it's just kind of sad to see John McCain and the others going to the dark side ... a sad way to end his career."
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Amy Goodman: I [recently] had a chance to sit down with Academy Award-winning filmmaker and author Michael Moore yesterday. He was in his home state of Michigan, one of the hardest hit areas of the nation, Michigan's [unemployment] now at 8.7 percent.

Michael Moore has recently published a new book called Mike's Election Guide '08 and a new online film called Slacker Uprising: A Look at the Youth Vote. Michael Moore is best known for his films Sicko, Fahrenheit 911, Bowling for Columbine and Roger and Me. He has recently been campaigning for a group of Democratic candidates in Michigan and is a backer of Barack Obama. I spoke to him from Traverse City, Michigan. ... Michigan is a very hard-hit state right now. In fact, John McCain pulled out of Michigan. Do you see a connection?

Moore: I'd like to believe it's because I'm here that he left, but I don't even know why he was here to begin with. People here have been bludgeoned during the last eight years. And, you know, the sad part about that is, is that next year or the year after, when they look back on this year, this is actually going to look like a really good year, because once General Motors merges with Chrysler, thousands and thousands of jobs, more jobs, are going to be eliminated, on top of the already thousands of more jobs that will be eliminated in the next few years because General Motors and Chrysler build twentieth century vehicles that either nobody wants or we shouldn't be building, considering the climate crisis that's in front of us.

Goodman: How did it happen that they didn't change, that you have now in Michigan the highest unemployment rate in the country?

Moore: It happened because the workers don't control the means of production. Oops, I guess I can't be president now that I said that. No, but seriously, I think that if the autoworkers, years and years ago, could have had a say in the cars that were being built, the Big Three would have built cars that people wanted to drive, instead of the kind of crappy-mobiles that they continue to build, the gas-guzzlers they continue to build. And people wanted something different, and nobody listened, because the auto companies were arrogant, and they had -- they have always had the attitude that what's good for -- you know the old saying -- General Motors is good for the country. Well, the country changed; General Motors didn't change. And so, now the people have suffered as a result of it. If we had a democratic economy, where the people, we the people, had a say in the decisions that are made, in terms of how our corporations are run, the things that they produce for our society, what we need collectively as a society, we probably wouldn't find ourselves in some of the positions that we're in right now.

Goodman: We're quite a ways away from Roger and Me, but you started right there.

Moore: Well, that distresses me to no end to even think about that, that it's almost twenty years since Roger and Me, and I was saying this twenty years ago, that, you know, unless we get a handle on this, things aren't going to get any better. And they didn't. They just continued to get worse. If you go back and look, actually, at Roger and Me now, Flint, Michigan looks pretty good. Even though 30,000 jobs at that time had been eliminated, there were still 50,000 people working there. I think the last number I saw is that there's somewhere between 11,000 and 13,000 people working for General Motors in Flint now, so almost 40,000 jobs less in Flint since I made that film. So it's -- I just can't tell you how distressing that is for me.

Goodman: You know, a couple weeks ago, we reported on the Michigan Messenger, that had that report that said that the Republican -- local Republican Party was going to be challenging voters based on lists of homes that have been foreclosed. And then it turned out that McCain, at the time, had his campaign headquarters, his office, in one of the foreclosure lawyer's offices. But what about the foreclosure rate in Michigan right now?

Moore: Well, they're really bad here in Michigan. I think if we're not the worst, we're in the top three, along with Florida and -- I forget the other state. But it's literally thousands each week here, people losing their homes.

And that story about the local Republican Party that was going to try and take a look at the foreclosure list in order to try and stop people from voting, you know, the Republican Party here in Michigan years ago actually -- you know, they weren't great, but they used to be decent. They used to -- they passed a lot of the early environmental laws here. The Republican governor was in favor of the Equal Rights Amendment for women, things like that. This was back in the '60s and '70s. And then, they just went weird, like all the Republicans did. And the last Republican to run for governor here two years ago was the guy who founded Amway. So, it's a really bizarre situation here now, in terms of the Republicans that are trying to make some headway.

But, frankly, I'm very optimistic about one thing in this state, and I've been working very hard on this locally. I set a goal to remove three Republican congressmen from Michigan in this election. And each of the three Democrats that I've been supporting, campaigning for, raising money for here in Michigan, all three of them are now ahead, in the polls, of the Republican incumbents here in Michigan. So I think we're going to have even better news on election night on Tuesday, not just in terms of the White House, but also the congressional delegation from states like Michigan.


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See more stories tagged with: election 2008, michael moore

Amy Goodman is the host of the nationally syndicated radio news program, Democracy Now!

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» RE: MM: advocate for truth Posted by: willymack
No profit in healthcare? Not so fast, Mikey.
Posted by: huricane on Nov 1, 2008 2:18 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm quite convinced that no one in America actually understands Canada's healthcare system.

The payment scheme is what's known as single-payer, wherein each provincial government is the sole payer for health services within that province. Each province funds its healthcare expenditures partly from sources such as provincial sales taxes, and partly from funds transferred from the federal government, and the federal government provides some fairly loose guidelines describing aspects of services to be provided. Every resident is covered.

The provincial governments then distribute funds to a number of regional health boards that have relative autonomy to manage the major facilities, staff, maintenance, etc.

All that being said, and to bring us back around to the point of all this, there is plenty of profit to be made in this so-called socialist system!

My family doctor runs his own clinic in partnership with four other docs. They lease the building, pay the nurses and clerks, buy the equipment and supplies. In every sense of the word, they are businessmen. They bill the provincial government for services they provide to us. The government doesn't tell them who to treat, what to prescribe or what office hours to keep. And he makes a very comfortable living.

The contractors who build a hospital make a profit; the medical equipment vendors make a profit on CT scanners and latex exam gloves; the maintenance companies polishing the floors every night make a profit.

My point is, there is plenty of room for profit in healthcare. It just doesn't come as a result of denying treatment.

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Election Posion Chocolate
Posted by: d1no on Nov 1, 2008 5:19 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nUB79WJ9ktQ

This is no joke. Contaminated Chocolate from China is not only the pirates coins. The election is the reason the full story is not being reported by the FDA.

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"Sticks and stones can break your bones, but words can never harm you..."
Posted by: ~Fiona~ on Nov 1, 2008 6:01 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When did we as a nation become so afraid of "words"???

This insanity of taking childish "name calling" seriously is a blight of ignorance visited upon us by the "master of ignorance" Karl Rove...

Its high time we as a nation started acting like responsible adults once more...

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Burr
Posted by: BurrDeming on Nov 1, 2008 6:43 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The notion that someone could have favored the bailout because it was ... you know ... good for the country doesn't get a first thought from Mr. Moore. I would have been interested in his counter-arguments, and there are some.

One is the problem with staffing the bailout. Those with the expertise are also the ones tied in with the institutions that went wrong on our dime.

The bailout itself has too few safeguards. I'm not really persuaded that it's okay for banks and other powerhouses getting federal funds to spend millions on inappropriate activities because it's separate from the bailout. Tax money is freeing up their limited funds, so it still comes back on us.

AIG really gets me mad and I'm not alone.

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A Big Hole In Michael Moore's Philosophy
Posted by: Last Chance on Nov 1, 2008 6:53 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Not a word about women's rights and the right of each woman to decide if and when to birth her children with or without husband, church or state permission. Not a word about reducing the human population to shrink and retro-fit the industrial complex to save the environment from megtons of pollution. Does Michael Moore believe "a growing economy is a healthy economy"? Why doesn't he speak and write about that? Is is because he is so devoted to his Flint Michigan constituency that wants the auto industry to again produce millions of cars to choke the roads and highways, just so they can have their jobs back and raise big families so the next generation can grow and expand and displace whatever is left of the environment?

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Dear Michael, McCain and Palin are worse than awful but...
Posted by: bthespoon on Nov 1, 2008 6:56 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I watched Obama rail against Bush policies that put all our wealth in the hands of the top 1% (right after he voted to approve $840 billion contribution to the problem), and wondered WTF?

Then if you listen closely he said he will pull "all but 50-80,000 of our troops out of Iraq...unless the situation on the ground changes"...(and redeploy them to Afghanistan with the same commander in charge)....and kick up bloated defense spending even worse than it already is.

Obama supports nuclear energy and "clean" coal. He thinks huge polluters should be able to purchase "credits" to allow them to keep polluting. Sigh.

He wants to feed the beast that is the main problem within our health coverage system (profit-driven health insurance industry) using our tax dollars, making it even stronger and harder to bring to justice. (Clue: he wants to feed it $100 billion more, when he knows honest reform would save us at least $350 billion per year, not cost anything). It's possibly the biggest lie perpetrated on the American public, and Obama is one of the perpetrators. It's akin to paying the KKK to take care of Civil Rights for us.

Then I see him laugh in the face of public campaign finance (breaking his pledge), NAFTA, FISA, on and on.

What are we voting for again?

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I recall...
Posted by: Bbear41 on Nov 1, 2008 7:14 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...That during the 2000 cmpaign, a rightwing radoi hoast declared that Gore would force the auto industry to modernise. Oh, wouldn't that have been a catastrophy.

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WHERE IS THE $ FOR OBAMA HEALTH CARE PLAN?
Posted by: drricklippin on Nov 1, 2008 7:50 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Michael Moore is a great patriot and muckraker in the historic tradition of those in the past who brought about real social change. THANK YOU!

Regarding health care Obama's plan and,even more so,the Conyers "Medicare for all" plan is not affordable.

No high tech-high-cost treatment driven "disease care" plan in ANY nation with an aging demographic is economically sustainable

So I am for a Conyers like plan with much more emphasis on both individual and,even more so institutional,(public health )prevention

Comments from Michael Moore,Amy Goodman and AlterNet readers sought

Thanks,

Dr. Rick Lippin
Southampton,Pa
ralippin@aol.com

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» We ration NOW Posted by: bthespoon
» RE: We ration NOW Posted by: drricklippin
Tony Benn, socialist, but...
Posted by: zipper696 on Nov 1, 2008 8:09 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It helps to know that he was born Anthony Wedgewood Benn (related to the pottery family) with aristocratic roots.
He stood to inherit his father's title and actually changed British law so an hereditary peerage could be renounced, which he did, shortening his name at the same time.
He was a major figure in the Labour Party for many years and was close to becoming it's leader, but his old style Leftish views didn't sit well with the New Labour "socialism Lite" generation and he was sidelined.
He continues to be outspoken and support workers, women's and minority's rights every day.

His son, Hillary is a member of Parliament and in the Cabinet.

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X-POLYGAMIST WIFE in ARIZONA
Posted by: X-POLYGAMIST WIFE on Nov 1, 2008 12:25 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Go, Michael, Go!!! You are a true Patriot and an inspiration to us all.

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Michael Moore and GM
Posted by: kgodden on Nov 1, 2008 1:49 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Mr. Moore,

As much as I admire your professional work (including 'Roger & Me'), you are VERY much off base with your obsolete opinions about GM. I am a GM employee, and I find that your comments and prejudices about my company to be highly offensive. Such comments only contribute to the company's problems, and ultimately contribute to the high unemployment of the state. I would very much like to meet with you personally (I'll buy the coffee) to see if we can have a rational conversation about GM. You check your biases at the door, and I'll check my defensiveness.

Of course, I doubt that you actually read these comments, so I'm basically venting for nothing. But GM (believe it or not) makes highly competitive vehicles, in some cases, superior to any competitor, and we have dramatically improved our vehicles' fuel economy for decades, even without gov't mandates. (This is easy to prove, by the way, using NHTSA documents).

Oh, well. I'll let you and the others go back to the lovely pastime of GM-bashing. My co-workers who have already lost their jobs no doubt appreciate the attention.

-KG

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» RE: Michael Moore and GM Posted by: stopthemaddness2
Did everybody miss...
Posted by: amerijake on Nov 1, 2008 4:25 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Moore calling for a draft for "rich Americans"? How did this point slip by all the commentators? Or does everybody simply agree with this outrageous proposal? Maybe he (an individual making millions each year) should sign himself up. I have had enough of this man.
Also, him calling for a multi-party electorate? I absolutely agree. However, does anybody else remember Moore's pleas to Nader and the green party to pull out of the 2004 election?
Hypocrisy has always gotten the best of Moore.

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» RE: Did everybody miss... Posted by: chasing8
Now is the time for all good people
Posted by: Landbaron on Nov 1, 2008 5:33 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
to come to the aid of their party...the democratic party that is.

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The Bible preaches a more socialist way of life
Posted by: Jellocat on Nov 1, 2008 9:59 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A friend of mine sent this over and I thought it said it all. This should go over to the McCain camp for them to study:

Acts 4:32-35
The Believers Share Their Possessions
32All the believers were one in heart and mind. No one claimed that any of his possessions was his own, but they shared everything they had. 33With great power the apostles continued to testify to the resurrection of the Lord Jesus, and much grace was upon them all. 34There were no needy persons among them. For from time to time those who owned lands or houses sold them, brought the money from the sales 35and put it at the apostles' feet, and it was distributed to anyone as he had need.

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McInsane has always been on the DARK SIDE! BUSH/Cheney/McInsane Belong in a CAGE!
Posted by: Ottomatic on Nov 2, 2008 4:19 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thousands killed and they continue to spew
FASCIST BU__! SH__!
Stop the Limo!
Put them on a Plane and
Drop
McInsane/
Bush/Cheney: into the Iraqi desert.
With a Shot Gun, Six Pack, Cowboy Hat and a Box of Pampers.

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Who Cares?
Posted by: ulyssesmsu on Nov 2, 2008 10:20 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Why does ANYONE care what Michael Moore thinks about anything?

An entire article devoted to him?

A tragic waste of space, time, and value.

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» RE: Who Cares? Posted by: villager1
they're the tourniquet alright!
Posted by: Iconoclast421 on Nov 3, 2008 10:05 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The tourniquet around the neck! I dont know why Moore is so blindsided by the false left/right paradigm this year. He didnt vote republicrat in 2000. Why do it now?

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