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Saving Our Democracy

By Bill Moyers, AlterNet. Posted February 27, 2006.


The Abramoff and DeLay corruption scandals make it clear that now more than ever we need publically financed elections.
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Saving Our Democracy

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This is the prepared text of Bill Moyers' remarks from an eight-day speaking trip in California on the issue of money and politics.

I will leave to Jon Stewart the rich threads of humor to pluck from the hunting incident in Texas. All of us are relieved that the Vice President's friend has survived. I can accept Dick Cheney's word that the accident was one of the worst moments of his life. What intrigues me as a journalist now is the rare glimpse we have serendipitously been offered into the tightly knit world of the elites who govern today.

The Vice President was hunting on a 50-thousand acre ranch owned by a lobbyist friend who is the heiress to a family fortune of land, cattle, banking and oil (ah, yes, the quickest and surest way to the American dream remains to choose your parents well.) The circumstances of the hunt and the identity of the hunters provoked a lament from The Economist. The most influential pro-business magazine in the world is concerned that hunting in America is becoming a matter of class: the rich are doing more, the working stiffs, less.

The annual loss of 1.5 million acres of wildlife habitat and one million acres of farm and ranchland to development and sprawl has come "at the expense of 'The Deer Hunter' crowd in the small towns of the north-east, the rednecks of the south and the cowboys of the west." Their places, says The Economist, are being taken by the affluent who pay plenty for such conveniences as being driven to where the covey cooperatively awaits. The magazine (hardly a Marxist rag, remember) describes Mr. Cheney's own expedition as "a lot closer to 'Gosford Park' than 'The Deer Hunter' -- a group of fat old toffs waiting for wildlife to be flushed towards them at huge expense."

At the heart of this story is a metaphor of power. The Vice President turned his host, the lobbyist who is also the ranch owner, into his de facto news manager. She would disclose the shooting only when Cheney was ready and only on his terms. Sure enough, nothing was made public for almost 20 hours until she finally leaked the authorized version to the local newspaper. Ms. Armstrong suggested the blame lay with the victim, who, she indicated, had failed to inform the Vice President of his whereabouts and walked into a hail of friendly fire. Three days later Cheney revised the story and apologized. Don't you wonder what went back and forth with the White House that long night of trying to agree on the official line?

We do know someone from the hunting party was in touch with Karl Rove at the White House. For certain Rove's the kind of fellow you want on the other end of the line when great concoctions are being hatched, especially if you wish the victim to hang for the crime committed against him.

Watching these people work is a study of the inner circle at the top of American politics. The journalist Sidney Blumenthal, writing on Salon.com, reminds us of the relationship between the Armstrong dynasty and the Bush family and its retainers. Armstrong's father invested in Rove's political consulting firm that managed George W. Bush's election as governor of Texas and as president. Her mother, Anne Armstrong, is a longtime Republican activist and donor. Ronald Reagan appointed her to the Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board after her tenure as Ambassador to the United Kingdom under President Ford, whose chief of staff was a young Dick Cheney. Anne Armstrong served on the board of directors of Halliburton that hired Cheney to run the company.

Her daughter, Katharine Armstrong, host of the hunting party, was once a lobbyist for the powerful Houston law firm founded by the family of James A. Baker III, who was chief of staff to Reagan, Secretary of State under the first George Bush, and the man designated by the Bush family to make sure the younger Bush was named President in 2000 despite having lost the popular vote. According to Blumenthal, one of her more recent lobbying jobs was with a large construction firm with contracts in Iraq.

It is a Dick Cheney world out there -- a world where politicians and lobbyists hunt together, dine together, drink together, play together, pray together and prey together, all the while carving up the world according to their own interests.

Two years ago, in a report entitled Democracy in an Age of Rising Inequality, the American Political Science Association concluded that progress toward realizing American ideals of democracy "may have stalled, and even, in some areas, reversed."

Privileged Americans "roar with a clarity and consistency that public officials readily hear and routinely follow" while citizens "with lower or moderate incomes are speaking with a whisper."

The following year, on the eve of President George W. Bush's second inauguration, the editors of The Economist, reporting on inequality in America, concluded that the United States "risks calcifying into a European-style, class-based society."

As great wealth has accumulated at the top, the rest of society has not been benefiting proportionally. In 1960 the gap between the top 20% and the bottom 20% was 30 fold. Now it is 75 fold. Thirty years ago the average annual compensation of the top 100 chief executives in the country was 30 times the pay of the average worker. Today it is 1000 times the pay of the average worker. A recent article in The Financial Times reports on a study by the American economist Robert J. Gordon, who finds "little long-term change in workers' share of U.S. income over the past half century." Middle-ranking Americans are being squeezed, he says, because the top ten percent of earners have captured almost half the total income gains in the past four decades and the top one percent have gained the most of all -- "more in fact, than all the bottom 50 percent."

No wonder working men and women and their families are strained to cope with the rising cost of health care, pharmaceutical drugs, housing, higher education, and public transportation -- all of which have risen faster in price than typical family incomes. The recent book, "Economic Apartheid in America: A Primer on Economic Inequality" and Insecurity, describes how "thirty zipcodes in America have become fabulously wealthy" while "whole urban and rural communities are languishing in unemployment, crumbling infrastructure, growing insecurity, and fear."

This is a profound transformation in a country whose DNA contains the inherent promise of an equal opportunity at "Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness" and whose collective memory resonates with the hallowed idea - hallowed by blood - of "government of the people, by the people, and for the people." The great progressive struggles in our history have been waged to make sure ordinary citizens, and not just the rich, share in the benefits of a free society. Yet today the public may support such broad social goals as affordable medical coverage for all, decent wages for working people, safe working conditions, a secure retirement, and clean air and water, but there is no government "of, by, and for the people" to deliver on those aspirations. Instead, our elections are bought out from under us and our public officials do the bidding of mercenaries. Money is choking democracy to death. So powerfully has wealth shaped our political agenda that we cannot say America is working for all of America.

In the words of Louis Brandeis, one of the greatest of our Supreme Court justices: "You can have wealth concentrated in the hands of a few, or democracy, but you cannot have both."

Some simple facts:

The cost of running for public office is skyrocketing. In 1996, $1.6 billion was spent on the Congressional and Presidential elections. Eight years later, that total had more than doubled, to $3.9 billion.

Thanks to our system of privately financed campaigns, millions of regular Americans are being priced out of any meaningful participation in democracy. Less than one half of one percent of all Americans made a political contribution of $200 or more to a federal candidate in 2004. When the average cost of running and winning a seat in the House of Representatives has topped one million dollars, we can no longer refer to that August chamber as "The People's House." If you were thinking of running for Congress, do you have any idea where you would get the money to be a viable candidate?

At the same time that the cost of getting elected is exploding beyond the reach of ordinary people, the business of gaining access to and influence with our elected Representatives has become a growth industry. Six years ago, in his first campaign for President, George W. Bush promised he would "restore honor and integrity" to the government. Repeatedly, during his first campaign for President, he would raise his right hand and, as if taking an oath, tell voters that he would change how things were done in the nation's capitol. "It's time to clean up the toxic environment in Washington, DC," he would say. His administration would ask "not only what is legal but what is right, not what the lawyers allow but what the public deserves."

Hardly.

Since Bush was elected the number of lobbyists registered to do business in Washington has more than doubled. That's 16,342 lobbyists in 2000 to 34,785 last year. Sixty-five lobbyists for every member of Congress.

The amount that lobbyists charge their new clients has increased by nearly 100% in that same period, according to The Washington Post, going up to anything from $20,000 to $40,000 a month. Starting salaries have risen to nearly $300,000 a year for the best-connected people, those leaving Congress or the administration.

The total spent per month by special interests wining, dining, and seducing federal officials is now nearly $200 million. Per month.

But numbers don't tell the whole story. There has been a qualitative change as well. With pro-corporate business officials running both the executive and legislative branches, lobbying that was once reactive has gone on the offense, seeking huge windfalls from public policy and public monies.

One example cited by The Washington Post: Hewlett-Packard, the California computer maker. The company nearly doubled its budget for contract lobbyists in 2004 and took on an elite lobbying firm as its Washington arm. Its goal was to pass Republican-backed legislation that would enable the company to bring back to the United States, at a dramatically lowered tax rate, as much as $14.5 billion in profit from foreign subsidiaries. The extra lobbying paid off. The legislation passed and Hewlett Packard can now reduce its share of the social contract. The company's director of government affairs was quite candid: "We're trying to take advantage of the fact that Republicans control the House, the Senate, and the White House." Whatever the company paid for the lobbying, the investment returned enormous dividends.

I want to point out here that I believe in equal opportunity muckraking. When I left Washington for journalism I did not leave behind my conviction that government should see to it that we have a more level playing field with one set of rules for everyone, but I did leave behind my partisan affections. Anyone who saw the documentary my team and Iproduced a few years ago on the illegal fund raising for Bill Clinton's re-election, knows I am no fan of the democratic money machine that helped tear the party away from whatever roots it once had in the daily lives and struggles of working people, turning it into a junior partner of the Chamber of Commerce. I mean people like California's Congressman Tony Coelho, who in the 1980s realized that Congressional Democrats could milk the business community for money if they promised to "pay for play." I mean people like Terry McAuliffe, the former Democratic National Committee Chairman,who gave Bill Clinton the idea of renting the Lincoln bedroom out to donors, and who did such a good job raising big money for the Democrats that by the end of his reign, Democrats had fewer small donors than the Republicans and more fat cats writing them million-dollar checks.

But let's be realistic here. When the notorious Willie Sutton was asked why he robbed banks, he answered, "Because there is where the money is." If I seem to be singling out the Republicans, it's for one reason: that's where the power is. They own the government lock, stock, and barrel. Once they gained control of the House of Representatives in 1994, their self-proclaimed revolution has gone into overdrive with their taking of the White House in 2000 and the Senate in 2002. Their revolution soon became a cash cow and Washington a one party state ruled by money.

Look back at the bulk of legislation passed by Congress in the past decade: an energy bill which gave oil companies huge tax breaks at the same time that Exxon Mobil just posted $36 in profits in 2005 and our gasoline and home heating bills are at an all-time high; a bankruptcy "reform" bill written by credit card companies to make it harder for poor debtors to escape the burdens of divorce or medical catastrophe; the deregulation of the banking, securities and insurance sectors which led to rampant corporate malfeasance and greed and the destruction of the retirement plans of millions of small investors; the deregulation of the telecommunications sector which led to cable industry price gouging and an undermining of news coverage; protection for rampant overpricing of pharmaceutical drugs; and the blocking of even the mildest attempt to prevent American corporations from dodging an estimated $50 billion in annual taxes by opening a PO Box in an off-shore tax haven like Bermuda or the Cayman islands.

In every case the pursuit of this legislation was driven by big money. Our public representatives, the holders of our trust, need huge sums to finance their campaigns, especially to pay for television advertising, and men and women who have mastered the money game have taken advantage of that weakness in our democracy to systematically sell it off to the highest bidders.

Let's start with the "K Street Project." K Street is the Wall Street of lobbying, the address of many of Washington's biggest lobbying firms. The K Street Project was the brainchild of Tom DeLay and Grover Norquist, the right wing strategist who famously said that his goal is to shrink government so that it can be "drowned in a bathtub." This, of course, would render it impotent to defend ordinary people against the large economic forces - the so-called free market - that Norquist and his pals believe should be running America.

Tom DeLay, meanwhile, was a small businessman from Sugar Land, Texas, who ran a pest extermination business before he entered politics. He hated the government regulators who dared to tell him that some of the pesticides he used were dangerous - as, in fact, they were. He got himself elected to the Texas legislature at a time the Republicans were becoming the majority in the once-solid Democratic south, and his reputation for joining in the wild parties around the state capital in Austin earned him the nickname "Hot Tub Tom." But early in his political career, and with exquisite timing and the help of some videos from the right wing political evangelist, James Dobson, Tom DeLay found Jesus and became a full-fledged born again Christian. He would later humbly acknowledge that God had chosen him to restore America to its biblical worldview. "God," said Tom DeLay, "has been walking me through an incredible journey...God is using me, all the time, everywhere...God is training me. God is working with me...."

Yes, indeed: God does work in mysterious ways.

In addition to finding Jesus, Tom DeLay also discovered a secular ally to serve his ambitions. He found out the power of money to power his career. "Money is not the root of all evil in politics," DeLay once said. "In fact, money is the lifeblood of politics." By raising more than2 million dollars from lobbyists and business groups and distributing the money to dozens of Republican candidates in 1994, the year of the Republican breakthrough in the House, DeLay bought the loyalty of many freshmen legislators and got himself elected Majority Whip, the number three man in Newt Gingrich's "Gang of Seven"who ran the House.

Here's how they ran it: On the day before the Republicans formally took control of Congress on January 3, 1995, DeLay met in his office with a coterie of lobbyists from some of the biggest companies in America. The journalists Michael Weisskopf and David Maraniss report that "the session inaugurated an unambiguous collaboration of political and commercial interests, certainly not uncommon in Washington but remarkable this time for the ease and eagerness with which these allies combined."

DeLay virtually invited them to write the Republican agenda. What they wanted first was "Project Relief" -- a wide-ranging moratorium on regulations that had originally been put into place for the health and safety of the public. For starters, they wanted "relief" from labor standards that protected workers from the physical injuries of repetitive work. They wanted "relief' from tougher rules on meat inspection. And they wanted "relief" from effective monitoring of hazardous air pollutants. Scores of companies were soon gorging on Tom DeLay's generosity, adding one juicy and expensive tid-bit after another to the bill. According to Weisskopf and Maraniss, on the eve of the debate 20 major corporate groups advised lawmakers that "this was a key vote, one that would be considered in future campaign contributions." On the day of the vote lobbyists on Capitol Hill were still writing amendments on their laptops and forwarding them to House leaders.

The Speaker of the House, Newt Gingrich, famously told the lobbyists: "If you are going to play in our revolution, you have to live by our rules." Tom DeLay became his enforcer.

The rules were simple and blunt. Contribute to Republicans only. Hire Republicans only. When the electronics industry ignored the warning and chose a Democratic Member of Congress to run its trade association, DeLay played so rough -- pulling from the calendar a bill that the industry had worked on two years, aimed at bringing most of the world in alignment with U.S. copyright law -- that even the House Ethics Committee, the watchdog that seldom barks and rarely bites, stirred itself to rebuke him -- privately, of course.

DeLay wasn't fazed. Not only did he continue to make sure the lobbying jobs went to Republicans, he also saw to it that his own people got a lion's share of the best jobs. At least 29 of his former employees landed major lobbying positions -- the most of any Congressional office. The journalist John Judis found that together ex-DeLay people represent around 350 firms, including thirteen of the biggest trade associations, most of the energy companies, the giants in finance and technology, the airlines, auto makers, tobacco companies, and the largest health care and pharmaceutical companies. When tobacco companies wanted to block the FDA from regulating cigarettes, they hired DeLay's man. When the pharmaceutical companies -- Big Pharma -- wanted to make sure companies wouldn't be forced to negotiate cheaper prices for drugs, they hired six of Tom DeLay's team, including his former chief of staff. The machine became a blitzkrieg, oiled by campaign contributions that poured in like a gusher.

Watching as DeLay, with the approval of the House leadership, become the virtual dictator of Capitol Hill, I was reminded of the card shark in Texas who said to his prey, "Now play the cards fair, Reuben, I know what I dealt you." Tom DeLay and his cronies were stacking the deck.

They centralized in their own hands the power to write legislation. Drastic revisions to major bills were often written at night, with lobbyists hovering over them, then rushed through as "emergency measures," giving members as little as half an hour to consider what they may be voting on.

The Democratic minority was locked out of conference committees where the House and Senate are supposed to iron out their differences with both parties in the loop. The Republican bosses even took upon themselves the power to rewrite a bill in secrecy and move it directly to a vote without any other hearings or public review.

Sometimes this meant overruling what the majority of House members really wanted. Consider what happened with the bill to provide Medicare prescription drug coverage, as analyzed by Robert Kuttner in The American Prospect. As the measure was coming to a vote, a majority of the full House was sympathetic to allowing cheaper imports from Canada and to giving the government the power to negotiate wholesale drug prices for Medicare beneficiaries. But DeLay and his cronies were working on behalf of the big pharmaceutical companies and would have none of it. So they made sure there would be no amendments on the floor. They held off the final roll call a full three hours -- well after midnight -- in order to strong-arm members who wanted to vote against the bill.

It was not a pretty sight out there on the floor of the House. At one point DeLay marched over to one reluctant Republican -- Representative Nick Smith -- who opposed the Medicare bill -- and attempted to change his mind. Smith, who was serving his final term in office, later alleged that he was offered a bribe -- $100,000 for his son's campaign to succeed him. When he subsequently retracted his accusation, the House Ethics Committee looked into the charges and countercharges and wound up admonishing both Smith and DeLay, who admitted that he had offered to endorse Smith's son in exchange for Smith's support but that no money or bribe were involved. Timothy Noah of Slate.com has mused about what DeLay's endorsement would nonetheless have meant in later campaign contributions if Smith had gone along. While the report of the ethics committee never did find out the true story, Noah asks: "Who did whisper '$100,000' in Smith's ear? The report is full of plausible suspects, including DeLay himself, but it lacks any evidence on this crucial finding. You get the feeling the authors would prefer to forget this mystery ever existed."

There are no victimless crimes in politics. The price of corruption is passed on to you. What came of all these shenanigans was a bill that gave industry what it wanted and gave taxpayers the shaft. The bill covers only a small share of drug expenses. It has a major gap in coverage -- the so-called "donut hole." It explicitly forbids beneficiaries from purchasing private coverage to fill in the gap and explicitly forbids the federal government from bargaining for lower drug prices. More than one consumer organization has estimated that most seniors could end up paying even more for prescription drugs than before the bill passed.

Furthermore, despite these large flaws the cost of the bill is horrendous -- between 500 billion andone trillion dollars in its first 10 years. The chief actuary for Medicare calculated a realistic estimate of what the bill would cost, but he later testified before Congress that he was forbidden from releasing the information by his boss, Thomas Scully, the head of the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services, who was then negotiating for a lucrative job with the health care industry. Sure enough, hardly had the prescription drug bill become law than Scully went to work for the largest private equity investor in health care and at a powerful law firm focusing on health care and regulatory matters.

One is reminded of Senator Boies Penrose. Back in the first Gilded Age, Penrose was a United States senator from Pennsylvania who had been put and kept in office by the railroad tycoons and oil barons. He assured the moguls: "I believe in the division of labor. You send us to Congress; we pass laws under which you make money... and out of your profits you further contribute to our campaign funds to send us back again to pass more laws to enable you to make more money."

Gilded Ages -- then and now -- have one thing in common: Audacious and shameless people for whom the very idea of the public trust is a cynical joke.

Tom DeLay was elected to Congress by the ordinary people of Sugar Land, Texas. They had the right to expect him to represent them. This expectation is the very soul of democracy. We can't all govern -- not even tiny, homogenous Switzerland practices pure democracy. So we Americans came to believe our best chance of responsible government lies in obtaining the considered judgments of those we elect to represent us. Having cast our ballots in the sanctity of the voting booth with its assurance of political equality, we go about our daily lives expecting the people we put in office to weigh the competing interests and decide to the best of their ability what is right. Instead, they have given the American people reason to believe the conservative journalist P.J. O'Rourke was right when he described Congress as "a parliament of whores."

A recent CBS News/New York Times poll found that 70% of Americans believe lobbyists bribing members of Congress is the way things work. Fifty-seven percent think at least half of the members of Congress accept bribes or gifts that affect their votes. A Fox News poll reported that65% believe most elected officials in Washington make policy decisions or take actions on the basis of campaign contributions. Findings like these underscore the fact that ordinary people believe their bonds with democracy are not only stretched but sundered.

You see the breach clearly with Tom DeLay. As he became the king of campaign fundraising, the Associated Press writes, "He began to live a lifestyle his constituents back in Sugar Land would have a hard time ever imagining." Big corporation such as R.J. Reynolds, Phillip Morris, Reliant, El Paso and Dynegy provided private jets to take him to places of luxury most Americans have never seen -- places with "dazzling views, warm golden sunsets, golf, goose-down comforters, marble bathrooms and balconies overlooking the ocean."The AP reports that various organizations -- campaign committees, political action committees, even a children's charity established by DeLay -- paid over $1 million on hotels, restaurants, golf resorts and corporate jets in DeLay's behalf: at least 48 visits to golf clubs and resorts (the Ritz Carlton in Jamaica, the Prince Hotel in Hawaii, the Michelangelo in New York, the Phoenician in Scottsdale, the El Conquistador in Puerto Rico, where villas average $1,300 a night); 100 flights aboard corporate jets arranged by lobbyists; and 500 meals at fancyrestaurants, some averaging $200 for a dinner for two. There was even a $2,896 shopping spree at a boutique on Florida's Amelia Island offering "gourmet cookware, sabbatier cutlery and gadgets for your every need."

DeLay was a man on the move and on the take. But he needed help to sustain the cash flow. He found it in a fellow right wing ideologue named Jack Abramoff. Abramoff personifies the Republican money machine of which DeLay with the blessing of the House leadership was the major domo. It was Abramoff who helped DeLay raise those millions of dollars from campaign donors that bought the support of other politicians and became the base for an empire of corruption. DeLay praised Abramoff as "one of my closest friends." Abramoff, in turn, told a convention of college Republicans, "Thank God Tom DeLay is majority leader of the house. Tom DeLay is who all of us want to be when we grow up."

Just last month Jack Abramoff pleaded guilty to fraud, tax evasion, and conspiracy to bribe public officials, a spectacular fall for a man whose rise to power began 25 years ago with his election as Chairman of the College Republicans. Despite its innocuous name, the organization became a political attack machine for the Far Right and a launching pad for younger conservatives on the make. "Our job," Abramoff, then 22 years old, wrote after his first visit to the Reagan White House, "is to remove liberals from power permanently [from] student newspaper and radio stations, student governments, and academia." Karl Rove had once held the same job as chairman. So did Grover Norquist, who ran Abramoff's campaign. A youthful $200-a-month intern named Ralph Reed was at their side. These were the rising young stars of the conservative movement who came to town to lead a revolution and stayed to run a racket.

They reeked piety. Like DeLay, who had proclaimed himself God's messenger, Ralph Reed found Jesus, was born again, and wound up running Pat Robertson's Christian Coalition, landing on the cover of Time as "the Right Hand of God." Reportedly after seeing "Fiddler on the Roof" Abramoff became an Orthodox religious Jew who finagled fake awards as "Scholar of Biblical and American History," "Distinguished Bible Scholar" (from an apparently non-existent organization), the "Biblical Mercantile Award" allegedly from the Cascadian Business Institute through which money was funded for DeLay's famous visit to a plush Scottish golf club, and the national order of merit from the USA Foundation, whose chairman was... Jack Abramoff.

It is impossible to treat all the schemes and scams this crowd concocted to subvert democracy in the name of God and greed. But thanks to some superb reporting from, The Associated Press, and Knight-Ridder, among others, we can touch on a few.

Abramoff made his name, so to speak, representing Indian tribes with gambling interests. As his partner he hired a DeLay crony named Michael Scanlon. Together they would bilk half a dozen Indian tribes who hired them to protect their tribal gambling interests from competition. What they had to offer, of course, was their well-known connections to the Republican power structure, including members of Congress, friends at the White House (Abramoff's personal assistant became Karl Rove's personal assistant), Christian Right activists like Ralph Reed, and right wing ideologues like Grover Norquist (according to The Texas Observer, two lobbying clients of Abramoff paid $25,000 to Norquist's organization -- Americans for Tax Reform -- for a lunch date and meeting with President Bush in May 2001.)

Abramoff and Scanlon came up with one scheme they called "Gimme Five": Abramoff would refer tribes to Scanlon for grassroots public relations work, and Scanlon would then kick back about 50% to Abramoff, all without the tribes' knowledge. Before it was over the tribes had paid them $82 million dollars, much of it going directly into Abramoff's and Scanlon's pockets. And that doesn't count the thousands more that Abramoff directed the tribes to pay out in campaign contributions.

Some of the money found its way into an outfit called the Council of Republicans for Environment Advocacy (CREA), founded by Gale Norton before she became Interior Secretary, the cabinet position most responsible for Indian gaming rights (as well as oil and gas issues, public lands and parks, and something else we'll get to in a moment).

Some of the money went to so-called charities set up by Abramoff and DeLay that filtered money for lavish trips for members of Congress and their staff, as well as salaries for Congressional family members and DeLay's pet projects.

And some of the money found its way to the righteous folks of the Christian Right. One who had his hand out was Ralph Reed, the religious right's poster boy against gambling. "We believe gambling is a cancer on the American body politic," Reed had said. "It is stealing food from the mouths of children... (and) turning wives into widows." When he resigned from the Christian Coalition (just as it was coming under federal investigation and slipping into financial arrears), Reed sought a cut of the lucre flowing to Abramoff and Scanlon. He sent Abramoff an email: "Now that I am leaving electoral politics, I need to start humping in corporate accounts ... I'm counting of you to help me with some contacts."

Abramoff came through. According to Susan Schmidt and R. Jeffrey Smith, he and Scanlon paid Reed some $4 million to whip up Christian opposition to gambling initiatives that could cut into the profits of Jack Abramoff's clients. Reed called in some of the brightest stars in the Christian firmament -- Pat Robertson, Jerry Fawell, James Dobson, Phyllis Schlafly -- to participate in what became a ruse in Abramoff's behalf: They would oppose gambling on religious and moral grounds in strategic places (Texas, Louisiana, Alabama) at decisive moments when competitive challenges threatened Abramoff's. Bogus Christian fronts were part of the strategy. Baptist preachers in Texas rallied to Reed's appeals. Unsuspecting folks in Louisiana heard the voice of God on radio -- with Jerry Fawell and Pat Robertson doing the honors -- thundering against a riverboat gambling scheme, which one of Abramoff's clients feared would undermine its advantage. Reed even got James Dobson, whose nationwide radio "ministry" reaches millions of people, to deluge phone lines at the Interior Department and White House with calls from indignant Christians.

In 1999 Abramoff arranged for the Mississippi Choctaws, who were trying to stave off competition from other tribes, to contribute over $1 million to Norquist's Americans for Tax Reform, which then passed the money along to the Alabama Christian Coalition and to another anti-gambling group Reed had duped into aiding the cause. It is unclear how much these Christian soldiers, "marching as to war," knew about the true purpose of their crusade, but Ralph Reed knew all along that his money was coming from Abramoff. The emails between the two men read like Elmer Gantry.

It gets worse.

Some of Abramoff's money from lobbying went to start a non-profit organization called the U.S. Family Network. Nice name, yes? An uplifting all-American name, like so many others that fly the conservative banner in Washington. Tom DeLay wrote a fundraising letter in which he described the U.S. Family Network as "a powerful nationwide organization dedicated to restoring our government to citizen control." Fund raising appeals warned that the American family "is being attacked from all sides: crime, drugs, pornography... and gambling." So help me, I'm not making this up. You can read R. Jeffrey's Smith mind-boggling account of it on the Washington Post website, where he writes that the organization did no discernable grassroots organizing and its money came from business groups with no demonstrated interest in the "moral fitness" agenda that was the network's professed aim.

Let's call it what it was: a scam -- one more cog in the money-laundering machine controlled by DeLay and Abramoff. A former top assistant founded the organization. It bought a townhouse just three blocks from DeLay's Congressional quarters and provided him with fancy free office space where he would go to raise money. DeLay's wife also got a sizeable salary. But that's the least of it.

Working with Abramoff through a now-defunct law firm in London and an obscure off-shore company in the Bahamas, Russian oil and gas executives were using the U.S. Family Network to funnel money to influence the majority leader of the House of Representatives -- yes, that chamber of American government once known as "The People's House."

Our witness for this is the Christian pastor who served as the titular president of the U.S. Family Network, the Reverend Christopher Geeslin. He told The Washington Post that the founder of the organization, the former DeLay aide, told him that a million dollars was passed through from sources in Russia who wanted DeLay's support for legislation enabling the International Monetary fund to bail out the faltering Russian economy without demanding the country raise taxes on its energy industry. As Molly Ivins pointed out in a recent column, right on cue DeLay found his way onto Fox News Sunday to argue the Russian position. That same titular head of the U.S. Family Network, the Christian pastor, said DeLay's former chief of staff also told him, "This is the way things work in Washington."

This is the way things work in Washington.

Twenty-five years ago Grover Norquist had said that "What Republicans need is 50 Jack Abramoffs in Washington. Then this will be a different town."

Well, they got what they needed, and the arc of the conservative takeover of government has now been completed. As Abramoff had once said his goal was to banish liberals from college campuses, and later that "All of my political work is driven by philosophical interests, not by the desire to gain wealth," now his intentions, as he admitted to Michael Crowley of The New York Times, were "to push the Republicans on K Street to be more helpful to the conservative movement." Money, politics, and ideology became one and the same in a juggernaut of power that crushed everything in sight, including core conservative principles.

Here we come to the heart of darkness.

One of Abramoff's first big lobbying clients was the Northern Marianas Islands in the Pacific. After World War II the Marianas became a trusteeship of the United Nations, administered by the U.S. Government under the stewardship of the Interior Department. We should all remember that thousands of Marines died there, fighting for our way of life and our freedoms. Today, these islands are a haven for tourists -- first-class hotels, beautiful beaches, championship golf course. But there is a dark side. The islands were exempted from U.S. labor and immigration laws, and over the years tens of thousands of people, primarily Chinese, mostly women, were brought there as garment workers. These so-called "guest workers" found themselves living in crowded barracks in miserable conditions. The main island, Saipan, became known as America's biggest sweatshop.

In 1998 a government report found workers there living in substandard conditions, suffering severe malnutrition and health problems and subjected to unprovoked acts of violence. Many had signed "shadow contracts" which required them to pay up to $7,000 just to get the job. They also had to renounce their claim to basic human rights, including political and religious activities, socializing and marrying. If they protested, they could be summarily deported. As Greg Mcdonald wrote in The Houston Chronicle, the garments produced on Saipan were manufactured for American companies from tariff-free Asian cloth and shipped duty- and quota-free -- to the United States. Some of the biggest names in the retail clothing industry -- Levi Strauss, The Gap, J. Crew, Eddie Bauer, Reebok, Polo, Tommy Helfiger, Nordstrom's, Lord and Taylor, Jones New York, and Liz Claiborne -- had been able to slap a "made in the USA" label on the clothes and import them to America, while paying the workers practically nothing.

When these scandalous conditions began to attract attention, the sweatshop moguls fought all efforts at reform. Knowing that Jack Abramoff was close to Tom DeLay, they hired him to lobby for the islands. Conservative members of Congress lined up as Abramoff's team arranged for them to visit the islands on carefully guided junkets. Conservative intellectuals and journalists, for hire at rates considerably above what the women on the islands were making, also signed up for expense-free trips to the Marianas. They flew first-class, dined at posh restaurants, slept in comfort at the beachfront hotel, and returned to write and speak of the islands as "a true free market success story" and "a laboratory of liberty."

Abramoff took Tom DeLay and his wife there, too. DeLay practically swooned. He said the Marianas "represented what is best about America." He called them "my Galapagos" -- "a perfect petri dish of capitalism."

These fellow travelers -- conservative members of Congress, their staffs and their lapdogs in the rightwing press and think tanks -- became a solid phalanx against any and all attempts to provide the workers on the islands with a living wage and decent living conditions. For instance, when a liberal California Democrat, George Miller, and a conservative Alaskan Senator, Frank Murkowski, indignant at the "appalling conditions," wanted to enact a bill to raise minimum wages on the islands and at least prevent summary deportation of the workers, DeLay and Abramoff stopped them cold. As Representative Miller told it, "They killed my reform bill year after year. And even when an immigration reform bill by Senator Frank Murkowski, a Republican, was approved by the full Senate, they blocked it repeatedly in the House."

After the 2000 election, when the spoils of victory were being divided up, Abramoff got himself named to the Bush transition team for the Interior Department. He wanted to make sure the right people wound up overseeing his clients, the Marianas. He enlisted Reed, who said he would raise the matter with Rove, to stop at least one appointment to Interior that might prove troublesome. Small wonder that about this time Reed wrote an email to Enron's top lobbyist touting his pal Abramoff as "arguably the most influential and effective gop lobbyist in congress. I share several clients with him and have yet to see him lose a battle. He also is very close to DeLay and could help enormously on that front. raised $ for bush...he [sic] assistant is Susan Ralston [who would become Rove's assistant.]"

For his services to the Marianas Jack Abramoff was paid nearly $10 million dollars, including the fees he charged for booking his guests on the golf courses and providing them copies of Newt Gingrich's book. One of the sweatshop moguls with whom Abramoff was particularly close contributed half a million dollars to -- you guessed it -- the U. S. Family Network that laundered money from Russian oligarchs to Tom DeLay.

To this day, workers on the Marianas are still denied the federal minimum wage while working long hours for subsistence income in their little "petri dish of capitalism" -- "America at its best."

Both ends of Pennsylvania Avenue were now in sync. George W. Bush had created his own version of the K Street Project. Remember how he emerged from the crowded field of Republican candidates in early 1999 and literally blew several of them out of the water? He did so by drowning his opponents with money. In just his first six months of fundraising, Bush collected some $36 million -- nine times more than his nearest opponent, John McCain. The money came from the titans of America business and lobbying who understood their contributions would be rewarded. You've heard of the Pioneers and Rangers -- people who raised at least $100,000 and $200,000 for Bush. Among them were people like Tom DeLay's brother, also a lobbyist; the CEO of Enron, Kenneth ("Kenny Boy") Lay; and hundreds of executives from the country's banks, investment houses, oil and gas companies, electric utilities, and other companies.

While Tom DeLay kept a ledger on K Street, ranking lobbyists as friendly and unfriendly, the Bush campaign gave every one of his Pioneers and Rangers a tracking number, making sure to know who was bringing in the bucks and where they were coming from. In May of 1999 the trade association for the electric utility industry sent a letter to potential contributors on Bush campaign stationery. He told his colleagues that Bush's campaign managers "have stressed the importance of having our industry incorporate the tracking number in your fundraising efforts...it does ensure that our industry is credited and that your progress is listed..."

The bounty was waiting. A score of Pioneers and Rangers were paid off with ambassadorships. At least 37 were named to post-election transition teams, where they had a major say in selecting political appointees at key regulatory positions across the government. Remember the California energy crisis, when Enron traders boasted of gouging grandmothers to drive up the prices for energy? Well, Enron's Kenneth Lay had been Bush's biggest campaign funder over the years and what he asked now as a pay-off was appointment to the Energy Department transition team. This is how Enron's boss got to name two of the five members of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, who looked the other way while Enron rigged California's energy prices and looted billions right out from the pockets and pocketbooks of California's citizens.

There are, as I said, no victimless crimes in politics. The cost of corruption is passed on to you. When the government of the United States falls under the thumb of the powerful and privileged, regular folks get squashed.

This week I visited for the first time the Museum of the Presidio in San Francisco. From there American troops shipped out to combat in the Pacific. Many never came back. On the walls of one corridor are photographs of some of those troops, a long way from home. Looking at them, I wondered: Is this what those Marines died for on the Marianas -- for sweatshops, the plunder of our public trust, the corruption of democracy? Government of the Abramoffs, by the DeLays, and for the people who bribe them?

I don't think so.

But this crowd in charge has a vision sharply at odds with the American people. They would arrange Washington and the world for the convenience of themselves and the transnational corporations that pay for their elections. In the words of Al Meyeroff, the Los Angeles attorney who led a successful class action suit for the workers on Saipan, the people who now control the U.S. Government today want "a society run by the powerful, oblivious to the weak, free of any oversight, enjoying a cozy relationship with government, and thriving on crony capitalism."

America as their petri dish -- the Marianas, many times over.

This is an old story and a continuing struggle. A century ago Theodore Roosevelt said the central fact of his time was that corporations had become so dominant they would chew up democracy and spit it out. His cousin Franklin Roosevelt warned that a government of money was as much to be feared as a government by mob. One was a progressive Republican, the other a liberal Democrat. Their sentiments were echoed by an icon of the conservative movement, Barry Goldwater, in 1987:

The fact that liberty depended on honest elections was of the utmost importance to the patriots who founded our nation and wrote the Constitution. They knew that corruption destroyed the prime requisite of Constitutional liberty, an independent legislature free from any influence other than that of the people...representative government assumes that elections will be controlled by the citizenry at large, not by those who give the most money. Electors must believe their vote counts. Elected officials must owe their allegiance to the people, not to their own wealth or to the wealth of interest groups who speak only for the selfish fringes of the whole community.
I have painted a bleak picture of democracy today. I believe it is a true picture. But it is not a hopeless picture. Something can be done about it. Organized people have always had to take on organized money. If they had not, blacks would still be three-fifths of a person, women wouldn't have the vote, workers couldn't organize, and children would still be working in the mines. Our democracy today is more real and more inclusive than existed in the days of the Founders because time and again, the people have organized themselves to insist that America become "a more perfect union."

It is time to fight again. These people in Washington have no right to be doing what they are doing. It's not their government, it's yourgovernment. They work for you. They're public employees -- and if they let us down and sell us out, they should be fired. That goes for the lowliest bureaucrat in town to the senior leaders of Congress on up to the President of the United States.

They would have you believe this is just "a lobbying scandal." They would have you think that if they pass a few nominal reforms, put a little more distance between the politician and the lobbyist, you will think everything is okay and they can go back to business as usual.

They're trying it now. Just look at Congressman John Boehner, elected to replace Tom DeLay as House Majority Leader. Today he speaks the language of reform, but 10 years ago Boehner was handing out checks from the tobacco executives on the floor of the House. He's been a full player in the K Street Project and DeLay's money machine, holding weekly meetings with some of the most powerful lobbyists in the Speaker's suite at the Capitol. He has thought nothing of hopping on corporate jets or cruising Caribbean during winter breaks with high-powered lobbyists. Moreover, the man Boehner beat to succeed DeLay -- Congressman Roy Blunt -- has been elected to DeLay's first job as Majority Whip despite being deeply compromised by millions upon millions of dollars raised from the same interests that bought off DeLay.

And what now of DeLay? He's under indictment for money laundering inTexas and had to resign as Majority Leader. But the other day the party bosses in Congress gave him a seat on the powerful House Appropriations Committee where big contributors get their rewards. And -- are you ready for this? -- they put him on the subcommittee overseeing the Justice Department which is investigating the Abramoff scandal, including Abramoff's connections to DeLay.

Business as usual. The usual rot. The power of arrogance.

You may say, see? These forces can't be defeated. They're too rich, they're too powerful, they're too entrenched.

But look at what has happened in Connecticut, one of the most corrupt states in the union. Rocked by multiple scandals that brought down a state treasurer, a state senator, and the governor himself with convictions of bribery, tax evasion, and worse, the people finally had enough. Although many of the parties had to be forced, kicking and screaming to do it, last December the legislature passed clean money reform and the new governor signed it into law. The bill bans campaign contributions from lobbyists and state contractors and makes Connecticut the very first state in the nation where the legislature and governor approved full public funding for their own races. Connecticut isn't the only place where the link between public officials and private campaign contributions has been broken. Both Arizona and Maine offer full public financing of statewide and legislative races. New Jersey, New Mexico, North Carolina, and Vermont have clean money systems for some races. The cities of Portland, Oregon and Albuquerque, New Mexico recently approved full public financing for citywide races.

In these places, candidates for public office -- executive, legislative, and in some cases judicial -- have the option of running on a limited and equal grant of full public funding, provided they take little or no private contributions. To qualify they have to pass a threshold by raising a large number of small contributions from voters in their district. The system allows candidates to run competitive campaigns for office even if they do not have ties to well-heeled donors or big money lobbyists, a near impossibility when public elections are privately funded.

In places where clean elections are law, we see more competition for legislative seats and a more diverse group of people running for office. In David Sirota's words, they "are encouraged to run on their ideas, their convictions and their integrity instead of on how effectively they can shake down the big money." And there are policy results as well. In Arizona, one of the first acts of Governor Janet Napolitano, elected under the state's public financing program, was to institute reforms establishing low-cost prescription drug subsidies for seniors. Compare that to the Medicare debacle going on at the national level. In Maine, where clean elections has been in place since 2000, there have also been advances in providing low cost pharmaceutical drugs for residents, and in making sure that every state resident has medical coverage.

Why? Because the politicians can do what's right, not what they're paid to do by big donors. They, not the lobbyists, write the legislation. As one blogger put it this past weekend, instead of dialing for dollars, they might have time even to read bills like 'The Patriot Act' and find the small print establishing a secret police.

California may soon follow Connecticut. Calling for the political equivalent of electroshock therapy, the Los Angeles Times recently urged Californians: "Forget half-measures. The cure is voluntary public financing of election campaigns." Already the Clean Money and Fair Elections Bill has passed the state assembly and is headed for the senate. Check it out at caclean.org.

Think about this: Californians could buy back their elected representatives at a cost of about $5 or $6 per California resident. Nationally we could buy back our Congress and the White House with full public financing for about $10 per taxpayer per year. You can check this out on the website Public Campaign.

Public funding won't solve all the problems. There's no way to legislate truly immoral people from abusing our trust. But it would go a long way to breaking the link between big donors and public officials and to restoring democracy to the people. Until we offer qualified candidates a different source of funding for their campaigns -- "clean," disinterested, accountable public money -- the selling of America will go on. From scandal to scandal. The people out across the country on the front lines of this fight have brought the message down to earth, in plain language and clear metaphors. If a player sliding into home plate reached into his pocket and handed the umpire $1000 before he made the call, what would we call that? A bribe. And if a lawyer handed a judge $1000 before he issued a ruling, what do we call that? A bribe. But when a lobbyist or CEO sidles up to a member of Congress at a fundraiser or in a skybox and hands him a check for $1000, what do we call that? A campaign contribution.

Representative Barney Frank likes to say of Congress: "We are the only people in the world required by law to take large amounts of money from strangers and then act as if it has no effect on our behavior."

What law is he talking about? The unwritten law that says your Congressman has to raise $2,000 per day from the day he or she is sworn in to the next election days - weekdays, Saturdays, Sundays, Christmas Eve and the Fourth of July. As long as elected officials need that constant stream of cash, someone will run our country but it won't be you.

Even some business lobbyists are having second thoughts. One of them, Stanton Anderson, was recently quoted in Business Week: "As a conservative, I've always opposed government involvement. But it seems to me the real answer is federal financing of congressional elections."

Mr. Anderson understand this isn't about a "few bad apples." This is about the system. We can change the system. But we have to believe democracy is worth fighting for.

Listen to what Theodore Roosevelt said one hundred years ago when he took on the political bosses and big money of his time for committing "treason to the people."

We are standing for the great fundamental rights upon which all successful free government must be based. We are standing for elementary decency in politics. We are fighting for honesty against naked robbery. It is not a partisan issue; it is more than a political issue; it is a great moral issue. If we condone political theft, if we do not resent the kinds of wrong and injustice that injuriously affect the whole nation, not merely our democratic form of government but our civilization itself cannot endure.

We need that fighting spirit today -- the tough, outraged and resilient spirit that knows we have been delivered a great and precious legacy, you and I -- "government of, by and for the people" -- and, by God we're going to pass it on.

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Bill Moyers is president of the Schumann Center for Media and Democracy, which gives financial support to AlterNet. Rebecca Wharton, Karen Kimball, Micah Sifry and Nancy Walzman contributed to this speech.

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Election Channel and Election.org
Posted by: ilima on Feb 27, 2006 1:34 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thankyou Bill Moyers. I miss you on PBS.

I keep launching this idea out into the universe when ever I see an opportunity. I think it would work quite well with public financing of campaigns. If you missed the SinceSlicedBread contest fiasco by SEIU that was this ideas last foray out in the wider world.

This is a brief version of a big idea.

Election Channel and Election.org

The problem is the influence of big money on government and politicians.

My idea is the Election Channel and Election.org. Every office for election from dog catcher to the president would only be allowed at these locations. A structured format of debates, biographies, position statements, etcetera would be required of all candidates. It could be limited to 6 to 9 months before an election, run and repeated 24/7 and regionalized on cable and the net.

The channels and website used would be owned by the people and facilities made available for the media production candidates would need. All political advertising would be banned. The Election Channel and Election.org could have non-political commercials to help pay for costs. This would not prevent candidates from talking at public events and gatherings but that is reasonably free as far as costs to do.

This would help by making government more responsive to average Americans and their needs because more average Americans would be able to run for office with the outrageous money barrier removed.

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Thank you Bill for this very detailed article
Posted by: ShaSpirit on Feb 27, 2006 3:47 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I too miss Bill Moyers and I miss PBS that used to before he was forced out. Now there is not much difference between the News Hour and the MSM. I also agree it is at the grassroots level that our government must change and public financing is the only way we the people can change it. I hate it that there are so many demands for my few dollars to contribute candidates. We are only into the Primaries.

I am like so many seniors that are truly afraid what will happen with three more years of Bush&Co. They have put in a new social security private accounts bill in the new budget bill. No one has really talked about it yet. What we do read is about Medicare cuts. In three more years my small social security check will go to pay for medicare deductibles, co-pays and month premiums and that is not counting what they will take out for the new drug bill. If something does not change pretty soon then a whole lot of people over 65 will have nothing to live on.

I am wondering what will happen to all those seniors in nursing homes, since they no longer have medicaid and 25% of their benefits have been taken away? They cannot take care of themselves and have no one to take care of their rights. We need publicly funded candidates NOW!

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Root out the Military, Industrial, Congressional Complex 1st
Posted by: jreinhart1 on Feb 27, 2006 3:52 AM   
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Without rooting out the M,I,C complex and the elimination of the National Security Act, I see no way that any election reform will work. I have seen Mr. Moyer's documentery of the NSA that was done in the early 80s that spells out clearly that there can be no peace until the war mongers and profiteers are out of power. Unfortunately, the people of this country are obsessed with power far in excess of what would be considered overwhelming in the presence of other nations to the detriment of any peace time dividend as well as the education, health and welfare of our own citizenry. Overt or covert, the US has been in a war continuously since WW II with many devistating side affects such as illegal cash flow from money laundering the sale of drugs and weapons. In 1999, Senator Levin's committe determined that this amount was somewhere between $500 BILLION and $1 TRILLION dollars performed by US companies and banks. The triumvarate complex is a cycle of corruption that does little to protect anything except their own interests.

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Bill Moyers is great and he makes excellent points here, however...
Posted by: Prophit on Feb 27, 2006 4:25 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
.... the weakness in our system now is the educational level and critical thinking capabilities of the electorate which buys into all the propoganda that encourages them to vote against their own best interest.

Another weakness is the actual election process with non voting trails to confirm the vote cast. Until and Unless we get rid of those machines, this is all moot. nothing will matter until we fix the actual election counting process.

I go back and forth between "let the system self destruct and start from scratch" and "lets fix this thing now through the existing system". Frankly I think the latter right now is an impossibility.

I saw it locally here when elections were held in my little town and big money came in on the little local races and we couldn't figure out where it came from or why! So, who knows where all of this will end up.

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It's not fixable
Posted by: Moonray on Feb 27, 2006 4:53 AM   
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Moyers makes some good points, but the problem is too big. How can we fix a system when those in charge of fixing it have been irrevocably corrupted by it?

Let's face it: Our congressional and presidential elections have become elaborate charades in which the Military Industrial Complex anoints a chosen few as winners. The voting itself is almost superfluous.

Fortunately, our country is so affluent that even our poor are relatively well off, so we haven't seen much serious political dissent. That could change, however, if we get hit with one or more WMDs. The economy could collapse and our "democracy" along with it.

There is little we can do except keep our fingers crossed and make whatever pathetic political reforms we can get approved.

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» RE: It's not fixable Posted by: Lincoln fan
» NOT ENOUGH TIME, LINCOLN! Posted by: Prophit
» RE: NOT ENOUGH TIME, LINCOLN! Posted by: Lincoln fan
» We could vote out every incumbent Posted by: Bic Pentameter
FIGHTING SPIRIT
Posted by: eileenflmng on Feb 27, 2006 5:08 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
“As of January 17, 2006, the rap sheet listed 2,229 American military dead in Iraq together with an unknown number of Iraqi civilians; what looks to be the sum of $1 trillion to $2-trillion, already committed to The Project for the New American Century’s real estate development in the Mesopotamia desert.

"Better reasons to impeach a president than the one pressed into service against Bill Clinton, whose penis was known to be aimless and shown to be harmless.” [ March 2006 HARPER'S Magazine p.32]

much more on WAWA:
http://www.wearewideawake.org

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Now is the time
Posted by: Lincoln fan on Feb 27, 2006 5:26 AM   
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Anyone who saw the documentary my team and Iproduced a few years ago on the illegal fund raising for Bill Clinton's re-election, knows I am no fan of the democratic money machine that helped tear the party away from whatever roots it once had in the daily lives and struggles of working people, turning it into a junior partner of the Chamber of Commerce.

Even though this Republican administration is the most corrupt in generations, we must never be satisfied with the "lesser of the evils". When one "holds his nose and pulls the lever" his vote is wasted. There is a huge difference between voting against and voting for.

Our big problem is that neither party represents the people. Both parties are financed by the corporate establishment. For instance, In the 2000 campaign the pharmaceutical industry contributed $10 millions to the Democrats and $20 millions to the Republicans. It is no wonder that the prescription drug bill was a bonanza for the drug companies. An interesting coincidence is that the AARP which originally opposed the bill had 30 million members. Those 30 million potential votes were trumped by the 30 million dollars.

Campaign financing has been reformed every now and again over the past 150 years with no success. Neither party really wants to change the system. It is much easier for politicians to take campaign contributions and do the bidding of the donors than to work for the peoples votes by solving their problems. I am skeptical about the reform's chances on a national level.

I believe that The Lincoln Initiative. a grassroots movement, can force both parties to represent the people. It is time for a showdown. Before the next election, both parties must be forced to declare whether they support the issues of the people or the issues of the corporatocracy. Whether they work for our votes or the dollars of the establishment.

Join The Lincoln Initiative a true grassroots movement. There are no leaders, no registration, no contributions, no meetings.
We have no issue except to make "government of the people, by the people, and for the people" a reality.

Click on we the people

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A THOUGHT
Posted by: denb on Feb 27, 2006 5:34 AM   
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WHAT MIGHT WORK IS AN AMENDMENT TO THE CONSTITUTION THAT SIMPLY STATES ONLY REGISTERED VOTERS CAN DONATE TO CANDIDATES.ALL OTHER MONEY IS BANNED.LIMIT THE AMOUNT TO 1$, 50 CENTS,AND A DIME.THIS COMBINED WITH THE T.V. IDEA WOULD STOP A LOT OF THIS GREEDY,EVIL,SHIT,THAT CALLS ITSELF GOVERNMENT.

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Comprehensive election reform
Posted by: dchauls on Feb 27, 2006 6:26 AM   
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Here is another approach to solving the same problem:
Past attempts to control campaign financing did not address the single most important problem: our presidential campaign and election system do not do a good job of educating prospective voters about the capability of each candidate to occupy the most powerful position on the planet. As a result, people end up voting for or against a candidate based upon impressions rather than knowledge. And these impressions are usually based upon brief television ads for and against the candidates, prepared by campaign operatives and media specialists, rather than the candidates themselves.
We have to make the education of voters the most important objective of an election campaign reform process.
This is inextricably integrated with questions of finance.
The goal of campaign finance reform is to reduce the influence of money on government. Politicians and parties in power maintain that major donors only gain greater access, not greater influence – but we all know that this is a fiction. Most politicians do consider influence-for-money to be wrong, but they nevertheless need to pay their bills. As long as candidates need money to be successful, this money – and the influence that follows – will continue to corrupt our election system and our government.
TV advertising is the single most costly item of any campaign - estimated at a quarter of a billion dollars in the last presidential campaign. If this item were completely removed, candidates would need much less money and, therefore, would need to raise much less. Elimination of the cost of TV advertising is the silver bullet to achieve true campaign finance reform.
The perfect time to institute comprehensive election reform is now, when neither party knows for sure who will be its standard-bearer in the next presidential election. It is the ideal time for a bi-partisan approach. If both parties can agree on the three goals of
• improving voter education,
• reducing election costs, and
• perfecting voting procedures,
we now have a window of opportunity for instituting change.
To achieve these three goals, we suggest that the US:
1. Establish a powerful Presidential Election Commission, composed of people both parties consider to be fair and as non-partisan as possible. This Commission should have power to regulate all elements of the campaign and election – not simply to file complaints that are dealt with after the election ends.
2. Require TV channels to donate substantial free prime time for:
a. debates between or among the candidates;
b. various types of unrehearsed questioning of each candidate –
i. by specialists on topics of concern to voters,
ii. by ordinary people, and
iii. by the press; and
c. separate 10-30-minute speeches by each candidate. .
Establish the quantities of each of the above long in advance, at least a year before the election. Quantities of such events ought to be fairly substantial – far more than the three debates that have become traditional.
Establish the format, structure, and other details of the debates and the unrehearsed questioning long before any candidates are known. The basic intent should be to encourage substantial impromptu interaction between candidates and questioners, and between the candidates themselves. Campaign operatives should have no power to modify these rules.
3. Ban paid TV advertisements for or against candidates in the 2-3 months preceding the election. This ban should apply to the parties, the candidates, 527s, everyone.
4. In order for item #3 to be legal, pass an amendment to the Constitution to clarify the First Amendment: Freedom of speech should apply to voices, not to money.
5. Require a paper voting trail, with the paper ballot considered as the official ballot.

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» RE: Comprehensive election reform Posted by: The critic
» RE: Comprehensive election reform Posted by: Lincoln fan
Politics in the Heartland: money talks etc.
Posted by: sausage on Feb 27, 2006 6:34 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
From The Sunday Des Moines Register by political columnist Dave Yepsen:
"Then last week, Bob Vander Plaats dropped his bid for the Republican nomination for governor to become rival Jim Nussle's running mate. That ended the GOP primary and leaves the party in position to mass resources for the fall campaign. Democrats, by contrast, will spend millions fighting one another(emphasis added), and that could leave them short of money for the November effort.

"All the activity in the (Chet) Culver and (Michael) Blouin camps has eclipsed Ed Fallon's campaign, which already lagged badly in money.

"It also takes more than $1 million to win a competitive primary and millions more to win a general election(emphasis added). Any candidate, male or female, who can't raise serious money doesn't have a serious chance."


So there you have it. He, or she, who has the most money wins, so says Iowa's "best" political observer, David Yepsen.

Ed Fallon, mentioned in the quote above, is trying to buck this trend and his been working tirelessly though a grassroots effort. He has voluntarily limited personal contributions to $2,400 due to his committment to clean money/clean elections reform.

However, we must remember that political campaiging is no longer an exercise in democracy, it is a year-round business. But if yard signs are any indication, Fallon is the clear favorite in his hometown, Des Moines.

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REPUBLICANS WAGE NEVER ENDING CLASS WAR.
Posted by: rabblerowzer on Feb 27, 2006 6:55 AM   
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"You can have wealth concentrated in the hands of a few, or democracy, but you cannot have both." -- Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis

REPUBLICANS WAGE NEVER ENDING CLASS WAR.

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otto
Posted by: otto on Feb 27, 2006 7:37 AM   
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I fear that we have to hit bottom, like an alcoholic before beginning to reform, and have enough people fall into poverty to be like South America before the big change will happen. Then we may start back in the direction of countries like Venezuela and Bolivia. Otherwise "this nation of the wealthy. for the wealthy, and by the wealthy shall not perish from the earth."

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blacksheepbaby
Posted by: bloominblacksheep on Feb 27, 2006 7:46 AM   
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Definitely we need to reform Campaign spending. The idea of limiting contributions to only registered voters makes perfect sense. You've got to "play to pay"! I love it!

The Media, I believe, WOULD respond if Cable subscribers would organize and keep up unrelenting pressure for fair coverage. There are enough educated people in that demographic to do that! And they are "paying customers"!
In many areas, they also pay to have access to the regular networks! They have enormous influence, IF THEY ORGANIZE. They question is: does it mean that much to them yet? The tension is building...

Maybe I'm naive, but the Administrations's repeated excesses and failures to respond in the past few months have made it very obvious that something is very wrong! People ARE beginning to stir from their toy-and-TV-induced fat and happy sleep. Katrina, the mounting death toll in Iraq, the Ports mess (where foreign companies, we discover, have been operating in our Ports "for business reasons" longer than we ever suspected), these "asleep at the switch" reactions of this Administration are making it ever more evident that we do not have the "normal" Government that most of us have come to expect.

Campaign reform, as voted before, was a bare "first step". We see now how corrupt the results were, and will be again, if we do not "take our Govern'ment back".

Years ago, when I was a small child, my Dad sat on a barren island in the Pacific and plotted an intricate, hidden course for P-38s to go after the Supreme Commander of the raid on Pearl Harbor. He plotted it down to the last second, and the planes found their target, and who knows? Maybe it slowed the War down a bit, and maybe it didn't. All I knew was that I was missing my Dad on the eve of my fifth birthday, but there was a reason for him to be where he was, and he had carefully explained it to me, the year before, when he left our small home in California. Democracy was truly on the line back then.

Well, it is on the line now, too, but for very different reasons indeed. And this time, the problem is coming more from within than from without Yet we are operating from the same mindset that we used forty, fifty, sixty years ago. Someone is profiting greatly from it. We need to remember Eisenhower's words as he left office, and fear greatly becoming a Fortress, some kind of "Military Empire" with preemptive war, Expanded Presidential Powers, a paranoid mindset, and a loss of liberty and civil rights among our People. Then there will be NO REASON to defend our borders whatsoever. We will have already lost our Democracy while trying to promote it.

We must get our government back from misguided people who think that preemptive War, torture, and spying on our own are the way to go; who think that a Facist State is a necessity. And the way we begin to do that is to set up a clamor such as they have never heard before. We must once again become the "Sleeping Giant" that Yamomoto feared he had awakened with Pearl Harbor; but this time it must be the Administration itself that awakens us. And our protest must be forceful, but we must use every peaceful, non-violent and economic means at our disposal to regain our Country.

We cannot lose our Government. We almost have. Every time I think of these "fat cats" I think of those young Marines on Henderson Field, 62 years ago, subjected to bombing raids every night, and of one young Marine Major, sitting up and figuring out, all night, how to help those P-38s find their way to the architect of the Japanese Navy and of the attack on Pearl Harbor, the Trade Center of his day. I wonder what he would think of the "Democracy" he gave so much of his life for, or if he would be corrupted, too. I hope not.

Thank you, Bill, for sounding the Call.

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Politics and money go together even more than love and marriage
Posted by: Sojourner on Feb 27, 2006 7:49 AM   
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Always have. Always will. But don't forget the Demos spent as much or more than the Repugs in the last presidential election. So money isn't everything.

With all the solutions proposed in this thread, it seems clear that our problem is a lack of agreement about the problem.

Until convinced otherwise, the big picture is whether the USA will become a bigger empire or whether we return to supporting self-determination for autonomous nations. It's the difference between Pax Americana and the United Nations. The current administration wants empire. I grew up with the dream of a community of nations.

So we are now battling over the character of the USA. Do we continue to go it alone, because we're the biggest SOB in the valley? Or do we listen when the scholars tell us that history is littered with the carcasses of former empires? From that of ancient Persia, now known as Iraq, to the German, French, British, Italian, and Japanese of more recent vintage.

Ours is a crucial moment. We shall decide whether the USA opts for empire or for a world community of democratic nations. Empire always looks good, until it crumbles. And it always crumbles. Since that provides evidence for the sinfulness of human beings, for those true believers the issue is already settled.

But some of us believe in the possibility of a new world, unlike anything in the old world. Believe in the new world. Then the only problem is those folks who cannot see the forest for the trees. How many times must we make the same historical mistakes, again and again? Let us learn from history rather than repeat it.

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» Sorry, "Mesopotamian" Posted by: Sojourner
I just don't understand them.
Posted by: antiapathy on Feb 27, 2006 8:18 AM   
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why are Republicans (conservatives, whatever you want to call them) so invested in transfering money and power from the people to the coroporations? I get that many of them make a pretty penny off the process, but the majority of them are normal people who are getting screwed in the deal. Regular joes who own small businesses or family farms that are being wiped out of existince by large corporations. Are these people all retarded? Or to they think things would genuinely be better if a handful of large corporations ruled the world?

These people seem to believe that hard work is the best way to get ahead in life. They want to cut off programs like social security and welfare, because personal responsibility is their dogma. But then they give away the candy store to corporations through tax breaks and wage-lowering measures. WTF?

If anyone understands why people are so eager to support candidates and measures that go against their own interests and beliefs, please explain it to me.

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public campaign financing is being used to lock out 3rd parties
Posted by: wli on Feb 27, 2006 9:40 AM   
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There is already a bill, H.R. 4694, for "public campaign financing."

The insurmountable obstacles it erects for third parties are rather blatantly aimed at protecting the long-since coopted Democrats against third party challengers. This is supported by the few remaining genuine Democrats due to the fact that the Republicans are astroturfing the Green Party and others to split the left-wing vote. It's supported by Republicans because they've long-since infiltrated and controlled the Democratic Party.

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Public Campaign Financing is not Enough
Posted by: Democritus on Feb 27, 2006 10:34 AM   
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Socrates said that voting by ballot was no better than voting by lot. Why was that? It was because people were uneducated, and would accept sophistry and rhetoric over simple truth. Public financing of campaigns is a necessary condition of having an honest, capable government. But it isn't sufficient. What's needed is education from an early age in one's civic responsibilities and lessons in how our government works. Then impose a fine on those eligible voters who do not bother to vote. Funds from these fines alone could be used to cut the cost of public financing perhaps in half.

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What We Can Do Right NOW!
Posted by: starvinmarvy on Feb 27, 2006 10:58 AM   
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MARCH.......thats right..MARCH !!!!
All of us here are so frustrated. The ideas that come from us all are terrific ideas that ABSOLUTELY should be implemented!!Somehow....someway....maybe someday!!!
(my immediate thought is term limits !)
BUT...MARCH ON WASHINGTON...is one thing we can do RIGHT NOW...as a population.We don`t have to wait for elections.We don`t have to wait while we watch more of our kids die. We don`t have to wait while we fall deeper into the abyss !!! POWER with the PEOPLE!!! MASSIVE...never before done...peaceful march .....with the underlying reason for it and perhaps its "slogan" "We`re taking our country back!!"
If Alternet,MoveOn,DailyKos,TomPaine,MotherJones,ect
can come together and promote something like this...we could make change RIGHT NOW!!!!!!

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» P.S. Bill Moyer.. Posted by: starvinmarvy
great article but overwhelming
Posted by: ccbite on Feb 27, 2006 11:42 AM   
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What Bill doesn't mention is the lack of outrage on the part of the Democrats and the corresponding eagerness of Republicans to exploit the expectation of 'civil discourse' to their own cynical advantage. Republicans know that Teddy Kennedy will never walk across the Senate floor and 'cold cock' a Republican colleague. Where is the Democratic outrage at these internal machinations? These democratic senators, while a minority, are still a very elite group and wield great power. If they don't act on principle, then they are just as complicit through inaction. What use is their power?

Here's a few ideas:
- tax religion (they're already represented anyway, who are we kidding?)
- term limits for congress & senate (once served, you can't return)
- responsibility for redistricting should be taken away from Congress, perhaps use the GAO to regulate (since when did leaders choose their voters?)
- public election financing (all levels)
- fixed rate political advertising for media (to control out-of-control media costs for tv, papers, etc.; would reduce the need to spend so much time to pander for money)
- elections held over a span of 3 days (Thu, Fri, Sat)
- voting is required by all citizens and you can't cross state borders if you haven't voted

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Moyers, Bill: Truth Teller
Posted by: Tom Degan on Feb 27, 2006 11:46 AM   
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You've got to hand it to Bill Moyers. When the right-wing crazies like Bill O'Reilly try to portray him as some kind of left-leaning extremist, they always conveniently leave out the fact that this good and decent man is actually an ordained Baptist minister.

I sleep a little better at night knowing that Mr. Moyers is still out there speaking truth to power. God bless you, Bill.

Tom Degan
Goshen, NY
tomdegan@frontiernet.net

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Make the Money Irrelevant
Posted by: asque on Feb 27, 2006 4:12 PM   
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If everyone talks to their neighbors, friends and relatives, they bypass the media and the money. Let them know that you care. Tell them the truth about the so called morality issues that are used to divert them. Encourage people that you want to vote for to run and then go door to door and support them. A true grassroots campaign does not need millions, just dedicated and informed people.

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» Power Flows From..... Posted by: Brux
May There Always Be A Bill Moyers
Posted by: Riverside on Feb 28, 2006 2:54 AM   
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That said, bringing off true and lasting election reform is going to take the hard working, grass-roots effort many here suggest. Now talking about it is pretty sweatless, doing it is going to take some real commitment and tons of energy. In other words, how hard do we want to work to be free?

Can we talk to an extreme right-wing conservative and arrive at a common ground that allows us to agree about being free?

Can we praise the evangelical while pointing out that supporting the Bush Administration on the basis of a misguided religious conviction is both unwise and dangerous to his religious freedom and my secular freedom?

Bottom line, can we find the common core of humanity that will allow us to come together and save this great nation?

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DeLay - Abramoff - Reed Scandal Steals American Jobs
Posted by: DrGeneNelson on Feb 28, 2006 5:59 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Learn how the Rep. Tom DeLay - Jack Abramoff - Ralph Reed scandal steals American citizen jobs. A groundbreaking documentation and information collection. The author was displaced from his "high tech" career by the corrupt special visa programs. Dr. Gene Nelson may be reached at (214) 455 - 8065 in Dallas, Texas.
An American Scam by Dr. Gene Nelson

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Outgoing--Democracy. Incoming--Fascism
Posted by: boblecht on Feb 28, 2006 11:24 AM   
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"Government of the people, by the people, for the people" is gone. We now have government of the people by the corporations for the corporations. This is not Democracy; it is Fascism.

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You're right, Mr. Moyers, but the fix is in.
Posted by: Ellen Remore on Feb 28, 2006 10:34 PM   
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Few people in this currently-benighted country are as insightful or as eloquent as Bill Moyers. I only wish I could share his optimism about nipping our burgeoning police state in the bud. Unfortunately, my gut instinct is that, having gone to the trouble of stealing two presidential elections, and subsequently almost completing the job of transforming the presidency into an autocracy, there's virtually nothing these sonsabitches will not stoop to in order to stay in power, including mixing up the ballots while nobody's looking. That's one thing Mr. Moyers overlooks--the fact that the Repugs are rigging elections. And since the media is turning a blind eye to it, it's unlikely that anything will be done about it before we have to vote for the next president. My money is on George Allen--just like Bush, a perfect useful idiot. And another Southern governor. Pleasant prospect, isn't it? But remember you heard it here first. Now I suggest you go and quietly pound your head against a wall.

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MOVING TO VERMONT
Posted by: AlienSlave on Mar 1, 2006 5:26 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Well here I go again breaking one of my self imposed rules of posting web links. (Slapping my face without the use of Aqua Velva aftershave bad Dobby, bad Dobby). http://www.benningtonbanner.com/headlines/ci_3557081 I’m realistically going to move to Vermont and I’m going to join the fight there for reform and support and encourage anyone running for office that supports it. Read this article and see who is supporting what! It should stop most of the posted debate and accusations here and hopefully start a true dialogue here of what to do to support Vermont.
AlienSlave

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Democarcy is fragile
Posted by: jeffrey7 on Mar 1, 2006 6:14 AM   
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When you have centralized wealth along with centralized power,you loose democracy. Why? Those whom want wealth and power don't want any other voices heard except those who spit money.
Democracy is beyond money and power. Democracy IS power. When ALL Voices are heard you have democracy.
When the nations wealth is equatibly distributed you have
democracy.When power is SHARED among ALL the People you have democracy.Anything less becomes a tyrannical overlordship where the poor and the helpless along with the environment become a blockage to profit and plunder.
A democracy does not allow for a single person to be able to wage war on anyone anywhere at any time. A democracy is
the power of the people,not the power of money,which is fluid and flows to those whom are the most greedy and corrupt.
Our course to save this democracy is a clear one. We must remove all that stands in it's way. The corrupted politicians,
their fat cat contributors and those coperate entities that support the centralizing of power and wealth must be controled or the People will continue toloose out.
Whomever seeks the Oval Office should be commited to
making sure the criminals that put this country in such jepordy
will be arrested and jailed,with their wealth seized and redistributed to the poor. They should make Healthcare for ALL a day one policy. Social Security and the environment should be moved into 'Always Funded' programs,off the Budget which is fraught with pork and corruption. The powers to wage war should be returned to the Congress with strict oversite of the intelligence community and it's counterpart Homeland Security. The wealthy should be taxed into equality
with the rest of the citizenry. The People should be involed in every major decesion made by the Govt. There should be a
'None of the Above' slot on the ballots forcing both parties
to adopt policies and platforms that gain real support because they are broad and not limited to the few.
With Freedom and Liberty, democracy can thrive and grow.
Under our current form, Freedom is squandered and Liberty is exhausted under threats made by a 'propped up' enemy or worst yet, one that does'nt exisit at all except as a tool of Fear and Repression. Freedom is yours,Liberty is yours,surrender it to no one or anything under any circumstance. To do so means you have become the 'controled' and not the Controler

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It does an old heart good.
Posted by: Slowburn on Mar 1, 2006 11:51 AM   
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to see you swinging away at the social injustices of this upside down world. I'm looking forward to your next appearance on the daily show. Swing away bill swing away.

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Mary
Posted by: mbarthel on Mar 1, 2006 11:56 AM   
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As has been already said, thank you, Bill Moyers, for speaking truth to power.

In addition to campaign finance reform, it has been stated that if voting were done on a national holiday, more people might participate. I've worked many years as an election judge, and I agree. Our young people and young working parents need the ability to get to the polls. One day from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. might not be enough when you have children involved in sports, or other activities.

Why not use Veterans Day as Voting Day. Make it a day to honor our democracy and those who fought for it! Make it a national holiday so we can all participate in Veterans events. Our veterans did not fight and die for a flag, they fought for an idea. What better way to honor their sacrifice than to allow people to participate fully.

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» RE: Mary Posted by: gltirebiter
Our nation's peril may be closer than we realize
Posted by: CWB on Mar 2, 2006 2:07 AM   
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Thank you Bill Moyers for another thought-provoking article.

With all that has happened to this nation since 2000, I cannot be optimistic about its future. This is the sort of situation that is so scary, that it "will chill," as the old saying goes, "your beer." And even after you've drunk it, I might add!

President Bush is seeking the right to conduct warrantless wire taps sans warrants signed by judges. Bush says that there may not be time for a warrant when surveiling terrorists. However, the law allows him to conduct necessary wire taps against terrorists and seek a warrant as late as 72 hours later.

The relevent question should be, why is this not a sufficient allowance to legally conduct surveilance?

The reason that this law, allowing for a warrant to be sought 72 hours after the fact, is not useful to Bush is because no judge will sign a warrant for the wire tapping of those who are political dissenters. This is precisely what Bush has in mind ---spying on American-born citizens to determine who is for and who is against him and his goals. Who knows what would be in store for those not in agreement with him. For those, I'm sure hell is in store.

There has even been talk of concentration camps having been built in remote areas of the nation to segregate dissenters from the rest of the nation. Websites such as prisonplanet, arcticbeacon, jeffrense are several that convey this idea. Very little of great importnce in the way of national events have ocurred that I have not first learned of on the jeffrense (Jeff Rense) site. first.

Since his bid for the right to conduct warrantless surveilance, I have suspected that by the end of his second term, Bush will have installed a dictatorial regime with all constitutional liberties having been eliminated.

I'm not sure that voting will end this problem, for with the endless ocean of money at the disposal of the republican Party from its richest benefactors, it would not be too difficult to not only buy off the 06 and 08 elections but to also buy off the entire election system -- "lock, stock, barrel, and all." It was the CEO of Diebold, Inc who publicly promised the Ohio election to Bush in 04. The Diebold voting machines are easy to rig (program) and control so as to manipulate the outcome of any election.

If they have the voting mechanism of America in their control, then the people will have to resort to gunfire to correct this situation and take back their nation, for nothing else will suceed.

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decent dissent
Posted by: decenter on Mar 2, 2006 10:00 AM   
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I can't help but think that a system of representative government that has it's feet bound in the restrictions of travel time and limited communication peculiar to the late eighteenth century, is due for an update. Perhaps, with the advent of the internet, it can be something as simple as when you pay your taxes, you get to pull up the budget website and say where you money goes. Think of how legislating control of our money away from congress and giving it back to us would change things.

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MUSENATIVE
Posted by: NATIVEMUSE on Mar 2, 2006 10:44 AM   
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I have always thought that it might be a good idea to pay legislators $500,000.00/year or whatever sum is sufficient to the people, index it, and AS A CONDITION, make it a treasonous act for them to accept money from any outside source. Let the lobbyists buy them lunch, RETAINING RECIEPTS to avoid invalidating the enshrinement of Political Speech in Buckley vs. Valeo, and the premissions to let the people redress grievances by petitioning their government. Let the Television stations reinstate the Fairness Doctrine. Tax ALL who make money with a social security tax, no ceiling on annual income. DO NOT have term limits, those who serve longer, learn more about how to legislate, and those who are only permitted to serve a term certain would just grab what they can get at the trough. I'm sure there are many mistakes in these ideas, but through discussion, they could be improved, trashed for better ideas, and problems solved, rather than just planting a Bush in front of every problem and worshiping it, hoping that the problem will vanish. We need to make the Constitution applicable to PEOPLE and not PERSONS ( Corporations ) as the Framers did not intend to give Corporations Constitutional protection, this will never happen, but after the Supremes did what they did to the Congress over the Commerce Clause, it is worth a try, and would go a long way to making this a Country instead of an Oligarchy, or Fascistic " Democracy ".

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Selling, not Saving Democracy
Posted by: revscpa on Mar 3, 2006 9:47 AM   
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Depressing and yet, excellent article. Maybe, the title Saving Our Democracy, should be Selling Off Our Democracy. Much thanks, Bill

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One way
Posted by: Lincoln fan on Mar 4, 2006 7:43 AM   
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the public may support such broad social goals as affordable medical coverage for all, decent wages for working people, safe working conditions, a secure retirement, and clean air and water, but there is no government "of, by, and for the people" to deliver on those aspirations

There are three peaceful solutions to this problem.

First, effective campaign finance reform. This will not happen because neither party nor the establishment want it. There have been campaign finance reforms made from time to time for almost 150 years. None have worked.

Second, a viable third party. History shows that this is almost impossible on the national level.

Third, a grassroots movement. History shows this to be a workable solution. We've had the rise of the labor unions, the women's suffrage movement, the temperance movement, the civil rights movement, and the peace movement of the sixties. All these successes prove this to be the most practicable approach.

Join The Lincoln Initiative and help make "government of the people, by the people, and for the people" a reality. Click on join us today

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god help us
Posted by: www.wreckedband.com on Mar 4, 2006 4:39 PM   
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On March 4, 2006 - 3:34pm www.wreckedband.com said:
www.wreckedband. com on March 2, 2006 - 11:00pm.

feingold ...said ..that this does not mean its over ..he will keep om fighting ......you weak need...yes need ....yellow ..human ....so many coments talk about ..bushes poll #s ...that the world hates bush ...well heres the thing ...raise your hands if u read the dem ...platform ...i mean picked the thing up and read ..what your party stands for ...really u should know it like a perverted precher knows his ...bible ...because we are the ones that make change ...martin luther took it to the streets ....jerry rubin took it to the streets ...kent state students ...were shot dead in the streets ....artists ...were out their taking it to the streets ...its your falt the act was passed ...u and the world dont seem to like george ....well he is the fucken pres ...he runs the show ..like it or not ....this is not scull and bones ..friends ..this is our ..our kids ...world ...get pissed at the leaders ...and then look at who we have become ...fat pigs ..cell phone ..video games....every distraction ...oh did i say money ....lots and lote of money ...bono ..100 million ..paul mccartney 1 billion ...bill cosby 300 million john cary 1 billion ..well his bitchie wife ....jessie jackson ...holy shit ....the sleeping giant is out their but the 60 s and 70 s people that took to the streets are fat ,inshape ...now have the time to get back out their ,,,look beatles ,,,cream ...hendrix ...rock gods ...sex drugs rock ....now the young ....who complane ....whip the fucken parents ...smack the people who made so much great change ..before ....take to the streets ...a house divided can not stand ...the greatest power on earth your in it u can controll it ,,,but we get pisser at the dems ..feingold ....holy shit ....look up folk your getting deep throuted ...and the islams the capitalest bill gates will sell your kids out like i.g. farber did in world war two ...look it up ....WAKE UP THE SLEEPING GIANT>>>>richard hydell and wrecked
www.wreckedband. com | Homepage | 03.03.06 - 12:40 am | #

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bi the way those bands i spoke of and their are a lot more ...a bunch of bands played on the oldies station ...not that theirs anything wrong with that ...but come on lets get some real new young rock ...hip .hop..rap .. and shake thing up ...everyone is so worried about their shit well ..make some noise at the grammies ..american music awards ...soul train awards ...tv shows ..talk shows ...any were ..those bands has fucken balls ...lennon had balls ...it does not take a village ..it takes a nation ....the most powerfull nation that their ever was ....richard hydell and wrecked
www.wreckedband. com | Homepage | 03.03.06 - 12:51 am | #

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Democracy sucks
Posted by: kooz on Mar 4, 2006 7:51 PM   
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fuck bush, fuck the troops, fuck freedom and fuck democracy.

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Start with your city, your county and your state
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Mar 5, 2006 2:49 PM   
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I think that the best method to change elections is to start at the local level - every city council in this country should be subject to strict election finance laws, whose centerpiece should be public funding of elections. The corporate takeover of the US is occuring not just at the federal level - megacorporations are coming into towns and cities and trying to use local officials to implement water privatization schemes. I know this is going on all over California, and I'm not sure about the rest of the country, but local officials are making these decisions to build corporate-owned desalination plants (in Santa Cruz, Monterey and Orange counties, for example). Stop them at home first, then think about the rest of the country.

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