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Election 2006: The End of an Era, Finally

By William Greider, The Nation. Posted December 5, 2006.


The November election was indeed the watershed we hoped: The conservative order has ended, and Democrats have a chance to reshape politics for the next generation, starting with Iraq and economic reform.

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The Democratic Party was not really ready for this. Democrats have been in the wilderness so long -- since Ronald Reagan launched the conservative era twenty-five years ago -- that older liberals began to think it was a life sentence. Bill Clinton was the party's rock star; he made people feel good (and occasionally cringe), but he governed in idiosyncratic ways that accommodated the right and favored small gestures over big ideas. The party adopted his risk-averse style. Its substantive meaning and political strength deteriorated further.

Then George W. Bush came along as the ultimate nightmare -- even more destructive of government and utterly oblivious to the consequences.

The 2006 election closed out the conservative era with the voters' blast of rejection. Democrats are liberated again to become -- what? Something new and presumably better, maybe even a coherent party.

This is the political watershed everyone senses. The conservative order has ended, basically because it didn't work -- did not produce general well-being. People saw that conservatives had no serious intention of creating smaller government. They were too busy delivering boodle and redistributing income and wealth from the many to the few. Plus, Republicans got the country into a bad war, as liberals had decades before.

On the morning after, my 6-year-old grandson was watching TV as he got ready for school. He saw one of those national electoral maps in which blue states wiped away red states. "Water takes fire," he said. Water nourishes, fire destroys. How astute is that? It could be the theme for our new politics.

With Democrats in charge of the House and the Senate, we can now return to a reality-based politics that nourishes rather than destroys. The party's preoccupation with "message" should take a back seat to "substance" -- addressing the huge backlog of disorders and injuries produced by conservative governance. This changeover will be long and arduous. But at least it can now begin.

Republicans lost, but their ideological assumptions are deeply embedded in government, the economy and the social order. Many Democrats have internalized those assumptions, others are afraid to challenge them. It will take years, under the best circumstances, for Democrats to recover nerve and principle and imagination -- if they do.

But this is a promising new landscape. Citizens said they want change. Getting out of Iraq comes first, but economic reform is close behind: the deteriorating middle class, globalization and its damaging impact on jobs and wages, corporate excesses and social abuses, the corruption of politics. Democrats ran on these issues, and voters chose them.

The killer question: Do Democrats stick with comfortable Washington routines or make a new alliance with the people who just elected them? Progressives can play an influential role as ankle-biting enforcers. They then have to get up close and personal with Democrats. Explain that evasive, empty gestures won't cut it anymore. Remind the party that it is vulnerable to similar retribution from voters as long as most Americans don't have a clue about what Democrats stand for.

The first order of business is taking down Bush. The second front is the fight within the Democratic Party over its soul and sense of direction. These are obviously intertwined, but let's start with Bush and how Democrats can contain his ebbing powers. This is not a philosophical discussion. Events are already moving rapidly.

Everyone talks up postelection bipartisanship, and voters are weary of partisan cat fights. But that doesn't mean selling them out to get along with the other party. If Bush wants compromise, let him start by promising not to nominate any more hard-right-wingers to the federal judiciary. Harry Reid, the new Senate majority leader, could respond by promising not to confirm any nominees if Bush doesn't keep his word.

The tables are turned now. Democrats will control the pursestrings of government. Beyond keeping post offices open, they can kill anything Bush proposes. They have the high ground, but they can now also be blamed for what goes wrong. For the first time in a dozen years, Democrats have the power to alter the governing fundamentals.

Ending the war cannot be compromised. Voters want out "now," as soon as possible. They did not endorse a couple more years of US occupation, many more lost lives and wasted billions. If Democratic leaders get that wrong, it becomes their war too, and Americans will not be forgiving. A coherent alternative that deserves bipartisan support may emerge from the Baker-Hamilton group. But, if not, Democrats should be principled critics and draw up their own road map.

Let Iraqis decide their own fate. Telling them to split up into three parts sounds like more colonialist intervention. Iraqis are robbed of true sovereignty as long as occupying Americans are present. Democrats can come up with a plausible timetable for withdrawal, accompanied by rational foreign-policy steps like direct talks with Iran and other Middle Eastern powers to defuse the sectarian violence and to arrange a manageable exit for the US military.

Congress cannot command troops, but it has enormous leverage to coax and prod Pentagon policy through appropriations and other legislation. Cutting off funds in the midst of war is not going to happen -- it never has in US history -- but the military itself could become a valuable source of strategic ideas, both in hearings and through back-door communications. Bush's promised "victory" in Iraq is not an option.

The Pentagon, in fact, is especially vulnerable to Congressional pressure, because its spending is scandalously out of control. Rumsfeld allowed it, and the services took advantage of his open checkbook. Emergency "war" spending is headed toward $507 billion and covers numerous projects with no relevance to Iraq or Afghanistan. House and Senate committees can force out the facts and expose this outrage now. If they don't, it will haunt them later when they try to reduce federal deficits.

When Democrats take up their commitment to reducing Bush's budget deficits, they face a big problem up front. The economy is heading toward recession. Shrinking federal deficits would only make things worse. Dems need to back off that pledge and consider stimulative spending instead.

They can look for money elsewhere. One promising source lies in the many investigations and hearings Senate and House committees are planning to expose war-profiteering -- Halliburton's no-bid contracts, obscene subsidies and tax breaks for Big Oil and Big Pharma, the rank corruption that has essentially looted government programs. Properly managed, these inquiries can produce popular anger and demands for recovering the public capital carried off by private interests.

The straightforward way to achieve this is taxation. For three decades, Washington has been cutting taxes for corporate and financial interests, not to mention the wealthy. Democrats have to find ways to stop intoning this conservative tax-cutting mantra by showing that government has been robbed and ordinary families are the losers. Will voters be upset that Democrats are recovering public money by raising taxes on the plunderers? I think they will cheer.

Representative Charles Rangel, the next chair of the House Ways and Means Committee, has said he will not attempt to repeal Bush's outrageous tax cuts for the wealthy -- but instead let them expire in 2010. That kills estate-tax repeal and puts other measures in terminal jeopardy. Democrats should go on the offense and develop a tax-shift strategy that increases taxes on corporations and capital in order to finance tax relief for struggling families, middle-class and below. Last-Ditch Bush may veto this, but let's see how many nervous Republicans vote against it.

All this depends, however, on the question of whether Democrats have the stomach for a fight, not only with Bush and the GOP but with the business and financial interests that underwrite both parties. We don't know yet, but a test case may come soon. Corporate leaders, investment bankers and the insurance industry are lobbying to gut the modest regulations enacted after Enron and to disable investor lawsuits against fraud on Wall Street and in corporate boardrooms.

Which side will Democrats be on? In the 1990s leading senators supported big money against the interests of injured investors, including pension funds. Deviating Democrats included Chris Dodd, Joe Lieberman, Charles Schumer and Joe Biden, to name a few. If they are on the wrong side this time, voters should hear about it.

This tension between liberal economic values and the center-right economics of Clinton is the party's great divide. Clintonistas-in-waiting -- awaiting Hillary's White House -- still dominate party affairs in Washington. But the facts have changed. Voters expressed their contempt for Republicans in 2006. They did not suggest they want the same behavior from Democrats.

Is the new Congress reflected in economic populists like Senator-elect Jim Webb of Virginia and free-trade critics like Senator-elect Sherrod Brown? Or pro-gun, antiabortion conservatives from the South and Midwest who might pull the party rightward? Both before and after the election, major media, led by the New York Times and Washington Post, repeatedly emphasized that no leftward ideological shift would occur, because Democrats are moving rightward. This was bogus, way too simplistic. It overlooked the fact that 100 or more candidates ran aggressively on liberal or populist economic issues -- against unregulated free trade and the offshoring of American jobs, against special interests, corporate excesses and social abuses. The Blue Dog and New Democrat caucuses will expand, but the Progressive Caucus will, too, and will remain the largest -- at seventy-one members.

The spin originated with DLC types, and a principal source was Representative Rahm Emanuel, chair of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, who recruited many of the candidates. "Emanuel and other top Democrats told their members they cannot allow the party's liberal wing to dominate the agenda next year," the Post reported. If Speaker Nancy Pelosi intends to be in charge, she might not want Representative Emanuel standing at her back.

The party's ideological debate is under way privately at a more serious level. Robert Rubin, the influential former Treasury Secretary and executive chair at Citigroup, launched the Hamilton Project this past spring to head off the rising rebellion within party ranks against corporate-led globalization. He is proposing various measures, but holds fast to "free market" principle: Don't interfere with the global markets and multinationals.

Organized labor has taken up Rubin's invitation to talk and is countering with its ideas for fundamental reforms. Labor leaders do not expect to change Rubin's mind. Their objective is to show Democratic incumbents that they are caught in a serious bind -- between their injured voters and multinational investment bankers. Democrats will have nothing meaningful to say to them as long as the party adheres to the economic orthodoxy. They need debate and an aggressive agenda that stanches the bleeding for Americans and saves the global system by reforming it.

Nancy Pelosi has the power to break through the risk-averse habits. She and liberal allies like Representative George Miller are playing shrewd, not reckless politics. But the Democrats don't have forever to establish bona fides with the electorate. A year from now, if the party looks like the same old timid crowd, Democrats will be in trouble of their own making.

This is where activists can develop influence inside Congress. They have to work on persuading Pelosi, Reid and key House and Senate chairs to take the larger risks. The breadth of the Democratic victory gives them license to push a more ambitious agenda. The weak public regard for Democrats gives them an incentive. The House-Senate majorities enable the party to pass a lot of urgent progressive reforms -- regulating global warming, for example -- that may not become law but would create forward momentum and draw "nay" votes from reactionary Republicans.

Progressives must develop an inside-outside strategy that engages this new Democratic Congress intimately while it rallies citizens at large to add their voices, too. This is going to be a hard, long struggle. Turning around a political party and politics isn't accomplished in one or two election cycles.

But some newly elected Democrats found a smart formula in 2006. Talk to people about their lives and really listen to what people, not polls, say. Then offer solutions, not just rhetoric, that might work. If they learn to do this conscientiously, pretty soon Democrats might begin sounding like a political party.

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William Greider is the author of, most recently, "The Soul of Capitalism" (Simon & Schuster).

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watershed?
Posted by: edith on Dec 5, 2006 1:03 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I remember similar articles when Jimmy Carter and a large Democratic majority was elected on the heels of a GOP-debacle of Watergate tethered to a severe recession in the 74-76 era. Lobbyists, "tax" reformers and neo-liberals coopted both Carter and the Liberals. The era of HMO's, free trade, non-union industries and intervention in Iran and Afghanistan began. The way for Reagan was paved by Carter, Mondale, Tip O'Neill( a phony populist who could be found after work boozing it up with his GOP counterparts, including, after 1980, Reagan.). Robert Byrd was the Senate "leadership". Some reform. Ted Kennedy and Jesse Jackson made half-hearted efforts to create a New Populism in the Democratic Party but were crushed by big money and the failing power of unions in the 70's and 80's. The shift of power that Greiede hopefully, and perhaps naively detects after this year's elections, many of which were razon thin wins, comes upon a landscape far less friendly to populist reform than in 1976, the "bicentennial" year in which a New American Revolution was hoped for iwth the election of Carter.

Will hopes be dashed again? Not really. There are no real hopes as contrasted with Greider's self-generated hopes, to dash. Where is the Movement, the echoes of which were at least alive in millions' first hand recollections in 76, souring as they might have been as the yuppie generation began to form.

Greider, who has been through it all and has to always be taken seriously do to his keen analysis of economics and real trends, not just chic, nevertheless is hoping for one last Last Hurrah dance before he departs the scence. But where is the RFK of today, and more important, where are the mass movements that made King and RFK possible?

There is evidence certainly that this year the people were fed up with GOP corruption and "stay the course". There is conclusive evidence however that the "people" want a significant economic restructuring, although several progressives are now in the Senate. Yet several progressives have been in office for many years, Sherrod Brown, Wellstone, Feingold, and George Miller and the Calif/NY/Mass Dem delegations as long standing examples. During the Carter and then Clinton eras, the progressives were held in check. And how the public regards government may have irreversibly changed. The seniors of 76 were still the workers of the Depression, and Roosevelt and Truman, let alone Kennedy, were real memories.

But since 1976, retirements have poured into IRA and 401k plans, no one trusts Social Security, and young people have no institutional memory of an era of Vietnam protests, civil rights hopes and ever increasing expectations for each succeeding generation. America was on top in 76; challenged by Japan but not yet by China. The unions still mattered and US factories were not yet an oxymoron.

In 1976, there still was hope. A hope which Democrats then dashed with cynicism and wheeling and dealing with K St which made the switch from Nixon and Ford to Carter and Mondale quite nicely, and then hardly missed a beat with coronation of Reagan. 1980 was a watershed year for Republicans. We do not see the cohesive ideological vision by progressive Democrats that the Reagonauts had; nor do the Sherrod Brown progressives dominate the Dems the way true believers dominated the 78-84 GOP. Yes, the GOP became corrupt, as all revolutions do.

The question is: Has the Left Liberal Revolution even begun so that it will eventually turn on itself as revolutions always do? Greider provides a whiff of what might have been and perhaps of what might be, but no clear evidence of what is.

Instead, the media fawns over the mirage of Barack Obama, the chameleon mixed race Great WhiteBlackImmigrant Hope from Illinois. Has anyone heard anything as radical from Obama as Reagaon promised and delivered to his followers?

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» RE: watershed? Posted by: robchapman
» RE: watershed? Posted by: amacd
» RE: watershed? Cont. Posted by: amacd
» RE: watershed? Cont. Posted by: willymack
» RE: watershed? Posted by: yellow
» RE: watershed? Posted by: edith
» RE: watershed? Posted by: yellow
» yep: watershed? Posted by: Burton
problem
Posted by: rsaxto on Dec 5, 2006 2:36 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The real problem that regular Americans have with the political future is that so many democrat office holders are beholden to the same greedy, corrupt CEO corporate structure which has brought us record deficits and counterproductive wars under Bushite republican office holders. We need to convert greedy corp suckers like Leiberman, etc. to ordinary-folks-helping democrats. If we can morph these greedy republican-type backsliders into decent real democrat legislators the future for American democracy will be bright indeed.

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The First Order of Business
Posted by: robchapman on Dec 5, 2006 4:13 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Mr. Greider writes that the first order of business for the Democratic Majority of the 110th Congress is taking down Bush.

In my opinion Nr Greider's statement is the classic reflection that the Democrats and progressives have internalized the Republican/conservative outlook.

To the GOP, everything is about winning. Their blogs and conversations are filled with soul searching discussions about who got hosed.

The Democrats have the rare opportunity in this Congress of being in the position to advocate change and to formulate and communicate a coherent and comprehensive vision of our shared future.

Yes the 110th Congress needs to begin the work of undoing the stupid and callous philosophy called Reaganism, and they need to be courageous and assertive in doing so.

But it is more important that Progressives recognize that Bush is a not a lame duck but a cooked goose and that we keep our focus on building a progressive, left of center majority to govern for the next decade.

Robert Chapman
Lansing, NY

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The earth first, the inhabitants next, impeachment and accountability of course!
Posted by: greentime on Dec 5, 2006 5:53 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If we want to survive as a species, if we truly want to end not just this war, but all wars, then we must change course and put this planet first.

I can't think of any argument that should precede this path.

Then we must act to create a sustainable, healthy society not just for the few but for all of us, and our web of life. We must embrace our interdependence.

And then, in the model of Nelson Mandela's good ways in South Africa and in hopes of restorative justice, we must hold those false leaders who hijacked this country and knocked US down, accountable for the harm they have caused.

What great hope we could have for our future if we move in this new direction. What great hope we could offer the world if we lead by example.

Peace, integrity, good will.
Let's get moving!

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You're just lying to yourselves
Posted by: dikaiosyne on Dec 5, 2006 7:12 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I can tell you exactly what will happen over the next two years. Not very much. Any attempts by regressives of the left wing to impose any sort of liberal or neo-liberal agenda will be met by the Bush veto pen. This would include taxes and additional punitive regulations on business for example. About the only thing I am not sure will not develop is "shamesty" for illegal aliens since Bush seems determined to get some sort of "comprehensive" immigration reform and would probably go along with pretty much anything the Dems propose. If one looks at the recent election results with a objective eye one would determine that there is no mandate for liberal policies since the majority of the newly elected Democrats are "blue dog" conservatives and that every state referendum on liberal philosophy went down to defeat with the exception of the Arizona referendum which didn't institute any new law or reform but left it up to the legislature of the state to determine how to handle the pervert problem. You can sum up the last two years of the Bush administration as status quo maintained. The bluster from the Dem side of the aisle (and this forum) during the next two years should be most entertaining.

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The ones that did least jumping first in line
Posted by: ng1944 on Dec 5, 2006 9:34 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Did You hear anything from Obama or Hilary in these
nightmare years of Bush presidency.
Hillary was the first warmonger, Obama was afraid to say
one bad word about Bush.
And look, she is first to jump in line for presidency,
and You can hear Obama, Obama, Obama..........
Who in his right mind going to vote for her.
Go to hell, Hillary together with Obama

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See The Future America
Posted by: mite on Dec 5, 2006 9:50 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Take a walk or bus to skid row- homeless area of your city or town and spend the day there with your kids. Find the local food bank and talk to the citizens of this country that understand what it is to have no voice.Because you need to let your children and grand children see their future.

You will find none of these individuals with a credit card, because the banks of the federal reserve do not pre-approve anyone down here. Citizens without a voice deal only with cash, gold, and professional services to get their needs. They live in reality down here not denial.

You see these citizens had their rights and liberties taken away years ago or were born into it. I am not going to go into this process as only experience is the best teacher. i.e. Make one mistake and vacation in the penal system and you can forget ever making a decent living or be part of society.

But what does this have to do with the new Congress and the next two years? Well I could detail it for you but denial would stop your brain from accepting it so lets wait until it hits you in you pocket book.

The democrats will do as their told like every other majority in Congress for the last 100 years. Bush will stay Pres. and Cheney Vice, with no accountability. Congress will keep financing the wars and black-op's, etc. And your taxes (illegal) will continue to pay the interest on the loans from the Banker's. www.givemeliberty.org www.originalintent.org and www.educate-yourself.org look under the heading `The Truth About The Federal Reserve Bank'

Until Congress does what JFK attempted (Executive Order 11110) to bring back our own coin we will be controlled by dark forces. So don't believe there is a difference between these two parties, the CFR, Trilateral, and International Banks control our everything.

Hey citizens have you read the Constitution and Bill of Rights, or will that interfear with the soaps and brainwashing of the media channels.

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» RE: See The Future America Posted by: ALANHESTER
» RE: See The Future America Posted by: Krain61
First order of business should be reform of the voting system
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Dec 5, 2006 11:11 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"The killer question: Do Democrats stick with comfortable Washington routines or make a new alliance with the people who just elected them?"

Elected - Grieder has it right. As the ripoff of Florida voters in Katherine Harris' old district shows, the voting system is still in need of reform. Once again, the corporate media is waving it's hands frantically - 'nothing to see here, folks'. I mean, more people voted for the hospital board then for the Congressional seat, according to the paperless touch-screen voting machines - riiight!

The solution to this issue is to legally require optical scan paper ballot systems, with no proprietary software or hardware allowed - complete transparency of the process. The marked paper ballots are available for recounts, and the optical scan machines are NOT EVER hooked up to phone lines or wireless networks; rather, using modern technology, they should capture a digital image of each ballot (easy to do!), inscribe the vote count on two non-rewritable CD's, one going to the statewide voting headquarters and one remaining locked in the optical scan machine until the election is officially certified - and all the paper ballots are stored under lock and key in case a recount is necessary. Simple, easy to do - anyone can do it.

The only reason for touch-screen voting machines and secretive proprietary contracts with privately owned corporations (Sequoia, Diebold, etc.) is the ease with which electoral fraud can be committed. I bet that the real vote in November 2006 would have left the Democrats with a veto-overriding majority - and I haven't even mentioned the fraudulent manipulation of the voter rolls, either.

Let's see if the new Democratic majority will address this topic - because if they don't, expect another Republican presidential 'victory' in 2008.

What you, gentle reader, can do is go to your county voting official with a written 'official public records request' in hand. The request should be for (1) a copy of the contract between the county and the private vendor supplying the machines, and (2) copies of all correspondence between the county and the vendor. Smile, be polite, and if they don't give you what you want contact www.eff.org or www.blackboxvoting.org and tell them exactly what happened - they may be able to help. Come on, do it! Would someone out there be interested in tallying the results? Moveon.org? People for the American Way?

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smells like wish fulfillment to me
Posted by: DaBear on Dec 5, 2006 12:33 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The whole piece is utter speculation while ignoring facts on the ground. Fun fiction but since I was looking for some correlation with reality in the piece, I feel betrayed by a waste of time.

I saw the writing on the wall for the Democrat party way back before in 1990, the year I woke up and refused to ever vote Dim or Repug ever again. While Greider holds his breath, I'm headin' to the pub for another pint. I'm buyin'....

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Politics are just that!
Posted by: Krain61 on Dec 5, 2006 3:20 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Who really thinks anything will change in this country? Were suckers for the best lies..We need to stop voting for polititions and get regular people who go out and earn money the old fashion way..They need to take a pay cut..We have ! Lobbiest should be jailed..Everything that's passed should be posted in it's entirty in the paper for us to decide if it passes.There nothing transparent in our system..There's to much pork which should also taken out..And if they really wanted to show us there serious they could repeal the FEDERAL RESERVE AND TELL EVERY AMERICAN how they have and likely will still be robbed by forien banks and tell the public how many billions just in interest goes over sea's each day of our money..

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Politicians Should Read These Comments
Posted by: faultroy on Dec 5, 2006 4:58 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am not going to comment on the specifics of other posters other than to say: Congratulations--job very well done.
These inciteful comments should be read by all politicians.
There are some very good and inciteful comments--regardless of your political affiliation.

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IMHO, Restoring the Constitution and securing the republic comes first
Posted by: LMNOP on Dec 6, 2006 7:28 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Getting out of Iraq comes first, but economic reform is close behind: the deteriorating middle class, globalization and its damaging impact on jobs and wages, corporate excesses and social abuses, the corruption of politics. Democrats ran on these issues, and voters chose them."

I would suggest that restoring the rule of law (impeachment and iindictments), redividing the federal government back into three branches, restoring the Bill of rights.

That means that the frst order of business is to reverse the Patriot Act, the Domestic Security Enhancement Act, the RealID Act, the Military Commissions Act of 2006 and the Defense Authorization Act, as well as beginning investigations into fraud, cronyism, profiteering and any other relevant malfeasance. And to restore and maintain integrity also means cleaning up the voting fiasco.

The war, the economy, restoring America's position in the world community - they can begin working on these problems concurrently, so yes, they should be attacked immediately and with urgency, but not as the highest priority. But if we had to prioritize, restoring the Constitution and the republic would have to come first I believe.

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People Party vs Money Party, we need clean elections
Posted by: 1Eco. on Dec 9, 2006 5:23 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sirota details who is for the people and who is with money.
see. People Party vs Money Party. yes most, so called leaders are on the money side now from both parties, however that may soon change. the truth is going to come out and corruption will not
be allowed. when the people slowly begin to learn the truth they will vote
for new leadership. we need to show that new leadership
at every front. this will take time, yet a sustainable energy
future is possible now. it comes soon enough as more people's party leaders begin to lead by example.

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Charles Rangel Wants You!
Posted by: Burton on Dec 10, 2006 3:01 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Representative Charles Rangel has talked about re-introducing the military draft. So now that the Dems are in power, will we be seing military conscription, as part of public service, perhaps? Are all you 18-25 year old men ready to be marched off to the Middle East?

By the way, shouldn't we also draft women?

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