All posts by Ellinorianne

I’m fighting Obamaphilia

Yes, I’m fighting it, not outwardly, but the inner struggle is what I am referring to.  I’m fighting Obamaphilia…


What the Cult of Obama doesn’t realize is that he’s a politician. Not a brave one taking risky positions like Ron Paul or Dennis Kucinich, but a mainstream one. He has not been firing up the Senate with stirring Cross-of-Gold-type speeches to end the war. He’s a politician so soft and safe, Oprah likes him. There’s talk about his charisma and good looks, but I know a nerd when I see one. The dude is Urkel with a better tailor.

All of this is clear to me, and yet I have fallen victim. I was at an Obama rally in Las Vegas last month, hanging at the rope line afterward in the cold night desert air, just to see him up close, to make sure he was real. I’d never heard a politician talk so bluntly, calling U.S. immigration policy “scapegoating” and “demagoguery.” I’d never had even a history teacher argue that our nation’s history is a series of brave people changing others’ minds when things were on the verge of collapse. I want the man to hope all over me.

LA Times

I want to resist, I really do.  I’ve got my inner cynical to fight, but there is something more than that, something that’s more important to me and that is my own sense of hope.  Corny, I know.

But my philosophy is, hope for the best, prepare for nothing less.  That’s right, I hope for the best and tell myself that if I don’t get that, I can deal with the worst later.  It’s not naive, I am also one of those people that believes our point of view can greatly increase our own inner wellbeing.  

The irony of this?  I struggle with chronic depression and yet I still push everyday for the best.  I smile and I try to be as kind and gentle with everyone, I turn the other cheek and I sometimes weaken and say things I regret.  But, I still hope for the best and I rely on faith, in myself, in the universe and in life that things will work out, those things that I cannot control will fall into place with or without my hope, so I might as well be positive.  What’s the harm?

I know, there are those who see plenty of harm, but this isn’t blind faith, I am aware of so many things, in fact, I tend to be the kind of person who does care too much and if I didn’t push forward with my silly optimism, I probably wouldn’t be able to get out of bed everyday.

I was talking to the receptionist of my company one day and I said, damn, I grouchy, I’m having a bad day.  She said, “What?  You grouchy?  No you are not, I love that you are always smiling and that you always take time to say hello.  I don’t think I’ve ever seen you in a bad mood!”.  That meant a lot to me.  I do believe that we can affect those around us, that the small things we do matter and I imagine if every single one of us attempted to be a little kinder, a little more patient and a little more hopeful, it could change the world.  People say that I’m a dreamer, but I’m not the only one.

So, fuck you say?  How the hell could I resist Obamaphilia?  I can’t.  I believe if you go into a fight thinking you can’t win, then you’ve already lost half the battle.  I believe that if you can’t talk big then how can you dream big?  And if you can’t imagine the change you want to be, then how can you even start?

Stein talks about how his mother just doesn’t get it, she fears for all those young people and the eventual heartbreak that life is so good at handing us.  


Obama is Peter Sellers in “Being There.” As a therapist, she’s seen the danger of ungrounded expectations. “You feel young again. You feel like everything is possible. He helps you feel that way and you want to feel that way; it’s a great marriage. Unfortunately, the divorce will happen very quickly.”

“We want what he represents,” she said. “A young, idealistic person who really believes it. And he believes it. He believes he can change the world. I just don’t think he can.”

Thing is, I’ve watched too many movies and read too many novels; I can’t root against a person who believes he can change the world. The best we Obamaphiles can do is to refrain from embarrassing ourselves. And I do believe that we can resist making more “We Are the World”-type videos. We can resist crying jags. We can resist, in every dinner argument and every e-mail, the word “inspiration.” Yes, we can.


But I agree with Stein and it’s the reason I’ve come around.  Oh, I have also spent a couple of nights at Obama’s website.  He has plans, I see that and I find that arguement against him to ring hollow.  I’m ready for something other than more of the same.  And even though my concerns are many, from the Reagan comments to the lack of mandates, I have decided that hope outweights these concerns and that it’s okay to hope for the better rather than prepare for the worst.

And there is another thing, Obama visited New Orleans and he said the following words…


So many of us live a life that is ordered, with comforts we can count on. Somewhere, we know, there are people who don’t have a house with a sturdy roof; who have nowhere to go when they can’t make rent; who don’t have a car to drive to another city when a storm is coming; who can’t get care when they’re sick, or get the education that would give them a chance at their dreams.

But too often, we lose our sense of common destiny; that understanding that we are all tied together; that when a woman has less than nothing in this country, that makes us all poorer.

and this…

We are tired of being disappointed by our politics. We are tired of being let down. We’re tired of hearing promises made and ten-point plans proposed in the heat of a campaign only to have nothing change when everyone goes back to Washington. Because the lobbyists just write another check. Or because politicians start worrying about how they’ll win the next election instead of why they should. Or because they focus on who’s up and who’s down instead of who matters.

And while Washington is consumed with the same drama and division and distraction, another family puts up a For Sale sign in the front yard. Another factory shuts its doors forever. Another mother declares bankruptcy because she cannot pay her child’s medical bills.

Each of us running for the Democratic nomination agrees on one thing that the other party does not – the next President must end the disastrous policies of George W. Bush. And both Senator Clinton and I have put forth detailed plans and good ideas that would do just that.

But I am running for President because I believe that to actually make change happen – to make this time different than all the rest – we need a leader who can finally move beyond the divisive politics of Washington and bring Democrats, Independents, and Republicans together to get things done. That’s how we’ll win this election, and that’s how we’ll change this country when I am President of the United States.

BarackObama.com

So you see, I have to believe, there is something in me that cannot fight hope, that cannot fight possibility and cannot fight another chance for something to change.  Does it mean it will work for sure?  No.  Does it mean that anything is guaranteed?  Of course not, there are no guarantees in life.  I’ve long ago accepted that there are many things that are out of my control, but I’ve also taken on the responsibility to be in control of those things I can change.  Perception is a powerful tool and rather than doing the same thing over and over again expecting a different result, I can change how I interact with the world and I can fight for change in my own way.


If you lose hope, somehow you lose the vitality that keeps life moving, you lose that courage to be, that quality that helps you go on in spite of it all. And so today I still have a dream.

Martin Luther King, jr.

And lastly, I am supporting Obama in spite of the many people at this site that have acted so poorly and call themselves an Obama supporter.  You do not do yourself or Obama any favors when your arguments prey on fear, on doubt and on hate.  I’ve been saddened to see so many negatives come from this site and I realize that just as Obama is a mere human being, so are all of us.  So just think before you type, breathe before you yell and ask yourself if what you are about to say is going to further hope or continue the same old bullshit of looking down and belittling anyone who doesn’t not see what you see or believe what you believe?

Update:  I am and will always be an Edwards supporter.  But that doesn’t mean I can’t support another candidate.  I was inspired by this man to be involved and to care again.  Now I want to stay involved and keep caring.  So no matter who the nominee is, I will continue to be involved and to push a progressive agenda within the Democratic Party.  Can I make a difference?  I don’t know, but it makes a difference TO ME, that I stay true to what I believe and that I continue to fight for what I think is right.  I don’t believe that tearing down the remaining candidates does anything to progress any agenda.

Keeping the Edwards message alive, what you can do now in the Primaries for Progressive issues!

This is a call to all those who support the progressive platform that John Edwards pushed throughout the primary season.  Even if you currently support another candidate actively, this is a call to you.  And even if you are just unable to support anyone but John, this is a call to you.  And even if you never actively supported John Edwards but you admired the stands he took on issues, there is something you can do.


Now, I’ve spoken to both Senator Clinton and Senator Obama. They have both pledged to me and more importantly through me to America, that they will make ending poverty central to their campaign for the presidency.

And more importantly, they have pledged to me that as President of the United States they will make ending poverty and economic inequality central to their Presidency. This is the cause of my life and I now have their commitment to engage in this cause.

http://www.johnedwards.com/new…

 

We need to help John hold them accountable and the way we can do that is use our voice, just as John has shown us, that we can speak out.  Whatever issue was important to you, take that issue and contact the other two remaining candidates and demand they not only address it but that they promise to keep their pledge to John.

Hillary Clinton for President

4420 North Fairfax Drive

Arlington, VA 22203

703-469-2008

Fax: 703-962-8600

http://www.hillaryclinton.com/…


Barack Obama for President

To reach the Campaign Headquarters by phone, please call: (866) 675-2008

You can contact us by mail at:

Obama for America

P.O. Box 8102

Chicago, IL 60680

http://my.barackobama.com/page…

I’m sure this is something that goes without saying, but be kind and respectful when talking about these issues with the people you call.  We are all Democrats (well many of us here) and this is not about the partisan infighting, this is about holding our party and our candidates accountable for what we believe the Democratic Party should stand for.

There will be no talking points and no script, just speak from your heart and let them know that these issues matter to you as a Democrat and as an American and that we demand that our candadites speak to all these issues.

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It is a revolutionary world we live in. Governments repress their people; and millions are trapped in poverty while the nation grows rich; and wealth is lavished on armaments.  

For the fortunate among us, there is the temptation to follow the easy and familiar paths of personal ambition and financial success so grandly spread before those who enjoy the privilege of education. But that is not the road history has marked for us.  

The future does not belong to those who are content with today, apathetic toward common problems and their fellow man alike. Rather it will belong to those who can blend vision, reason and courage in a personal commitment to the ideals and great enterprises of American society.

Robert F. Kennedy

http://www.rfkineky.org/projec…

Robert F. Kennedy went on a poverty tour in 1968, forty years ago this month.  “Kennedy’s purpose in touring eastern Kentucky was to examine the outcomes of the first wave of “war on poverty” legislation with the people it most affected.”  But what people remembered most about this tour was the fact that Robert spent so much time with individuals talking about their issues and struggles.  Robert make this part of his run for President and his reason for running also reminds me of John, “I do not run for the Presidency merely to oppose any man, but to propose new policies. I run because I am convinced that this country is on a perilous course and because I have such strong feelings about what must be done, and I feel that I’m obliged to do all I can.”


Kennedy stood on a ticket of racial and economic justice, non-aggression in foreign policy, decentralization of power and social improvement. A crucial element to his campaign was an engagement with the young, whom he identified as being the future of a reinvigorated American society based on partnership and equality.

Kennedy’s policy objectives did not sit well with the business world, in which he was viewed as something of a fiscal liability, opposed to the tax increases necessary to fund such programs of social improvement. When verbally attacked at a speech he gave during his tour of the universities he was asked, “And who’s going to pay for all this, senator?”, to which Kennedy replied with typical candor, “You are.” It was this intense and frank mode of dialogue with which Kennedy was to continue to engage those whom he viewed as not being traditional allies of Democrat ideals or initiatives.

Kennedy made urban poverty a chief concern of his campaign, which in part led to enormous crowds that would attend his events in poor urban areas or rural parts of Appalachia.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R…

A hatip to LaEscapee for the following piece, it draws parallels between John Edwards and Robert F. Kennedy by using their won words.  It is also the reason I included John’s speech at the DNC meeting in February ’07.

Suspended not Ended: John Edwards 08

And this is a plea to all those who never supported Edwards, I ask that you too read these or listen to the clip of John’s speech and try to understand why so many of us feel that John’s voice must be kept in the debate even if he is not officially a candidate.  This is not a call for votes nor a plea for anyone to change their minds.  This is merely another means to inspire you to remember why you call yourself a Demcorat and that we are all in this together, that we all have to speak out for these issues even if we do not agree on how they should be solved.

The following are clips from John Edwards speech during the DNC Winter Meeting and it’s amazing, just amazing.  I want you to look at these if you haven’t or even if you have so that you can see how Edwards stayed on message for an entire year and that he spoke to these issues with such passion and clarity.

We have to remember what brought us to Edwards, that he doesn’t just speak about why he needs to be President, but why we need to be the Party that we used to be.  We have to push the party to remember its roots and to remember who we stand for, it’s so important and that is why these issues go beyond John Edwards, but througout the heart of this party and the Country.  The only thing the last eight years have proven to us is that Republicans could give a rats ass about the everyday American.  They are the party of the Corporate hand outs and the endless wars.  

Highlights: John Edwards at the DNC Winter Meeting

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v…

Remarks on Poverty

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v…

Remarks on Health Care

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v…

Remarks on Energy and the Environment

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v…

And, the full text of this speech.  Why do I think this is important?  Because it was clear from the beginning that Edwards was talking about change for the Democratic Party and for our Country!  I also think this speech clearly shows where John was the first candidate of “change”.  He used the phrase “transformational change” in February of 2007 and he used the same phrase up to the very end his campaign was active in this race.


Washington, D.C.

February 2, 2007

Thank you.

We’re all here together – but why are we here?

Why are we here?

We are here because somewhere in America an eight-year old girl goes to sleep hungry, a little girl who ought to be drawing pictures and learning multiplication cries herself to sleep, praying that her father, who has been out of work for two years, will get a job again. It doesn’t have to be that way.

We are here because somewhere in America, a hotel housekeeper walks a picket line with her union brothers and sisters fighting for decent health care benefits during the day and works the late-shift at a diner at night so that she and her family can live a decent life and so her boy can go to college and have choices she never had. And somewhere a young man folds a college acceptance letter and puts it in his drawer because even with his part-time job and his mother’s second job, he knows he cannot afford to go. It doesn’t have to be that way.

We are here because somewhere in America a mother wipes her hand on a dishcloth to go answer a knock on her door … and opens it to find an army chaplain and an officer standing there with solemn faces and her boy’s name – her patriotic son who enlisted after September 11 – on their lips. It doesn’t have to be that way.

We are here because somewhere in the world, a 5-year old boy in a refugee camp is bending under the weight of his 2-year old sister. His family massacred, he carries his remaining sister everywhere, and sleeps with his arms wrapped tightly around her, knowing that tomorrow he will have to do the same thing, and again the next day and the day after that because she is all the family he has now. It doesn’t have to be that way.

We are here because somewhere in America a father comes home from the second shift and feels a raging fever on the brow of his sleeping daughter as he kisses her goodnight. And now, bone-weary and worried, he cradles that child in his arms at the emergency room, because there is nowhere else for him to go. It doesn’t have to be that way.

They are why we are here. Because everywhere in America, people are counting on us to stand up for them.

And so I ask you, will you stand up for that tired father forced into emergency rooms to get health care for his little girl?

Will you stand up for the brave young boy in the refugee camp?

Will you stand up for the working men and women in our labor movement who have to fight for decent working conditions and living wages?

Will you stand up for the young man who knows that education is his way out of the cycle of poverty and yet it seems beyond his grasp?

Will you stand up for that hungry eight-year old girl so she doesn’t give up on her life before it’s even begun?

Will you stand up for all the American families whose loved ones are serving in Iraq and Afghanistan?

Will you stand up?

Will you stand up for America?

Because if we don’t stand up, who will?

If we don’t speak out, who will?

Forty years ago, speaking in protest against the war in Vietnam on the eve of its escalation, the Reverend Doctor Martin Luther King said there comes a time when silence is betrayal. Silence is betrayal.

That time has come again. We cannot stand silent.

They have to hear you. Can they hear you?

I believe it is a betrayal not to speak out against the escalation of the war our nation is engaged in today, in Iraq.

It is a betrayal for this President to send more troops into harm’s way when we know it will not succeed in bringing stability to the region.

And it is not right by our silence to enable this President to escalate the war in Iraq. And we must not delude ourselves: our silence enables this President to escalate the war.

It is a betrayal not to stop the President’s plan when we have the responsibility, the power and the actual tools to prevent it.

Being satisfied with non-binding resolutions we know this President will ignore is a betrayal. And shutting down debate in the Senate on this issue is worse than a betrayal. It’s an outright denial of the people’s will.

And one more thing, while I’m at it.

You described yourself as “the decider.” I have news for you. The American people are the real “deciders,” Mr. President. And they are saying, “You have had your chance.”

Americans are speaking out. And our leaders must do no less.

You must stand up now against George Bush’s escalation of the war in Iraq. George Bush is counting on us not to stand up, not to fight against this escalation with everything we have. George Bush is counting on a Democratic Party that will not press for what we know is right.

Silence is betrayal.

Opposing this escalation with all the vigor and tools we have is a test of our political courage. And you’d better believe that George Bush, Dick Cheney and Karl Rove are betting that we don’t have that courage.

They don’t think we have it in us. They’re counting on their opponents to be weak, and political, and careful.

This is not the time for political calculation. This is the time for political courage. Stand up.

Being honest and changing course in Iraq is the first step in restoring America’s ability to provide moral leadership throughout the world. And make no mistake: America must lead. We are the pre-eminent, stabilizing power in the world. If we don’t stand up, who will?

This is the time for political courage – not only when it comes to speaking out against Iraq, but also about the challenges we face here at home.

Because, when it comes to 37 million Americans living in poverty, silence is betrayal.

One in every five children – count them, one in every five American children – live in poverty, here on the richest nation on the planet. It doesn’t have to be that way.

The causes of poverty are complex, entrenched, and powerful. And our will to address them and restore the promises of equality and social justice must be just as strong. Are you strong enough? Will you stand up to end poverty in America? It means addressing education, jobs, health care, housing, predatory lending, and personal responsibility. The fight will be long and it will not be easy. Are you ready? Will you use your voice against poverty, or will you stand silent? Stand up. Stand up to eradicate poverty in America.

When it comes to 47 million Americans without health care, silence is betrayal.

The 47 million are silent victims of a health care system gone wrong, where policies are driven by profits not patient care. We have to stop letting the health insurance companies and the big pharmaceutical concerns decide our nation’s health care policy. We have to give the silent victims, who stand in line at free clinics and use the expired medicines of friends and neighbors, we have to give them the dignity of universal health care.

And while we’re at it, we have to stop using words like “access to health care” when we know with certainty those words mean something less than universal care. Who are you willing to leave behind without the care he needs? Which family? Which child?

We need a truly universal solution, and we need it now.

Will you stand up for universal health insurance in America?

And it’s time we stood up for an energy policy that’s not dictated by the profit margins of Big Oil — and an environmental policy that’s not promoted by or regulated by polluters. Today, not tomorrow, or in the next decade or in the next generation. Today, our planet is at risk, and here, again, silence is betrayal.

So, will you speak out? Will you stand up?

These are the great moral imperatives of our time. And by breaking the silence we are not breaking faith with our flag or our forefathers or our brave young men and women in uniform. We are keeping faith with America.

Because we are better than this. We are better than this.

We should be the bright light, the beacon for all the world.

We are not the country of the Superdome in New Orleans after Katrina;

We are not the country of Abu Ghraib or Guantanamo;

We are not the country of secret surveillance and government behind closed doors.

We are Americans, and we’re better than that.

And we are Democrats, the party of action – not reaction. We are Democrats, the party of principle – not appeasement. The time for half-measures, empty promises, and sweet rhetoric is gone. Now is the time for courage, decisiveness and moral leadership.

It’s time to stand up for the promise of America again — and for the principle that every American matters, no matter where you come from, or what color your skin is, or how much money you have in your pocket.

Let’s stand up for the working people whose labor made this country great. America was built by men and women who worked with their hands. And organized labor has fought for and made better the lives of every working man and woman, by giving them a voice – labor never stands silent where wrongs need to be righted. Will you stand with them? It is time we acknowledged that it is organized labor, which has protected the American worker against mistreatment by corporate America. I am proud to stand beside organized labor? Will you stand with them, too? Will you walk with them and march with them?

We know one thing for sure: it is time to be patriotic about something other than war. It is time to do what you know is right and to speak out against what you know is wrong.

Not tomorrow. Now. Speak out now, take action now.

We don’t have to wait to see if someone keeps the promises of a 2008 campaign. In fact, the transformational change this country needs cannot wait until January 2009.

Tomorrow begins today. And our obligation to act starts right here, right now.

Because somewhere in America, because everywhere in America, people are counting on us to stand by them and to fight alongside them for what we know in our hearts is right.

So let’s stand up together. We have always been the party of promise who stood with the working man and woman, the party of hope who stood with the needy, the party of compassion who stood with the young and the old and the frail. It is who we are.

In times like these, we don’t need to redefine the Democratic Party; we need to reclaim the Democratic Party.

Thank you, God bless you and God bless this great country.

And for those who doubt that John Edwards has given us a call to arms, all you need to do is read from his speech in New Orleans, just one week ago from today and you can see that he was addressing something more than just his Presidnential Campaign, but to the very heart of this party and the fight to reclaim this Country for the right reasons.


I began my presidential campaign here (New Orleans) to remind the country that we, as citizens and as a government, have a moral responsibility to each other, and what we do together matters. We must do better, if we want to live up to the great promise of this country that we all love so much.

All of you who have been involved in this campaign and this movement for change and this cause, we need you. It is in our hour of need that your country needs you. Don’t turn away, because we have not just a city of New Orleans to rebuild. We have an American house to rebuild.

This work goes on. It goes on right here in Musicians’ Village. There are homes to build here, and in neighborhoods all along the Gulf. The work goes on for the students in crumbling schools just yearning for a chance to get ahead. It goes on for day care workers, for steel workers risking their lives in cities all across this country. And the work goes on for two hundred thousand men and women who wore the uniform of the United States of America, proud veterans, who go to sleep every night under bridges, or in shelters, or on grates, just as the people we saw on the way here today. Their cause is our cause.



Their struggle is our struggle. Their dreams are our dreams.

Do not turn away from these great struggles before us. Do not give up on the causes that we have fought for. Do not walk away from what’s possible, because it’s time for all of us, all of us together, to make the two Americas one.

Thank you. God bless you, and let’s go to work. Thank you all very much.

So, I ask you, what do you chose to do?  I will end with this amazing quote from John that was pointed out to me by NCDemAmy.  It’s from Four Trials, which I actually read last year and it’s perfect for the occassion.


I have learned two great lessons–that there will always be heartache and

struggle, and that people of strong will can make a difference. One is a

sad lesson; the other is inspiring. I choose to to be inspired.

I’m asking you, because your candidate is out of the race, are you going to chose to be sad and do nothing, or are you going to chose to be inspired?  And for those of you who never supported John, are you going to continue to be angry at those who don’t support your candidate now or are you going to chose to be inspired by their passion and their ideals? Are you going to help your candidate woo them by addressing these very real issues rather than bullying and delcaring that a vote for John is a vote that is lost.

Nothing was lost by supporting John Edwards and so much was gained for this party and can still be gained for all of us who want to keep this message alive and well in 2008 and beyond.


You can be disappointed, but you can’t walk away.

John Edwards – November 2nd, Election Night, Front of Kerry supporters gathered in Boston.

John Edwards, “Your voice will be heard”



We are trying to construct a more inclusive society. We are going to make a country in which no one is left out.

Franklin D. Roosevelt


And then — and then, finally, if you’re one of the millions of Americans who have yet to cast your vote in this democratic process, beginning on February 5th and moving beyond, your voice will be heard and we will be there with you every single step of the way.

Join us in this movement. Join in this campaign. Let’s make America what it’s capable of being.

God bless you all and thank you for your support and thank you for being here and thank you for your voice.

John Edwards is asking that everyone’s voice be heard.  Isn’t that part of this Democracy?  Letting all voices be heard?   We may not always like what they have to say, but they have a right to speak.  The current problem we face is that the system allows those with the means to drown out those who do not.  99% of the people are being shouted down by the top 1%.  How can we let this continue?

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JOHN EDWARDS: Thank you all very much.

I want to join Senator Clinton and President Clinton in congratulating Senator Obama.

Now, the three of us move on to February 5th…

(APPLAUSE)

… where millions of Americans will cast their vote and help shape the future of this party and help shape the future of America.

Our campaign from the very beginning has been about one central thing and that is to give voice to millions of Americans who have absolutely no voice in this democracy, to give voice…

(APPLAUSE)

… to give voice to people like the woman I met in Kansas City a couple of years ago, who told me the story of working full-time and not being able to pay both her heating bill and her rent and having to come home every night in the winter and dress her children in all of their clothes, in their coats, put them under blankets and put them in bed together so they could stay warm.

snip

… you are worried, worried because you’ve lost your job and you’re worried sick about finding a new job, your voice will be heard in this campaign.

If you’re one of 37 million Americans who wake up every single day literally worried about feeding and clothing your children and living in poverty, your voice will be heard in America and it will be heard in this campaign and we will speak for you and we will fight for you.

snip

And if you’re one of the forgotten middle class, people who are working and struggling just to pay their bills, literally worried about every single day, we will give you voice in this campaign.

And last, if you are one of the extraordinary men and women who have served this country patriotically and worn the uniform of the United States of America and you’re not getting the health care that you deserve and you need or if you’re one of 200,000 veterans who live in this country, who, every night, go to sleep under bridges or in shelters or on grates, as long as we are alive and breathing, your voice will be heard in this campaign and it will be heard in America.

New York Times

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Your voice will be heard, but only, only if John Edwards stays in this race.  And because of the virtual media brown out, we have to speak for John Edwards and let everyone know his presence is essential to the process.  We may have to fight to be heard, we may have to write letters, call people and canvass to be heard, but we have to speak out and use our voice for John.  It’s that simple.

I sincerely believe that many of the issues that Obama and Clinton are focusing on would not have the same time in the spotlight as they do now (and no, I am not implying that Obama and Clinton don’t care about these issues).  Edwards won the debate heard round the world and it really was the reason for Edwards’ surge in the middle of the week, people saw something that they’d been longing for, someone who cares about what they want in a new President.  This is about Americans and their needs not the needs of our politicians.  The bickering will not get any of the things that are badly needed in this country.  It will get us a nominee, but it won’t help Democrats rally the party around the most important issues to them.  We have to be the party of ideas now (Well, I think we always have been).

This is why John needs to stay in this race, he has to remain as the voice of reason and as the conscience of the party.  And I know that this is not news for any of the steady Edwards supporters, we’re in it until John says he’s no longer going to fight.  We fight for him until he says that his fight is over.

And everyone knows about the letter from Martin Luther King III and I know we’ve posted it, but King makes the argument for why I still support Edwards.  Edwards is the voice of the voiceless and he is pushing the issue of poverty and economic injustice to be heard and recognized as a real threat to our Democracy.


“I am disturbed by how little attention the topic of economic justice has received during this campaign,” wrote King. “I want to challenge all candidates to follow your lead, and speak up loudly and forcefully on the issue of economic justice in America.

“From our conversation yesterday, I know this is personal for you. I know you know what it means to come from nothing. I know you know what it means to get the opportunities you need to build a better life. And, I know you know that injustice is alive and well in America, because millions of people will never get the same opportunities you had.

“I believe that now, more than ever, we need a leader who wakes up every morning with the knowledge of that injustice in the forefront of their minds, and who knows that when we commit ourselves to a cause as a nation, we can make major strides in our own lifetimes.”

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The curse of poverty has no justification in our age. It is socially as cruel and blind as the practice of cannibalism at the dawn of civilization, when men ate each other because they had not yet learned to take food from the soil or to consume the abundant animal life around them. The time has come for us to civilize ourselves by the total, direct and immediate abolition of poverty.

Martin Luther King, Jr., Where Do We Go from Here: Chaos or Community?, 1967.

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Can you believe that 41 years later our Country still faces an abundance of poverty?  We have the money to fight useless wars but not the money to feed and care for those who need our help.  How can we let this stand?  Is this not a moral issue?  How can we call ourselves the leaders of the free world when 47 million of our people have no health care?  How?


   “I think our voices together are more powerful than our voices alone.”

   “Today, too many Americans are separated from the opportunities of our country because of where they live,”

   “This is our time now. It falls to use to redeem our democracy, reclaim our government and relight the promise of America for our children.”

   “I have learned there are much more important things in life than winning elections at the cost of selling your soul.”

   “I don’t believe open government means popular answers in public and honest candor in private.”

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I’m extremely proud of this diary, John Edwards says, “There is nothing we can’t do if we do it together.” and I am going to include some of it here.


Democrats must take stands and must show how their interests are not about making the The Democratic Party the only party, but making the Democratic Party, the Party of change, of hope and of convictions, that puts people before profits and that works for it’s people, not against them.  These stands don’t just benefit Democrats either, it is in the best interest of every American, regardless of ethnicity, religion or gender.  And that’s why we have to fight to take the Government back by showing Republicans that we have OPINIONS, those are not bad things.  I’d much rather lose by having strong opinions than lose by having luke warm stands that can’t be offensive to anyone, because you know what?  That doesn’t excite people, it doesn’t get them to vote and it doesn’t show them how the Government can work in their favor.

   

“There’s a wall around Washington and we need to take it down. The American people are on the outside. And on the other side, on the inside, are the powerful, the well-connected and the very wealthy. That wall didn’t build itself or appear overnight. For decades, politicians without convictions and powerful interests gathered their bricks and their stones and their mortar, and they went to work. They went to work to protect their interests, to block the voice of the American people, and to stop our country’s progress. They went to work to protect, defend, and maintain the status quo.

   “That wall around Washington, it protects a system that’s rigged and guess who struggles as a result? Every single day, working men and women see that wall when they have to split their bills into two piles pay-now and pay-later; when they watch the factory door shut for the last time; when they see the disappointment on their son or daughter’s face when there’s no money to pay for college. Every single day they see that wall when they have to use the emergency room as a doctor’s office for their son because they can’t afford to pay for health care. This is not okay. That wall has to come down.

   …

   “That’s why America needs a fighter, Democrats. We need one to break down that wall so that we can see Our America-imagine Our America-and build one America.

   …

   “This is bigger than politics. Bigger than any candidate or political party. Because the truth is that it’s not just Republicans who built this wall. Democrats helped too. Too many politicians from both parties are choosing self-preservation over principle, compromise over convictions.

   “You have a choice in this election. You have to decide what kind of person you want as your next president. Do you want someone who is going to pretend that wall around Washington isn’t there, or defend the people who helped build it? Or do you want someone who is going to lead with conviction and tell you the truth, and have a little backbone? Do you want someone who is going to hope that the people who spent millions of dollars and decades building that wall, and have billions more invested in keeping it up, are going to be willing to compromise, to take it down voluntarily? Or do you want someone who is going to stand up to those people and fight for your interests, when the chips are down, when your backs are against the wall, every single day?

   “We have a choice in this election. We can keep trying to shout over that wall. We can keep trying to knock out a chink here and there, to punch little holes in it and hope our voices get through. We can settle for baby steps, half-measures and incremental change, and try to inch our way over that wall and toward a better future. Or we can be bold and knock it down. …

   “This is going to be the fight of our lives. I know because I’ve spent my whole life fighting the powerful on behalf of hard-working people, and I can tell you this: they are not going to give up their power easily. But I can also tell you this: if you fight them – and you are right – you can win.

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The test of our progress is not whether we add more to the abundance of those who have much it is whether we provide enough for those who have little.

Franklin D. Roosevelt

And even more telling, others are noticing Edwards as well, overseas.


John Edwards has pushed issues of poverty – homelessness, hunger, lack of health insurance, lack of worker rights, the decimation of America’s trade union movement – back into the forefront of the American political debate. Even if Edwards fails in his quest for the presidential nomination, his contribution has been extraordinary. So, how about the candidate making a second job promise: John Edwards ought to be declared Labour Secretary-designate. It would piss off corporate America to no end, but it would be a brave choice and would give working Americans a powerful reason to go to the polls come Election Day. In such a role, Edwards could end up being as powerful a voice for reform as was FDR’s labour secretary Frances Perkins during the New Deal years.

We’re a long way from November, but I’d love to see a Democratic ticket with not just strong presidential and vice-presidential candidates, but Anderson and Edwards also in the wings. That would be a slate seriously worth voting for.

Guardian UK

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Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter.

Martin Luther King, Jr.

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In the first 25 days of this quarter, campaign has raised more online than the whole 4th quarter – the vast majority of which will be doubled by federal matching funds

Do you want to help keep John fighting?  Donate to his campaign!

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Edwards comes to California to set the rest of the Country in the right direction, his!

On a union rooftop in downtown LA, I stood and waited for John Edwards.  I took day off from work to drive from Irvine to LA.  The traffic was bearable and I managed some parking as well.  I ran into other local Edwards supporters from Orange County who were volunteering through the Progressive Democrats of America.  It was nice to see some friendly faces and I was eager to hear John Speak, as was the rest of the crowd.  They broke into changing “John Edwards” and their enthusiasm gave me the chills.

It seemed like people were paying attention, that they knew we had to give him a chance to speak and I really hope more than the people on the rooftop will have a chance to hear what he said, it’s for all of us.

Go here, to Brad Blog for the entire speech, it is well worth the listen and it was amazing.

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John made an important point about why California mattered this year.  Are you reading this California? If you support Edwards, it is imparative that you not only vote for him, but that you make your presence known, let people know John is still in the race, not just for you or me, but from them too.


“I am an underdog campaign, but this is where you come in,” he said in closing, his voice rising. “You can help us here in California, help a grassroots movement that spreads across this state, that spreads across this country. When that tidal wave of change is finished, we will be able to look our children in eye and say, ‘We did for our you what our parents did for us.'”

Edwards took the time to criticize Arnold for his massive spending cuts to Education, Health Care, etc.   The state is losing revenue from guess what?  That’s right, the housing crisis.  The last thing we need to cut are services that help families that are on the verge of losing their homes or are upside down on their mortgages due to the huge decline in housing values.  My home has lost 10% of it’s value in one year, what if I have a major illness?  What if I lose my job?  I would be that much closer to losing my home when it’s not even worth what I bought for a year ago.

He fired up the crowd by ripping into California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s proposed education and state health care budget cuts. “The last thing that needs to happen in the state of California is to have any of the funding that is that is necessary to provide health care for Californians cut,” he said, adding: “Who in the world in America thinks we have too much money invested in public education? This makes absolutely no sense.”

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Above are three of the people who helped introduce Edwards to the LA Crowd in the downtown headquarters of a local SEIU Union Hall.  I really enjoyed Annelle Grajeda’s introduction the most, she really focussed on why Edwards is the candidate not just for union families, but working families.


“John Edwards is the change candidate in this campaign — the candidate with not only the boldest ideas for change, but the candidate who can win in November, strengthen Democratic majorities in Congress and at the state level, and make his ideas a reality,” said SEIU CA State Council President Annelle Grajeda. “John Edwards can go to any part of the country and help Democrats down-ballot. With John Edwards as our nominee, we can get the change we need.”

“I’m proud to support John Edwards because he understands, better than any other candidate, the challenges facing working Americans,” said L.A. City Councilman Richard Alarcón. “Whether it’s truly universal health care, fixing America’s trade policy or ending America’s involvement in Iraq, John Edwards has offered real solutions to the challenges Americans face, and he’s determined to be a voice for regular people. I truly believe we need his leadership in the White House.”

“After eight years of George Bush, it is critical that we have a Democrat in the White House,” said L.A. City Councilman Herb Wesson. “We need a candidate who can bring real change to America and who can win. That candidate is John Edwards. He can compete and win in every part of the country, including red states and battleground states because Americans identify with who he is and what he stands for – fairness and opportunity and making sure everyone has a chance.”

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Alercon made a great point, why are we paying so much attention to New Hampshire and Iowa?  Californians need to change the tone of the race and really send the most important message of all, well monied campaigns are great, but it doesn’t mean they have to win, even in big states like California.


“I’m asking you, California, are you going to follow Iowa? Are you going to follow New Hampshire? Or are you going to stand alone as Californians and also send a message across America?”

http://www.azstarnet.com/sn/po…

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John addressed an issue that is so important to Californians, alternative sources of power.  I came across this on youtube from yesterday’s rally and wanted to add it.

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Didn’t take this one, it was from the opposite side of the rooftop.

The comments that hit me the most are the ones about comparing the the wages and bonuses of CEO’s (Health care CEO makes 200 million) and the profits of large corporations (Oil company rakes in 40 BILLION in profits as families struggle to pay for heating oil!) to the millions of Americans who are lacking Health Care, housing, food and education.  

John Edwards does not want to cut profits and wages, he wants to insure that no one is left behind while the people on top profit to excess.  It’s the disparity that’s troublesome to me, to John and to many others.  At what point is it okay to make a profit while denying coverage to people who pay their benefits?  And John is standing his ground on Mandates, he’s proud to say his plan requires that people get health care and that pre-existing conditions will be a thing of the past.  Your health care should go with you, where ever you work and what ever you do.  Imagine that?

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You could tell how much he loved the crowd and how happy he was to be there, his energy level was amazing as was his candor, his honesty and his ability to bring it down to just a few important points.  The system is broken and when it does work, it’s working for far too few and leaving so many out, mostly working families and single household families with working mothers.  (Personal rant, why the hell can’t we help those women who stick, who stay to raise their children?  Why must shelters turn away women with children to go back to the streets?  How is this okay in any society?  I ask this as a child of a single mother, who lived in dingy apartments, relatives basements and other conditions to escape an abusive relationship.  This was a bold move for my mother to make in 1972 and it’s not any easier 35 years later?)

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“To get real change, we need a president who will stand up against the big corporations and powerful interests who control Washington,” said Edwards. “The American people – whether they live in rural areas or urban areas, red states or blue states – need a President who will stand up for them. As President, I will make sure the voices of all Americans are heard in Washington. If we fight together, we can get the change we need and America will rise.”

And there were a few times where John had to stop talking because th cheering was just not going to quit.  He loved it, he knew his message was getting to the right people.  

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The photo I took as I tried to get closer and talk to John. Ha!  Right.

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This is where I was, in the back, happy to see all the media and news vans, thank God.

At the end John was swarmed by so many people and I had chosen to be far back rather than up front where I started.  I regret not being a bit closer, just so I could at least tell him one thing, I’m proud that I support him, I’m proud of the campaign he’s running and I don’t regret being such a vocal supporter of his, he’s really proven to me that I made the right choice.  He’s still fighting, so I too will continue.

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This woman and her son were waiting to say hi to John, but she didn’t dare try to push forward, so I asked if I could take their photo.  Her son was so happy to be there too, he was bouncing, he was giggling and he was joyful.  It made my day!

And here are some photos of the rally that other people took, which are so much better than mine.  I need a nicer camera!

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I voted for John yesterday as did my Mother.  She was happy too.

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I saved this from our kick off meeting, Orange County for Edwards.  It’s Stephanie, my cousin and some kid I found hanging out at my house 🙂

Here is a local report of Edwards’ visit.

And last but not least, please don’t foget today is the day.  Edwards can raise money, please donate!

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I waited until today to donate $100.  I don’t have it really but I’m still doing it because I think it’s that important.  

Why Iowa is Still a Win for Edwards

Yesterday was the largest turn out for an Iowa Caucus ever and so many of those who came to caucus were young and as they would say “Fired up and ready to go”. And went they did. Obama won the night and his supporters are celebrating.

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Elizabeth and John Celebrate their victoryBut there is a story that’s being ignored by the mainstream media, it’s still a two person race to them but in the eye of many Edwards supporters, last night was a victory for him as well. And no, Edwards did not concede in his speech last night, because it’s not over and I think that since he had the most attention he’s probably gotten so far by the MSM the last thing he wanted to do was talk about a “loss”. Rather than that, he focussed on what is so important to him and his focus for his campaign, Edwards continues to talk about the poor, the homeless and the disenfranchised in our Country. He wasn’t there to talk about candidates, but the people who still have no voice.

Edwards released a statement regarding Obama’s win and said that he called him personally to congratulate him.

   

“Earlier tonight, I called Senator Obama to congratulate him on his victory in the Iowa caucuses. Tonight’s results shows how clearly the American people are sick of the status quo and ready for a president who will fight for the bold change America needs. “

And, I sincerely believe that this is a win for all Democrats. Almost twice as many Democrats came out to caucus than Republicans and the race is tight right now to show that we have a tough decision to make, that we have three amazing candidates to chose from, there is no loss here for Edwards or for any Democrat.

If you did not have a chance to see Edwards’ post Iowa Caucus debate, please take the time to do so, it is at the end of my post. This is why this man inspires me, this is why I care so much about this election, more than I have ever before. And the good news is, more people are going to hear his message.

It also means money for his campaign. Today they released a statement saying that yesterday is “putting the campaign on track for its best online fundraising day to date.” And half of those who contributed were first time donors and more than 90% were donations under $100. This is the campaign that relies on small money donations rather than lobbyist and PAC money, every cent counts.

So, what does this have to do with California? In order for California to count we have to help Edwards win Nevada. I am planning to drive to Las Vegas on the weekend of the 12th in order to canvass and phone bank for Edwards and the Nevada supporters have pledge to come to California and help us do the same for our Primary on February 5th.

Just three more days to New Hampshire and this whole nomination process has been knocked on it’s butt. It’s no longer a two person race and thanks to Edwards, it’s no longer about “Politics as usual”.

Cross posted from The Liberal OC

John Edwards and America Rising

We Will Right The Wrongs, Make Our Nation The Way We Want It To Be – That’s America Rising

As he opened an eight-day bus tour across the state this afternoon, there were reminiscent strains of his 2004 message in the air at the Polk County Convention Center as he presented his closing theme for this campaign: “America Rising.”

I wrote a Diary that was very important to me and heartfelt.  And this new 8 day bus tour only reinforces my assertion that John Edwards is going to do all he can to make the system work for everyone again, not just those who have the money and power to influence the process, but those who go to bed hungry, those who don’t dream of going to college because of money, those who worry about how they will pay their next mortgage payment and those who are doing well today but could find themselves financially ruined because of a catastrophic illness or accident.

This campaign is more about America than it is about John Edwards and it’s more about lifting up those who have been held down for far too long.  I sincerely believe that Edwards has seen how the power of the Government has been abused by the few at the cost of the many.  

John Edwards needs every single voter to rise to the occasion and make a choice.  We need to stand up and be heard, as Edwards in the past has so eloquently said, “I think our voices together are more powerful than our voices alone.”  That too is America Rising.


America Rising

December 10, 2007

Excerpts From prepared remarks

“I grew up in a family where my grandmother walked to work at the mill every day wearing her apron. My grandfather, who was partially paralyzed, hauled rolls of cloth using one arm. My dad worked in those mills for 36 years, my mom worked too – all of them for one reason – to give us a chance to rise up and have a better life.

“That’s the greatness of America – the promise that every generation will give its children the chance to rise higher, dream bigger, live greater. I took the chances my parents gave me and spent my life fighting to make sure that people just like the people I grew up with had a real chance in the world. When indifferent, irresponsible corporations knocked them down, I was there to help them rise up.

“And that’s what drives me now. When I talk about the Two Americas, this is what I mean – the very wealthiest and most powerful have manipulated our government for their own ends. They use their wealth and their power to keep themselves wealthy and powerful at the expense of everyone else. And when they do that, they’re holding America back.

“But that’s about to change. You can feel it here in Iowa. Because America can’t be held back. Because America belongs to us.

“When we face obstacles, you know what we do? We get up. We rise up. We right wrongs and we make our nation the way we want it to be. That’s what’s happening in this election. That’s what’s happening here in Iowa. America is rising.

“When we lift 37 million Americans out of poverty – that’s America Rising. When we guarantee universal health care for every man, woman, and child in America – that’s America Rising. When we stop reckless trade deals that send American jobs overseas and create great jobs here – that’s America Rising. When we can look James Lowe in the eye and say with conviction, what you lived through will never happen again in our America – that’s America Rising.”

JohnEdwards.com

Toward the end, he said: “Are we going to be looking for careful political calculation, or are we going to be looking for bold, strong leadership for the United States?”

That’s a very important question, what are we looking for? I’m looking for someone who is not afraid to take a stand, who is not afraid to say “I was wrong” and who is not afraid to ask the tough questions.

And for those who have counted Edwards out, I have this for you:

As candidates prepare to chart their last movements across Iowa – selecting the itineraries for their bus tours, crafting the message of their final arguments – Mr. Edwards has an institutional memory that other candidates must rely on their strategists to provide. Yes, there are as many differences as similarities between the race of 2004 and 2008, but the ingrained experiences for Mr. Edwards should not be overlooked.

“You’ve got to believe there’s going to be some movement,” Mr. Edwards said, recalling his “dramatic rise” at this point in the campaign four years ago. Asked how that experience helps, he added: “I know these people. I know what they care about.”

“Rigged” features John Edwards speaking directly to New Hampshire voters about how the system in Washington is corrupt and rigged against hardworking Americans on behalf of the moneyed corporate interests.

John Edwards’ latest television ad airing in New Hampshire:

“We don’t have universal health care because of drug companies, insurance companies, and their lobbyists in Washington, D.C.”

This is my reason for standing up, Charlotte, a happy, healthy little girl who has so much ahead of her.  She doesn’t have a care in the world, this was her this Saturday at the Southern California GCN Christmas Party.  What’s that?  It’s the Gay Christian Network and I’m a proud Christian Ally for the gay, lesbian and transgender community, I want to stand up for those who don’t have many of the legal rights that many take for granted.  Why bring my daughter?  Because I want her to know many different people and understand the blessing it is to have a varied community.  I guess you could say they are part of my village.  So I’m rising for Charlotte, I want her to have all the opportunities that I’ve had and more.

By the way, that’s her with a bit of table decor in her mouth, she’s by far the silliest person I know.  Why do I share this?  Because this is a personal choice and we all have our own reasons, I want people know that my personal choice has to do with this person in my life.

John Edwards: The Moral Test of our Generation

John Edwards gave an amazing speech today at St. Anselm’s College, Manchester, New Hamphshire and has solidifed for me the reason I’ve chosen to support him as the nominee for President.  He’s saying things that are right but not easy to say.  He’s been consistant on these things and I think he makes it clear that he asked himself all the right questions.

Please take the time to read his remarks, they are amazingly candid, lucid and beautifully empathetic to the trials of those who are slipping right out of the middle class.  Their fight is everyone’s fight, we are in this together and it’s time to rid ourselves of the “Screw you, I’ve got mine” politics that have been going on for far too long.

He celebrates the victories of this Country of ours, it’s patriotic without pandering and it’s honest without being patronizing.  “As Americans we are blessed — for our ancestors are not dead, they occupy the corridors of our conscience. And, as long we keep the faith — they live. And so too the America of idealism and hope that was their gift to us.”

Remarks by Senator John Edwards
St. Anselm’s College, Manchester, New Hamphshire
October 29, 2007

Many of you know that I am the son of a mill worker — that I rose from modest means and have been blessed in so many ways in life. Elizabeth and I have so much to be grateful for.

And all of you know about some of the challenges we have faced in my family. But there came a time, a few months ago, when Elizabeth and I had to decide, in the quiet of a hospital room, after many hours of tests and getting pretty bad news — what we were going to do with our lives.

And we made our decision. That we were not going to go quietly into the night — that we were going to stand and fight for what we believe in.

As Elizabeth and I have campaigned across America, I’ve come to a better understanding of what that decision really meant — and why we made it.

Earlier this year, I spoke at Riverside Church in New York, where, forty years ago, Martin Luther King gave a historic speech. I talked about that speech then, and I want to talk about it today. Dr. King was tormented by the way he had kept silent for two years about the Vietnam War.

He was told that if he spoke out he would hurt the civil rights movement and all that he had worked for — but he could not take it any more — instead of decrying the silence of others — he spoke the truth about himself.

“Over the past two years” he said, “I have moved to break the betrayal of my own silence and speak from the burning of my own heart.”

I am not holier than thou. I am not perfect by any means. But there are events in life that you learn from, and which remind you what this is really all about. Maybe I have been freed from the system and the fear that holds back politicians because I have learned there are much more important things in life than winning elections at the cost of selling your soul.

Especially right now, when our country requires so much more of us, and needs to hear the truth from its leaders.

And, although I have spent my entire life taking on the big powerful interests and winning — which is why I have never taken a dime from Washington lobbyists or political action committees — I too have been guilty of my own silence — but no more.

It’s time to tell the truth. And the truth is the system in Washington is corrupt. It is rigged by the powerful special interests to benefit they very few at the expense of the many. And as a result, the American people have lost faith in our broken system in Washington, and believe it no longer works for ordinary Americans. They’re right.

As I look across the political landscape of both parties today — what I see are politicians too afraid to tell the truth — good people caught in a bad system that overwhelms their good intentions and requires them to chase millions of dollars in campaign contributions in order to perpetuate their careers and continue their climb to higher office.

This presidential campaign is a perfect example of how our politics is awash with money. I have raised more money up to this point than any Democratic candidate raised last time in the presidential campaign — $30 million. And, I did it without taking a dime from any Washington lobbyist or any special interest PAC.

I saw the chase for campaign money at any cost by the frontrunner in this race — and I did not join it — because the cost to our nation and our children is not worth the hollow victory of any candidate. Being called president while powerful interests really run things is not the same as being free to lead this nation as president of a government of the people, by the people, and for the people. If protecting the current established structure in Washington is in your interest, then I am not your candidate. I ran for president four years ago — yes, in part out of personal ambition — but also with a deep desire to stand for working people like my father and mother — who no matter how hard things were for our family, always worked even harder to make things better for us.

But the more Elizabeth and I campaigned this year, the more we talked to the American people, the more we met people just like my father, and hard working people like James Lowe. James is a decent and honest man who had to live for 50 years with no voice in the richest country in the world because he didn’t have health care. The more people like him that I met, the more I realized something much bigger was stirring in the American people. And it has stirred in each of us for far too long.

Last month Ken Burns — who made the great Civil War documentary — launched his newest epic on World War II on PBS — and what a story it tells.

At the cost of great suffering, blood and enormous sacrifice, within four years after Pearl Harbor it is incredible what this nation achieved. America built the arsenal of democracy worthy of our great history. We launched the greatest invasion armada in the history of warfare against Hitler’s fortress Europe, and, with our allies, we freed a continent of suffering humanity.

At the same time on the other side of the globe we crossed 10,000 miles of ocean and liberated another hemisphere of humanity — islands and nations freed from the grip of Japanese militarists. While at the same time succeeding in the greatest scientific endeavor ever undertaken — the Manhattan project — and topped it off with building the Pentagon, one of the largest buildings in the world in a little over a year.

It is incredible what America has accomplished. Because no matter what extraordinary challenges we have been faced with, we did exactly what America has always done in our history — we rose to the challenge.

And, now, as I travel across America and listen to people, I hear real concern about what’s going on. For the first time in our nation’s history, people are worried that we’re going to be the first generation of Americans not to pass on a better life to our children.

And it’s not the fault of the American people. The American people have not changed. The American people are still the strong, courageous people they have always been. The problem is what our government has become. And, it is up to us to do something about it.

Because Washington may not see it, but we are facing a moral crisis as great as any that has ever challenged us. And, it is this test — this moral test — that I have come to understand is at the heart of this campaign.

Just look at what has happened in Iraq. What was the response of the American people to the challenge at hand? Our men and women in uniform have been heroes. They’ve done everything that’s been asked of them and more. But what about our government? Four years after invading Iraq, we cannot even keep the lights on in Baghdad.

When Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans, the American people were at their best. They donated their time and their money in record numbers. There was an outpouring of support. I took 700 college kids down to help — young people who gave up their spring break. But what about our government? Three years after hurricane Katrina thousands of our fellow Americans, our brothers and sisters, are still housed in trailers waiting to go home.

There’s no better example of the bravery and goodness of the American people than the response to the attacks of 9/11: firefighters and first responders risking and too often giving their lives to save others, charging up the stairs while everyone else was coming down; record bloodbank donations; and the list goes on. But what about our government? Six years after 9/11, at Ground Zero there sits only a black hole that tortures our conscience and scars our hearts.

In every instance we see an American people who are good, decent, compassionate and undeterred. And, American people who are better than the government that is supposed to serve and represent them.

And what has happened to the American “can do” spirit? I will tell you what has happened: all of this is the result of the bitter poisoned fruit of corruption and the bankruptcy of our political leadership.

It is not an accident that the government of the United States cannot function on behalf of its people, because it is no longer our people’s government — and we the people know it.

This corruption did not begin yesterday — and it did not even begin with George Bush — it has been building for decades — until it now threatens literally the life of our democracy.

While the American people personally rose to the occasion with an enormous outpouring of support and donations to both the victims of Katrina and 9/11 — we all saw our government’s neglect. And we saw greed and incompetence at work. Out of more than 700 contracts valued at $500,000 or greater, at least half were given without full competition or, according to news sources, with vague or open ended terms, and many of these contracts went to companies with deep political connections such as a subsidiary of Haliburton, Bechtel Corp., and AshBritt Inc.

And in Iraq — while our nation’s brave sons and daughters put their lives on the line for our country — we now have mercenaries under their own law while their bosses sit at home raking in millions.

We have squandered millions on building Olympic size swimming pools and buildings that have never been used. We have weapons and ammunition unaccounted for that may now be being used against our own soldiers. We literally have billions wasted or misspent — while our troops and their families continue to sacrifice. And the politically connected lobby for more. What’s their great sacrifice — higher profits.

It goes on every minute of every day.

Corporate executives at United Airlines and US Airways receive millions in compensation for taking their companies into bankruptcy, while their employees are forced to take cuts in pay.

Companies like Wal-Mart lobby against inspecting containers entering our nation’s ports, even though expert after expert agrees that the likeliest way for a dirty bomb to enter the United States is through a container, because they believe their profits are more important than our safety. What has become of America when America’s largest company lobbies against protecting America?

Trade deals cost of millions of jobs. What do we get in return? Millions of dangerous Chinese toys in our children’s cribs laden with lead. This is the price we are made to pay when trade agreements are decided based on how much they pad the profits for multinational corporations instead of what is best for America’s workers or the safety of America’s consumers.

We have even gotten to the point where our children’s safety is potentially at risk because nearly half of the apple juice consumed by our children comes from apples grown in China. And Americans are kept in the dark because the corporate lobbyists have pushed back country of origin labeling laws again and again.

This is not the America I believe in.

The hubris of greed knows no bounds. Days after the homeland security bill passed, staffers from the homeland security department resigned and became homeland security consultants trying to cash in. And, where was the outrage? There was none, because that’s how it works in Washington now. It is not a Republican revolving door or a Democratic revolving door — it is just the way it’s done.

Someone called it a government reconnaissance mission to figure out how to get rich when you leave the government.

Recently, I was dismayed to see headlines in the Wall Street Journal stating that Senate Democrats were backing down to lobbyists for hedge funds who have opposed efforts to make millionaire and billionaire hedge fund managers pay the same tax rate as every hard-working American. Now, tax loopholes the wealthy hedge fund managers do not need or deserve are not going to be closed, all because Democrats — our party — wanted their campaign money.

And a few weeks ago, around the sixth anniversary of 9/11, a leading presidential candidate held a fundraiser that was billed as a Homeland Security themed event in Washington, D.C. targeted to homeland security lobbyists and contractors for $1,000 a plate. These lobbyists, for the price of a ticket, would get a special “treat” — the opportunity to participate in small, hour long breakout sessions with key Democratic lawmakers, many of whom chair important sub committees of the homeland security committee. That presidential candidate was Senator Clinton.

Senator Clinton’s road to the middle class takes a major detour right through the deep canyon of corporate lobbyists and the hidden bidding of K Street in Washington — and history tells us that when that bus stops there it is the middle class that loses.

When I asked Hillary Clinton to join me in not taking money from Washington lobbyists — she refused. Not only did she say that she would continue to take their money, she defended them.

Today Hillary Clinton has taken more money from Washington lobbyists than any candidate from either party — more money than any Republican candidate.

She has taken more money from the defense industry than any other candidate from either party as well.

She took more money from Wall Street last quarter than Rudy Giuliani, Mitt Romney, and Barack Obama combined.

The long slow slide of our democracy into the corporate abyss continues unabated regardless of party, regardless of the best interests of America.

We have a duty — a duty to end this.

I believe you cannot be for change and take money from the lobbyists who prevent change. You cannot take on the entrenched interests in Washington if you choose to defend the broken system. It will not work. And I believe that, if Americans have a choice, and candidate who takes their money — Democrat or Republican — will lose this election.

For us to continue down this path all we have to do is suspend all that we believe in. As Democrats, we continue down this path only if we believe the party of the people is no more.

As Americans, we continue down this path only if we fail to heed Lincoln’s warning to us all.

“At what point then is the approach of danger to be expected,” he asked, “if it ever reaches us it must spring up amongst us. It can not come from abroad. If destruction be our lot — we must ourselves be its author and finisher. As a nation of free men we must live through all time or die by suicide.”

America lives because 20 generations have honored the one moral commandment that makes us Americans.

To give our children a better future than we received.

I stand here today the son of Wallace and Bobbie Edwards. The father of Wade, Cate, Emma Claire and Jack — and I know, as well as you, that we must not be the first generation that fails to live up to our moral challenge and keep the promise of America.

That would be an abomination.

There is a dream that is America. It is what makes us American. And I will not stand by while that dream is at risk.

I am not perfect — far from it — but I do understand that this is not a political issue — it is the moral test of our generation.

Our nation’s founders knew that this moment would come — that at some point the power of greed and its influence over officials in our government might strain and threaten the very America they hoped would last as an ideal in the minds of all people, and as a beacon of hope for all time.

That is why they made the people sovereign. And this is why it is your responsibility to redeem the promise of America for our children and their future.

It will not be easy — sacrifice will be required of us — but it was never easy for our ancestors, and their sacrifices were far greater than any that will fall on our shoulders.

Yet, the responsibility is ours.

We, you and I, are the guardians of what America is and what it will be.

The choice is ours.

Down one path, we trade corporate Democrats for corporate Republicans; our cronies for their cronies; one political dynasty for another dynasty; and all we are left with is a Democratic version of the Republican corruption machine.

It is the easier path. It is the path of the status quo. But, it is a path that perpetuates a corrupt system that has not only failed to deliver the change the American people demand, but has divided America into two — one America for the very greedy, and one America for everybody else.

And it is that divided America — the direct result of this corrupt system — which may very well lead to the suicide Lincoln warned us of — the poison that continues to seep into our system while none notice.

Or we can choose a different path. The path that generations of Americans command us to take. And be the guardians that kept the faith.

I run for president for my father who worked in a mill his entire life and never got to go to college the way I did.

I run for president for all those who worked in that mill with my father.

I run for president for all those who lost their jobs when that mil was shut down.

I run for president for all the women who have come up to Elizabeth and me and told us the like Elizabeth they had breast cancer — but unlike Elizabeth they did not have health care.

I run for president for twenty generations of Americans who made sure that their children had a better life than they did.

As Americans we are blessed — for our ancestors are not dead, they occupy the corridors of our conscience. And, as long we keep the faith — they live. And so too the America of idealism and hope that was their gift to us.

I carry the promise of America in my heart, where my parents placed it. Like them, like you, I believe in people, hard work, and the sacred obligation of each generation to the next.

This is our time now. It falls to us to redeem our democracy, reclaim our government and relight the promise of America for our children.

Let us blaze a new path together, grounded in the values from which America was forged, still reaching toward the greatness of our ideals. We can do it. We can cast aside the bankrupt ways of Washington and replace them with the timeless values of the American people. We can liberate our government from the shackles of corporate money that bind it to corporate will, and restore the voices of our people to its halls.

This is the cause of my life. This is the cause of our time. Join me. Together, we cannot fail.

We will keep faith with those who have gone before us, strong and proud in the knowledge that we too rose up to guard the promise of America in our day, and that, because we did, America’s best days still lie ahead.

Sleeping with the Enemy : HRC Rakes In GOP Bucks In The O.C.

This piece is also posted at Of The Bus at The Huffington Post.  “Campaign Coverage by People Who Aren’t in the Club

Hillary out raised both Obama and Edwards in the third quarter of the campaign and not only are Democratic candidates receiving money from Democrats, but also Republicans. 18% of Hillary’s Orange County donors are registered as Republicans, Obama 14% and Edwards 11%. Doesn’t seem like a huge gap, but if you think of it in terms of differences, Hillary received 22% more donations from Republicans than Obama and 39% more than Edwards. Republican donors are not just making symbolic donations either. The average donation from the Republicans registered in Orange County to Clinton was $1,800 with Democratic donors not far behind with an average of $1,600.

Direct link to the piece.  Just to clarify, I’m Heather Pritchard, the author of the piece.

It isn’t the first time Orange County has gotten excited about a Democratic Candidate. In 1992 prominent Republicans broke ranks to support a little known Governor from Arkansas for the Democratic nominee for President. Clinton lost in Orange County to Bush Sr. 67% to 32% even though he was lauded as a moderate Democrat and after winning office he pushed through policies that in hind sight were more harmful than first perceived by moderate Democrats. NAFTA is now under fire in some form from each Democratic candidate as are other Clinton initiatives (Hillary even admits it could use some reworking).

Hillary is walking a fine line between the experience she received as First Lady and the down side of these policies as a Presidential Candidate. Hillary wants to appeal to men by claiming to be their gal and voting for bills like Kyl-Lieberman amendment but she also wants to ride the wave of exuberance created by the idea of the first female US President in history. Clinton’s chief strategist claims that polling indicates that Hillary will have “as much as 24% of Republican women defect and make a major difference nationwide in terms of, I think, the emotional element of potentially having the first woman nominee.” Women so badly want a woman President they will jump ideological lines to vote for one and since Hillary is triangulating herself into the left side of the GOP it makes it possible for them to rationalize this choice, not only is she a woman, she’s a tough woman.

Hillary also benefited by fund raising in Orange County by way of Norman Hsu, who is being sued by Briar Wood Investments. Hsu is being accused of defrauding investors of “at least $23 million and dictated that they make contributions to Democratic candidates as a condition of doing business with him. “

Martin Waters, Briar Wood’s chief and registered Republican was invited to attend Democratic Party events “as proof of his stature and credibility, the lawsuit says.” And although Hillary has returned the money raised by Hsu, it’s interesting to note that she had received these donations by help of a Republican rather than a Democratic connection in the county.

Update – The information I gathered is public.  I used information from the Orange County Registrar of Voters and public Donation records from Q3.