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leadership

Is it time to give up on politics

by: susaninrindge

Fri Nov 05, 2010 at 06:55:33 AM EDT

I'm sure I'm not the only one here who has realized the magnitude of the forces in our culture/country that are stacked against any progressive political progress. I read a column today that speaks so well to my concerns. Let me quote Carlos Ball, from Rutgers in today's Huffington Post:

"Ultimately, however, the real problem is not that liberals have been playing defense for decades. Instead, the real problem is that progressive politicians (President Obama included) during that time have been utterly incapable of defending liberal values -- such as society's moral obligation to help and care for all of its members in need -- against the onslaught of attacks by social conservatives and free-marketeers. The thing that I yearn for the most are liberal leaders who are willing to speak in explicitly moral terms about what we owe each other as human beings and as equal members of our society."

When I get most frustrated with Obama is when he continues to miss opportunities to speak with passion about his values and vision for our country.  His flat, affect-less, pathetic press conference on Monday was the most recent case in point. Why can't he get out there and speak -- not about the political process but about the results he wants to achieve -- for us -- for the middle class people, many of whom watch FOX News and who have been lead to slaughter -- some shred of power going up against giant corporations, health care companies, banks, oil companies that dictate their terms, ruin our environment and care only about profits.  

Why can't he at least underscore how Republicans have demonstrated over and over throughout recent history their concern only for these giant corporations. Why can't he come out as our champion in the face of incredible odds given the decades of Bush's and Reagan and the recent Supreme Court give-away. If he can't do this. If he can't speak with conviction about why he's president, well, then, I give up!  

Discuss :: (1 Comments)

The 12 Days of the NH Primary: Day 4

by: Delegator

Mon Dec 31, 2007 at 17:53:55 PM EST

On the fourth day to the primary my candidate gave to me
FOUR hundred thousand volunteers,
three members of his family,
two cultural backgrounds,
and one outstanding orator!

Barack Obama often talks about bringing people together to tackle the issues that face our nation. It's more than talk, though, because he already has brought people together on a scale never before seen in American politics. Whether he is breaking all kinds of records for individual donors to his campaign, energizing hundreds of thousands of volunteers -- many of them first-timers to the national political process -- or serving as CEO of a well-run campaign organization, Senator Obama has demonstrated an impressive ability to lead a diverse set of people toward a common goal.

Clearly, Barack Obama provides the kind of leadership we need to break out of partisan gridlock and really take on the issues that have been  festering through two decades of cynicism and divisiveness.

There's More... :: (0 Comments, 328 words in story)

Honor Before Dishonor Before Death, Most of All

by: BTB

Mon Sep 17, 2007 at 12:00:01 PM EDT

Plymouth, NH -

If you ask John McCain or Rudy Giuliani (or Fred Thompson or Mitt Romney or even Ed Koch for that matter) about Democrats and the Iraq War these days, chances are the response will include a call for the denunciation of MoveOn.org's recent "Betray Us" ad. Heaven forbid an activist group would say something critical about the current government?s widely pro-war stance, and try to frame the upcoming Senate hearings accordingly.

No, according to these Republicans it is an affront to the Republic floated up from the smelliest of slime on the bottom of a New York City barroom, or wherever else liberals hang out.

But if you look at the advertisement, you see that it offers up a prediction of the day?s events that is largely true. It cites the Pentagon's convoluted formula for tracking violence in Iraq and forecasts that Petraeus will suggest the removal of a few thousand troops, but only as part of a ten-year plan to stay in Iraq. Then on Tuesday, that same thing happened.

And yet the news cycle has spent most of it?s time covering the GOP reaction to the ad without discussing the merits of the case. Republicans, increasingly hateful toward the more and more powerful MoveOn.org, want their rivals to distance themselves from the group and kiss up to General Petraeus for his career?s worth of service.

MoveOn.org and Hillary Clinton are easy punching bags for the likes of Rudy Giuliani and John McCain, today?s most outspoken fans of Petraeus and the surge. But I will be interested to see what punches they throw at Sen. Chuck Hagel (R-NE) who, in his maverick mindset and retiring electoral freedom, has become more and more critical of the process.

This weekend on Bill Maher?s show Hagel called Bush's use of Petraeus to tout his Iraq policy a ?dirty trick? and said that it was ?dishonest and hypocritical.? He reiterated that this is not Petraeus' policy, because the army is "subservient" to the elected officials.

Let?s rehash that last bit. Chuck Hagel, a United States Senator and a veteran, acknowledge that Petraeus is doing a "sell job" for the elected President of our country, and hence distorting the information for political purposes. Déjà vu.

If the Republicans are true to their principles they will be calling for Hagel to renounce his statements. Something tells me those calls won't be heard with much fervor, if at all.

Too many of the few, the proud, and the hard-headed who are still behind Bush and his surge mentality are there either to save face or to uphold an antiquated notion of military honor. The same honor code that frowns upon insulting a two-time purple heart recipient. The same kind of honor that was absent from the minds of the people who got us into this war.

Death before dishonor is an awesome motto when you are living the samurai lifestyle, or out in the trenches bravely risking your life for your brothers and sisters in combat, but it is widely lacking as a credible foreign policy slogan. Especially when the dishonor in the eyes of the world has already been done, and is only getting worse.

Honor won?t win us this war. That?s because it isn?t a war to be won or lost. It is a war to be ended. Hagel himself mentioned that it in an op-ed for the Washington Post last November, "Militaries are built to fight and win wars, not bind together failing nations." This war was a mistake from the start, and it is a shame that our twice elected President got us into it, that our spineless legislature aided and abetted it, and furthermore that our duly elected 2006 anti-war legislature has thus far failed to stop it.

As Gary Hart said in the Huffington Post a few days ago:

?That the media still treat these operatives and spokespersons, and indeed the president himself, seriously is witness to their desire for ?access? and ?sources? rather than their commitment to the truth...Nothing is more difficult than to admit that we made a tragic mistake in selecting our leaders. But that is the first step toward redemption. Absolute rejection of those who lay claim to ownership of security is the next.?

And it is true. We as a nation must stick up for ourselves and not allow the few and the honor bound to take over our future, our standing, and our security in the world.

"Militaries are built to fight and win wars, not bind together failing nations."

The failed nation of Iraq, torn apart more and more every day by anti-American sentiment and civil war, can and should not be held together by our military.

To call that surrender just doesn?t make any sense. To call that defeat just doesn?t make any sense. To call that dishonor just doesn?t make any sense.

Yet Iraq, which less than a year ago seemed destined for the political recycle bin, has found another foothold. Our congress allowed Bush to instigate a surge. Then our Senate spent hours soliloquizing in the post-surge hearings instead of calling for real truth and actin, and all along our media has generally given it all a pass, even up to the MoveOn nonsense.

On the other hand we have Frank Rich. In his Sunday column he calls out everyone for their ignorance of the real issue at hand, and calls on the Dems to condemn the MoveOn ad if only for taking away from what should have been the issue of the week - the monumentally flawed policy in Iraq.

"Will the Democrats Betray Us?" the title of the column asks, by not providing the leadership America needs on this. Because let's face it, if We the People had our teeth on Washington's ass a little more fiercely, none of this would be an issue. Instead we have iphones and shitty health care and the National Football League on our minds. Which, quite honestly, is all pretty interesting. Much more so than war.

Rich sees it this way:

"You can't blame the public for changing the channel. People realize that the president's real ?plan for victory? is to let his successor clean up the mess. They don't want to see American troops dying for that cause, but what can be done? Americans voted the G.O.P. out of power in Congress; a clear majority consistently tell pollsters they want out of Iraq. And still every day is Groundhog Day. Our America, unlike Vietnam-era America, is more often resigned than angry."

I fear that is what is bound to happen in today?s media-soaked world. When there are so many channels to turn to, who wants to be stuck on the ones that show clips of a violent Iraq, and worse yet a President who fails time and again to be candid and honest with the American people. It is depressing me already.

Back to death, even by conservative DoD standards, the US death toll is sitting at 3781 and rising at an average of 2. 5 each day, and the injury count is nearly 28,000. Meanwhile the number of daily attacks on US and Iraqi civilians has been increasing at a disturbing rate ever since the war began, and is now almost 200 each day. The situation in Iraq is like a Hydra, and no amount of continued troop presence to slay the beast's many heads is going to bring us more honor. Just more human death.

Death sucks.

Fortunately for each of us here in America, we have the wealth and the technology to choose options other than death. When the war is getting me down I can head down to Penuche's for a few happy hour beers or up into Pemi country to gaze at the majestic White Mountains. The more chances I have to make those choices the more often I do it.

I understand that, which is why I respect the people who descended on Washington this past weekend. Opponents may call them the vocal minority, but polls show that they are more appropriately dubbed the active wing of the majority.

The problem is that we won't be led out of Iraq by the idealists among us. We will be led out by our elected officials. So unless they step up and give some straight talk back to the obstructionist Republicans, and unless the 65% of us who want out stop changing the channel, I fear there is no end in sight. And that, my friends, bestows mountains of dishonor upon us as Americans.

Read more dispatches from the Granite State Campaign Trail at http://www.threeqblog.com

Discuss :: (0 Comments)

Big Tent Democrat on Dodd's Leadership

by: Matt Browner Hamlin

Thu Aug 16, 2007 at 19:07:50 PM EDT

MyDD has started a new series where supporters of the different Democratic presidential candidates are given limited front-page blogging privileges to talk about their candidate. Big Tent Democrat of TalkLeft (aka Armando of DailyKos) was tapped to post on MyDD's front page about Senator Dodd on every Thursday.

BTD's first post is now live. It's titled, "How Chris Dodd Won My Support: By Leading On the Issues Now". He leads off with a story that's actually relatively similar to my own -- of not really looking for a candidate to support, but being won over by Dodd's bold leadership on issues right now.

I never expected to be supporting any of our fine candidates for President at this point, much less Senator Chris Dodd (D-CT). I was not shopping for candidates. Indeed, I insisted (insist?) that the Netroots has spent 2007 too focused on the 2008 horserace instead of being focused on the pressing issues of today, especially the Iraq issue.

But that actually explains how Chris Dodd won my support. Chris Dodd is leading on the issues of today as well as discussing his vision for the issues of tomorrow. Take Iraq for instance. While Dodd thoroughly explains his views on what he will do about Iraq as President, he has spent just as much time explaining and stressing the critical importance of Democrats doing all they can now to end the Iraq Debacle. This is not an issue that can wait 18 months. Thus Dodd argues that we must:

End the War in Iraq Decisively. Chris Dodd understands that ending the war in Iraq makes America safer. He strongly supports the Feingold-Reid proposal - the only responsible measure in Congress that sets a timetable to end the war in Iraq by March 31, 2008 - and he has urged all the candidates in the presidential race to join him. It is time to stand up to the President's misguided Iraq policy.
(Emphasis supplied.) More than anything else, this position won my support. Instead of introducing a "Dodd plan" for getting us out of Iraq, to buttress a stump speech, Chris Dodd put the issue first, he put the nation first, and he argued for what Democrats (and any Republicans with wisdom and courage) should be doing NOW, not in January 2009, to end the Iraq Debacle. With this one act, Chris Dodd demonstrated the type of leadership, political courage, selflessness and wisdom that we need from our future President.
There's More... :: (6 Comments, 150 words in story)

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