What Bernie Said, Part I
Tuesday 14 December 2010
by: William Rivers Pitt, t r u t h o u t | Op-Ed

Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vermont). (Photo: United States Congress)
At the time of this writing, legislation to formalize the tax deal between President Obama and congressional Republicans cleared cloture by a large margin, and looked ready to sail through the Senate. Polls indicate a large margin of Americans approve of the deal, and newspapers like the Washington Post are hailing the process as "the most significant bipartisan vote since President Obama took office."
Not everyone agrees.
Last week, a battery of congressional Democrats rose up in outrage over the deal, specifically protesting not only the extension of George W. Bush's tax cuts for rich people, but for the attack on the payroll tax, which many see as the beginning of the end of Social Security.
Leading the charge was Senator Bernie Sanders (I-VT), who took to the well of the Senate on Friday to deliver a marathon eight-and-a-half hour denunciation of the deal. As his speech rose and grew, bloggers and "mainstream" media reporters, and then the networks, focused on the fact that it was happening. Articles debated whether this was a "true" filibuster, or merely a very long speech, and a few snippets of what Sanders said were disseminated.
The thing was, if you were not watching C-SPAN, or if you didn't have eight hours to spare, you probably missed the vast majority of what he had to say. No articles I could find repeated his more salient points at any length, and by the end of the weekend, it was as if the event had not taken place.
Not on my watch, folks.
The speech delivered by Mr. Sanders on Friday ranks among the most important I have ever heard in my life, certainly the single most pertinent expression of fact and outrage that has been delivered in this current climate of "compromise" and collapse. He told more truth in his eight hours than many of us have heard from an elected official in the last ten years, and it would be a disgrace if his eloquence faded into the background without the study and reflection it deserves.
The thing is, Mr. Sanders basically recited a book on Friday; the sheer volume of what he had to say is staggering. I highly recommend reading the entire transcript yourself when you have the time, but make enough time; the full transcript is 124 pages long. In lieu of that, I took the time to cull out and highlight what I consider to be the most pertinent aspects of the speech. Because there is so much, I have broken these highlights into two parts. The second part will run later in the week, whether or not this tax deal passes.
What Sanders had to say is too important to miss. The emphasis added in these passages is mine. He begins below with an examination of the so-called "death tax":
This agreement includes a horrendous proposal regarding the estate tax. That is a Teddy Roosevelt initiative. Teddy Roosevelt was talking about this in the early years of the 20th century. It was enacted in 1916 and it was enacted for a couple of reasons. Teddy Roosevelt and the people of that era thought it was wrong that a handful of people could have a huge concentration of wealth and then give that wealth, transmit that wealth to their children. He did not think that was right.
Let us be very clear: This tax applies only - only - to the top three-tenths of 1 percent of American families; 99.7 percent of American families will not pay one nickel in an estate tax. This is not a tax on the rich, this is a tax on the very, very, very rich.
If my Republican friends had been successful in doing what they want to do, which is eliminate this estate tax completely, it would have cost our Treasury--raised the national debt by $1 trillion over a 10-year period. Families such as the Walton family, of Wal-Mart fame, would have received, just this one family, about a $30 billion tax break.
It is all too rare these days to actually hear an elected official jump up and down on the fact that this country has been neatly divided between the scrabbling, scratching majority and an all-powerful micro-minority that gets every break there is to get. Thirty billion for one family? How many schools is that?
From there, Mr. Sanders moved on to the assault on Social Security:
Even though Social Security contributed nothing to the current economic crisis, it has been bartered in a deal that provides deficit-busting tax cuts for the wealthy. Diverting $120 billion in Social Security contributions for a so-called "tax holiday'' may sound like a good deal for workers now, but it's bad business for the program that a majority of middle-class seniors will rely upon in the future.
While this idea of lowering the payroll tax sounds like a good idea, in truth, it really is not a good idea. This idea originated from very conservative Republicans whose intention from the beginning was to destroy Social Security by choking off the funds that go to it. This is not just Bernie Sanders' analysis. There was recently - I distributed it recently at a meeting we held - a news release that came from the National Committee to Preserve Social Security and Medicare. The headline on that press release is "Cutting Contributions to Social Security Signals the Beginning of the End. Payroll Tax Holiday is Anything But.'' What the National Committee to Preserve Social Security and Medicare, which is one of the largest senior groups in America, well understands is that there are people out there who want to destroy Social Security. And one way to do that is to divert funds into the Social Security trust fund and they don't get there.
A majority of Americans were against extending tax cuts for the wealthy, and a whole lot of people have been wondering for a while why this administration and this congress have not instead focused as intently as required on the subject of job creation. Mr. Sanders has a simple solution:
As a former mayor, infrastructure does not get better if you ignore it. You can turn your back, if you are a mayor or Governor, on the roads and the highways because you do not have the money to fix them today, but they are not going to get better next year. At some point, they are going to have to be repaired and fixed. We may as well do that right now.
So I believe the money, the very substantial sums of money in this agreement between the President and the Republicans, which goes into tax breaks for corporate America, could be effectively spent on infrastructure.According to the National Surface Transportation Policy and Revenue Study Commission, $225 billion is needed annually for the next 50 years to upgrade our surface transportation system to a state of good repair and create a more advanced system. The Federal Highway Administration reports that $130 billion must be invested annually for a 20-year period to improve our bridges and the operational performance of our highways. At present, one in four of the Nation's bridges is either structurally deficient or functionally obsolete. One in four of our bridges is either structurally deficient or functionally obsolete. Yet in this agreement struck by the President and the Republican leadership, to the best of my knowledge, not one nickel is going into our infrastructure. We need to invest in our infrastructure. We need to improve our infrastructure. When we do that, we can create millions of jobs.
From there, Mr. Sanders went on to remind everyone about the nightmare that was the Bush years, and what kind of damage was done to this country because of it. From there, he made several pointed remarks about what he believes to be the true foundations of Republican ideology:
The passage of this agreement would mean we would continue the Bush policy of trickle-down economics for at least 2 more years. That is not a good thing to do because, I think, as most Americans know, that philosophy, that economic approach, simply did not work. The evidence is quite overwhelming. I do not think there is much debate, when median family income during Bush's 8 years goes down by $2,200, when we end up losing over 600,000 private sector jobs, and all of the job growth was in the Federal level, I do not see how anybody would want to continue that philosophy. But that, in essence, is what will happen if this agreement is passed.
During the Bush years, the wealthiest 400 Americans saw their incomes more than double. Do you really think that after seeing a doubling of their incomes under the Bush years, these people are in desperate need of another million-dollar-a-year tax break? In 2007, the 400 top income earners in this country made an average of $345 million in 1 year. That is a pretty piece of change. That is the average, $345 million. In terms of wealth, as opposed to income, the wealthiest 400 Americans saw an increase in their wealth of some $400 billion during the Bush years. Imagine that. During an 8-year period, the top 400 wealthiest people each saw an increase, on average, of $1 billion apiece. Together, these 400 families have a collective net of $1.27 trillion. Does anybody in America really believe these guys need another tax break so that our kids and our grandchildren can pay more in taxes because the national debt has gone up?
Let me also say there is no doubt in my mind what many - not all but many - of my Republican colleagues want to do; that is, they want to move this country back into the 1920s when essentially we had an economic and political system which was controlled by big money interests; where working people and the middle class had no programs to sustain them when things got bad, when they got old, and when they got sick; when labor unions were very hard to come by because of anti-worker legislation. That is what they want. They do not believe in things like the Environmental Protection Agency. They do not believe in things like Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, Federal aid to education. That is the fight we will be waging.
This point cannot be made strongly enough: What our Republican friends want to do - and they have been pretty honest and up front about it, especially some of the extreme, rightwing people who have been running for office and, in some cases, have won - they have been honest enough to say they want to bring this country back to where we were in the 1920s. Their ultimate aim is the basic repeal of almost all of the provisions that have been passed in the last 70 years to protect working people, the elderly, and children. They believe in a Darwinian-style society in which you have the survival of the fittest; that we are not a society which comes together to take care of all of us. You take care of me in need and I take care of you and your family; that we are one people. Their strategy is pretty clear. They want to ultimately destroy Social Security.
Once again, Sanders dared to raise a subject almost no one in Washington DC has the courage to touch - how much economic damage we have suffered, and continue to suffer, because of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan:
In terms of the Federal budget, when President Bush first took office, he inherited a $236 billion surplus in 2001 and a projected 10-year surplus of $5.6 trillion. That is what Senator Landrieu was discussing. But then some things happened. We all know that 9/11 was not his fault, but what happened is, we went to war in Afghanistan. We went to war in Iraq. The war in Iraq was the fault of President Bush, something I certainly did not support, nor do I think most Americans supported. The war in Iraq, by the time our last veteran is taken care of, will probably end up costing us something like $3 trillion, adding enormously to our national debt.
So when we talk about Iraq, it is not only the terrible loss of life that our soldiers and the Iraqi people have experienced, let's not forget what it has done to the deficit and the national debt. We did not pay for the war in Iraq. We just put it on the credit card.
This below was my favorite part. Rather than continuing to deal in abstractions and bland figures, Mr. Sanders laid it on the table and put a name and a face to the greed that has been driving us into the dirt:
Let me personalize this a little bit. This gentleman, shown in this picture I have in the Chamber - I have no personal animus toward him at all; I think I met him once in a large room. His name is James Dimon. He is the CEO of JPMorgan Chase. Over the past 5 years, Mr. Dimon, who is the CEO of JPMorgan Chase, received $89 million in total compensation - a bank that we now know received hundreds of billions in low-interest loans and other financial assistance from the Federal Reserve and the Treasury Department.
So Mr. Dimon received $89 million in total compensation. His bank was bailed out big time by the taxpayers. But under the legislation the President negotiated with the Republicans, Mr. Dimon - I use him just as one example for thousands; nothing personal to Mr. Dimon - will receive $1.1 million in tax breaks. So $1.1 million in tax breaks for a major CEO on Wall Street, who over the last 5 years received $89 million in total compensation.
Meanwhile - just to contrast what is going on here - 2 days ago, I brought before the Senate legislation which would provide a $250 one-time check to over 50 million seniors and disabled veterans, who for the last 2 years have not received a COLA on their Social Security. Many of those seniors and disabled vets are trying to get by on $14,000, $15,000, $18,000 a year. The total package for that bill was approximately $14 billion that would go out to over 50 million seniors and disabled vets. We won that vote on the floor of the Senate 53 to 45. But just because you get 53 votes in the Senate does not mean you win. Because the Republicans filibustered, I needed 60 votes. I could not get 60 votes. I could not get one Republican vote to provide a $250 check to a disabled veteran trying to get by on $15,000 or $16,000 a year.
But Mr. Dimon, who made $89 million in the last 5 years, will get a $1 million tax deduction if this agreement is passed. Now, that may make sense to some people. It does not make a lot of sense to me.In America today - we don't talk about this too much, but it is time we did - we have the most unequal distribution of wealth and income in the industrialized world. I haven't heard too many people talk about that issue. Why not? Our Republican colleagues want huge tax breaks for the richest people, but the reality is the top 1 percent already today owns more wealth than the bottom 90 percent. How much more do they want? When is enough enough? Do they want it all? We already have millions of families today who have zero wealth. They owe more than they own. Millions of families have below zero wealth. We are living in a situation where the top 1 percent owns more wealth than the bottom 90 percent. The top 1 percent owns more wealth than the bottom 90 percent. That is simply unacceptable.
According to the Citizens for Tax Justice, if the Bush tax breaks for the top 2 percent are extended, these are some of the people who will benefit and what kind of benefits they will receive: Rupert Murdoch, the CEO of News Corporation, would receive a $1.3 million tax break next year. Mr. Murdoch is a billionaire. Do we really think he needs that? Jamie Dimon, the head of JPMorgan Chase, whose bank got a $29 billion bailout from the Federal Reserve, will receive a $1.1 million tax break. Trust me, Jamie Dimon, the head of JPMorgan Chase, is doing just fine. Vikram Pandit, the CEO of Citigroup, the bank that got a $50 billion bailout, would receive $785,000 in tax breaks. Ken Lewis, the former CEO of Bank of America - a bank that got a $45 billion bailout--the guy is already fabulously wealthy - would receive a $713,000 tax break. The CEO of Wells Fargo - these are the largest banks in America; the CEOs of these banks are already making huge compensation. John Stumpf, who is the CEO of Wells Fargo, would receive a $318,000 tax break every single year. The CEO of Morgan Stanley, John Mack, whose bank got a $10 billion bailout, would receive a $926,000 a year tax break. The CEO of Aetna, Ronald Williams, would receive a tax break worth $875,000.
Mr. Sanders has been leading the push to expose the insane lending policies practiced by the Federal Reserve during the onset of the financial crisis. Trillions of dollars were doled out to American companies as well as foreign companies and banks, with no oversight and no accountability, while Americans debated the comparably meager $700 billion bailout, having no idea what was going on in the Fed. When Sanders tried to get answers, he was told by Fed officials to go pound sand. On Friday, he let us know about it:
After years of stonewalling, the American people have learned the incredible, jaw-dropping details of the Fed's multimillion-dollar bailout of Wall Street and corporate America - not just Wall Street. It is one of the things we learned. As a result of this disclosure, in my view - we are going to get into what was in what we learned--Congress has to take a very extensive look at all aspects of how the Federal Reserve functions and how we can make our financial institutions more responsive to the needs of ordinary Americans and small businesses.
Then, on top of that, a number of the wealthiest individuals in this country also received a major bailout from the Fed. The ``emergency response,'' which is what the Fed described their action as during the Wall Street collapse, appears to any objective observer to have been the clearest case that I can imagine of socialism for the very rich and rugged free market capitalism for everybody else.
Furthermore, what we now know is the extent of the bailout for the large financial corporations. Goldman Sachs received nearly $600 billion. Morgan Stanley received nearly $2 trillion. Citigroup received $1.8 trillion. Bear Stearns received nearly $1 trillion. And Merrill Lynch received some $1.5 trillion in short-term loans from the Fed.
Furthermore, I think the American people are interested to know that the Fed bailed out the Korea Development Bank, the wholly owned, state-owned Bank of South Korea, by purchasing over $2 billion of its commercial paper. The sole purpose of the Korea Development Bank is to finance and manage major industrial projects to enhance the national economy not of the United States of America but of South Korea. I am not against South Korea. I wish the South Koreans all the luck in the world. But it should not be the taxpayers of the United States lending their banks' money to create jobs in South Korea. I would suggest maybe we want to create jobs in the United States of America. At the same time, the Fed also extended over $40 billion for the Central Bank of South Korea so that it had enough money to bail out its own banks.
After the cloture vote, Mr. Sanders released a statement explaining why he voted "No":
It makes no sense to me to provide huge tax breaks for millionaires and billionaires while we drive up the national debt that our children and grandchildren will have to pay. I further object strenuously to the lowering of rates on the estate tax, which only benefits the top 0.3 percent, the very, very wealthiest people in this country. I also am concerned about a significant precedent which diverts $112 billion in payroll taxes away from the Social Security trust fund. Our goal now must be to strengthen Social Security, not weaken it. Of course we must extend unemployment benefits and the tax breaks that the middle class desperately needs, but in my view we could have and should have negotiated a much stronger agreement.
As previously stated, the entire transcript from Friday is well worth a long, close read, for Mr. Sanders went into much greater detail and at greater length than has been provided above. This is just a taste, but what a taste. The sad realities and hard truths provided by Mr. Sanders must be spread far and wide, passed from hand to hand, repeated ad nauseam until everyone within reach of your arm is aware of what is really going on today. He had the courage to tell it straight. We must not let his words fade away.
Part II will be coming later this week.

This work by Truthout is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 United States License.



Comments
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It "Machts NICHTS" what he
Tue, 12/14/2010 - 15:47 — Vic Anderson (not verified)It "Machts NICHTS" what he says! It's more Obamanible RHETORIC, so far; Ultimately for the RICH!! Sanders or some senator(s) MUST Wield (That's WIELD, NOT yield; DEM 'em all!) the "Secret" HOLD on this Obamanation of a thousand Cuts' BLOODBATH!!!
I wish the Senate had 59
Tue, 12/14/2010 - 15:59 — Old Bill (not verified)I wish the Senate had 59 more like Bernie Sanders. My sincere hope is that Mr. Obama does not earn a legacy as the "Jelly Man" when it comes to dealing with the GOP on diverting money from the rest of us to the clutches of the undeserving few. How to end the calamity of greed? Mr. Sanders is awake and speaking truth, the country should listen to his reason.
Thank you so much for this.
Tue, 12/14/2010 - 16:22 — Anonymous (not verified)Thank you so much for this. I tried to share this with loved ones and sadly it was over before they got the chance. Now they can have all the time they need to understand what is really going here. I hope they are able to read it before the vote.
"You don't need to be a
Tue, 12/14/2010 - 17:26 — billnbillieskid (not verified)"You don't need to be a Weatherman to see which way the wind is blowing." Truer word were never spoken! Everybody bend down and grab your ankles, we're about to be taken for a RIDE! I am thankful to GOD that I have no children to be enslaved by the elite Masters of the Republi-WON'T Party of NO! Now, with Mr. Boehner in charge it will be, "HELL, NO!" Mr. Boehner and his colleagues might do well to have their children tutored in Chinese since THEY are the ones who now OWN us, lock, stock and barrel. Gung Hay Fat Choy, everybody!
The R's held the unemployed
Tue, 12/14/2010 - 17:29 — Jack E Lohman (not verified)The R's held the unemployed people hostage until they got a good deal from our weakling Dems, and now we are applauding??? That's not legislating for the good of the country, that's piracy.
Jack Lohman
http://MoneyedPoliticians.net
good one pitt, finally
Tue, 12/14/2010 - 17:58 — Anonymous (not verified)good one pitt, finally something with a little tooth in it from you. kudos to bernie sanders, a real human being and a man who understands he is a servant of the ppl.
It is easy for the Senate to
Tue, 12/14/2010 - 18:11 — Anonymous (not verified)It is easy for the Senate to support the obamanation tax bill that will give $1 trillion to the wealthy. Most Senators are already very wealthy. They are just supporting another deal to line THEIR pockets while they pick ours.
As for Social Security, Senators get a very generous pension and would never need Social Security. If the Republicans destroy SS, it won't affect Senators so why should they care?
The middle class is doomed unless we take to the streets with our pitch forks and torches and demand the change we were promised. Until then, the most massive transfer of wealth in history will continue. The class war is almost over and we have little chance of winning with Obama giving the plutocrats everything they demand.
Excellent job of the rip-off
Tue, 12/14/2010 - 18:12 — Anonymous (not verified)Excellent job of the rip-off of the people. But you forgot one very important Bush move the money to my people only 5 months into his office...the stealing from the surplus with a gift of $200 for every worker. But who really got the bulk of that money was , yes, Virginia, Corporate American. All the fat 1% got more than a million each to stuff into their wallets. How quickly we forget. Please review that very early fraud by Bush and Cheney. And keep up the good work.
What can we the people do to
Tue, 12/14/2010 - 18:14 — Anonymous (not verified)What can we the people do to support Bernie Sanders? Action should be taken on all issues. We are completely ignored by sending letters and groups are also responding supporting the senator. What needs to be done?
Thank you Will Pitt for
Tue, 12/14/2010 - 18:44 — Anonymous (not verified)Thank you Will Pitt for this, Senator Sanders is an astute gentleman with common sense and deserves to be heard far and wide.
Bernie Sanders for
Tue, 12/14/2010 - 19:22 — furthark (not verified)Bernie Sanders for President! Now that Barack Obama has managed to totally alienate his "base" by his lying and cutting sweetheart deals with both sides of the Plutocrat Party (Democrat and Republic), he doesn't deserve a "major party" nomination in 2012 and should just retire to his little-ole-ranch in Texas or where ever and fade into history as one of the most conniving and dishonest presidents in history.
Somebody had to speak the
Tue, 12/14/2010 - 19:27 — Greg Scott (not verified)Somebody had to speak the truth...
Bernie is still fighting the
Tue, 12/14/2010 - 19:36 — Cap'n Canard! (not verified)Bernie is still fighting the good fight, but he is outnumbered by the filthy rich who are greedy for even more. I see this as a sign that America is done as an economic power, the wealthy will just move their money elsewhere.
Thanks, Will, for this
Tue, 12/14/2010 - 20:32 — Robert Walters (not verified)Thanks, Will, for this synopsis. It would help if you could post the URL for the entire transcript; I suppose it's on the C-Span or Senator Sanders' Web sites but don't know that for sure.
Bernie Sanders, and those who stand with him, may not prevail, but those who don't surely will go down in ignominious defeat when the entire structure crumbles to ruin. The only salvation is to be found in local connections among like-minded people, or people of good will, who can be relied upon to cover each other's backs.
Thank you for doing this!
Tue, 12/14/2010 - 20:36 — Carolyn (not verified)Thank you for doing this! We need to publish this, like a fat pamphlet to pass out to folks. Could we get M. Moore to fund it? Hand it out like candy.
Seriously, we need to think of a good way to get this out and fast. And online isn't enough. Hey, how about getting actors (or regular folk) to do a reenactment of it???!! And videotape it and make it viral. Or, maybe it is already going crazy on YouTube, I haven't checked.
It is a horrible but not surprising fact that the media basically blacklisted this. Can you imagine if a GOP brat did a filibuster? Holy cow, it would be all over.
The US would be lucky if the
Tue, 12/14/2010 - 21:21 — delia ruhe (not verified)The US would be lucky if the Repubs regressed the country back to the 1920s because at least the US was functioning in the 1920s. What's in store for the US if the neocons in both parties have their way is complete collapse: think USSR in the 1980s. And the rich won't care, as their money is mostly invested abroad and they can just move to Switzerland, if most of them aren't already there.
I have heard, but cannot
Tue, 12/14/2010 - 23:00 — An (not verified)I have heard, but cannot verify, that for years the government has been skimming the interest that the Social Security Fund earns every year and not putting it back into the Social ecurity Fund. Can anyone verify this?
I get so depressed with all
Tue, 12/14/2010 - 23:23 — G. Wilson (not verified)I get so depressed with all this stuff...we have
to be able to purchase the goods the top sells...
they'll just get back. Who will purchase their
wares if we do not have any money. It doesn't
trickle down, it trickle up when we have nothing
to spend....
Well folks? What are we
Tue, 12/14/2010 - 23:34 — Anonymous (not verified)Well folks? What are we going to do about this?
This situation is more dangerous to the republic
than anything we have seen since the 60s.
Where's the million, ten million,
twenty million person march on Washington?
That's what it will take!
Yes, the Fed Gov't has been
Wed, 12/15/2010 - 00:33 — Social Security Skimming explained... (not verified)Yes, the Fed Gov't has been taking money out of Social Security since the Regan Years in an effort to pay for government spending while "cutting taxes" that Regan was so famous for. In fact, he raised Social Security tax on his watch to increase SS revenue.
Then they started taking money out of Social Security replacing it with Gov't IOU's (T-bills). Bush I continued this, Clinton, then Bush II finally spent it all. During Bush Jr. Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill said, "...as managing trustee of Social Security... Today we have no assets in the trust fund.".
However, it had a bunch of T-bills and will not go bankrupt unless the US Gov't defaults on those. Social Security is being paid out on taxes currently being taken in.
This is laid out in page 50 of Matt Taibbi's latest book, "Griftopia" in the chapter on Alan Greenspan titled, "The Biggest Asshole in the Universe."
"...it would be a disgrace
Wed, 12/15/2010 - 05:48 — jahf (not verified)"...it would be a disgrace if his eloquence faded into the background without the study and reflection it deserves."
Earnest study and reflection are two things people of this country do not do. Not only do Americans not do these things, they decry them. If Americans are getting screwed, they have only themselves to blame.
Notes to PresObama 1.this is
Wed, 12/15/2010 - 07:36 — Anonarcmous (not verified)Notes to PresObama
1.this is the speech you should have given, or physically stepped up and backed SenBSanders.
2. we are NOT interested in your used car dealer "compromise goals"-- =value as Michelle wearing a new dress torn in half.
3. to reprise you "change" without compromise next election.
4.you are not a leader--except when it comes to being elected--use the same format now.for 2+ years you have not, you have given up.
5. your +wealthy Republicanfiends will never be your base--they are using you. Maybe as a black man, you have diffuclty seeing this. I am sorry.
Just think of what Obama can
Wed, 12/15/2010 - 09:28 — Hank Van den Berg (not verified)Just think of what Obama can do over the next two years to with the Republicans in control of the Congress, given how he has given them most everything they wanted while the Democrats controlled both houses. But you might ask: What more could he give in on? After all, he's already taken ownership of every problem the Republicans created.
Well, there are actually quite a few Republican issues he could get out in front of, especially now that he has more former Clinton advisers who are masters at stealing Republican issues like gutting welfare and deregulating banking. I was thinking Obama could start another war, legalize censorship of the new media in the name of national security, revive active use of the Espionage Act, reduce the Federal government's support of Medicaid, abandon his industry-written pitiful healthcare legislation after the Supreme Court rules against it, resume offshore drilling, subsidize private education at all levels while cutting support of public education, extend temporary immigrant worker programs that business wants, cut corporate taxes, privatize more government activity, and, of course, privatize social security and cut funding for Medicare. These are just a few that I came up with in 20 seconds.
And all of you progressives had better not complain, because Obama will use all his charm and venom to shut you up (while quietly putting up with Republican sniping).
Oh, I hope I am wrong on this.
"Tyranny, like hell, is not
Wed, 12/15/2010 - 10:16 — Skip (not verified)"Tyranny, like hell, is not easily conquered; yet we have this consolation with us, that the harder the conflict, the more glorious the triumph," wrote founding father Thomas Paine.
A thousand thanks, Sen. Sanders!
Thank you Mr Pitt! This
Wed, 12/15/2010 - 12:57 — Floresta (not verified)Thank you Mr Pitt!
This editorial will go out to all my peeps.
Last week hubby and I received a survey from the !gasp!, Heritage Foundation, one of the infamous right-wing 'think' tanks and the taking points were beyond hilarious..."death tax" and the rest of the misspoken blather all on a mere two pages. Well, we sent it back with some major corrections, ha ha ha. The mystery of how they got our name and mailing info still remains a mystery, however.
Images of the French
Wed, 12/15/2010 - 14:30 — The uprising (not verified)Images of the French revolution come to mind. Off with there heads, says I.
In a week, the majority of
Fri, 12/17/2010 - 03:29 — Under the Thumb (not verified)In a week, the majority of the middle class will have forgotten, if they even cared, what happened here today. The country has been placated into a stupefied silence once again, while the wizards of wealth management cook their mystery stew of poison for the masses.
Cackling... "Here, EAT, my little friend..! You're going to LIKE this...."
But there will be those few who resist. The few who carry the true banner of freedom and honor. Mr. Sanders, you are our inspiration. God bless you!
Bernie's been a hero of
Sun, 12/19/2010 - 02:56 — Rogerscorpion (not verified)Bernie's been a hero of mine, for a few years. I'm so glad Mr Pitt chose to present this, to his audience.
Now, more Americans know what a treasure we have in Bernie Sanders.
delia, you are a fool of
Thu, 01/06/2011 - 15:21 — Frances in California (not verified)delia, you are a fool of monumental proportions - the US didn't function in the 1920's; the Robber Barons got away with the wealth and there was no safety net for anything. People such as yourself might have died in childbirth . . . or of the flu.