Guest guest Posted November 4, 2004 Report Share Posted November 4, 2004 Thu, 04 Nov 2004 08:12:40 -0800 Subject:Progress Report: Reclaiming Morality " American Progress Action Fund " <progress The Progress Report by Christy Harvey, Judd Legum and Jonathan Baskin November 4, 2004 VALUES Reclaiming Morality IRAQ Time To Work UNDER THE RADAR Go Beyond The Headlines " We must accept finite disappointment but we must never give up infinite hope. " – Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. THE FIGHT GOES ON " Was it Over When the German's Bombed Pearl Harbor? " In the wake of Tuesday's election, the Progress Report is more motivated than ever to find new ways to advance the progressive agenda. Please send us your ideas on how to go forward in the coming years to pr – we'll publish a few of our favorites in a coming edition. Thanks for your help. VALUES Reclaiming Morality On Election Day 2004, 18 million Americans reportedly voted for President Bush because of " moral values, " which " edged terrorism and the economy as the top issue " of the election. But on a number of issues that should be critical to voters who care about morality, the president needs to do better in his second term. " Regardless of who leads this country, " said National Council of Churches General Secretary Robert Edgar, " the agenda of the church must always respond faithfully to the Bible's timeless mandate to minister to the poor, the marginalized and the outcast; and to be seekers and makers of peace. " To that end, progressive religious groups such as Hadassah, Interfaith Alliance and the Protestants for the Common Good (PCG) are encouraging people of faith to work toward reforms on moral issues such as economic justice, poverty, affordable housing and the environment. These are some of the areas in which the president can improve in his second term. RELIGIOUS ISSUES: Evangelical Pastor Jim Wallis – editor of Sojourners – writes that the 2004 election has begun " a real debate in this country over what the most important 'religious issues' are in politics. " The religious right " fought to keep the focus on gay marriage and abortion…But many moderate and progressive Christians disagreed. We insisted that poverty is also a religious issue, pointing to thousands of verses in the Bible on the poor. The environment – protection of God's creation – is also one of our religious concerns. " The Rev. Jeff Schutz, until recently a pastor at " a fast-growing evangelical congregation, " urged Americans to think past personal moral issues like abortion and gay marriage. " How about talking about adoption, special-needs children, reforming the insurance industry, [and] the homeless? " Schutz said. (For more, check out American Progress's Faith and Progressive Policy Initiative.) POVERTY: The president let millions of kids slide into poverty while cutting taxes for the richest Americans. In his first term, President Bush enacted tax cuts skewed overwhelmingly towards the wealthy even as poverty, especially for children, rose for three straight years. The president has pushed to make those tax cuts permanent. A national network of churches and faith-based organizations, Call to Renewal, has been formed to combat poverty in America. HEALTH CARE: The president pandered to special interests instead of providing affordable health care for America's seniors. Under President Bush, five million Americans have lost their health insurance and millions more have seen their premiums rise. The Bush administration backed a Medicare bill which put drug and insurance companies ahead of seniors. According to the American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research (AEI), President Bush's second-term health care plan would insure just 6.7 million new Americans, still leaving 38.3 million Americans uninsured. ENVIRONMENT: President Bush rolled back environmental safeguards, putting the interests of polluters ahead of public health. In Bush's first term, the environment " has stalled or gone into reverse in several areas, " in large part because of the president's reliance on industry insiders (like Halliburton) to write new pollution laws. DEFICIT: President Bush saddled future generations with debt. The president promised not to pass problems on " to future generations, " but if President Bush cannot successfully pay down the $422 billion deficit – created in large part by his tax schemes – he will pass the biggest debt in American history from one generation to another. So far, he has " revealed no details " as to how he plans to pay the debt down. HOUSING: The president tried to dismantle Section 8, the " most successful public-and-private housing partnership in the history of the United States. " The president has repeatedly endorsed programs and policies that are hostile to the program, endangering housing for more than two million poor families nationwide. IRAQ Time To Work The war in Iraq isn't going away. For the past few months, Candidate Bush misrepresented the dire situation in Iraq, painting a falsely rosy picture for American voters. It's time for President Bush own up to his responsibility and face the facts. The country is wracked by a growing insurgency which is armed with powerful, looted weapons; the country is ground zero for terrorist recruitment; our soldiers don't have the equipment they need to fight; international support has all but vanished; and elections scheduled for January are in danger of losing legitimacy. Just yesterday, gunmen kidnapped the second U.S. citizen to be seized this week, while militants released a tape " showing the beheading of an Iraqi officer as a warning to those who deal with 'the infidel' American troops. " Elsewhere, " a U.S. soldier was killed and another was wounded in a roadside bombing 12 miles south of the capital. " The U.S. election is over; it's time for the president to stop playing politics and get to work. REFOCUS ON WINNING BROADER INTERNATIONAL SUPPORT: International support for the war in Iraq, never strong, has crumbled, and unless the coalition is rebuilt, U.S. troops will be left to shoulder the burden alone. Just yesterday, one of the few remaining countries, Hungary, announced its troops would be leaving in March. It joins a long list of countries that have removed support: Spain withdrew its 1,300 troops last March. " The Dominican Republic withdrew 302 soldiers, Nicaragua 115 and Honduras 370. The Philippines withdrew its 51 in July, a month early, after insurgents took hostage a Filipino truck driver working for a Saudi company. Norway withdrew 155 military engineers, keeping only 15 staff members to help NATO train and equip the Iraqi security forces…Poland, the fourth-largest contributor, with 2,400 troops, says it intends to withdraw by the end of next year, and the Netherlands, with 1,400 troops, said this week that the latest rotation of troops would be its last contribution to Iraq. New Zealand is withdrawing its 60 engineers and Thailand said it wanted to bring home its 450 troops. Singapore has reduced its contingent to 33, from 191; Moldova has trimmed its force to 12, from 42. On Wednesday Bulgaria's Defense Ministry said it would reduce its 483 troops to 430 next month, Reuters reported. " FIND THE MISSING EXPLOSIVES: Tons of lethal explosives were looted from unguarded sites in Iraq and now are in the hands of the insurgents and terrorists. This morning, the Los Angeles Times has an eyewitness account of the looting. A group of Army reservists and National Guardsmen watched as " Iraqi looters loaded powerful explosives into pickup trucks and drove the material away from the Al Qaqaa ammunition site " in the days after the fall of Baghdad. The soldiers were outnumbered and requested help from higher-ups to secure the site but they received no reply. " One soldier said U.S. forces watched the looters' trucks loaded with bags marked hexamine — a key ingredient for HMX — being driven away from the facility. Unsure what hexamine was, the troops later did an Internet search and learned of its explosive power. " GET NECESSARY EQUIPMENT TO OUR TROOPS: President Bush must get necessary equipment and armor to our troops in Iraq. Nearly half of U.S. casualties in Iraq are the direct result of roadside bombs, yet twenty months after the start of the war, U.S. soldiers on the front lines still lack " thousands of fully armored vehicles that could save American lives. " Soldiers also lack basics like ammunition, radios, and night vision goggles. BRING BACK AID GROUPS: The ongoing threat of kidnappings and bombings has driven away nearly all international aid groups, leaving U.S. troops and U.S. taxpayers to shoulder the burden alone. USA Today recently reported, " The departure of the charitable non-governmental organizations, or 'NGOs,' from Iraq is more than a barometer of the violence there. It's a big setback for the dream of a peaceful and stable Iraq. It means the U.S. military and taxpayer-paid contractors are almost the only ones left to handle a complex and dangerous burden. " Under the Radar MINIMUM WAGE – FLORIDIANS GIVE WORKERS A BOOST: On Tuesday, voters in Florida " overwhelmingly approved a $1 raise in the wage, from $5.15 to $6.15. " Meghan Scott, communications director for Floridians For All, the group that sponsored the measure, " said the strong support for the measure across party lines meant voters saw it as a moral issue as well as a boost to working families. " The initiative was bolstered by a study sponsored by American Progress which demonstrated that many workers would reap significant benefits, while the costs for businesses would be negligible. STEM CELL – CALIFORNIANS VOTE FOR PROGRESS: California voters approved a ballot initiative Tuesday that " committed billions of dollars to stem-cell research. " Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger broke ranks with President Bush " to support spending $3 billion in seed money for stem-cell research, saying it would bring the state more jobs. " SUPREME COURT – SPECTER ISSUES WARNING: Yesterday, Sen. Arlen Specter (R-PA), the likely chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee, made his position clear on expected Supreme Court vacancies. Specter warned President Bush " against trying to fill any upcoming Supreme Court vacancies with judges who would oppose abortion rights or invite Democrats to block them for being too conservative. " FISCAL RESPONSIBILITY – MOUNTING DEBT MUST BE ADDRESSED: Immediately after securing a second term, " the Bush administration announced Wednesday that it will run out of maneuvering room to manage the government's massive borrowing needs in two weeks, putting more pressure on Congress to raise the debt ceiling when it convenes for a special post-election session. " Congress " put off dealing with the debt ceiling before adjourning in October, preferring not to force members to vote on the politically sensitive issue of adding to the national debt before the November elections. " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 4, 2004 Report Share Posted November 4, 2004 " Reportedly " voted for moral values, is precisely right. The people that voted for Bush, on moral grounds, are at best, self deceived, and in general are deceiving everyone around them. Bush is arguably the most " immoral " president in history. To not know this is a disaster in itself. To vote to force Bush on the rest of us, is absolutely intolerable. Does anyone actually accept the proposition that the " deep " South, has a " superior " morality over the North, East or West. Those of us that know better, which is most of us, will have to console ourselves with the certainty that the election was rigged in the battleground States, and most of all in Ohio and Florida. That we've accepted the outcome with nary a whisper of opposition reveals how completely cowed and intimidated we all feel at the prospect of having to openly acknowledge our own doubts about the legtimacy of the election. We yielded in 2000, and pretended to ourselves, that we could endure the theft of that election " and " a Bush presidency. Now in 2004, we've once more surrendered our political will to these criminals, and people are already saying that we'll even the score in 2006. What nonsense. If we allow them to get away with what they've done in '04, it'll be easier for them in '06, and still worse in '08. You firmly " draw the line, " not in response to your knowledge of the presence of evil, but in response to your courage in opposing it. JP - " califpacific " <califpacific Thursday, November 04, 2004 12:08 PM Progress Report: Reclaiming Morality Thu, 04 Nov 2004 08:12:40 -0800 Subject:Progress Report: Reclaiming Morality " American Progress Action Fund " <progress The Progress Report by Christy Harvey, Judd Legum and Jonathan Baskin November 4, 2004 VALUES Reclaiming Morality IRAQ Time To Work UNDER THE RADAR Go Beyond The Headlines " We must accept finite disappointment but we must never give up infinite hope. " - Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. THE FIGHT GOES ON " Was it Over When the German's Bombed Pearl Harbor? " In the wake of Tuesday's election, the Progress Report is more motivated than ever to find new ways to advance the progressive agenda. Please send us your ideas on how to go forward in the coming years to pr - we'll publish a few of our favorites in a coming edition. Thanks for your help. VALUES Reclaiming Morality On Election Day 2004, 18 million Americans reportedly voted for President Bush because of " moral values, " which " edged terrorism and the economy as the top issue " of the election. But on a number of issues that should be critical to voters who care about morality, the president needs to do better in his second term. " Regardless of who leads this country, " said National Council of Churches General Secretary Robert Edgar, " the agenda of the church must always respond faithfully to the Bible's timeless mandate to minister to the poor, the marginalized and the outcast; and to be seekers and makers of peace. " To that end, progressive religious groups such as Hadassah, Interfaith Alliance and the Protestants for the Common Good (PCG) are encouraging people of faith to work toward reforms on moral issues such as economic justice, poverty, affordable housing and the environment. These are some of the areas in which the president can improve in his second term. RELIGIOUS ISSUES: Evangelical Pastor Jim Wallis - editor of Sojourners - writes that the 2004 election has begun " a real debate in this country over what the most important 'religious issues' are in politics. " The religious right " fought to keep the focus on gay marriage and abortion.But many moderate and progressive Christians disagreed. We insisted that poverty is also a religious issue, pointing to thousands of verses in the Bible on the poor. The environment - protection of God's creation - is also one of our religious concerns. " The Rev. Jeff Schutz, until recently a pastor at " a fast-growing evangelical congregation, " urged Americans to think past personal moral issues like abortion and gay marriage. " How about talking about adoption, special-needs children, reforming the insurance industry, [and] the homeless? " Schutz said. (For more, check out American Progress's Faith and Progressive Policy Initiative.) POVERTY: The president let millions of kids slide into poverty while cutting taxes for the richest Americans. In his first term, President Bush enacted tax cuts skewed overwhelmingly towards the wealthy even as poverty, especially for children, rose for three straight years. The president has pushed to make those tax cuts permanent. A national network of churches and faith-based organizations, Call to Renewal, has been formed to combat poverty in America. HEALTH CARE: The president pandered to special interests instead of providing affordable health care for America's seniors. Under President Bush, five million Americans have lost their health insurance and millions more have seen their premiums rise. The Bush administration backed a Medicare bill which put drug and insurance companies ahead of seniors. According to the American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research (AEI), President Bush's second-term health care plan would insure just 6.7 million new Americans, still leaving 38.3 million Americans uninsured. ENVIRONMENT: President Bush rolled back environmental safeguards, putting the interests of polluters ahead of public health. In Bush's first term, the environment " has stalled or gone into reverse in several areas, " in large part because of the president's reliance on industry insiders (like Halliburton) to write new pollution laws. DEFICIT: President Bush saddled future generations with debt. The president promised not to pass problems on " to future generations, " but if President Bush cannot successfully pay down the $422 billion deficit - created in large part by his tax schemes - he will pass the biggest debt in American history from one generation to another. So far, he has " revealed no details " as to how he plans to pay the debt down. HOUSING: The president tried to dismantle Section 8, the " most successful public-and-private housing partnership in the history of the United States. " The president has repeatedly endorsed programs and policies that are hostile to the program, endangering housing for more than two million poor families nationwide. IRAQ Time To Work The war in Iraq isn't going away. For the past few months, Candidate Bush misrepresented the dire situation in Iraq, painting a falsely rosy picture for American voters. It's time for President Bush own up to his responsibility and face the facts. The country is wracked by a growing insurgency which is armed with powerful, looted weapons; the country is ground zero for terrorist recruitment; our soldiers don't have the equipment they need to fight; international support has all but vanished; and elections scheduled for January are in danger of losing legitimacy. Just yesterday, gunmen kidnapped the second U.S. citizen to be seized this week, while militants released a tape " showing the beheading of an Iraqi officer as a warning to those who deal with 'the infidel' American troops. " Elsewhere, " a U.S. soldier was killed and another was wounded in a roadside bombing 12 miles south of the capital. " The U.S. election is over; it's time for the president to stop playing politics and get to work. REFOCUS ON WINNING BROADER INTERNATIONAL SUPPORT: International support for the war in Iraq, never strong, has crumbled, and unless the coalition is rebuilt, U.S. troops will be left to shoulder the burden alone. Just yesterday, one of the few remaining countries, Hungary, announced its troops would be leaving in March. It joins a long list of countries that have removed support: Spain withdrew its 1,300 troops last March. " The Dominican Republic withdrew 302 soldiers, Nicaragua 115 and Honduras 370. The Philippines withdrew its 51 in July, a month early, after insurgents took hostage a Filipino truck driver working for a Saudi company. Norway withdrew 155 military engineers, keeping only 15 staff members to help NATO train and equip the Iraqi security forces.Poland, the fourth-largest contributor, with 2,400 troops, says it intends to withdraw by the end of next year, and the Netherlands, with 1,400 troops, said this week that the latest rotation of troops would be its last contribution to Iraq. New Zealand is withdrawing its 60 engineers and Thailand said it wanted to bring home its 450 troops. Singapore has reduced its contingent to 33, from 191; Moldova has trimmed its force to 12, from 42. On Wednesday Bulgaria's Defense Ministry said it would reduce its 483 troops to 430 next month, Reuters reported. " FIND THE MISSING EXPLOSIVES: Tons of lethal explosives were looted from unguarded sites in Iraq and now are in the hands of the insurgents and terrorists. This morning, the Los Angeles Times has an eyewitness account of the looting. A group of Army reservists and National Guardsmen watched as " Iraqi looters loaded powerful explosives into pickup trucks and drove the material away from the Al Qaqaa ammunition site " in the days after the fall of Baghdad. The soldiers were outnumbered and requested help from higher-ups to secure the site but they received no reply. " One soldier said U.S. forces watched the looters' trucks loaded with bags marked hexamine - a key ingredient for HMX - being driven away from the facility. Unsure what hexamine was, the troops later did an Internet search and learned of its explosive power. " GET NECESSARY EQUIPMENT TO OUR TROOPS: President Bush must get necessary equipment and armor to our troops in Iraq. Nearly half of U.S. casualties in Iraq are the direct result of roadside bombs, yet twenty months after the start of the war, U.S. soldiers on the front lines still lack " thousands of fully armored vehicles that could save American lives. " Soldiers also lack basics like ammunition, radios, and night vision goggles. BRING BACK AID GROUPS: The ongoing threat of kidnappings and bombings has driven away nearly all international aid groups, leaving U.S. troops and U.S. taxpayers to shoulder the burden alone. USA Today recently reported, " The departure of the charitable non-governmental organizations, or 'NGOs,' from Iraq is more than a barometer of the violence there. It's a big setback for the dream of a peaceful and stable Iraq. It means the U.S. military and taxpayer-paid contractors are almost the only ones left to handle a complex and dangerous burden. " Under the Radar MINIMUM WAGE - FLORIDIANS GIVE WORKERS A BOOST: On Tuesday, voters in Florida " overwhelmingly approved a $1 raise in the wage, from $5.15 to $6.15. " Meghan Scott, communications director for Floridians For All, the group that sponsored the measure, " said the strong support for the measure across party lines meant voters saw it as a moral issue as well as a boost to working families. " The initiative was bolstered by a study sponsored by American Progress which demonstrated that many workers would reap significant benefits, while the costs for businesses would be negligible. STEM CELL - CALIFORNIANS VOTE FOR PROGRESS: California voters approved a ballot initiative Tuesday that " committed billions of dollars to stem-cell research. " Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger broke ranks with President Bush " to support spending $3 billion in seed money for stem-cell research, saying it would bring the state more jobs. " SUPREME COURT - SPECTER ISSUES WARNING: Yesterday, Sen. Arlen Specter (R-PA), the likely chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee, made his position clear on expected Supreme Court vacancies. Specter warned President Bush " against trying to fill any upcoming Supreme Court vacancies with judges who would oppose abortion rights or invite Democrats to block them for being too conservative. " FISCAL RESPONSIBILITY - MOUNTING DEBT MUST BE ADDRESSED: Immediately after securing a second term, " the Bush administration announced Wednesday that it will run out of maneuvering room to manage the government's massive borrowing needs in two weeks, putting more pressure on Congress to raise the debt ceiling when it convenes for a special post-election session. " Congress " put off dealing with the debt ceiling before adjourning in October, preferring not to force members to vote on the politically sensitive issue of adding to the national debt before the November elections. " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 5, 2004 Report Share Posted November 5, 2004 WHO YOU CALLING " WE " I do NOT accept this Not at all. No, I WILL NOT SHUT UP. I WANT MY COUNTRY BACK!!! On Thu, 4 Nov 2004 15:03:38 -0800, John Polifronio <counterpnt wrote: > > " Reportedly " voted for moral values, is precisely right. The people that > voted for Bush, on moral grounds, are at best, self deceived, and in general > are deceiving everyone around them. Bush is arguably the most " immoral " > president in history. To not know this is a disaster in itself. To vote to > force Bush on the rest of us, is absolutely intolerable. Does anyone > actually accept the proposition that the " deep " South, has a " superior " > morality over the North, East or West. Those of us that know better, which > is most of us, will have to console ourselves with the certainty that the > election was rigged in the battleground States, and most of all in Ohio and > Florida. That we've accepted the outcome with nary a whisper of opposition > reveals how completely cowed and intimidated we all feel at the prospect of > having to openly acknowledge our own doubts about the legtimacy of the > election. We yielded in 2000, and pretended to ourselves, that we could > endure the theft of that election " and " a Bush presidency. Now in 2004, > we've once more surrendered our political will to these criminals, and > people are already saying that we'll even the score in 2006. What nonsense. > If we allow them to get away with what they've done in '04, it'll be easier > for them in '06, and still worse in '08. You firmly " draw the line, " not in > response to your knowledge of the presence of evil, but in response to your > courage in opposing it. > JP > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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