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Time for change's Journal
Posted by Time for change in General Discussion (01/01/06 through 01/22/2007)
Sat May 27th 2006, 04:18 PM
Liberals are the staunchest defenders of America as defined by our founding documents and as defined by the American people. What they hate is the bizarre and inhumane concept of America that is put forward by today’s Republican Party.
"Even Islamic terrorists don't hate America like liberals do. They don't have the energy”. – Ann Coulter

It infuriates me to hear hypocritical Republicans spout off about how “liberals hate America”. In the first place, it’s a meaningless and stupid thing to say, because the phrase “hate America” (or “love America”) can mean so many different things. But saying that “liberals hate America” makes a damn good sound bite, and there are many voters who are swayed by that phrase, under the principle that if you hear something said enough times it must be true. And anyhow, what else do Republicans have to talk about?

The fact of the matter is that, according to some definitions of “America” liberals do in fact hate America, and Republicans love America. But according to other definitions of “America”, liberals love America and conservatives hate it.

It is imperative that we make that distinction because otherwise liberals are usually seen to be on the losing side of the argument, since our corporate media acts as a megaphone for Republicans to spread the “liberals hate America” cliché. But if we can successfully make the distinction as to which “America” WE love and hate, and which “America” THEY love and hate, then we will have destroyed a politically powerful talking point for the Republicans – one of the few that they have left.


Why I present this issue as Republicans vs. liberals

It may seem odd that I talk about this in terms of Republicans vs. liberals, rather than conservatives vs. liberals or Republicans vs. Democrats.

By Republicans I mean today’s Republicans – our current presidential administration and all their supporters and enablers in Congress, our judiciary, and in the general population. There are many conservatives who do not support our current administration, and I do not intend this essay to apply to them (although it may in fact apply to some or many of them).

And I speak of “liberals” rather than of Democrats because not all Democrats subscribe to the liberal principles that I discuss here. And furthermore, the Republican “hate America” accusation is generally directed at liberals, rather than Democrats as a whole. They realize that there are so many Americans that consider themselves Democrats that they would sound too strident if they directed their attack against all Democrats, so they have decided to pursue a “divide and conquer” strategy instead. By demonizing liberals and at the same time claiming that liberals have taken over the Democratic Party, the Republicans hope to peal away some Democratic votes.


The “America” that is loved by liberals and hated by Republicans

I can think of at least four different definitions that people use to define the America that they love or hate. Two of them are loved by liberals and hated by Republicans, and the other two are loved by Republicans and hated by liberals. I’ll start here by talking about the America that is loved by liberals.


America as defined by its founding documents – The Declaration of Independence and its Constitution

The first founding document of America, its Declaration of Independence, expresses the ideals which were meant to provide the rationale for its very existence and general guidance for the establishment of its government and all future actions. There are two basic principles of this document that are crucial to the point I am trying to make. The first is this:

We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. — That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed.

What we should take away from this great statement is that ALL men (and by implication, women and children too) should have the opportunity for a decent life – AND that it is the purpose of government to ensure that they have that opportunity.

And it is also very important to point out that the AMERICAN Declaration of Independence does not distinguish, in its human rights declarations, between American citizens and other people. ALL people have these rights. And by the way, Jesus expressed a very similar sentiment when he said "Whatever you neglected to do unto one of these least of these, you neglected to do unto Me"

Liberals fervently believe in this.

That is why liberals eventually abolished slavery in our country.

That is why liberals passed laws that limited the power of corporations to control the lives of ordinary citizens of our country.

That is why liberals passed the Social Security laws and worker compensation laws – to ensure some degree of financial security for the citizens of our country.

That is why liberals even believe in a social safety net (which today’s Republicans call Communism) – to ensure that the least fortunate of our citizens have some opportunity for a decent life.

That is why liberals passed Medicare, to ensure that our older citizens have some access to adequate health care, and why liberals have tried to pass a national health insurance plan – to extend that access to all citizens of our country.

That is why liberals favor raising the minimum wage in our country – so that the working men and women of our country don’t have to live in poverty.

That is why liberals favor adequate funding of public education – so that children will have the opportunity to make a decent life for themselves.

That is why liberals believe that war should be used as a national policy ONLY as a last resort, after other measures have failed – so that the lives of millions are not destroyed for the profits of the few.

That is why liberals believe that we need laws to preserve our environment, which is necessary for a continuing decent life for all people of the world – so that future generations will continue to reap its life preserving and enhancing benefits.

And that is why liberals reject the idea that that private companies have the right to count our votes with secret “proprietary” software] programs that don’t provide assurance that our votes are actually counted – so that ALL people can be assured of the opportunity to participate in our Democracy.


The other basic principle in our Declaration of Independence that I wish to emphasize is this:

That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government…

I emphasize this because Republicans often use as a rationale for their claim that “liberals hate America” the criticisms that liberals direct against their government. Well, as the above excerpt from our Declaration makes clear, there is nothing more American than criticizing our government when one believes that our government is being destructive of the ends for which it was created.

Liberals take the Declaration of Independence very seriously, and that is why they criticize our government when they believe that criticism is warranted – NOT because they “hate America”.


The purpose of our Constitution was to provide a legal framework for the enactment of laws that would eventually make the ideals expressed in our Declaration of Independence a reality. The first ten amendments to our Constitution, the Bill of Rights, were created in order to ensure basic liberties for our citizens. Liberals fervently believe in our Constitution as a means of protecting our Democracy, and that is why they get upset when they observe attempts to undermine our Constitution.


America as defined by its people

Another way of thinking about one’s feelings about America is in reference to its people. Of course there are so many millions of people in America that it is difficult to think about this in the abstract. Liberals, like most other people, love some people and dislike or hate others.

But if I had to describe what it means to love people as an abstract principle, I would go right back to the Declaration of Independence. Loving America as defined by its people is very similar or identical to a fervent belief in our Declaration of Independence, since that Declaration expresses the ideal that ALL people have the RIGHT to an opportunity for a decent life.


The America that is hated by liberals and loved by Republicans

America as defined by its current government

Unfortunately, since the Bush administration came to power in 2001, they and their Republican supporters, by their actions, have shown nothing but contempt for our Declaration of Independence, our Constitution, the people of the United States, and all the people of the world. Liberals do indeed hate this, just as Republicans, as shown by their support for these actions, obviously don’t have a problem with it:

By George W. Bush’s use of hundreds of signing statements to state his intention NOT to follow the laws passed by Congress, he has expressed his contempt for Democracy in general.

By our administration’s unprecedented use of “first amendment zones” to limit the right of protesters against our government to be heard, it has expressed contempt for our First Amendment’s guarantee of free speech. Free speech is a useful guarantee of liberty ONLY IF it can be heard. The right to protest against tyrannical government was THE main rationale for our First Amendment.

By our administration’s declaration that it is illegal for news reporters to report on government actions if our government unilaterally declares those actions to be secret and of national security interest, our administration again has expressed its contempt for our First Amendment’s guarantee of free speech.

By our administration’s program for warantless spying on American citizens, it has expressed its contempt for our Fourth Amendment’s guarantee of freedom from unreasonable searches and seizures.

By our administration’s holding of prisoners “suspected of terrorism” indefinitely and without the bringing of charges or giving them the right to defend themselves, it has expressed its contempt for our Fifth Amendment’s guarantee of the right to face one’s accusers and to defend one’s self against government accusations. By its abuse and torture of many of those prisoners it has expressed its contempt for international law.

By our administration’s preemptive war against a country that posed no threat to us, and their lies to the American people that were designed to make that war politically feasible, they expressed contempt for the American people.

By our administration’s failure to even attempt to take timely action to rescue victims of Hurricane Katrina, it expressed its contempt for people who lack the resources to protect themselves against such natural disasters.

By our administration’s eagerness to side with corporations and wealthy and powerful individuals against other citizens of our country on every single issue, it has expressed contempt for the good majority of people of our country, as well as the principles in our Declaration of Independence. These issues include massive tax breaks for the wealthy, the removal of environmental regulations on the actions of corporations, the attempted destruction of the Social Security Administration, opposition to an increase in the minimum wage to close to the poverty level, the failure to adequately fund our public schools, and many many more.

Lastly, Republicans for decades have expressed so much contempt for the American Civil Liberty Union that they actually use it as a term of abuse. The purpose of the American Civil Liberty Union can be summed up as follows:

The American system of government is founded on two counterbalancing principles: that the majority of the people governs, through democratically elected representatives; and that the power even of a democratic majority must be limited, to ensure individual rights.

Majority power is limited by the Constitution's Bill of Rights, which consists of the original ten amendments ratified in 1791, plus the three post-Civil War amendments (the 13th, 14th and 15th) and the 19th Amendment (women's suffrage), adopted in 1920.

The mission of the ACLU is to preserve all of these protections and guarantees:

In other words, the purpose of the ACLU is to protect the American system of government, as defined by our Constitution. Republicans make no secret of their hatred of the ACLU.


America as defined by “American exceptionalism”

“American exceptionalism” is the term that is used by today’s Republicans to refer to their belief that America never does anything wrong (well, ok, they only use this doctrine when Republicans are in power), and therefore criticizing our government indicates at best hatred for “America” and at worst treason. I don’t know how else to explain this bizarre concept. I don’t even know if most Republicans would say that I am mischaracterizing them in the way I attribute this belief to them, or if they would proudly admit to it. Either way, I don’t see how they can deny it.

This belief is evident in the way that Republican claims that “liberals hate America” are almost always linked to another phrase that they attribute to liberals – “the blame America first crowd”. To these Neanderthals, criticism of an American (Republican) government provides all the grounds they need for their claim that “liberals hate America”.
The concept was expressed perfectly by Republican talk show host Hugh Hewitt, when he referred to Democrats as “a party of bitter hostility to the idea of American exceptionalism”. This statement was directly tied to his scathing criticism of Senator Richard Durbin for daring to complain about the torture of American prisoners of war on the floor of the U.S. Senate. In his scathing criticism of Durbin, Hewitt never once denied Durbin’s charges. There was no need to deny the charges to the kind of people to whom Hewitt’s tirade was addressed. His point was simply that America should be allowed to do whatever it wants to do, and criticism of American actions, no matter what they are, constitute “hatred of America”.


Conclusion

Liberals are the staunchest defenders of America as defined by our founding documents and as defined by the American people. What they hate is the bizarre and inhumane concept of America that is put forward by today’s Republican Party. When liberals criticize that version of America, and are consequently accused by Republicans of “hating America”, they should be very assertive about making the distinction. Few Americans approve of today’s Republican agenda once they understand what it is.
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A summary of my DU posts
Time for change


The good majority of my DU posts consist of one of six general subjects: The need to remove from office the current cancer upon our nation; election fraud; the tragedy of the Bush administration; my ideas on the liberal values that we all hope will some day replace the values that our current government runs on; historical events that I believe cast light upon our current situation; and other political ideas.


The need to remove Bush and Cheney from office

In 2006, John Conyers wrote a 198 page report, documented with 1,401 references, titled “The Constitution in Crisis – The Downing Street Minutes and Deception, Manipulation, Torture, Retribution, Cover-ups in the Iraq War, and Illegal Domestic Surveillance”. The title of his report reflected the primary reasons why George Bush and Dick Cheney must be removed from office: They have made a mockery of our Constitution – the foundation for the rule of law in our nation – by consistently violating it. Our Constitution, if we can keep it in fact and not just in name, makes our nation much more than just a democracy. By providing protections for minorities and the powerless, our Constitution adds civility, humanity, and decency to what could otherwise be a barbaric nation – democratic or not.

Aside from the continuing damage that Bush and Cheney can do to our country in their remaining time in office, including their potential to involve us in ever expanding new wars, failing to remove from office the most lawless presidential administration in our history will set an awful precedent in our nation – a precedent for doing away with our Constitution. Providing in our Constitution a mechanism for impeachment and removal from office was of utmost priority to our Founding Fathers. As Thomas Jefferson once said, “When once a republic is corrupted there is no possibility of remedying any of the growing evils but by removing the corruption and restoring its lost principles…”

Many arguments have been put forward against impeachment. This post answers those arguments. Some opponents of impeachment mistakenly advocate the view that the impeachment of public officials requires evidence of the commitment of an actual crime – and would not be justified by such things as gross violation of the public trust, corruption, negligence, or incompetence. Leaving aside the fact that such an interpretation would leave our nation subject to rule by people who would do great and possibly irreparable harm to it, the preponderance of evidence flatly contradicts that interpretation.

Others claim that we don’t have enough evidence to proceed with impeachment. I argue here that the current evidence for impeachment is so abundant, arguing that we need more sets the impeachment bar at an absurdly high level.

Others argue we don’t have the votes for impeachment – which implies that we must not bring individuals to trial until we have counted the votes, rather the using the trial to get the votes. Such an argument ignores the likelihood that votes will accumulate as Americans watch the impeachment trial and become intensely exposed for the first time to the many outrageous crimes of George Bush and Dick Cheney. And it also ignores the fact that Senators who refuse to vote for conviction will probably be putting their seats in jeopardy.

But perhaps the most urgent reason for moving to impeach Bush and Cheney as soon as possible is that their continuing refusal to be bound by the laws and the Constitution of our nation raises the spectacle that they may be planning a coup d’etat. Why else would they go to such lengths to destroy our Constitution and the rule of law in our nation? We must preempt them by moving as quickly as possible on this.


Election fraud

The DU apparently was born as a result of the 2000 November-December election fraud that began the long nightmare that is the George W. Bush administration.

I went to bed on Election Day 2000, shortly after Bush was announced as our new President, feeling as if the end of world civilization was near at hand. My wife woke me up a couple hours later to tell me the good news that the announcement of Bush’s Presidency had been temporarily cancelled. Thus began a period of 36 days that I followed more intensely than any other news event of my life – ending in the infamous and disastrous Supreme Court decision that marked the beginning of our long road to dictatorship.

My son (EOTE) joined DU in January 2001, a few days after it began, but I did not, for reasons that now escape me. I did, however, do a lot of writing about the 2000 election, including a desperate plea to my Maryland Senators, to please demand a real recount of the 2000 Florida vote. And I also contributed an article to DU on that subject, in my son’s name (I did not use my own name because I was a federal employee and I was afraid that I could get into trouble for writing such an article), in the spring of 2001.

The fraudulent 2004 Presidential election is what brought me into DU. I had worked as a volunteer in the Kerry/Edwards campaign, I had followed the presidential polls obsessively, and by Election Day 2004 I was about as confident as I could be that John Kerry would be our next President. Thus, the reported results of that election were both profoundly disappointing and difficult for me to believe, as they were for the great majority of DUers.

I immediately began an effort to acquire as many election statistics as I could, in a feverish and desperate attempt to prove that the election was a fraud, which I hoped would aid in its overturning. In late November I had my son post an analysis that I did of the discrepancy between the exit polls and the official election results (Note: My son supplied the title, which I feel is too strong, which you can see if you read the article). And finding that it was awkward to have my son post my articles, I joined DU a few days later.

Since then I have posted dozens of election fraud related threads, a small number of the most important of which I have included in my journal.

In particular, I have come to believe that the main mechanism by which the 2004 election was stolen was the massive and illegal targeted purging of Democratic voters in Ohio, especially in Cleveland. This thread contains a great amount of evidence to support that contention.

In addition, I believe that there is good evidence that says that large numbers of votes in Cuyahoga County were deleted by its central tabulator, as explained in this thread, which also discusses an early 2006 partial audit of Cuyahoga County. And, I think that the death of Raymond Lemme, who while investigating Clint Curtis’ sworn allegations of vote switching computer programs, was found dead in a Georgia hotel room, just a couple weeks after telling Curtis that he had traced the corruption “all the way to the top”, is extremely suspicious to say the least. Here is my explanation of the controversy over the discrepancy between the 2004 exit polls and the official 2004 vote count. And here is a summary of several reasons I have written about for believing that the 2004 election was stolen.

Finally, here are my ideas for preventing another stolen election in 2006 and 2008.


The tragedy of the Bush administration

The fake war on terrorism

I believe that a crucial requirement for a good understanding of the Bush administration’s actions since September 11, 2001, is the realization that its “War on Terrorism” is nothing but a colossal fake. Only with that realization do numerous Bush administration characteristics and actions make sense, including: Its disinterest in Osama bin Laden; its great urge to rush into a war with Iraq at any cost; its utter contempt for international law and the rest of the world; its succession of no-bid contracts for its wealthy friends; its lavish tax cuts for the wealthiest of our citizens and corporations during ‘time of war’; the Dubai port deals; and, its attempt to turn our democracy into a dictatorship.

With that in mind, I wrote in this post about the main reasons why I believe that the Bush administration was complicit in the 9-11 attacks. There are many reasons why I believe that now, but the initial and still most important reason is the utter failure of our military, the mightiest military that the world has ever known, despite repeated warnings and more than ample time on 9-11 itself, to protect its own capital city.

Abuse of the human rights of prisoners for no apparent purpose

To me, the most sickening and disgraceful aspect of the Bush administration’s “War on Terrorism” is its complete lack of concern for human rights, demonstrated among other ways by the indefinite confinement, without trial or even bringing of charges, of thousands of prisoners of war, and its frequent use of torture. I have discussed this issue in several OPs, starting with this one. Here I describe the issue as seen through the eyes of a U.S. Army Muslim Chaplain who had ministerial responsibilities for hundreds of our prisoners at Guantanamo Bay, who witnessed the severe and daily abuse of his charges over a period of several months, and who eventually was imprisoned himself when it was felt that he was making too many waves over what he had seen. Here is my summary of what the great journalist Seymour Hersh had to say on this subject, based on his numerous high level sources. Jimmy Carter felt so strongly about this issue that he broke the unwritten rule against ex-Presidents criticizing sitting Presidents, with one of the most scathing attacks on this policy that I have ever seen. And Senator Richard Durbin was the victim of continued public verbal abuse from the right for daring to make public how our government was treating its prisoners.

Lying us into war

It is evident to most informed people that one of the biggest motivations for Bush's "War on Terror" was to provide a justification for the invasion of Iraq. Seymour Hersh’s excellent account of how the Bush administration manipulated and twisted intelligence in order justify a preemptive war against Iraq is a must read for anyone who still supports this administration and thinks that the Iraq war was necessary. And as for Bush's excuse that we are now fighting that war for the benefit of the Iraqi people, Democrats should start talking about how the Iraqi people actually feel about us being in their country.

Just how bad are Bush and his cronies and how much danger do they pose to American democracy?

George w. Bush and his administration and fellow travellers in today's Republican Party are about as bad as they come. They are anti-science ignoramuses. They are chicken hawks. They have no consciences. They are torturers. They are cowards. They are evil. And I doubt that there are any moral boundaries beyond which they will not go to get their way.

I think that in the interest of preserving our democracy, we should be aware of the similarities between the Bush administration and Hitler’s Nazis (which I wrote about even before the revelations about Bush’s warantless wiretapping), and understand that if we aren’t vigilant, yes it CAN happen here too.


Moral values that separate us from today’s Republicans

It makes me so mad to hear people ridicule what they consider to be “liberal values” and compare them unfavorably to the wonderful moral values of George W. Bush and his Republicans friends. In the vast majority of cases these people don’t even have a vague idea about what liberal values really are. They have simply been conditioned by our corporate media over several years or decades to believe that liberals encourage irresponsibility, are ‘soft’ on national defense and ‘law and order’, and are wild spenders. These ridiculous myths about liberals have in turn encouraged the Democratic Party to disavow the liberal label and in some cases to veer way to the right. I submit that, rather than running away from the liberal label we should be proud of it, and we should challenge those that seek to disparage it. And to further make this point I posted a tribute to several historical and current political leaders who have been unafraid to speak out loudly for what they believe in, and I suggested an answer to those Republican morons who accuse liberals of hating America.

Let's take a look at some of the specific moral values that separate Democrats from Republicans:

Republicans like to pretend that they're more moral than us because they're more "religious"

Many of those who disparage liberals are fundamentalist Christians who repeatedly invoke the name of Jesus Christ, and who believe that the superiority of their moral values to those of liberals and Democrats is proven by their repeated references to Jesus. Don’t these people understand that Jesus was a liberal, whose moral values were much closer to those of the Democratic Party than to those of the Republican Party, with whom they align themselves and vote for? Isn't it an astounding paradox that the Republican Party has usurped for their own purposes one of the most liberal religious leaders in world history, while at the same time showing nothing but contempt for liberals and liberal principles?

The movement for privatization of government functions

One of the biggest threats to our democracy is the privatization movement. In the name of “freedom” and “self-reliance”, the leaders of this movement advocate the freedom of powerful corporations to destroy our environment and to run our elections, our schools, our social safety net programs, and our prison system, as well as every other program which has long been considered a legitimate function of government. The fact that government is elected by the people to serve public functions, whereas the purpose of private corporations is to make profits for their investors, is either totally lost on these people, or else they simply feel that the above mentioned programs should be run for profit rather than for service.

Al Gore alluded to this issue in his great film, "An Inconvenient Truth", where he discussed the unholy alliance between government, private industry, and the press, whereby a corrupt government, in exchange for legal bribes from the industries they are supposed to control, propagates false information and policies that are favorable to those industries instead of the public that they are elected to serve. I discuss my own personal experience with that unholy alliance, where the FDA withdrew an about to be published scientific article I had written, under pressure from a manufacturer who stood to be economically hurt by the information in that article.

The need for a free and independent press

Another great threat to our democracy is the ownership of our country’s news media by a very small group of wealthy individuals who have strong ties to the Republican Party, and whose motivation in providing “news” is to maintain satisfaction with the status quo, rather than to report what is important and true. Two prime examples of corporate media shills and pseudo-journalists who pretend to be real journalists are Chris Matthews and Tim Russert. Bill Moyers explains how this situation threatens to destroy our democracy, and how this came about through the dismantling of rules and regulations which were meant to prevent the monopolization of our news. And Robert Parry explains why he started his web site to help combat the misinformation we get from our corporate media.

Health care

Liberals, and most other decent people, believe that people should be entitled to decent health care. That is why, prior to the "pro-life" administration of George W. Bush, infant mortality rate in the United States had been steadily declining for several decades. But shortly into the Bush administration, due to the starving of women and infant health programs for federal funds, infant mortality rate began a steady rise. Nor do Republicans care much about veterans' health, as indicated by the rejecting of this much needed veteran's health bill in the U.S. Senate by virtually a strict party line vote.

An enquiring mind

One of the many tricks that our corporate media uses to squelch alternative viewpoints is to label anyone who substantially disagrees with their “correct” version of the news as “conspiracy theorists”. Well, I have news for them. The views of us “conspiracy theorists” are usually much more closely aligned with reality than is most of the trash that we hear from the corporate news media these days, such as the stories about Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction, which were used to justify our illegal preemptive invasion of that country. We “conspiracy theorists” believe that it is not only the right of American citizens to challenge the corporate news media story lines, but it is our responsibility as well, as good citizens who care about our country.

The dignity of all human beings

Perhaps the most important value held by liberals is a belief in the dignity of all human beings – hence the 19th century movement by liberals to abolish slavery. Here is one of my favorite stories on that subject.

A summary

And here is a post where I talk about all the major values that separate Democrats from Republicans.


Historical events that help us understand our present

Though there is little doubt that George W. Bush is by far the worst president we’ve ever had, our past history is at least partly responsible for preparing the way for this tragedy. The history of our nation is full of examples of failures to live up to our ideals. In addition to our long history of slavery and our near extermination of the Native American population of our present day country, we began a long history of overseas imperialism beginning in the late 19th Century. The long standing history of extreme hostility to socialism by the elites of our country has been responsible for much of this imperialism, as well as domestic repression against labor unions and others who would speak out against the status quo. The usurpation by our Executive Branch of the war making powers given to Congress by our Founding Fathers did not originate with George W. Bush. And the attitudes fostered by our long history of slavery are still with us today, especially in the areas of our country where slavery thrived for so long.

Today, as the transgressions of George Bush and Dick Cheney threaten the existence of our nation as we know it, we would do well to recall how the German nation was led into tyranny more than six decades ago. The parallels between Hitler’s war on terror and George Bush’s war on terror are extraordinarily striking in my opinion. And the better able we are to recognize the danger, the more likely we are to take steps to prevent a similar fate.


Political ideas

Republicans have 3 great advantages in elections against Democrats, whereas the only advantage that the Democratic Party has is that its policies are meant to serve all Americans, rather than just the select few. In addition to electoral fraud and huge sums of money donated to the GOP by their corporate masters as legalized bribery, Democrats have to contend with a multitude of news media whores.

But those advantages are not sufficient for a Party that has nothing of value to offer to our country. So, when we suggest investigation of their corrupt deeds they call us conspiracy theorists. When we suggest policies such as making basic affordable health care available to all Americans they accuse us of class warfare. And when we criticize the rampant corruption at the highest levels of government they accuse us of "hating America". And when none of that works they try to scare us by telling us that if we don't give them unlimited power over us we risk being killed by terrorists.

If there was ever a presidential administration that needed to be impeached, this is it. Grass roots efforts are under way to accomplish this, and we can all help. Our Democratic leaders need to seriously consider and talk about this. And they must be united and avoid inter-party warfare.
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