Kerry’s Speech, Yours and Mine

The following are my favorite parts of

Kerry’s speech. You can follow the link to the full text. mjh

The complete text of Kerry’s acceptance speech

Now I know there are those who criticize me for seeing complexities — and I do — because some issues just aren’t all that simple.

For us, that flag is the most powerful symbol of who we are and what we believe in. Our strength. Our diversity. Our love of

country. All that makes America both great and good.

That flag doesn’t belong to any president. It doesn’t belong to any ideology

and it doesn’t belong to any political party. It belongs to all the American people. …

We believe that what matters most is not

narrow appeals masquerading as values, but the shared values that show the true face of America. Not narrow appeals that divide us, but

shared values that unite us. …

And let me say it plainly: In that cause, and in this campaign, we welcome people of faith. America

is not us and them. I think of what Ron Reagan said of his father a few weeks ago, and I want to say this to you tonight: I don’t wear

my own faith on my sleeve. But faith has given me values and hope to live by, from Vietnam to this day, from Sunday to Sunday. I don’t

want to claim that God is on our side. As Abraham Lincoln told us, I want to pray humbly that we are on God’s side. …

These

aren’t Democratic values. These aren’t Republican values. They’re American values. We believe in them. They’re who we are. …

What if we have a president who believes in science … ? …

That is the kind of America I will lead as president — an America

where we are all in the same boat.

Never has there been a more urgent moment for Americans to step up and define ourselves. I will

work my heart out. But, my fellow citizens, the outcome is in your hands more than mine.

I do have two objections. First,

what about those of us who believe you can be decent and moral and not believe in god or church? We’re used to be left out; we’re

pariahs in a nation founded on freedom from religious oppresion — oh, but wait, not freedom from religion itself.

Finally, I’m very

sad that I didn’t hear anyone at the convention protest the ‘free speech cage’. That not one ‘liberal’ would say ‘tear down that

cage — America is a free speech zone!’ This is how bad things are today. mjh

Proud Liberal

During Howard Dean’s speech to the Democratic National Convention, he said

something that puzzled the pundits: we no longer need to be ashamed to say we are Democrats. David Brooks, a conservative, mused, ‘when

have Democrats ever been ashamed to be Democrats?’

The problem is the word: it’s not ‘Democrat,’ it’s ‘Liberal.’ The Radical

Right has heaped scorn on liberalism and liberals for nearly 40 years. Even now, while Kerry undermines Bush’s security creditionals

(war-hero vs party-boy), the Radical Right couldn’t care less: Kerry’s a liberal and they’re going to make sure everyone in America

knows that, because everyone in America know being a Liberal is bad.

Why is liberalism bad? Don’t just spew the Radical

Rights’ refrain in response — think. In the last 30 years, a Republican President lied, cheated and stole and resigned. Another

cajoled us while making deals with dictators and death squads. The current one started with the big lie, ”I’m a uniter, not a

divider,” and went downhill from there. What, exactly, do Conservatives have to be proud of, or, why aren’t they ashamed of this?

What is the single greatest accomplishment of liberalism in the last 40 years? The Civil Rights Movement. Where were the

Radical Right and the Christian Evangelicals then? Well, many of them were Southern Democrats. Cleverly, the Republicans lured them

with talk against the Federal Government. The Federal Government is the Beast. On the surface, they talk about taxes and regulations. At

the heart is fear: fear of change, fear of loss of power, fear of others, of ‘them.’ We’ll call ‘them’ liberals, but, wink, you know

what we mean: blacks, hispanics, asians, gays, women — whatever you fear, that’s them over there, waiting to take your way of life away

from you. Lies that play on fear. Straight out of Nixon’s playbook.

Fear is at the heart of the control the Radical Right

and Christian Evangelicals hold over the Republican Party and, through it, all of America. We may not be able to do anything about

their fear and loathing, but we cannot let it stop us from progress and moving America forward again towards freedom and peace. America

IS a liberal nation, equality and justice are LIBERAL notions; the status quo, convention, keeping power and control are

CONSERVATIVE, and shameful. mjh

Loyalty Oath

You must pledge allegiance to King George!ABQjournal: Obtaining Cheney Rally Ticket Requires Signing Bush Endorsement By Jeff Jones, Journal Staff Writer

Unless you sign an endorsement for President George W. Bush, you’re not getting any passes. …

An endorsement form provided to the Journal by Random says: “I, (full name) … do herby (sic) endorse George W. Bush for reelection of the United States.” It later adds that, “In signing the above endorsement you are consenting to use and release of your name by Bush-Cheney as an endorser of President Bush.” …

“I’m outraged at this. I’m being closed off by my own government. It’s crazy,” said East Mountains resident Pamela Random, who added that she is an unaffiliated voter. …

When Kerry visited Albuquerque earlier this month, a contingent of Bush supporters were in the crowd. The Associated Press has reported that the group chanted “Viva Bush!” during the event. The AP added that Kerry urged the crowd to tolerate the Bush supporters.

Fears rules the the Radical Right and through fear they rule America. mjh

In NM: Kerry–52% Bush–42.2%

New Mexico Politics with Joe Monahan

“August may be a do or die month for the President,” opined one top Republican who has worked at all levels of politics. “The real trouble for Bush is not just in the horse race, but in how voters here feel about the direction of the country. Only 39% believe the country is on the ‘right track’ compared to 57% who feel it’s on the ‘wrong track.”

The grim numbers for Team Bush are as follows: Kerry–52% Bush–42.2% Nader–0.9%. That’s a 9.8% lead for Kerry, the largest of the five Zogby polls conducted thus far and the second one that has put him over the magic 50% level. The margin of error in the poll, done July 19-23, is plus or minus 4.4%. 499 New Mexicans participated.

‘dissimilar, dated and unrelated’

Letter:Republicans use Kerry quotes out of context (Daily Lobo)

Editor,

In today’s political forum, so much of what is passed through the media contains partial information and disinformation.

Nowhere is this more true in than the recent Republican attempt to portray John Kerry as a flip-flopper. Using partial and out-of-context information, conservative pundits have tried to cast doubt on Kerry’s political career. The great majority of the 37 flip-flops the Republican media cling to are based on superficial information or quotes, which are then juxtaposed against another quote selectively tailored to meet the needs of the flip-flop argument.

In these articles, dissimilar, dated and unrelated events are whittled down and cast as the whole story.

The conservatives would have us believe that Kerry flipped from a stance that abortion is a states’ issue to the stance it is a federal issue. That’s No. 17 on the GOP’s list of flip-flops, and a simple look at the facts dissolves this argument. The purported flip-flop uses a statement Kerry made in 1972 and one he made in 1985 when he said “Those of us in (federal) government have a special responsibility to protect this right (abortion).”

A seeming flip-flop right? Why would Kerry say abortion should be left to the states in 1972? Probably because it was not until 1973 that the Supreme Court decreed abortion was a federally-protected right for women. Before that, it was left for the states to decide.

The difference in Kerry’s statements is not a reflection of change in his policy, but a change in the laws of the United States and the rights of Americans. Bush may not respect the decisions of the Supreme Court in regards to abortion, but that doesn’t make them irrelevant.

Another tool in the conservative media’s attempt to slander Kerry’s record is to use simple disinformation. Their account of Kerry’s purported flip-flop on the No Child Left Behind Act – No. 8 on the GOP’s list – is a cold-cut example of this tactic.

The act was one of the cornerstones of Bush’s 2000 campaign in which he billed himself as an “education president.” In 2001, Kerry voted in support of the act. Conservatives contend Kerry then flip-flopped when he recently said he was going to “make the president accountable for making a mockery of No Child Left Behind.” Even on its face, this argument can hardly be taken as a legitimate flip-flop.

Kerry’s statement is an obvious criticism of Bush’s support for his administration’s legislation, not a criticism of the act.

Further, history backs Kerry’s criticism of Bush. After the passing of the bill, the Bush administration failed to even propose adequate funds to support the No Child Left Behind act. In every fiscal year since the passage of the bill, the Bush administration’s budget has fallen $6-7 billion short of funding the obligations set forth in Bush’s legislation.

Not funding a bill that was the cornerstone of his presidential campaign? Sounds more like a Bush flip-flop.

Terri-Nikole Baca
Morgan Pierce
Nathan Cobb
UNM College Democrats

"It does not require a majority to prevail, but rather an irate, tireless minority keen to set brush fires in people's minds." — Sam Adams