Howard Dean - The Voice of the Democratic Party Grassroots

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Introduction by Art Torres, who said he though this was the best speech Howard Dean has ever given:

It was in 1998, in a high rise in San Francisco, that a Governor of Vermont came to visit. I had never met him before, but he was very important even then, because he was the Chairman of the Democratic Governor's Association. He told me he was going work very hard to help elect Democrats to state houses across the country. And I want to thank him personally for helping us elect Gray Davis in 1998 as Democratic Governor after eighteen years of Republican rule. That was Howard Dean. When he ran for President and did not succeed at first, he didn't stop. He didn't say I'm done, I quit, I walk away.

More in Extended Entry

Introduction continued:
He went back to work. He went back to work for the Democratic nominee for President and Vice President. He went back to work for Governors, City Council Members, School Board Members, County Supervisors, members of Congress, legislators across the country, because he did not give up on the Democratic party. Those of us who are here know what candidates for President sometimes do. They fade away. They say thank you very much I'm off to do other things. Not Howard Dean. Not Howard Dean.  

His Democracy For America has transformed the politics of America. His political experience has given him a unique perspective, not only in the 1980's as the County Democratic Party Chair. Many of you don't realize this in Vermont he was the County Democratic Chair...In 1983 he was elected to the Vermont House of Representatives. He was elected to be Lt. Governor and then re-elected. In1990 he became Vermont's Governor on the death of  Gov. Richard A.Snelling, on Aug 14, 1991. He was in his medical office, never thinking he would be Governor and being called to say that a vacancy had occurred and he was now the governor of Vermont. The rest is history. He did not give up on us and we have not given up on him.  

Rather than go away, back to Vermont, great maple syrup and other things from that great state. Did Dean decide to fade away after 2004? No. He came back not to run for President, but to help rebuild the national Democratic party and revitalize it from the bottom up.  

As he did so, he created more enthusiasm and more energy because for the first time grassroots people realized for the first time, especially as the officers of the state Chairs of the Democratic party, realized his man is for real, he was committed to the grass roots and the fact that he wanted to head the Democratic party and work from the bottom up, reassured all of us that this party has a future in America.  

So I am thankful for the conversations we had by cell phone during his campaign. Late at night, calling from Vermont, me calling from San Francisco. exchanging ideas and exchanging visions. To know that I played a very small part in supporting him to take over this national party along with many other state chairs from around the country, is one of my proud moments. Because we are truly committed to the people in this room. People can talk about commitment, but as other speakers have said, Howard Dean follows through on his commitment and his word.

Please welcome Vermont's favorite son, America's National Democratic Chair, Governor, Doctor, Man Of The People, Howard Dean.

Howard Dean:  Thank-you.  (Standing O)  Thank-you. . . . Thank-you. . . . Thank-you. . . .

(Imitation of The Ahnold) I'm here to announce that I'm running for Governor of Caleeforneya.

You have three great candidates for Governor in California so I'm not doing that. I appreciate everyone being here. I really appreciate Art's kind words and his help. I just want to tell you how much I appreciate Mike Honda and what he has done. He is a complete team player and has been working his heart out, so that we can have some semblance of honesty back in Washington D.C.  Mike we thank you very much for that.  

I also want to make sure we recognize Alice Travester  who is a Californian, who is Secretary of the Democratic National Committee. Stand up and wave. I can't see anything up here with all of the lights in my face.

I want to thank Alexandra Rooker the Vice-Chair, and congratulate both Art and her on their re-election a few hours ago.  I appreciate all of your help a lot. If only California had been the first primary state. What I want to know is what is the legislature doing moving it to June 6th?

The first thing I want you to know is that this is not my chairmanship it is our chairmanship together. There is nothing one person can do by themselves. As a matter of fact, one of the reasons I sought this office is because of you. A lot of people here are people who have not been to a Cal Dem convention before or have not been on assemblies before or consider yourself a Dem three or four years ago.

I watched what happened   in California during the Assembly District elections   a few months ago.    Once again the grassroots got it before I did. I watched and I thought if you were going to reform the party from the ground up and I thought I'd try to help you reform the party from the top down.

Together we need to do a lot of things.

I've been really pleased by what I've  seen in the last few months. People used to say the Democratic party was really not a party, just a collection of interests. That isn't true any more. The future of the country is threatened. We're going to do what we need to do and work with who we have to work with to make sure America gets back on the right track again.

The first thing we did was start to put organizers in all fifty states.

You have seen the last eighteen state Presidential campaign in America. We can't win if we don't campaign in all fifty states. I went to Mississippi a few weeks ago, because I think if you don't show up in a state, how are people going to respect you if you don't even ask for their vote? So I went down to Mississippi. The Chairman of the Republican party called me all sorts of names before I even got there, which is what your do when you don't have anything to show for having been in power for five years.

When I got there I found that 900 people were waiting to get into an 800 capacity ball room. All four former Democratic Governors of Mississippi were there, which is unusual because they usually run the other direction when a national democrat shows up.  They are desperately hungry to win in Mississippi. They are hungry to win in Tennessee. They are hungry to win in Kansas.

Because the truth is there are no red states there are no blues states. There are only American states, and we all share the same values as Americans. Our problem is not that Americans don't share our values. Our problem is that   we don't communicate what those  values are very well.    Our problem is not that we need to change our values. Our problem is that     we need to talk to people in language that is relevant to their lives and not just ours.

Democrats are cerebral people.  Sometimes we make policy, but

We don't communicate to people why that policy is important here.
We have a young pollster who did a fascinating poll for us.

Which among other things shows there is a group of people who have the highest level of anxiety that I have every seen in America. About one quarter of Americans are worried. They are worried about the President sending more of their jobs overseas than ever before.  They are worried about losing their health insurance, even more than has already been lost.    These people are one check away from losing their mortgage.   One check away from having to go to a bankruptcy court. And yet they vote overwhelmingly Republican.

At the other end of that anxiety about economics, there is an enormous anxiety about their kids. These people are terribly worried about what they see coming across their television at their children, and they don't know what to do. They are worried about the Sheriff who just discovered the methamphetamine lab two counties over and they know it's headed for their school. They are worried about moral values. They are worried about gay marriage and abortion and all of that stuff.

But what they are worried about more than anything else is that they've already lost control of their life economically. The only thing they have left that they can't lose control of is their kids and their families. We need to talk to those folks. We need not to react to the backlash and the differences and opinions about gay rights and things like that, because that's the symptom.  

What is real is the fear and we don't address it. We come across like "Well that's unreasonable, that's irrational." Then our next reaction is we have three programs that are going to help that:  early child hood education, early intervention and universal health care. All good things. What they hear is "Oh, I see, you want to take over raising our kids for us."

We need to change the way we talk to folks. We can'tkeep talking to people talking from here. We need to talk to people from here.    Seventy percent of Americans vote from here. We don't have to change our core values. I've been to Mississippi. I've been to Tennessee. I've been to Kansas. If you stand up for what your believe, people will respect you. We may not get one single additional vote from those states, but we will never again be demonized the way the President demonized Democrats.

We need to show that we respect folks. The best way to show we respect people in all fifty states is to show up and listen to what they have to say and understand them. Not that we should ever agree with a violation of civil rights or equal rights under the law for all citizens. That is a core belief for all Americans and certainly for every Democrat.

 I think we need to talk about abortion differently. And I'll tell you just what I mean by that.  

Republicans have painted us into a corner as being pro-abortion. I don't know anyone who is pro-abortion. I don't. They back us into getting into an argument over whether abortion is a good thing or not. Did you know there has been a 25% higher rate of abortion since George Bush was President than when Clinton was President? We can make common ground with folks.

The issue we need to debate is whether a woman gets to make up her own mind over what kind of health care she's going to get or whether Tom DeLay gets to make up her mind for her. That's the issue we need to debate.

When I was campaigning for this job I ran into a lot of women in the south who said they were pro-life. They would tell me "I wouldn't want an abortion and I wouldn't want my daughter to have an abortion, but I'm not sure if I'd want to tell the lady next door, if she was in a fix, whether she should have an abortion."

We call that person pro-choice, but she calls herself pro-life. The minute we start talking about choice, she's not listening to us anymore.

When we say this debate is about  whether a woman has a right to make up here own mind    Every woman in America has been told what to do by somebody else once in a while.   Every woman in America gets that Democrats believe that individuals should be allowed to make up their own mind and that politicians in Washington will not make these decisions for Americans.  (Standing O)

I want to talk about moral values for a moment. It is a moral value not to leave more debt to your children than then the debt that you encountered. That is a moral value. We have not seen one Republican President balance in the last forty years balance the budget of the United States of America.  Borrow and spend borrow and spend borrow and spend. We can't trust the Republican party with our taxpayers' money.

Social Security is a moral value for people who have worked all their life. They deserve to retire with dignity. We ought not turn Social Security over to the same people who gave us Enron.

A strong defense of United States of America would be stronger if we continued to have the high moral ground in foreign policy. If we were only the admired nation that America was before George Bush took office. We would have a moral foreign policy and that would give us the ability to defend America. America is not going to be defended simply by having a strong military. We also need to have high moral purpose.

It is a moral value, as some of our evangelical friends have recently pointed out to conserve and steward the earth and the environment we were so lucky to have been given. Environmental preservation is a moral value.

It is a moral value not to cheat hard working middle class Americans by telling them that you've given them a tax cut when you raised their property taxes and exercised federal control over their schools.  It is a moral value to tell the truth. It is a moral value to be honest in our dealings with others.

It is not a moral value to be reprimanded three times by the ethics committee and then trying to get rid of the committee.

It is not a moral value to have 204 judges confirmed and then try to get rid of 200 years of Senate precedent, to get the last 10 on the bench.

It is not a moral value to create the largest deficits in the history of the U.S. of America and have our creditors be those who may one day be our enemy.

It is not a moral value to threaten judges of the United States of America because they made a decision that you don't agree with.

It is not a moral value to insert yourself into the private and most personal life and death decisions of a family at a time of their greatest need.

We can't win if all we do is talk about the problems that the Republicans have given this country. We can only win if we have a positive agenda. And that positive agenda includes jobs for Americans that will stay here in America. That positive agenda includes making labor unions stronger, so that every American can have the great dream of making sure that their children do better than they do.

That positive agenda includes committing America to join every other industrialized nation on the face of the earth and have a system of health care that every single American is covered by.

Every one in this room is here because you were able to give some money to the Democratic party. Everyone one in this room is able to give some money to the Democratic party because for the most part, you're doing OK. You may be struggling , but you're doing okay. Thank-you for that too.

Everybody is here and can afford to give a little bit to the Democratic party because somebody, either your parents or their parents, or their parents, came here, or in the case of native Americans were here before we got here.  You're here today as a success because somebody in that chain between those who came and those who are here tonight, benefited from a free and public American education.

What we will do as Americans is make sure that when the Democrats are back in power, that public education is supported. We will say no to Gov Swarzenegger's attempt to take $2 billion out of the education fund last year and break his promise  by not putting it back in the education fund this year. Governor, keep your promise to the children of California and fund public schools. That is how we get ahead in America.

Governor, don't go down the same road as Tom Day We can't use any more corrupt Republicans in office in this country. Governor, give our children the $2 billion you promised to make our public schools a success. The school system has been harmed enough.

Education, opportunity, a health care system that works for everybody, including a middle class people who are afraid it may be bankrupted. an economy that relies again on budgets that are balanced. Imagine every Republican Senator voting no on pay as you go bill that Republicans put in. The idea that we would ever in our life time see Republicans become the party of fiscal irresponsibility to me is astonishing, although very little is astonishing in Washington any more.

We want to rebuild America. We want to rebuild America's infrastructure. Which is being gutted by a tax policy that forces states and municipalities to raise taxes or go without. We want to rebuild American morals so we care about each other again and can publicly say so again. You know Social Security is not just about money. Social Security is about whether we have responsibility to each other in our community or not.

We will make sure that we are one nation. And part of being one nation is including every body. Including everybody and being honest with each other again, and that won't be easy all the time. Democrats make mistakes. Lord we've made plenty of them.

We don't have that far to go. We got 48% of the vote  after all of the mistakes we made. We don't have to do a whole lot to come back. All we need is three percent of the vote. Three percent of the vote to cast aside the propaganda of Fox News. Three percent to bring our health care policy in synch witht the rest of the world and three percent of the vote to take back moral foreign policy and be the shining example of   opportunity and  compassion and caring that this country once was.

Three percent to say to the people of California that we will fund California schools. Three percent to look ourselves in the mirror and say we are not leave enormous amounts of debt to our children. Three percent of the vote , we dcdan do it.We need four year campaigns in all fifty states. We need one other thing.

Some of you have heard this story before, but I'm going to tell it again anyway.

When I was campaigning for President. There was a lady in New Jersey who helped us enormously. She raised a lot of money for us.  Very smart people including people from previous Democratic administrations and so forth.  One of the guests was this woman's 30 year old daughter, who was a school teacher from Texas. We were talking about things and Church and State came around and everybody was talking about that. And all of a sudden the woman from Texas popped up and said "Governor, I don't agree with you on that, I'm an evangelical Christian we don't believe there ought to be separation of Church and State, we believe this is a Christian nation."

You could have heard a pin drop. Everybody was a little uncomfortable. And we changed the subject to something else and went on.

At the end of the evening I was saying good by to the guests. I asked her   Tell me how it is that you happen to support me.  You can't possibly agree with my views that a woman has the right to make up her own mind about her health care or that gays ought to have the same rights as everyone else.

She looked at me and said "we are deeply troubled by you views on gay rights and a woman's right to choose. But we support you for two reasons.  The first reason is that our child has   kidney disease.   That means In Texas that we cannot get  health insurance for our child, we can't get health insurance for anybody in our family. We think everybody ought to have health insurance.  

The real reason we support you is that evangelicals are people of deep conviction and you are a person of deep conviction. What we look at more than anything else is not if you will agree with every single one of our convictions, but if something happens to our family or our community or our country, that the people who are going to make the decision to help us are people who will make that decision will not make the decision based on focus groups but out of deep conviction.

We can put money into every state and knock on every door, but the only way to win a race in American politics is to stand up for what you believe in.   (Standing O)

The reason that this party is the party that has always led in times of change, and there are so few Presidents who you can think of on the other side who have really made a difference in America, is because there are a lot of people, not just political leaders in this party, but people who stood up to make a difference, at some personal sacrifice, and sometimes their lives, to say who they are and be proud of who they are and stood up for what they believe in.

If we say what our values are If we refuse to be bullied. If we inform Americans about what we believe instead of letting the other party do it. If we stand up and bring people to us, to lead towards   change again, vote by vote, election by election, precinct by precinct, year by year we will take this country back for the people who built it. You are the people who built America. We want our country back.  Thank-you very much. Thank-you. Thank-you very much.   (Standing O)



Display:


Breath of Fresh Air (3.00 / 0)

Thanks for that Howard, and Gary for finding it.

After another sleepless night constructing the VLWC it's nice to know I'm not the only one.

 

DAGGER
by goplies on Mon Apr 18, 2005 at 05:59:43 AM EST

Re: Breath of Fresh Air (3.00 / 0)

We're stil a little lacking in the vast department, but it's nice to finally have a left wing conspiracy with some political support.
by Gary Boatwright on Mon Apr 18, 2005 at 09:31:59 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Thanks. Great speech. (3.00 / 0)

I loved Art Torres's comments as well.  
by concerned democrat on Mon Apr 18, 2005 at 01:15:07 PM EST

Re: Thanks. Great speech. (3.00 / 0)

I agree. There was some scuttlebutt at the convention that Art wasn't really an enthusiastic Dean supporter. I'm skeptical after his comments Sunday. There's a hideous level of acrimony in the party right now, but I don't see any way to heal the rift. Dean is exactly on message for where the Democratic party needs to go, but the DLC powerbase is threatened and refuses to acknowledge Dean's appeal.
by Gary Boatwright on Mon Apr 18, 2005 at 01:53:44 PM EST
[ Parent ]

I don't hate you, won't flame you. (3.00 / 0)

I feel sad that you think it is your union's business who gets an abortion.  It isn't.

I am surprised that you are not aware that Howard Dean has worked with unions closely, that he has appeared at two conventions already, one behind closed doors with union leaders, and will speak at another one next week.  Must be that darn librul media forgetting to tell you.

I would like to respect Bush, but I don't.  He has deliberately and without any regret sent our soldiers into a wrong war. I detest the man for his lies and his lack of caring about ordinary Americans.  

His party will do what they can to kill the unions off.  The DLC did its share as well. Howard Dean, that old librul, is working with unions to try and give them more importance again.

Did you know he credited unions with the strength of the middle class in our country? He did.  He also said their demise would mean the demise of the middle class.

You go hug Bush close as he destroys this economy.  Get back to me later.  

by concerned democrat on Mon Apr 18, 2005 at 03:05:07 PM EST

Far left Pelosi? (3.00 / 1)

Geesh. You must be a Limbaugh and Hannity fan. I don't hate you. I feel sorry for you. Are you concerned about globalization and all of the jobs that Bush is shipping off to China? How about the minimum wage and decent labor standards for you and your fellow union members? Do you care about that?

(and ALL are aghast that our party would think that a minor could get an abortion without parental permission or notification, or that ANYONE could get an abortion after the first trimester)

So if your wife or daughter's life was threatened by a medical complication in pregnancy you would rather let them die than have an abortion? Were you aware that one out of every 3,000 pregnancies results in the death of the mother? If your wife or daughter were raped, would you insist that they have their attackers child? What if you had a thirteen year old daughter and she was raped? No problem?

If you don't like taxes, what is that you admire about Bush? Do you think Ken Lay is going to pay for Bush's deficits or do you think you and your children will pay for them with higher taxes?

Speaking of hate, have you listened to talk radio or cable lately? Maybe you've heard of Dr. James Dobson or Michael Savage. Have you heard of David Horowitz? Visit his site at Discover the Network.

These radicals reject the orders and alleged "hierarchies" of western democratic capitalism, and regard America as the arch imperialist power and guarantor of private property globally. That is the reason for the inclusion of Islamic radicals alongside American radicals who share a common attitude towards America as a "Great Satan" and Israel as a "little Satan."

Do you believe that Juan Williams, Phil Donahue, Garrison Keillor and Bonnie Rait all believe America is the "great Satan" and Israel is a "little Satan"? Perhaps you should turn off Faux News and talk radio and spend some time in the real world. Wake up and smell the coffee dude!

by Gary Boatwright on Mon Apr 18, 2005 at 03:29:42 PM EST

Paging Dr. Buddah . . . Paging Dr. Buddah (none / 0)

I don't know how I can read your original post any closer than by quoting your direct words. Let me try again:

(and ALL are aghast that our party would think that a minor could get an abortion without parental permission or notification, or that ANYONE could get an abortion after the first trimester)

Now what part of that direct quote did I not read carefully enough? If you can't express your views clearly, don't blame me.

Let's see. What part of the following quote am I not reading carefully enough?

I am not a fan of Limbaugh or Hannity but I don't hate them irrationally and almost psychotically as you do.

So I hate Limbaugh and Hannity "irrationally and almost psychotically"? Who's the hate monger now? Where did you pull that little observation from? The same place you have firmly impacted your head?

Where did you get the idea that I hated Limbaugh and Hannity? I disagree with them and think they are kooks, just like you are. I don't have any emotional attachment to them or you. How can I either hate or love somebody I have never met? Your ethical, moral and emotional compasses are all seriously out of whack.

Your perception of reality is seriously flawed. Not only are you reading emotions that do not exist into simple statements of fact, you do not even understand your own words. Therapy and medication are widely available. Please consult your yellow pages for professional help. Please turn off Faux News and talk radio immediately and call me in the morning.

That will be $200. You may pay the receptionist on your way out. I suggest a follow up appointment in thirty days, unless I run short of cash. In that case, I will have my secretary schedule an earlier appointment.

by Gary Boatwright on Mon Apr 18, 2005 at 06:42:54 PM EST
[ Parent ]

I thought these were key sections (none / 0)

Democrats need to stop giving voters a laundry list of issues and start talking to voters with the language of the heart.
What is real is the fear and we don't address it. We come across like "Well that's unreasonable, that's irrational." Then our next reaction is we have three programs that are going to help that:  early child hood education, early intervention and universal health care. All good things. What they hear is "Oh, I see, you want to take over raising our kids for us."

We need to change the way we talk to folks. We can'tkeep talking to people talking from here. We need to talk to people from here.    Seventy percent of Americans vote from here. We don't have to change our core values. I've been to Mississippi. I've been to Tennessee. I've been to Kansas. If you stand up for what your believe, people will respect you. We may not get one single additional vote from those states, but we will never again be demonized the way the President demonized Democrats.


Moral values are on our side if Democrats would start talking about what people really care about, instead of the lastest outrage du jour from the right wing noise machine.

I want to talk about moral values for a moment. It is a moral value not to leave more debt to your children than then the debt that you encountered. That is a moral value. We have not seen one Republican President balance in the last forty years balance the budget of the United States of America.  Borrow and spend borrow and spend borrow and spend. We can't trust the Republican party with our taxpayers' money.

This is the reason the DLC will always be losers. They have no deep convictions.
The real reason we support you is that evangelicals are people of deep conviction and you are a person of deep conviction. What we look at more than anything else is not if you will agree with every single one of our convictions, but if something happens to our family or our community or our country, that the people who are going to make the decision to help us are people who will make that decision will not make the decision based on focus groups but out of deep conviction.

DLC motto: Extremism in defense of mediocrity is no vice!
by Gary Boatwright on Mon Apr 18, 2005 at 08:37:23 PM EST

We're in trouble (1.00 / 2)

If Howard Dean is the spokesperson for the grassroots of the Democratic party, then the grassroots are in serious trouble.

The DNC motto; mediocrity is the best we can do because we can't win an election!!!

by liebermanlives on Mon Apr 18, 2005 at 10:21:40 PM EST

Re: We're in trouble (none / 0)

Can someone please get rid of this troll, all ready?

Jeez, if he had some obviously conservative name like "newtlives," he'd have been banned long ago and all record of him deleted.

In answer to the Trollish One's comment, hell yes, Dean is the voice of the grassroots.

Who raised $51,000,000 from ordinary people and not one dime from PACs and special interests? Dean, that's who.

Who stood up against Bush on the War in Iraq, the Patriot Act, No Child Left Behind, and all of the other right-wing garbage that Bush pushed down America's throats? Was it Joementum? No, it was Dean, that's who.

Who told ordinary people without the money for lobbyists that their voices mattered in the political process? Dean, that's who.

Howard Dean may not be Paul Wellstone, but he is THE grassroots man in the party power-structure today. He's the only one on the DNC who really cares what people who contribute less than $2,000 to campaigns think.

Is Dean the voice of the Democratic Party's grassroots? Hell, yes, he is.

by craverguy on Mon Apr 18, 2005 at 10:43:20 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: We're in trouble (none / 0)

"The DNC motto; mediocrity is the best we can do because we can't win an election!!! "

eh-yah... that about sums up your boy Joe.

Rest eary though... Howard and all of us are changing all of that. We'll rescue you and yours from you and yours.

The 10,000 Things
by Andrew C White on Tue Apr 19, 2005 at 02:48:53 PM EST
[ Parent ]

The search for a Democratic narrative (none / 0)

Bob Brigham, over at Swing State Project, has a great post up about Direction and Means.

The Democratic party has no message, therefore no popular support:

But Democrats aren't gaining from the other side's losses. Polls show the GOP congressional leadership is less popular than the president - but the Democratic leadership fares still worse. And even among rank-and-file Democrats, only 56 percent approve of their own congressional leadership, according to the Pew Research Center. Among Republicans, the analogous number is 76 percent.

That's the ultimate problem with centrism. It is impossible to get excited about or have any passion for moderation. Even Democrats are bored with the Democratic party.

It worries me that only 56% of Democrats approve of our congressional leadership. If Democrats don't respect the Party, why would swing voters?

We need to fight, earn the respect of America through bold action, and then talk about the progressive way.

A great comment from the link:

It's hard to work up a lot of support for a party that goes around polling vision statements to see which one sounds most "visionary."

Another swing and a miss for the DLC.

by Gary Boatwright on Tue Apr 19, 2005 at 01:42:14 AM EST

How about those Moral Values thingies? (none / 0)

Howard Dean gets it. How to talk to a conservative about moral values that mattter in their daily life, by Howard Dean:

Social Security is a moral value for people who have worked all their life. They deserve to retire with dignity. We ought not turn Social Security over to the same people who gave us Enron.

A strong defense of United States of America would be stronger if we continued to have the high moral ground in foreign policy. If we were only the admired nation that America was before George Bush took office. We would have a moral foreign policy and that would give us the ability to defend America. America is not going to be defended simply by having a strong military. We also need to have high moral purpose.

It is a moral value, as some of our evangelical friends have recently pointed out to conserve and steward the earth and the environment we were so lucky to have been given. Environmental preservation is a moral value.

It is a moral value not to cheat hard working middle class Americans by telling them that you've given them a tax cut when you raised their property taxes and exercised federal control over their schools.  It is a moral value to tell the truth. It is a moral value to be honest in our dealings with others.

It is not a moral value to be reprimanded three times by the ethics committee and then trying to get rid of the committee.

It is not a moral value to have 204 judges confirmed and then try to get rid of 200 years of Senate precedent, to get the last 10 on the bench.

It is not a moral value to create the largest deficits in the history of the U.S. of America and have our creditors be those who may one day be our enemy.

It is not a moral value to threaten judges of the United States of America because they made a decision that you don't agree with.

It is not a moral value to insert yourself into the private and most personal life and death decisions of a family at a time of their greatest need.

And some good articles in this months Sojourner's Magazine. My favorite, When Enough is Enough: Why God's abundant life won't fit in a shopping cart, and other mysteries of consumerism.

by Gary Boatwright on Tue Apr 19, 2005 at 04:07:37 AM EST

Energy self sufficiency is a moral value (none / 0)

Nuclear energy is an ecological and health disaster until we figure out a way to store the millions of tons of radioactive waste and debris that the nuclear industry has already generated. A fundamental antecedent of any new nuclear initiative is a solution to the problem of storing our current stockpiles.

Frontier Pac is definitely on target with their emphasis on Energy Independence. Bush and Cheney have literally abandoned the idea of energy independence from the Middle East. Bush's so called energy bill offers absolutely no long term or short term solutions to any of our energy problems. This is an enormous opportunity for the Democratic party.

by Gary Boatwright on Tue Apr 19, 2005 at 01:03:21 PM EST
[ Parent ]

President Howard (none / 0)

I am still hoping that Howard Dean will be our President...someday.  Until then, he is the right man in the right job.
by donna in evanston on Tue Apr 19, 2005 at 09:08:19 AM EST

Re: President Howard (none / 0)

That's a nice thought donna.

I just hope the DLC doesn't stab Dean in the back behind the scenes in his effort to rebuild the grassroots. He's got a big job a head of him, and he needs cooperation from the DLC. I hope he gets it.

by Gary Boatwright on Tue Apr 19, 2005 at 03:26:17 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: You Don't Want to Hear it... (none / 0)

If you are a Union official then you really aren't doing your membership any good by not knowing what you are talking about when it comes to Chairman Dean. I think if you took a chance and spoke with him and learned the truth about him then you'd find that he is the guy to solve the problems you and your membership have. But as long as you only listen to the right wing and DLC wing's smear of him your mind will remain closed, your membership poorly served, and your ability to effect real change compromised.
The 10,000 Things
by Andrew C White on Tue Apr 19, 2005 at 02:53:49 PM EST

Why bash the DLC again? (none / 0)

I don't get it, I was into that speech, and into the comments until people took it upon themselves to disparage the DLC for no reason. Read New Donkey by the DLC policy director. I would say he agrees with the contents of Howard's speech 100%.

Let's focus on the real target and follow through with the ideas in Howard Dean's speech, not strive for ideological purity.

The DLC loves polls it is true. The only reason the poll is to prove that their ideas are where the majority of American voters are, not to tell them what their ideas are. That's the distinction Gore and Kerry didn't get. And that's why they lost, they kept trying to use polling to find out what to say instead of saying what they believed.

by DaveB on Wed Apr 20, 2005 at 09:01:56 PM EST

A little sensitive aren't we? (none / 0)

You aren't specific about the "DLC bashing" you were referring to. I don't see anything that qualifies as anything more than mild criticism. Of course, the initial Howard Dean bashing by DLC trolls, when I first posted this diary, has been troll rated into oblivion. Trust me Dave, there is nothing in this diary that remotely qualifies as "bashing."

I've glanced through What We Stand For. I don't know who the policy director for NDOL is, so I'm not sure what you're referring to. Maybe he or she could have a little talk with Al From, who just last month, for some strange reason, was advising folks to "reject Michael Moore and the Move On crowd." Does NDOL explain Al From's obsession with Michael Moore, who I haven't heard anything about in months? Is From still complaining about Move On after their fund raiser for Sen. Byrd?

Maybe you could drop a line to Al From about not striving for ideological purity?

by Gary Boatwright on Wed Apr 20, 2005 at 11:51:47 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: A little sensitive aren't we? (none / 0)

Maybe bashing is too strong a word, but the are constant critiques and attacks on the DLC here on MyDD and it is just to get people behind you who have no clue about the organization and what it does. Ed Kilgore is the policy director of the DLC. He blogs at www.newdonkey.com and his discussions with DailyKos' Armando (google for them within Kos or newdonkey; I would read both ends of the discussion) are truely what we should be doing as a party-- having disagreements in the open for sure, but working on what we share in common and working towards goals we all can agree on: getting rid of Santorum, DeLay and Social Security Privatization. Destroying Bush's 2nd term and reclaiming the White House and Congress.

Dean was right on in his speech and I don't think you would find any DLC member disagreeing with anything in his CA speech. So why stick in a jab at them after a perfectly good post? I don't get it.

by DaveB on Thu Apr 21, 2005 at 12:28:36 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: A little sensitive aren't we? (none / 0)

You are ignoring my link to Al From's criticism of Michael Moore and Move On. Maybe Kilgore needs to have a little talk with Al From about criticizing other Democrats. I'll ask you the same question I ask everyone else. When was the last time Al From or Joe Lieberman criticized a Republican?

Like I said, you can't see the way DLC trolls tried to trash this diary, because their comments have been troll rated into the ether.

I thought the Democratic party was united in getting rid of Santorum too, until Kerry co-sponsored the Pharmacist's Right to Discriminate Against Women bill with Santorum. Why is Kerry trying to make Santorum look like a moderate?

It's a little late to try and trash Bush's second term. In the first 100 days of his second term, Bush has gotten class action law suit restrictions, bankruptcy restrictions and drilling in ANWR; three issues at the very top of the conservative wish list. The DLC has already helped make this one of the most successful first 100 days of any second term president. When are they going to start opposing him?

Sorry Dave. If you want Democrats to stop criticizing Democrats, MyDD is not the place to direct your attention. Tell it to Kilgore and From and Lieberman and Biden and Feinstein and . . .  well, you get the idea. MyDD is not the problem. The DLC is the problem.

by Gary Boatwright on Thu Apr 21, 2005 at 12:59:47 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: A little sensitive aren't we? (none / 0)

I don't like Joe Lieberman but he does attack GOPers WAY more than he attacks democrats, but he only gets attention when he attacks his fellow party members; ditto for Al From.

Do Michael Moore and MoveOn really need your defense of them? Can't they play with the big boys on their own? I like some of Moore's movies and some of what MoveOn does. I think they are misguided at times but they are still Democrats to me and we are all in this together.

I think we have done a good job at picking certain fights and winning them thus far. I too was upset with the bankrupcy bill and ANWR and I never saw anyone at the DLC support those measures, or Bush tax cuts. Both MyDD/Kos and the DLC need to stop attacking each other.

As for John Kerry, don't ask me to defend that schumck. I never liked him and just held my nose from March until November last year. If he thinks he has a prayer in 2008, he has another thing coming.

by DaveB on Fri Apr 22, 2005 at 12:18:10 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Delegate Region 5- Santa Clara County (none / 0)

Man was that a great speech. I sure miss his speeches. I went to the state convention and there was a very huge presence of Democracy for America all over the place. I estimate in my region about 75 % of new delegates were DFAer's. He has rebuild the Democratic party and he will continue to rebuild it for the better. He was great on Sat and the crowd was going very wild. I sat about 15 feet from him. He still is the man. Dean for Senator in 2010. Go Dean and the Dem party
by caomartorres on Thu Apr 21, 2005 at 12:18:20 PM EST

Thank You (none / 0)

Thank you to Congresswoman Zoe Lofgren and her Chief of Staff Sandra Soto for providing the dinner ticket. I could have never afforded them. Thank you!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
by caomartorres on Thu Apr 21, 2005 at 12:19:59 PM EST


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