Menu

Make a New Account

Username:

Password:



Forget your username or password?


Search




Advanced Search


Alegre's Corner
We're not finished folks - not by a long shot!

Progressives Send Letter of Discontent to Obama....

by: texan4hillary

Sat Aug 02, 2008 at 16:59:10 PM EDT


I frequent hilaryis44 but come here often. below read the letter progressives sent to obama begging him to be a progressive. gee they should have picked hillary if u wanted what they are demanding. denver will be wild.
texan4hillary :: Progressives Send Letter of Discontent to Obama....
Change We Can Believe In

An Open Letter to Barack Obama

This article appeared in the August 18, 2008 edition of The Nation.

July 30, 2008

Dear Senator Obama,

Progressive supporters of Barack Obama urge him to stand firm on the principles he so compellingly articulated in the primary. Join Phil Donahue, Barbara Ehrenreich, Studs Terkel, Walter Mosely, Gore Vidal, Bill McKibben, Jane Hamsher, Katrina vanden Heuvel and others in signing this open letter.

We write to congratulate you on the tremendous achievements of your campaign for the presidency of the United States.

Your candidacy has inspired a wave of political enthusiasm like nothing seen in this country for decades. In your speeches, you have sketched out a vision of a better future-in which the United States sheds its warlike stance around the globe and focuses on diplomacy abroad and greater equality and freedom for its citizens at home-that has thrilled voters across the political spectrum. Hundreds of thousands of young people have entered the political process for the first time, African-American voters have rallied behind you, and many of those alienated from politics-as-usual have been re-engaged.

You stand today at the head of a movement that believes deeply in the change you have claimed as the mantle of your campaign. The millions who attend your rallies, donate to your campaign and visit your website are a powerful testament to this new movement's energy and passion.

This movement is vital for two reasons: First, it will help assure your victory against John McCain in November. The long night of greed and military adventurism under the Bush Administration, which a McCain administration would continue, cannot be brought to an end a day too soon. An enthusiastic corps of volunteers and organizers will ensure that voters turn out to close the book on the Bush era on election day. Second, having helped bring you the White House, the support of this movement will make possible the changes that have been the platform of your campaign. Only a grassroots base as broad and as energized as the one that is behind you can counteract the forces of money and established power that are a dead weight on those seeking real change in American politics.

We urge you, then, to listen to the voices of the people who can lift you to the presidency and beyond.

Since your historic victory in the primary, there have been troubling signs that you are moving away from the core commitments shared by many who have supported your campaign, toward a more cautious and centrist stance-including, most notably, your vote for the FISA legislation granting telecom companies immunity from prosecution for illegal wiretapping, which angered and dismayed so many of your supporters.

We recognize that compromise is necessary in any democracy. We understand that the pressures brought to bear on those seeking the highest office are intense. But retreating from the stands that have been the signature of your campaign will weaken the movement whose vigorous backing you need in order to win and then deliver the change you have promised.

Here are key positions you have embraced that we believe are essential to sustaining this movement:

 § Withdrawal from Iraq on a fixed timetable.

 § A response to the current economic crisis that reduces the gap between the rich and the rest of us through a more progressive financial and welfare system; public investment to create jobs and repair the country's collapsing infrastructure; fair trade policies; restoration of the freedom to organize unions; and meaningful government enforcement of labor laws and regulation of industry.

 § Universal healthcare.

 § An environmental policy that transforms the economy by shifting billions of dollars from the consumption of fossil fuels to alternative energy sources, creating millions of green jobs.

 § An end to the regime of torture, abuse of civil liberties and unchecked executive power that has flourished in the Bush era.

 § A commitment to the rights of women, including the right to choose abortion and improved access to abortion and reproductive health services.

 § A commitment to improving conditions in urban communities and ending racial inequality, including disparities in education through reform of the No Child Left Behind Act and other measures.

 § An immigration system that treats humanely those attempting to enter the country and provides a path to citizenship for those already here.

 § Reform of the drug laws that incarcerate hundreds of thousands who need help, not jail.

 § Reform of the political process that reduces the influence of money and corporate lobbyists and amplifies the voices of ordinary people.

These are the changes we can believe in. In other areas-such as the use of residual forces and mercenary troops in Iraq, the escalation of the US military presence in Afghanistan, the resolution of the Israel-Palestine conflict, and the death penalty-your stated positions have consistently varied from the positions held by many of us, the "friends on the left" you addressed in recent remarks. If you win in November, we will work to support your stands when we agree with you and to challenge them when we don't. We look forward to an ongoing and constructive dialogue with you when you are elected President.

Stand firm on the principles you have so compellingly articulated, and you may succeed in bringing this country the change you've encouraged us to believe is possible.

Here is a list of early signatories to this open letter:

Rocky Anderson

Moustafa Bayoumi

Norman Birnbaum Professor Emeritus
Georgetown University Law Center

Tim Carpenter
Progressive Democrats of America

John Cavanaugh, director
Institute for Policy Studies

Juan Cole

Chuck Collins

Phil Donahue

Barbara Ehrenreich

Tom Engelhardt
Tomdispatch.com

Jodie Evans, co-f0under
CODEPINK: Women for Peace

Thomas Ferguson

Bill Fletcher Jr., executive editor,
BlackCommentator.com

Eric Foner

Milton Glaser

Robert Greenwald

William Greider

Jane Hamsher

Tom Hayden

Christopher Hayes

Richard Kim

Stuart Klawans

Bill McKibben

Walter Mosley

Richard Parker, president
Americans for Democratic Action

Gary Phillips
Writer and activist

Jon Pincus
achangeiscoming.net and member of Get FISA Right

Chip Pitts

Frances Piven

Elizabeth Pochoda

Katha Pollitt

Marcus Raskin

Betsy Reed

Bob Scheer

Herman Schwartz

Jonathan Schell

Gene Seymour

David Sirota

Norman Solomon
Author and Obama delegate to Democratic National Convention

Mike Stark

Jean Stein

Matt Stoller

Jonathan Tasini

Zephyr Teachout

Studs Terkel

Katrina vanden Heuvel

Gore Vidal

David Weir

Howard Zinn

Affiliations have been added when requested by the signatory./>

Add your name to the Open Letter calling on Barack Obama to
www.thenation.com/doc/20080818/open_letter/print

Tags: (All Tags)
Print Friendly View Send As Email
interesting timing: (0.00 / 0)

His base is unhappy and beginning to wonder about this guy.  (They should have listened to me;  I knew his plans were not exactly progressive!) So he starts reminding them he's African American.  (the dollar bill thing) That's his ploy to rally his base behind him again. They may be losing everything they thought he stood for, but they would still get excited about having the first AA president.



All those people fell for this fraud? (0.00 / 0)
May wonders never cease. Has our party been living with this many utopianists the whole time?

Rewarding the sexism that got him nominated affects me immedieately (0.00 / 0)
It's so weird that only certain subsets of the population can see sexism. But all the men that supported Hillary can see it.

It's too late, Nation progressives. If we reward the vile behavior that got him nominated, we encourage more of it. I'm not willing to vote for him.


May I humbly suggest, (0.00 / 0)
A Moral Debt (to go with the Fiscal Debt) for the children?  Because if we sanction such behavior for winning, we are just kicking the ball further down the road to the children.  It becomes their problem to stop the corruption in politics.  

That's why it would get worse.  


[ Parent ]
Bwahahaha! (0.00 / 0)


Medicare for All is Civil Rights

What will they say in the next issue? (0.00 / 0)
They're waking up from their stupor of denial.

[ Parent ]
don't count on it (0.00 / 0)
they do think that African Americans deserve an African American president. I do too, all things being equal, but not some guy who has ideas that have not been put into practice, by him, others have had the same ideas, and they don't work.  He can't even make them work in the primary, he's already made people hate him, by the way he dissed the girl candidate. he'll learn, but will the Nation? I doubt it, they're so proud to back an unqualified man over a fully qualified woman they make me dizzy. they think it's cause he'd black, but I don't think so, I think it's cause he isn't Hillary.  But, she kept looking better and better, and she's now clearly the most progressive who could actually get something done, and they backed the great male hope.  Fools.  

Hillary - alternative energy

[ Parent ]
Yes, the Presidency is not a job (0.00 / 0)
to fill with Affirmative Action. A black candidate, and there are many possibilities, who has actually done the job he was elected to do and has actual positions and votes on various things would be a good thing. A guy with charisma and no resume isn't.  

Live your life in such a way that when your feet
hit the floor in the morning, Satan shudders & says
'Oh $#!%'...she's awake!!


[ Parent ]
charisma (0.00 / 0)

He only has charisma because the media gave it to him.  Personally, I find him dull and lackluster.  The campaign surrounds his lackluster performances with big cheering crowds, and then the media keeps saying over and over and over how charismatic he is.  



[ Parent ]
he has charisma (0.00 / 0)
when he's on his real message, but he keeps belying his message. I'm afraid that some of his votes are affirmative action too, but I think affirmative action can give us some great people who would otherwise be overlooked or kept out altogether. That's not my problem with him.
I want to see that he can do what he says, and he right now has yet another opportunity to show it. He has to do some trust exercises, starting with trusting Hillary and then with trusting the voters that he can be honest and clear about what he intends to do.

I'd suggest that he start with consensus now, most Democrats want her on the ticket, consensus is putting her on the ticket.

HIs problem is that he's arrogant and out of touch, meaning that's the ad's the swift-boaters have decided to use for now. He needs to admit it, laugh at himself, suggest that John not try to spend those dollars he 'forged,' for example, play back.  He needs to show it's not true not get mad that someone said it was.  

I'd suggest that he admit that he's not a detail guy and admit that Hillary is, and that's why he wants her overseeing Washington, as vice president.

I'd suggest that he make it clear that he'll listen to everyone, and start by listening to me.  

Hillary - alternative energy


[ Parent ]
He has charisma when he's on message. (0.00 / 0)

You mean when he's leading the fire-it-up chant?!



[ Parent ]
no, never then (0.00 / 0)
he has tried to wreck it, that's for sure. You only have it when you don't try to sell it, he sullied his own brand.  But, he could get it back, he needs to learn to communicate, and he needs to look into himself and think.

She's the one with the most charisma, she can laugh and smile, she is the real deal, she can cheer anyone up.  He can get his back by piggy backing on hers, and showing he's having fun.  

Hillary - alternative energy


[ Parent ]
New version . . . (0.00 / 0)
Regarding your statement: "I'd suggest that he admit that he's not a detail guy and admit that Hillary is, and that's why he wants her overseeing Washington, as vice president."

I think you meant; . . . "why he wants her overseeing Washington, as President."

Heh


[ Parent ]
yeah, it's a little late to worry about being respected in the morning. (0.00 / 0)
they're pouring out their hearts, and obama's putting on his pants.

Barack Obama's election proves that any male can grow up to be president, provided he's willing to use misogyny as a campaign strategy.

[ Parent ]
Jeebus, you're funny. (0.00 / 0)


Medicare for All is Civil Rights

[ Parent ]
he's not been any different (0.00 / 0)
this is the same thing as being pro-gay rights but 'understanding' homophobes and standing with them too. He's really for consensus, that he really means. His own sensibilities are progressive, but he thinks that's less important than making sure everyone gets a little something, to reduce the bickering and the hate.  he blames the clintons for their own troubles with the press and the pugs, and he thinks a guy like him won't have that kind of problem, because he'll not insist on setting his own agenda, he'll give the others there's too, and get a little bit of his own, sometimes by agreeing but not really meaning it, so they feel good, but forget by the time he's supposed to deliver.

He has been clear about this, but everyone wants to read into him what they wish he were, a fighter for social justice, for the environment, even for sane foreign policy he is not

Shall I remind you that while in Europe he, the fellow who says he'll talk with anyone, suggested the Iranians can't count on having time for a new administration, they need to deal with Bush? Bush wants to bomb, Israel is prepared to bomb, probably after the election, and the Iranians are prepared to be attacked, and there is no doubt they'll attack back.

This isn't sane foreign policy, getting involved in starting a war with Iran is not sane, but Barack gave it his green light by saying, deal with Bush, and saying nothing more, to Bush or the Israelis.

This guy may mean well, I'd suspect he does mean well, but he isn't ready to be president. The only thing that makes him look remotely plausible is John McCain, and that's just to me, there are plenty who think John would be an improvement.

there is no need to have a progressive president who isn't interested in a progressive agenda. that's like having a progressive babysitter, but your parents make the rules.    

Hillary - alternative energy


At least Bush was disciplined or more disciplined (0.00 / 0)
about what he allowed to fly out his mouth. Save for the "crusades" quote, when Bush went off-script he knew enough to only talk about trivial stuff.

I still don't get why Obama said what he said to Iran, and if he knows the impact of what he said. And I don't quite get why it was a signal. But I believe you that it was a signal.


[ Parent ]
it wasn't a 'don't' (0.00 / 0)
Bush is a fool, and Barack is a normal man.  He mainly has a communication problem, he says what he means, but he says is as if we already know where he's coming from, and since his campaign deeds don't match his governing words, he confuses his followers and gives credence to the idea that he has no core.  So, then he needs to say more, and his explainers often show they don't know what he meant either. It's amazing that the Nation didn't understand and think he's backtracking from the progressive causes.

Bush said bring it on, he said axis of evil, he peppered his comments with religious signals, he smirked, he was and is a fat head. Barack can't be that bad, no one could be that bad.

You don't have to hate Barack to see he has problems with his message, as the messenger of his message. I think that if he picks HIllary as VP running mate, if he asks his delegates to sign a petition that they want her votes counted at the convention, if he sees the need for expertise, and if he more clearly articulates his message so's people know what they're voting for, he could do a decent job if he gets elected.  I don't know if he's up to it, I don't know if he can follow his message or if he doesn't know how, but should he be better than we think, then perhaps he could pull this off.  

Hillary - alternative energy


[ Parent ]
Ugh! (0.00 / 0)
When I read what you wrote;  "I still don't get why Obama said what he said to Iran, and if he knows the impact of what he said."
It reminds me of Bush opening the door at his State of the Union Address when he said in front of the world; "Iraq, Iran, North Korea - the Axis of Evil".  I was horrified.

[ Parent ]
oy (0.00 / 0)
oy vay. i get the feeling denver wont be a coronation.

In Other Words... (0.00 / 0)
turn into Hillary BHO and the soiner the better.

They're backing the wrong horse in this race if they're looking for a progressive champion.

Invest in Women - Change the World
http://twitter.com/alegrescorner


This is so sad (0.00 / 0)
He's not even President or the nominee yet.  

"Always aim high, work hard, and care deeply about what you believe in. When you stumble, keep faith. When you?re knocked down, get right back up. And NEVER listen to anyone who says you can't or shouldn't go on."
Hillary Clinton - June 7, 2008

Hillary Clinton
- Put stuff here

Blog Roll
- Put stuff here

Powered by: SoapBlox