Fri

03

Oct

2008

Shock and Awe: Bipartisan Beltway Terrorists Launch Economic 9/11 on the American People
Written by Chris Floyd   
You've seen the news. You know the score. The House of Representatives has now completed the economic terrorist attack inflicted on the American people by the nation's elite.

The bailout bill -- or as Arthur Silber more rightly terms it, the "Extortion Bill" -- is already law, thanks to the Democrats in Congress, and to Barack Obama, who spent the day working the phones and twisting arms to make sure the $700 billion bonanza for the filthy rich passed without any more of the hiccups that held it up earlier this week.

The plan that Obama made his own -- despite its origins in the poison kitchen of the Bush White House -- is far worse than the version voted down on Monday. Every reputable economic expert says that the plan is unworkable; it will not solve the problems at the root of the current economic crisis, but will only make them worse. It entrenches many of the fraudulent practices that led to the meltdown in the first place, and rewards the perpetrators for their misdeeds with a gargantuan amount of public money, which they can now use to carry on largely as before, albeit with a few new toothless "oversight" mechanisms operated by their own Wall Street cronies, and their bribed-and-bought hirelings on Capitol Hill.

There were many viable, reasonable, eminently centrist alternatives to the radical, plutocratic Bush-Obama scam -- alternatives which would have been politically palatable to a broad spectrum of the electorate. One of the best ones of this ilk that I've seen was outlined in the eminently mainstream Washington Post earlier this week by two eminently respectable Yale economists. (You can find it here.) There were many other such practical and effective plans offered by reputable experts, any one of which could have gone a long way toward protecting ordinary citizens now exposed by the meltdown, supporting the banks, and stabilizing the markets -- all without effecting one of the largest single redistributions of wealth since the Bolsheviks seized power in Russia in 1917.

None of these plans were considered or debated or even mentioned, not even for a single moment, by the Democratic leadership in the House and Senate. Instead, they joined the Republican leadership and the Bush Administration in repeating, over and over, the Big Lie that there was NO OTHER CHOICE but some basic version of the unworkable Bush plan. The Democrats -- led by Barack Obama -- not only threw a political lifeline to the most despised president in American history (in the middle of an election year!), they deliberately took ownership of a measure widely rejected by the American public -- a class war weapon of mass destruction whose malign effects will reverberate through American society for years, perhaps generations to come.

Why have they done this? Why would they do such a thing? Why would they commit such an egregious offense against their own people, when they could have very easily NOT done it, and had the near-unanimous support of the American electorate in standing up to the Bush plan and choosing some other completely mainstream alternative?

You already know the answer. It's because they do not serve the American people. They serve a very small yet brutally powerful ruling class. And this elite wanted the Bush-Obama extortion plan, and no other, to make sure their power and privilege were not unduly threatened by the  debacle that their own monstrous greed and fraud have made.

II.
Let's go back to Arthur Silber on this, as we have done so often during the financial crisis. As always, he goes behind the heated headlines to see the deeper threads of connection knitting the bipartisan economic-domestic Terror War with the bipartisan foreign policy Terror War that is now wrapping the world in flames. And he traces one of the prime roots of this sinister web: the American elite's belief that whatever they do to maintain their primacy -- however many people they kill, how much destruction and suffering and degradation they cause, at home and abroad -- it is all reasonable, rational and right...because they are doing it. Here is Silber in "Terrorist State, At Home and Abroad." [And again, you should read the whole thing, with the many links that broaden and deepen the scope of the argument.].

First, he quotes William Pfaff on the U.S. government's "aggressive, neverending global interventionism":

Militarized or otherwise, American policy remains under the influence of an unacknowledged and unjustified utopianism. This is the unanalyzed background to the work of all Washington's foreign policy agencies. It permeates the rhetoric and thinking of Republicans and Democrats alike. It is the reason Americans can think that history has an ultimate solution, and that the United States is meant to provide it.

Now Silber:

It has long been apparent to an honest observer that "utopianism" of this kind is immensely and unforgivably destructive, just as it is obvious that the belief that one person or one nation has the "ultimate solution" constitutes murderous arrogance of the kind we properly associate with the greatest monsters in history. One of the most deeply pathetic aspects of the tragedy of Iraq is that not a single element of this belief system has been dislodged in even the smallest degree. Thus, we continue to hear Obama, along with every other prominent national leader, proclaim: "The American moment has not passed. The American moment is here. And like generations before us, we will seize that moment, and begin the world anew."

Where it matters, on the ground, the American drive to world hegemony translates into brute force used to make others behave in the manner the U.S. government demands. Such force will often be deployed in the form of economic assistance, but offered only on certain conditions, which therefore more accurately means economic intimidation. On other occasions, the interference becomes harsher, while it is still kept under wraps to some extent: thus, we have numerous covert operations, sometimes used to engineer the overthrow of duly constituted governments. When all else fails, military force will be employed openly and with carefully crafted righteous anger.

It will also be cast as a "favor" to the victims, as Silber notes:

...just as the genocide unleashed by the U.S. government in Iraq constituted a benevolent, disinterested gift to more than a million slaughtered Iraqis, and to many more millions made homeless refugees. "Freedom isn't free," our viciously stupid propagandists announced to the dead, maimed and displaced Iraqis, neglecting to note that it was beneath our lofty status to inquire whether the gift was desired in the smallest degree, especially when acquired by these methods and with the associated costs. (This assumes that "freedom" was, in fact, the goal, which of course it was not. All of this is propaganda, remember.)

The fundamental lesson is unmistakable, and unmistakably evil in intent and execution (a word made horribly appropriate in more than one sense by our government's actions): you will do exactly as we say -- or else.

Now comes the turn to the domestic scene:

Just as it is not possible for an individual to restrict what constitutes a fundamental psychological methodology to only one area of his life, so a ruling class will not employ one approach in foreign policy while dealing with matters of domestic politics in a radically different manner. In any case, the U.S. ruling class never had such a desire: in one way or another, other nations would be made to submit to the demands of the U.S. government -- and the same is true for U.S. citizens. The citizens of America will do exactly as the ruling class demands -- or else. As far as the ruling class is concerned, you have as little reason to complain as the murdered Iraqis do: the ruling class only wishes to improve your life. The ruling class acts only on your behalf, and "for your own good."

You now witness these tactics of intimidation and of the most transparently, viciously manipulative fear-mongering deployed by almost every member of the ruling class in connection with the bailout bill....I have several other news articles offering comments from other members of the ruling class, and I could easily find many, many more, all to the same general effect: be terrified and do what they say. Or else. If you don't understand the urgency and necessity of doing exactly what they say, you're just stupid. In that case, you should obviously turn your life and your money over to your betters. Let them dispose of all of it as they see fit. That's why they're your rulers, isn't it? They know what's best for you.

...The system is now set up so that when the ruling class is particularly intent upon a certain objective, even your obedience isn't required any longer. After all, what are you going to do? Move to another country? Not vote for any of these bastards in November?

Most Americans won't do that. They protest now; once the deed is done, they'll go back to their lives, such as they will be at that point, and devote themselves to making the ruling class more wealthy and more powerful.

To a terrorist government, you're irrelevant, as irrelevant as a slaughtered five-year-old Iraqi girl. But they'll continue to try to scare you to death. You're easier to rule that way.

I suggest you get used to it. This is your future...

In a later piece, written as the House was passing the bailout, Silber hammered home to the grim implications of the key role played by Barack Obama in its passage. [Again, see the original for copious links]:

First, Obama and the Democrats fully own the extortion bill. Obama and the Democrats, as much as the Republicans, are nothing but whores for the sickeningly corrupt financial and corporate interests that control the U.S. government. I've been pointing this out about Obama for some time. Furthermore, in their determination to make certain that the ruling class's affluence and power are maintained with the work, blood and lives of "ordinary" Americans for generations to come, both Republicans and Democrats have turned their terrorist tactics on Americans with close to full force. All that is missing are the bullets -- but they may not be long in coming as conditions deteriorate. It should be illuminating (read: nauseating) to see most of those who would condemn brutal police state actions when ordered by Republicans watch identical events in total silence -- and in this context, silence means consent -- because a Democrat orders them.

Second, and see an earlier essay for much more on this subject, Obama's election will ensure the death of significant political opposition in this country for the foreseeable future as much as any single development can....

To sum up: the triumph of the ruling class, again, the destruction of the present and future for all other Americans, and the annihilation of political opposition, all within a matter of months.

Remember: there were viable alternatives to the Bush-Obama scam. It did not have to go down this way. It happened because the bipartisan political elite WANTED it to happen. And they wanted it to happen because those who have bought and paid for them wanted it to happen. As the old saying goes, you dance with the one that brung you.

But an even more apt quote, perhaps, is one we have used here many times, referring to the remark that the Emperor Tiberius once made when a groveling Roman Senate gave in once more to his authoritarian dictates: "Men fit to be slaves."
Comments (26)add comment

Grandma Jefferson said:

1286
...
A strange way to build an empire, by draining it dry. Let it crash, it's our only hope to stop the madness now. Anybody who nurses the faint hope that the shell-shocked, dim-witted 'Merkin people will somehow manage to rise, organize (in the face of the various, and very thorough surveillance and infiltration agencies), and throw this all off is a fool, because that won't happen. Only an international coalition can stop it, as history demonstrates over and over again. The bad news is, the rest of the world is now just as fascist as we are.


 
October 04, 2008
Votes: +6

InTheCity said:

0
...
There's also a fabulous discussion of this at the London Banker blog. He's a former central banker and securities regulator. http://londonbanker.blogspot.c...n-for.html
The best bit is in the comments where after the bill's passage in the House he completely agrees with Mr. Silber:
"It passed. It's a done deal. Warren Buffett will add to his fortune, as will Hank Paulson and his partners at Goldman Sachs. The Saudis and the Chinese will own more American banks, one step removed through their private equity partners. The GOP apparatchiks will all find cushy jobs on Wall Street and K Street come January (if martial law isn't imposed before then).

In a way, it's not much of a change from yesterday. The US has been on the path to lawless oligarchy for the past eight years. Today is just one more step down the path."

When a guy like this starts talking about the likelihood of martial law, it gives that possiblity more of a reality to me. It just seemed like a nightmare scenario that I was crazy enough to think possible. Ugh.
 
October 04, 2008
Votes: +0

lordmisterford said:

1643
For those with eyes to see --
For those with eyes to see, all of this was looming just over the horizon and was entirely predictable as far back as the late 1970s. "Stagflation" refuted and forever buried the so-called Law of Supply and Demand. Passage of the RICO laws, the Supreme Court's decision to uphold those laws, the advent and Supreme Court approval of no-knock searches, and public approval of all those things were to me clear indications of what was to come.

Make no mistake: I rave all the time about the misbehavior of Bush and his precious "elites," but I blame the American people for all that has gone wrong. They've been running scared -- voting their rights away by voting their fears and their prejudices for almost 60 years, now, and to date I see no sign that they are about to stop. The plain truth is they deserve what's coming. They asked for it and they're beginning to get it.

Every year the cops wax more and more arrogant, more and more invasive, more and more brutal, more and more trigger-happy. They aren't moving in that direction because they are perverse. They're moving in that direction because elected officials and Big Money want them to behave so. Meanwhile Mr. & Mrs. Doofus in the trailer courts blame. . . .

Ahh, piss on it. I don't need to go any farther and I'm making my own self sick.
 
October 04, 2008 | url
Votes: +2

gandhi said:

0
The Dude Abides
By the time the 2012 US elections roll around, if they do, there will be no more two-party state. The Democrats will have successfully occupied the middle ground of US politics, leaving the remnants of the GOP as an ultra-right faction that has no hope of regaining power.

The real challenge to the Democrats in 2012 will come from a new party - or perhaps a coalition of minor parties, including the Greens - under the "Progressive" banner. These people will be mightily pissed at how they were treated in 2008. Many will claim to regret voting for President Obama, without even remembering the horrid alternative at the time.

Of course, the Progressives' chances of success in 2012 will be small. Likewise in 2016...

Thus the PNAC vision of the elite agenda for the 21st century carries forward, no matter who holds power - an almighty, all powerful cabal, crushing any who oppose it, politically, militarily or economically.

Of course, you don't have to be American any more to be part of this elite. It went global a long time ago. Thus our new global elite includes billionaires like Frank Lowy, for example, who "lives" in Australia, builds shopping centers all over the world, and gives millions to Israeli "charities" to further the Zionist cause...

This is why I am no longer blogging. How many people can even begin to understand comments like this as anything but madness? I am not even a US citizen! Why should I care?

I am So. Very. Very. Tired.
 
October 04, 2008 | url
Votes: +3

KISS said:

0
...
Thanks for being here and thank you for introducing me to Arthur Silber.
Both of you are so right on the whores seeking the Oval Office,sadly the quote of Emperor Tiberius is as fitting today as than.
 
October 04, 2008
Votes: +0

scott douglas said:

1740
...
Don't laugh.

Tried to email my congress-person before the initial House vote. But that letter didn't make it. 'They' shut down their system so the servers wouldn't crash under the weight of all the e-outrage. My congress-person is in a secure (un challenged) dem seat. She voted with the leadership...So I called her office (now you can laugh) before the second vote. I was excruciatingly polite, suggesting that the good lady might lead her constituents rather than follow the Speaker, especially considering her rather high public profile for a sophomore - and, uh, oh yes: the opinion polls. I had the temerity to suggest, as well, that I would have to consider any primary challenger in the next round, if her erroneous vote for the bail out bill stood uncorrected by Friday night.

ha-ha.

I could almost hear the nail file rasping on the other end of the telephone.

She's the Chief Deputy Whip.

When you've finished cackling and exclaiming 'oh, Scotty! Scotty! Scotty!' please consider my new, post bail out dilemmas and help: Firstly - can one actually DIS-register to vote? And - where is the 'renounce your citizenship' icon on this freakin' browser...

 
October 04, 2008 | url
Votes: +2

blue ox babe said:

0
...
lordmisterford,

Indeed it sucks rotten eggs to see what has been brewing. Those of us who have been watching it, as you described, have a hard time believing the weakness of will and spirit of our fellow Americans. Why yield to trumped-up fears, why give away your personal liberties?

I still say Erich Fromm's Escape from Freedom explains this all quite nicely -- and at the same time its explanations make me sick to my stomach. Apparently most humans are not independent courageous spirits, but dependent cowards. That most find a mote of courage only when their money is at stake? A sad indictment indeed. What is money? It's a hollow construct designed to enable "commerce," and "commerce" surely isn't mankind's highest calling.
 
October 04, 2008
Votes: +0

Shep said:

0
Resource scarcity is coming to the fore
TPTB have known for decades that the so-called global economy, as current constituted (or in any form), is unsustainable. So, they're doing a class 'pump and dump' to squeeze every last penny from the sheeple who continue to believe that the system has their best interests in mind. Read Mike Ruppert's blog for more specifics on developments in that area.

The debacle will be nearly complete when -- to the horror of millions -- they are no longer able to access their bank accounts, nor credit lines. Then the theft will be just about complete. Any bets on what that's going to happen?
 
October 04, 2008
Votes: +1

FiddlerJones said:

1663
...
Well, I can't see anyway out of the totalitarian construct that's been built for us either, at this point. But that doesn't mean there isn't anyway out. No tyrants think of everything, least of all our group of neo-feudal sad sacks and their mass following. They still need to keep the power on, for example, and they keep sabotaging themselves, and will continue to. They still need to produce something other than paper wealth, their overpaid mercenary armies need to be paid and fed, and their underpaid forces- which is what they'll have to rely on for protracted fighting, both abroad and at home- are still made up largely of people who really don't want to be in any of this, especially when their main task will consist of torturing and shooting people in their own neighborhoods.

People who insist on living large, and then insist on having us pay their expenses for doing so, don't think of everything. They can be beaten. It's not going to be easy, it's not going to be peaceful, but they're not impregnable, since much of what they'll have to do to maintain power here at home is exactly what they're doing overseas, that is to say, bombing churches and strafing aid centers. They're Nazis, much shrewder than the operatic clowns who led the last generation of their world movement, and given their propensity for mass violence, maybe even more deadly. But I think they can be beaten. And if I didn't, I sure as hell wouldn't waste time talking about it or posting anything here. Obviously it's not going to be a walk in the park. But I do believe we have a chance of taking them down, and hurting them until we take them down, or I really wouldn't bother with any of this posting or any of the work I do as an educator in my neighborhood and in the labor movement. Why waste breath if all I'm waiting to do is die?
 
October 04, 2008
Votes: +3

rio rita said:

1747
Don't despair! That's what they want you to do
Having been born, bred and continue living at the bottom of this shit pile of US 'life', and trying to do my little bit to change stuff, I never thought I'd see the day that I would watch this house of cards come tumbling down. Me and my family are part of the lucky ones who have nothing to lose. But remember this --THEY are afraid of us!!!All of us!! and will do everything they can to keep us in chains. Those of you who have the velvet kind will probably begin to feel the chafing as things get worse. So it's time to get talking to each other: face to face--wherever you still live and wherever you may go. The window is open. For the sake of future generations we need a democratic renewal where people start talking to each other (off as well as on the Internet) with a mind to stop paying the rich! That's just for starters!!

Our security lies with fighting for the rights of all in concrete ways - 'cause our insecurity is guaranteed if we keep fighting over the entitlements of the rich. Class war kiddies!
 
October 04, 2008
Votes: +0

FiddlerJones said:

1663
...
Yo, Rio Rita. That's what I'm talking about. I've been living on the edge of this thing far too long to think of these jerks as impregnable or omniscient. People look at me like I'm crazy because I laugh when I talk about the possiblity of losing what I've managed to build for myself before this thing is over, but since I never had it to begin with, I've had it taken away or had to sell it off piece by piece to survive many times, and since I once had nothing at all, I don't scare so easy. These jerks have built a wall. Sometimes we'll have to walk around it, sometimes we'll have the resource to blow a hole through it. But since they have everything, they have nowhere to hide. They've got us surrounded. They're in trouble. As Durruti said, "we are going to inherit the earth. There is no doubt about that. The bourgeoisie may blast their own way out of the world, but that means nothing to us. We have always lived in holes in the wall. We carry a new world in our hearts, and that world is growing this minute." I have a little more to lose than I used to, but since that's not how I identify myself, I'm not too worried about it. Let the good times roll.
 
October 04, 2008
Votes: +0

Paul J said:

0
...
Very good pieces by Chris and Arthur and some excellent comments as well. One point though. The US elite's utopianism, as William Pfaff calls it, or Wilsonian idealism is more properly called hypocrisy. Fine words are easy enough, just look at the record, Noam Chomsky recently said with regard to that and as usual he's right. The worst tyrants in history proclaimed noble ends. What exactly is the difference this unconscious utopianism is making when it comes to concrete policies, steps on the ground, the US are making?
 
October 04, 2008
Votes: +0

commontater said:

1750
...
This is my first time comment as a member. Go easy on me, ok? Chris, I think you and Arthur Silber have explained the dilemma very well. It just seems so obvious to me that the whole meltdown was contrived. That the whole of Congress okayed it is very telling as to where their allegiance lies - in lies. I thought it was also interesting that just a minute after the votes in the House were tallied and announced, the clerk came in with a sealed communication from the President informing the House that he had extended the period of production of the Naval Petroleum Reserves for a period of 3 years from April 5, 2009, the expiration date of the current authorized period of production. The first thing that went through my head was Quid Pro Quo. The prezdementia may have said you give me and BushCo the money, and we'll give you the oil, or something to that affect.
 
October 05, 2008 | url
Votes: +1

SheilaSamples said:

1749
...
When it was three pages, there was national outrage because Paulson demanded total authority with no oversight and no review by courts or accountability. So they re-wrote it, and now -- buried in the 700 or so pages, Section 119(2)(a) is kind of interesting. But first...

Section 112 allows the US Secretary of the Treasury to astoundingly extend financing to foreign banks to purchase the debt of the American people.

Section 112 (1)(a) allows the US Government to hold stocks in companies for the first time in their history and which completely destroys the capitalist economy of their Nation.

Section 119(2)(a) gives the US Secretary of the Treasury dictatorial powers not reviewable by courts making this position the most powerful one in America.

Looks like when it went beyond the ability to hold Americans' attention (three pages), it wasn't quite so bad...
 
October 05, 2008
Votes: +1

theadr said:

1599
Here it comes
They are trying to outlaw cash. All transactions will need plastic or computer, both on the buying and the selling. Without which, you will starve. They will know all our consumptions. Check out Section 128. It makes banks not required to hold reserves. They can deny depositors withdrawals of their cash. We are just our accounts, digital $1's and $0's. Now how exactly am I to pay my pusher ... and my 'lover'? Guess I'll have to ask Spitzer.
 
October 05, 2008
Votes: +0

Duder said:

0
...
Those desperate for a working model to struggle against and overtake this madness really need to look carefully at what is happening in South America currently. The people are openly defying fascists and retaking government down there in a fashion the United States hasn't witness in over two hundred years. Remember, what gets left out of the daily papers is not just the more evil crimes of the elite but also those whom the elite don't want you to know about, because you might get some uppity ideas. Seriously. It would be a welcome change for genuine US pro-democracy advocates to begin embracing their brothers to the south.
 
October 05, 2008
Votes: +2

Fil Munas said:

0
...
Alas, our wretched country full of charlatans and thieves! The culture is arrogant and corrupt, the leaders venal and sinister, the masses dumb and docile.

Take Joe Biden at the debate last Thursday. The pitiful man earnestly proclaimed that the Administration should have taken his advice and not supported free elections in Israeli-occupied West Bank and Gaza. “See,” he lamented, “the people voted for Hamas!”

His contempt for democracy and free choice is breathtaking.
 
October 05, 2008
Votes: +2

blue ox babe said:

0
...
It's good to see new commenters, or old and recently quiet commenters, posting thoughts that reflect reality as it is, and not as it's pitched/spun to us. I'm grateful for the comments of these people

SheilaSamples
duder
theadr
FiddlerJones

and as always, I thank Mr Floyd for his continued fine writing and analysis.
 
October 05, 2008
Votes: +0

Sheila Samples said:

1749
Oops...
My toolbar filled in my email address rather than my name. (sigh)
 
October 05, 2008
Votes: +0

Linda J said:

1712
When a Congressman Outs the Leadership's Martial Law Threat on the Floor of Congress, There's Still Some Hope
Rep. Brad Sherman says the leadership threatened martial law if they didn't pass the bailout on Friday. See the Youtube. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HaG9d_4zij8
 
October 05, 2008 | url
Votes: +0

antiup said:

1449
A Fine funereal dirge...
"I suggest you get used to it. This is your future..." Arthur Silbur

Chris,

You and A.S. both make so much sense. Neither one of you shy away from reality because of absurd ties to the completely corrupt Democratic Party and Obama (Glenn Greenwald, for instance, seems so befuddled about what to say about the Obama Bailout that he's covering Palin,porn and Amadinijad--fodder of the MSM-- in an effort to avoid painful truths about the man that he'll pull the lever for when push comes to shove) But, that said, all your pieces sound like funeral dirges. Why? because you offer no alternatives! So fine, don't, there isn't a law for critics to have to provide positive solutions. But don't tell us to "Get used to it". we'll decide whether or not we want to capitulate as you seem to suggest we do, or attempt something a little more... brave.
 
October 05, 2008
Votes: +0

AlanSmithee said:

0
...
It's not just a threat. They're rounding up the troops to make it stick, too.

Brigade Combat Team From Iraq Said to be First Active 'Dedicated' Assignment by U.S. Unit to Northern Command

'May be Called Upon to Help With Civil Unrest, Crowd Control' Beginning in October, According to Military Paper...

http://www.bradblog.com/?p=6422
 
October 05, 2008
Votes: +0

blue ox babe said:

0
...
antiup - how true your words. Greenwald's lost when you get him outside the narrow confine of reading a piece of legislation and giving his opinion on that bill or law... his naivete and pure partisan perspective are laughable, as if they come from someone not even in jr high school. I shudder to think of how poor a lawyer he must be when litigating, if the clearest he can see is the picture where it's all the fault of the GOP and a narrow set of traitorous Dems. By comparison we don't see weak-kneed equivocation or self-gratifying scapegoating from either of Mr Floyd or Mr Silber.

The quality of writing on American Federal political analysis is directly related to the extent to which the author is willing to see the falsity of the Repub/Dem pretend-binary. Those who cannot bring themselves to face this ugly Janus are not worth reading, because they are giving their readers a deluded, artificial perspective, and no matter how good their analysis otherwise sounds, it suffers fatally from that flaw of partisan-dependent surrealism.
 
October 06, 2008
Votes: +0

kegbot1 said:

0
Advice
How do you read Chris Floyd's excellent material and not feel a total sense of despair?

Thanks rio rita for the words of encouragement. I need to see that. I'd welcome any other suggestions on how to keep on keepin' on in the face of all this bad news.

BTW Sheila, former PAO Army Recruiting Bn Cleveland here. You were famous among the PAOs even when I worked there (1991-96). Not necessarily loved, but famous :)

It's amazing the transformations and personal journeys we take to get to where we are today.

 
October 06, 2008 | url
Votes: +0

Linda J said:

1712
Sheehan To Start New National Party
http://www.digitaljournal.com/article/260751

I know new parties have a tough go here in corporate America, but I think if anyone can get this going, it's Cindy Sheehan. Her platform in the Pelosi challenge is very common sense on a grass roots level.

I look forward to working for this party. We cannot go quietly into that dark night.
 
October 06, 2008 | url
Votes: +0

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