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American Politics 2004 the Kusumi version

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          • value (String, 12849 characters ) Weighing the politics, the landscape and choice...
            • Weighing the politics, the landscape and choices of 2004 <!--break--> <p align="center"><font size="5">American Politics, 2004</font></p><br /><p align="center"><font size="3"><b>Weighing the politics, the landscape and<br />choices of 2004</b></font></p><br /><p align="left"><font size="2" face="Arial"><b>By John Kusumi</b></font></p><br /><p align="left"><font size="2" face="MS Sans Serif">Last month, I wrote an<br />article called &quot;Chinese Politics, 2004&quot; and correctly anticipated that<br />Jiang Zemin would step down as the chief of the Chinese military. He did so, and<br />now I myself have stepped down from the top job of the China Support Network<br />(CSN). CSN wants to free China, and I've thanked my fellow Americans for rising<br />to the occasion, when Tiananmen Square occurred, and for building the CSN with<br />me. After fifteen years with myself at the helm, I am leaving (while keeping the<br />title of director emeritus).</font></p><br /><p align="left"><font size="2" face="MS Sans Serif">Okay, then, shall I write<br />&quot;American Politics, 2004&quot;? America, we are in trouble. (Please return<br />your tray table and seat back to the upright position, place your head between<br />your knees, and grip your ankles.) We are a little bit like passengers in Flight<br />93 of 9/11. When did things get this bad? In 1984, I was Ronald Reagan's<br />18-year-old opponent, also opposed to Walter Mondale and to the entire two-party<br />system. Things got bad after you didn't elect me; that's my simple answer.</font></p><br /><p align="left"><font size="2" face="MS Sans Serif">Things got bad (1.) when<br />Tiananmen Square presented an emergency, and in the face of evil, George Bush<br />(Senior) didn't do anything about it -- encouraging the growth of a new<br />nuclear-armed, communist superpower. (2.) Things got bad when we missed an<br />opportunity, as we were already fighting Iraq in the first Gulf War (in 1991)<br />-- we could have gone on to Baghdad and taken out Saddam Hussein at that time.<br />(3.) Things got bad when the end of the Cold War occasioned no improvements, and<br />rather only political correctness and globalization around here. (4.) In my<br />experience of the 1990s, baby boomers don't manage technology development any<br />better than they manage government, which is not well. A bubble burst in the<br />stock market as a result. (5.) Things got bad as terrorism stayed off the radar,<br />leading up to the 9/11 catastrophe. (6.) (7.) (8.) George Bush has budget<br />deficits, trade deficits, and the price of gasoline all moving in the wrong<br />direction. For that matter, job growth in his administration has moved in the<br />wrong direction -- let's make that point (9.). And, he refuses to raise minimum<br />wage -- an increase that is clearly rightful and indicated to keep pace with<br />inflation; that can be point (10.). I hear that overtime pay and civil liberties<br />are being proscribed, and those can be bad thing (11.) and bad thing (12.).</font></p><br /><p align="left"><font size="2" face="MS Sans Serif">Anything else? Well, we can<br />name four<br />large problems in China, Iraq, Iran, and North Korea. The crime of<br />genocide is taking place in China, the Congo, and the Darfur region of Sudan.<br />The world has trouble in such places as Palestine, Chechnya, Kashmir, and Tibet.<br />The Taiwan strait could be a flashpoint for war. We<br />can name as problems Enron and Worldcom, and indeed a national run<br />of white collar crime.</font></p><br /><p align="left"><font size="2" face="MS Sans Serif">Anything else? The space<br />shuttle disintegrated. We've blown off the International Criminal Court, the Kyoto<br />treaty, the UN, NATO, the Geneva Conventions, and old allies. There's been<br />anthrax. Nobody has removed land mines, cluster bombs, and depleted uranium<br />weapons from our arsenal, and we're even working on a new variety of nuclear<br />weapon.</font></p><br /><p align="left"><font size="2" face="MS Sans Serif">Anything else? America has a<br />21st century society, living on a 20th century infrastructure. In the 1990s, we<br />built perhaps 200 new sports stadiums, and zero new power plants. If you've<br />experienced chronic traffic slow downs, or chronic airline delays, that's our<br />20th century infrastructure showing its age. We remain dependent upon Mid East oil. There<br />are coming challenges with inflation, interest rates, infrastructure, energy, and<br />social security. Health care is already a challenge. Forty five million of you are<br />without health insurance.</font></p><br /><p align="left"><font size="2" face="MS Sans Serif">There is one thing you<br />cannot explain to me. In 1991, we fought Iraq in the first Gulf War. In those<br />days, prisoners of war did not need secret military tribunals. Yet in 2003, for<br />the second war with Iraq, to have secret military tribunals was indispensable.<br />Did prisoners of war really change between 1991 and 2003? So drastically that<br />the world's Geneva Conventions had to go by the boards? Or, did we change in<br />that same interval?</font></p><br /><p align="left"><font size="2" face="MS Sans Serif">Many would ask, &quot;Who's<br />'we'? They can speak for themselves, right?&quot; True enough, where I stand in Generation X,<br />&quot;we&quot; are not running the country.</font> <font face="MS Sans Serif" size="2">I've<br />mentioned a mouthful about things getting bad. Perhaps you'd prefer my simple<br />answer -- things got bad after you didn't elect me. (And I thought things were<br />bad in 1984! --What about Reagan's budget deficit, and arms race? Government<br />spending was out of whack then, not to speak of now. And, their heads were in the sand<br />about energy independence. After the 1970s, it didn't take Washington long to<br />blow off every lesson that the 1970s might have taught.)</font></p><br /><p align="left"><font size="2" face="MS Sans Serif">America, the corruption that<br />you now have is far worse than Watergate. And as for injury, America, you are about to do it to yourself<br />(again) -- a vote for Bush or Kerry (either way) is a vote to rape the American<br />economy, workers, and middle class. In their<br />right minds, no one should be voting for either one of those two &quot;oppo-sames.&quot;<br />(For an aside, I'll mention that my book, </font><font size="2" face="Arial"><i>Activate<br />This!</i></font><font size="2" face="MS Sans Serif">, rates federal legislators.<br />Everyone received one star, two stars, or three stars. My book rated Kerry and<br />Edwards, both, as &quot;two star&quot; politicians. The rating was written before they<br />ran for President, meaning that it is clean, following the same rules that I applied,<br />evenhandedly, to all federal legislators. Bush was not rated, for not being a<br />legislator.) (But, psst -- aside, aside, if I had to place him he<br />would be a two star politician as well.) This year's election would be more<br />interesting if it was McCain versus Gephardt.</font></p><br /><p align="left"><font size="2" face="MS Sans Serif">Perhaps that's what troubles<br />me about this year's election. Between Bush and Kerry, I do have opinions, but<br />I'll keep them to myself. As I watch the debates, the notable thing is the<br />absence of Ralph Nader. Also recently, I caught the debate between four<br />&quot;alternative candidates,&quot; one each from the Constitution, Green,<br />Socialist, and Libertarian parties. This was another stage, but the absence of<br />Ralph Nader was again notable -- he wasn't there. This second-tier debate<br />reminded me of a 1984 convention for alternative candidates, a debate and<br />(remembered by an affiliate anchorman as)-- a win for your author. This year's winner<br />seemed to be David Cobb, from the Green party -- I found<br />him to be the most impressive of the group. However, in the end, neither<br />Nader nor Cobb quite match my own politics of practical idealism.</font></p><br /><p align="left"><font size="2" face="MS Sans Serif">The big difference is that<br />practical idealism and I are hawks. Hawkish on national security, we were supportive of removing Saddam<br />Hussein from power. It should have been done 12 years earlier, in the first Gulf<br />War -- but even now, we remain supportive of U.S. objectives in Iraq. It is ever<br />regrettable to have the deadly costs associated with war, but I think this war<br />to be a necessary evil. </font></p><br /><p align="left"><font size="2" face="MS Sans Serif">The politics of practical idealism have a general formula:<br />fiscally conservative, hawkish on national security, and socially liberal. In my<br />case, I'm<br />like former Minnesota Governor Jesse Ventura, except more hawkish, and opposed to the<br />globalization of free trade. (Washington's dirty secret is that that is what's </font><font size="2" face="Arial"><b><i>really</i></b></font><font size="2" face="MS Sans Serif"><br />hurting the economy. To de-industrialize our entire country and deflate our<br />economy, in each case without cause, is the profound corruption of our<br />time, and the glossed-over risks to national security are tantamount to<br />treason.) (Psst -- aside, aside, in the contrived contortions of debate by which<br />some excuse globalization, the name of the game is no longer<br />&quot;nationhood.&quot; Their brand of economics can more rightly be termed &quot;looting.&quot;<br />They are looting this nation.)</font></p><br /><p align="left"><font size="2" face="MS Sans Serif">At this time, all that is<br />predictable is that America has four more years of being screwed to expect.<br />Shall we have a ray of good news? The ray of good news is that this is the last<br />of the Jennings/Brokaw/Rather-managed elections. They are three anchormen who<br />have beat the drums for this globalization, while silencing Ralph Nader, et al.</font></p><br /><p align="left"><font size="2" face="MS Sans Serif">From my recent tenure there, I know they certainly have silenced the China<br />Support Network and the Chinese pro-democracy movement, during a humanitarian<br />emergency of genocide. Three groups experiencing a holocaust in China are Falun<br />Gong, Christians, and Tibetan Buddhists. --Their crisis has occurred, to not<br />even a ripple in<br />the Jennings/Brokaw/Rather &quot;news.&quot; The emergency in China never<br />stopped; China never got better on human rights; all that changed is that their<br />&quot;news&quot; stopped telling you about flagrant atrocities; abominations;<br />and, human rights abuses that continue happening right now, today, at this<br />minute. (See <a href="<a href="http://www.chinasupport.net">www.chinasupport.net</a>.)</font></p">http://www.chinasupport.net">www.chinasupport.net</a>.)</font></p</a>><br /><p align="left"><font size="2" face="MS Sans Serif">In conjunction with those three<br />men, let's keep that word, &quot;news&quot; protectively enclosed in scare<br />quotes. Their kind of &quot;news&quot; is scary, as is their self-selected<br />legacy. America's &quot;corruption<br />bubble,&quot; unsustainable but not yet burst, grew under their tenure. In the<br />United States, any news network that thinks of itself as &quot;fair and<br />balanced&quot; ought to change its slogan to &quot;sorry and saddening.&quot;<br />Have they ever balanced Chinese government statements with Chinese opposition<br />statements? Not recently. Have they ever balanced free trade pablum by breaking<br />the news that trade deficits are injurious (and encouraged by globalization)? I have yet to see such a fair and<br />balanced discussion. And, if the China Support Network appeared in their<br />&quot;news,&quot; the anchormen would have to report, &quot;This just in.<br />Communism is a bad thing.&quot; The situation should be embarrassing to them, and sorry and<br />saddening to the entire country.</font></p><br /><p align="left"><font size="2" face="MS Sans Serif">The good news is that an era<br />is ending -- in future elections, those three television network anchormen will be retired. In politics, Generation<br />X must then follow on, becoming the &quot;fix it&quot; generation in U.S.<br />politics.</font></p><br /><hr><br /><p align="left"><font size="2"><i>John Kusumi is a former presidential candidate<br />(independent). In 1984, as his campaign platform, he introduced the politics of<br />Practical Idealism to America. He later launched the China Support Network in<br />response to Tiananmen Square in 1989. His material lives at <a href="<a href="http://www.kusumi.com">www.kusumi.com</a>.</i></font></p">http://www.kusumi.com">www.kusumi.com</a>.</i></font></p</a>><br />
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          • safe_value (String, 12822 characters ) <p>Weighing the politics, the landscape and cho...
            • <p>Weighing the politics, the landscape and choices of 2004</p> <!--break--><p align="center"><font size="5">American Politics, 2004</font></p> <p> </p><p align="center"><font size="3"><b>Weighing the politics, the landscape and<br />choices of 2004</b></font></p> <p> </p><p align="left"><font size="2" face="Arial"><b>By John Kusumi</b></font></p> <p> </p><p align="left"><font size="2" face="MS Sans Serif">Last month, I wrote an<br />article called "Chinese Politics, 2004" and correctly anticipated that<br />Jiang Zemin would step down as the chief of the Chinese military. He did so, and<br />now I myself have stepped down from the top job of the China Support Network<br />(CSN). CSN wants to free China, and I've thanked my fellow Americans for rising<br />to the occasion, when Tiananmen Square occurred, and for building the CSN with<br />me. After fifteen years with myself at the helm, I am leaving (while keeping the<br />title of director emeritus).</font></p> <p> </p><p align="left"><font size="2" face="MS Sans Serif">Okay, then, shall I write<br />"American Politics, 2004"? America, we are in trouble. (Please return<br />your tray table and seat back to the upright position, place your head between<br />your knees, and grip your ankles.) We are a little bit like passengers in Flight<br />93 of 9/11. When did things get this bad? In 1984, I was Ronald Reagan's<br />18-year-old opponent, also opposed to Walter Mondale and to the entire two-party<br />system. Things got bad after you didn't elect me; that's my simple answer.</font></p> <p> </p><p align="left"><font size="2" face="MS Sans Serif">Things got bad (1.) when<br />Tiananmen Square presented an emergency, and in the face of evil, George Bush<br />(Senior) didn't do anything about it -- encouraging the growth of a new<br />nuclear-armed, communist superpower. (2.) Things got bad when we missed an<br />opportunity, as we were already fighting Iraq in the first Gulf War (in 1991)<br />-- we could have gone on to Baghdad and taken out Saddam Hussein at that time.<br />(3.) Things got bad when the end of the Cold War occasioned no improvements, and<br />rather only political correctness and globalization around here. (4.) In my<br />experience of the 1990s, baby boomers don't manage technology development any<br />better than they manage government, which is not well. A bubble burst in the<br />stock market as a result. (5.) Things got bad as terrorism stayed off the radar,<br />leading up to the 9/11 catastrophe. (6.) (7.) (8.) George Bush has budget<br />deficits, trade deficits, and the price of gasoline all moving in the wrong<br />direction. For that matter, job growth in his administration has moved in the<br />wrong direction -- let's make that point (9.). And, he refuses to raise minimum<br />wage -- an increase that is clearly rightful and indicated to keep pace with<br />inflation; that can be point (10.). I hear that overtime pay and civil liberties<br />are being proscribed, and those can be bad thing (11.) and bad thing (12.).</font></p> <p> </p><p align="left"><font size="2" face="MS Sans Serif">Anything else? Well, we can<br />name four<br />large problems in China, Iraq, Iran, and North Korea. The crime of<br />genocide is taking place in China, the Congo, and the Darfur region of Sudan.<br />The world has trouble in such places as Palestine, Chechnya, Kashmir, and Tibet.<br />The Taiwan strait could be a flashpoint for war. We<br />can name as problems Enron and Worldcom, and indeed a national run<br />of white collar crime.</font></p> <p> </p><p align="left"><font size="2" face="MS Sans Serif">Anything else? The space<br />shuttle disintegrated. We've blown off the International Criminal Court, the Kyoto<br />treaty, the UN, NATO, the Geneva Conventions, and old allies. There's been<br />anthrax. Nobody has removed land mines, cluster bombs, and depleted uranium<br />weapons from our arsenal, and we're even working on a new variety of nuclear<br />weapon.</font></p> <p> </p><p align="left"><font size="2" face="MS Sans Serif">Anything else? America has a<br />21st century society, living on a 20th century infrastructure. In the 1990s, we<br />built perhaps 200 new sports stadiums, and zero new power plants. If you've<br />experienced chronic traffic slow downs, or chronic airline delays, that's our<br />20th century infrastructure showing its age. We remain dependent upon Mid East oil. There<br />are coming challenges with inflation, interest rates, infrastructure, energy, and<br />social security. Health care is already a challenge. Forty five million of you are<br />without health insurance.</font></p> <p> </p><p align="left"><font size="2" face="MS Sans Serif">There is one thing you<br />cannot explain to me. In 1991, we fought Iraq in the first Gulf War. In those<br />days, prisoners of war did not need secret military tribunals. Yet in 2003, for<br />the second war with Iraq, to have secret military tribunals was indispensable.<br />Did prisoners of war really change between 1991 and 2003? So drastically that<br />the world's Geneva Conventions had to go by the boards? Or, did we change in<br />that same interval?</font></p> <p> </p><p align="left"><font size="2" face="MS Sans Serif">Many would ask, "Who's<br />'we'? They can speak for themselves, right?" True enough, where I stand in Generation X,<br />"we" are not running the country.</font> <font face="MS Sans Serif" size="2">I've<br />mentioned a mouthful about things getting bad. Perhaps you'd prefer my simple<br />answer -- things got bad after you didn't elect me. (And I thought things were<br />bad in 1984! --What about Reagan's budget deficit, and arms race? Government<br />spending was out of whack then, not to speak of now. And, their heads were in the sand<br />about energy independence. After the 1970s, it didn't take Washington long to<br />blow off every lesson that the 1970s might have taught.)</font></p> <p> </p><p align="left"><font size="2" face="MS Sans Serif">America, the corruption that<br />you now have is far worse than Watergate. And as for injury, America, you are about to do it to yourself<br />(again) -- a vote for Bush or Kerry (either way) is a vote to rape the American<br />economy, workers, and middle class. In their<br />right minds, no one should be voting for either one of those two "oppo-sames."<br />(For an aside, I'll mention that my book, </font><font size="2" face="Arial"><i>Activate<br />This!</i></font><font size="2" face="MS Sans Serif">, rates federal legislators.<br />Everyone received one star, two stars, or three stars. My book rated Kerry and<br />Edwards, both, as "two star" politicians. The rating was written before they<br />ran for President, meaning that it is clean, following the same rules that I applied,<br />evenhandedly, to all federal legislators. Bush was not rated, for not being a<br />legislator.) (But, psst -- aside, aside, if I had to place him he<br />would be a two star politician as well.) This year's election would be more<br />interesting if it was McCain versus Gephardt.</font></p> <p> </p><p align="left"><font size="2" face="MS Sans Serif">Perhaps that's what troubles<br />me about this year's election. Between Bush and Kerry, I do have opinions, but<br />I'll keep them to myself. As I watch the debates, the notable thing is the<br />absence of Ralph Nader. Also recently, I caught the debate between four<br />"alternative candidates," one each from the Constitution, Green,<br />Socialist, and Libertarian parties. This was another stage, but the absence of<br />Ralph Nader was again notable -- he wasn't there. This second-tier debate<br />reminded me of a 1984 convention for alternative candidates, a debate and<br />(remembered by an affiliate anchorman as)-- a win for your author. This year's winner<br />seemed to be David Cobb, from the Green party -- I found<br />him to be the most impressive of the group. However, in the end, neither<br />Nader nor Cobb quite match my own politics of practical idealism.</font></p> <p> </p><p align="left"><font size="2" face="MS Sans Serif">The big difference is that<br />practical idealism and I are hawks. Hawkish on national security, we were supportive of removing Saddam<br />Hussein from power. It should have been done 12 years earlier, in the first Gulf<br />War -- but even now, we remain supportive of U.S. objectives in Iraq. It is ever<br />regrettable to have the deadly costs associated with war, but I think this war<br />to be a necessary evil. </font></p> <p> </p><p align="left"><font size="2" face="MS Sans Serif">The politics of practical idealism have a general formula:<br />fiscally conservative, hawkish on national security, and socially liberal. In my<br />case, I'm<br />like former Minnesota Governor Jesse Ventura, except more hawkish, and opposed to the<br />globalization of free trade. (Washington's dirty secret is that that is what's </font><font size="2" face="Arial"><b><i>really</i></b></font><font size="2" face="MS Sans Serif"><br />hurting the economy. To de-industrialize our entire country and deflate our<br />economy, in each case without cause, is the profound corruption of our<br />time, and the glossed-over risks to national security are tantamount to<br />treason.) (Psst -- aside, aside, in the contrived contortions of debate by which<br />some excuse globalization, the name of the game is no longer<br />"nationhood." Their brand of economics can more rightly be termed "looting."<br />They are looting this nation.)</font></p> <p> </p><p align="left"><font size="2" face="MS Sans Serif">At this time, all that is<br />predictable is that America has four more years of being screwed to expect.<br />Shall we have a ray of good news? The ray of good news is that this is the last<br />of the Jennings/Brokaw/Rather-managed elections. They are three anchormen who<br />have beat the drums for this globalization, while silencing Ralph Nader, et al.</font></p> <p> </p><p align="left"><font size="2" face="MS Sans Serif">From my recent tenure there, I know they certainly have silenced the China<br />Support Network and the Chinese pro-democracy movement, during a humanitarian<br />emergency of genocide. Three groups experiencing a holocaust in China are Falun<br />Gong, Christians, and Tibetan Buddhists. --Their crisis has occurred, to not<br />even a ripple in<br />the Jennings/Brokaw/Rather "news." The emergency in China never<br />stopped; China never got better on human rights; all that changed is that their<br />"news" stopped telling you about flagrant atrocities; abominations;<br />and, human rights abuses that continue happening right now, today, at this<br />minute. (See <a href="&lt;a href=" http:="">www.chinasupport.net</a>.)</font></p>"&gt;<a href="http://www.chinasupport.net">http://www.chinasupport.net</a>"&gt;<a href="http://www.chinasupport.net">www.chinasupport.net</a>.)&gt;<br /> <p align="left"><font size="2" face="MS Sans Serif">In conjunction with those three<br />men, let's keep that word, "news" protectively enclosed in scare<br />quotes. Their kind of "news" is scary, as is their self-selected<br />legacy. America's "corruption<br />bubble," unsustainable but not yet burst, grew under their tenure. In the<br />United States, any news network that thinks of itself as "fair and<br />balanced" ought to change its slogan to "sorry and saddening."<br />Have they ever balanced Chinese government statements with Chinese opposition<br />statements? Not recently. Have they ever balanced free trade pablum by breaking<br />the news that trade deficits are injurious (and encouraged by globalization)? I have yet to see such a fair and<br />balanced discussion. And, if the China Support Network appeared in their<br />"news," the anchormen would have to report, "This just in.<br />Communism is a bad thing." The situation should be embarrassing to them, and sorry and<br />saddening to the entire country.</font></p> <p> </p><p align="left"><font size="2" face="MS Sans Serif">The good news is that an era<br />is ending -- in future elections, those three television network anchormen will be retired. In politics, Generation<br />X must then follow on, becoming the "fix it" generation in U.S.<br />politics.</font></p> <p> </p><hr /> <p align="left"><font size="2"><i>John Kusumi is a former presidential candidate<br />(independent). In 1984, as his campaign platform, he introduced the politics of<br />Practical Idealism to America. He later launched the China Support Network in<br />response to Tiananmen Square in 1989. His material lives at <a href="&lt;a href=" http:="">www.kusumi.com</a>.</i></font></p>"&gt;<a href="http://www.kusumi.com">http://www.kusumi.com</a>"&gt;<a href="http://www.kusumi.com">www.kusumi.com</a>.&gt;
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Local News

“Family Trouble”: The 1975 Killing of Denise Hawkins and the Legacy of Deadly Force in the Rochester, NY Police Department
CBA between the City of Rochester, NY and the Rochester Police Locust Club, 1974 - 1976
CBA between the City of Rochester & the Rochester Police Locust Club, 2019 - 2024
Did District Attorney Sandra Doorley Violate Ethics Guidelines While Attending a Local Republican Fundraiser in May?
Jim Goodman - Sleeper Cell for the Revolution!
The Press as Powdered Donut with Blue Badge in the Middle
Blueprint for Engagement: Evaluating Police / Community Relations Final Report (2017)
The Police-Civilian Foot Patrol: An Evaluation of the PAC-TAC Experiemnt in Rochester, New York (June 1975)
Police Killing of Denise Hawkins (1975)
Complaint Investigation Committee Legislation (1977)
Race Rebellion of July 1964
Selections Regarding the Police Advisory Board (1963-1970)
Prelude to the Police Advisory Board
A.C. White (January 26, 1963)
Police Raid on Black Muslim Religious Service (January 6, 1963)
Rufus Fairwell (August 12, 1962)
Incarcerated Worker sheds light on Prison Labor Conditions during Pandemic
Police and Political Commentary
BWC video indicates Mark Gaskill was holding his phone as police shouted "gun"
How the NY Attorney General's defended the police who killed Daniel Prude

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