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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 "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><br /><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><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, "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><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 "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><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 />"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><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 />"nationhood." Their brand of economics can more rightly be termed "looting."<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 "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="<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, "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><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 "fix it" 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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<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="<a href=" http:="">www.chinasupport.net</a>.)</font></p>"><a href="http://www.chinasupport.net">http://www.chinasupport.net</a>"><a href="http://www.chinasupport.net">www.chinasupport.net</a>.)><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="<a href=" http:="">www.kusumi.com</a>.</i></font></p>"><a href="http://www.kusumi.com">http://www.kusumi.com</a>"><a href="http://www.kusumi.com">www.kusumi.com</a>.>
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