A Guest Post By Montana Rep. Franke Wilmer
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I think most DWT readers are aware that Montana state Rep. (and professor) Franke Wilmer is one of the earliest and most enthusiastic endorsements Blue America made this cycle. And now it all comes down to next Tuesday when she faces off against a gaggle of garden variety Democrats for the party nomination to face off against far right corporate shill Steve Daines, a walking, breathing exemplar of the selfish, greed-obsessed 1%. Franke did a guest post I want to share with everyone, another example of why we need her, and people like her, in Congress-- instead of more of the same crap we're stuck with now. If you like what she has to say, please consider giving her a hand beating Daines in November, here at the Blue America ActBlue page. (It's alphabetical and she's way at the bottom, so don't spend all your money on the top few awesome candidates.)
Restoring The American Dream
by Rep. Franke Wilmer (D-MT)
The Founding Fathers-– or our Founders-– gave us the most incredible political system ever invented, one grounded by the rule of law, majority rule, and protection of minority opinions and dissent. They could not agree to renounce the slave trade, they did not extend political participation to women and non-property owners, and they dispossessed America’s First Nations from their land and resource base. But they gave us a system that would enable us to be better people, collectively, than they were. Indeed, they expected it. They invented the American Dream, and I’m running for Congress to restore it.
The American Dream is not about rich people getting richer, or the exceptional case of someone born into poverty becoming a millionaire, though both are possible in America. But the American Dream is a promise, a hope and a responsibility. It is our shared vision of the good society, of what we as Americans are all about.
The American Dream is that everyone has a fair chance to make the most of their talents and abilities, earn a decent living for themselves and their families, and pass along better opportunities to the next generation.
Every generation until now has moved that dream forward. In my lifetime that meant overcoming discrimination based on race, religion, gender, national origin, disability and age with sexual orientation on the frontier of justice today. The American Dream enabled me to overcome the challenge of being a divorced single mother waiting on tables to completing an undergraduate and two graduate degrees to become a university teacher, Chair of the Montana Human Rights Commission, and a representative in the Montana state legislature.
I have spoken all over the world about democracy and human rights. I’ve spoken to victims of war crimes in a war zone. I trace my own passion for democracy to falling in love with the idea of America after reading about our earliest revolutionary American patriots.
That dream-– that fair chances and hard work will enable everyone to make the most of their abilities, meet their needs including health care, and aspire to pass along better opportunities to their children-– is threatened today like no time I can remember.
Our public education system-– the cornerstone of equal opportunity or as Jefferson called it, “the great equalizer” has slipped from 3rd in the world to 15th. The middle class, the powerhouse of our economy and backbone of our democracy, is in decline as the U.S. Census Bureau reported in 2011 one in six Americans now live in poverty. Since 2000 the U.S. has seen 10% of our middle class jobs-- from 72 million to 65 million-- disappear. And while we commonly use the status and treatment of women to evaluate how democratic and progressive other countries are, women’s rights are under attack in the U.S. and our income remains stuck at 77% of our male counterparts. That’s up from 68% in 1970. At this rate we will achieve pay equality in 475 years. With a high school degree, this amounts to a loss of $750,000 for women over their wage-earning lifetimes and with a college degree the loss is $1 million.
When I say I am running for Congress to restore the American Dream, rebuild our economy and strengthen the middle class this is what I mean. It’s about time we sent someone to Congress who understands from her own experiences the importance of good public education, accessible and affordable higher education, and that hard work, fair chances, and improving opportunities for the next generation are core American values.
Labels: Franke Wilmer, Montana
1 Comments:
In April and part of May I was in NW Montana, drove there via Dell and Butte, then drove to Billings (Montana Brewing Co a must stop). We then went on to MN, back via Canada and then down again into MT thru Great Falls (go to Belt to the Harvest Moon Micro-brewery). I was looking but did not see one campaign sign for Wilmer .... lots of others but .... not one.
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