JOHN EDWARDS HAS GOT WHAT IT TAKES
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IN SOUTHERN PREACHER STYLE
-by Mags
Barack Obama may have star power, but John Edwards holds the keys to the Kingdom of the revived Camelot. When John Edwards took to the podium at the DNC Winter Meeting, the energy was apparent. John Edwards connected. He connected to the crowd and he nailed the message. You can read the transcript of his speech as it was prepared below.
Perhaps C-span will have it up soon, or perhaps it will circulate the blogs today or tomorrow. Catch the video if you can. It will bring tears to your eyes and make you cheer.
The speech is on target. John Edwards called for nothing less that political courage to stop George Bush now. To answer the call of the American people now. He did not mince words. He told the audience that "this is not the time for political calculation. It's the time for political courage." He paid homage to Molly Ivins by bringing up the importance of addressing women's health issues.
If I ever doubted that John Edwards could stir a crowd with a powerful address, those doubts were put to rest today. John Edwards can do it. Whether or not he can muster the political machinery behind him to win an election remains to be seen, but the man himself has the power to deliver a message and an agenda.
This is a speech that transcends the Democratic campaign. This speech was to a country in crisis NOW. No matter who we run, we need to listen to this man today. Our leaders in Washington need to pay attention. Hillary can explain how her hands are tied by politics, but John Edwards is able to cut through the rhetoric with his call for "political courage." There are few clear sighted politicians out there, this one is saying what the leadership needs to hear.
Well done, John.
PS. Someone create a Department of Peace and put Dennis Kucinich in it. For crying out loud, if we don't we are missing a great opportunity to shape the future of the world.
[Editor's note: Let me suggest anyone interested in Edwards' candidacy also read the interview he did with Ezra Klein about Iran and the Middle East at the American Prospect.]
The text of John's speech today at the DNC Winter Meeting:
Why are we here?
We are here because somewhere in America an eight-year old girl goes to sleep hungry, a little girl who ought to be drawing pictures and learning multiplication cries herself to sleep, praying that her father, who has been out of work for two years, will get a job again. It doesn't have to be that way.
We are here because somewhere in America, a hotel housekeeper walks a picket line with her union brothers and sisters fighting for decent health care benefits during the day and works the late-shift at a diner at night so that she and her family can live a decent life and so her boy can go to college and have choices she never had. And somewhere a young man folds a college acceptance letter and puts it in his drawer because even with his part-time job and his mother's second job, he knows he cannot afford to go. It doesn't have to be that way.
We are here because somewhere in America a mother wipes her hand on a dishcloth to go answer a knock on her door … and opens it to find an army chaplain and an officer standing there with solemn faces and her boy's name – her patriotic son who enlisted after September 11 – on their lips. It doesn't have to be that way.
We are here because somewhere in the world, a 5-year old boy in a refugee camp is bending under the weight of his 2-year old sister. His family massacred, he carries his remaining sister everywhere, and sleeps with his arms wrapped tightly around her, knowing that tomorrow he will have to do the same thing, and again the next day and the day after that because she is all the family he has now. It doesn't have to be that way.
We are here because somewhere in America a father comes home from the second shift and feels a raging fever on the brow of his sleeping daughter as he kisses her goodnight. And now, bone-weary and worried, he cradles that child in his arms at the emergency room, because there is nowhere else for him to go. It doesn't have to be that way.
They are why we are here. Because everywhere in America, people are counting on us to stand up for them.
And so I ask you, will you stand up for that tired father forced into emergency rooms to get health care for his little girl?
Will you stand up for the brave young boy in the refugee camp?
Will you stand up for the working men and women in our labor movement who have to fight for decent working conditions and living wages?
Will you stand up for the young man who knows that education is his way out of the cycle of poverty and yet it seems beyond his grasp?
Will you stand up for that hungry eight-year old girl so she doesn't give up on her life before it's even begun?
Will you stand up for all the American families whose loved ones are serving in Iraq and Afghanistan?
Will you stand up?
Will you stand up for America?
Because if we don't stand up, who will?
If we don't speak out, who will?
Forty years ago, speaking in protest against the war in Vietnam on the eve of its escalation, the Reverend Doctor Martin Luther King said there comes a time when silence is betrayal. Silence is betrayal.
That time has come again. We cannot stand silent.
They have to hear you. Can they hear you?
I believe it is a betrayal not to speak out against the escalation of the war our nation is engaged in today, in Iraq.
It is a betrayal for this President to send more troops into harm's way when we know it will not succeed in bringing stability to the region.
And it is not right by our silence to enable this President to escalate the war in Iraq. And we must not delude ourselves: our silence enables this President to escalate the war.
It is a betrayal not to stop the President's plan when we have the responsibility, the power and the actual tools to prevent it.
Being satisfied with non-binding resolutions we know this President will ignore is a betrayal. And shutting down debate in the Senate on this issue is worse than a betrayal. It's an outright denial of the people's will.
And one more thing, while I'm at it.
You described yourself as "the decider." I have news for you. The American people are the real "deciders," Mr. President. And they are saying, "You have had your chance."
Americans are speaking out. And our leaders must do no less.
You must stand up now against George Bush's escalation of the war in Iraq. George Bush is counting on us not to stand up, not to fight against this escalation with everything we have. George Bush is counting on a Democratic Party that will not press for what we know is right.
Silence is betrayal.
Opposing this escalation with all the vigor and tools we have is a test of our political courage. And you'd better believe that George Bush, Dick Cheney and Karl Rove are betting that we don't have that courage.
They don't think we have it in us. They're counting on their opponents to be weak, and political, and careful.
This is not the time for political calculation. This is the time for political courage. Stand up.
Being honest and changing course in Iraq is the first step in restoring America's ability to provide moral leadership throughout the world. And make no mistake: America must lead. We are the pre-eminent, stabilizing power in the world. If we don't stand up, who will?
This is the time for political courage – not only when it comes to speaking out against Iraq, but also about the challenges we face here at home.
Because, when it comes to 37 million Americans living in poverty, silence is betrayal.
One in every five children – count them, one in every five American children – live in poverty, here on the richest nation on the planet. It doesn't have to be that way.
The causes of poverty are complex, entrenched, and powerful. And our will to address them and restore the promises of equality and social justice must be just as strong. Are you strong enough? Will you stand up to end poverty in America? It means addressing education, jobs, health care, housing, predatory lending, and personal responsibility. The fight will be long and it will not be easy. Are you ready? Will you use your voice against poverty, or will you stand silent? Stand up. Stand up to eradicate poverty in America.
When it comes to 47 million Americans without health care, silence is betrayal.
The 47 million are silent victims of a health care system gone wrong, where policies are driven by profits not patient care. We have to stop letting the health insurance companies and the big pharmaceutical concerns decide our nation's health care policy. We have to give the silent victims, who stand in line at free clinics and use the expired medicines of friends and neighbors, we have to give them the dignity of universal health care.
And while we're at it, we have to stop using words like “access to health care” when we know with certainty those words mean something less than universal care. Who are you willing to leave behind without the care he needs? Which family? Which child?
We need a truly universal solution, and we need it now.
Will you stand up for universal health insurance in America?
And it's time we stood up for an energy policy that's not dictated by the profit margins of Big Oil -- and an environmental policy that's not promoted by or regulated by polluters. Today, not tomorrow, or in the next decade or in the next generation. Today, our planet is at risk, and here, again, silence is betrayal.
So, will you speak out? Will you stand up?
These are the great moral imperatives of our time. And by breaking the silence we are not breaking faith with our flag or our forefathers or our brave young men and women in uniform. We are keeping faith with America.
Because we are better than this. We are better than this.
We should be the bright light, the beacon for all the world.
We are not the country of the Superdome in New Orleans after Katrina;
We are not the country of Abu Ghraib or Guantanamo;
We are not the country of secret surveillance and government behind closed doors.
We are Americans, and we're better than that.
And we are Democrats, the party of action – not reaction. We are Democrats, the party of principle – not appeasement. The time for half-measures, empty promises, and sweet rhetoric is gone. Now is the time for courage, decisiveness and moral leadership.
It's time to stand up for the promise of America again -- and for the principle that every American matters, no matter where you come from, or what color your skin is, or how much money you have in your pocket.
Let's stand up for the working people whose labor made this country great. America was built by men and women who worked with their hands. And organized labor has fought for and made better the lives of every working man and woman, by giving them a voice – labor never stands silent where wrongs need to be righted. Will you stand with them? It is time we acknowledged that it is organized labor, which has protected the American worker against mistreatment by corporate America. I am proud to stand beside organized labor? Will you stand with them, too? Will you walk with them and march with them?
We know one thing for sure: it is time to be patriotic about something other than war. It is time to do what you know is right and to speak out against what you know is wrong.
Not tomorrow. Now. Speak out now, take action now.
We don't have to wait to see if someone keeps the promises of a 2008 campaign. In fact, the transformational change this country needs cannot wait until January 2009.
Tomorrow begins today. And our obligation to act starts right here, right now.
Because somewhere in America, because everywhere in America, people are counting on us to stand by them and to fight alongside them for what we know in our hearts is right.
So let's stand up together. We have always been the party of promise who stood with the working man and woman, the party of hope who stood with the needy, the party of compassion who stood with the young and the old and the frail. It is who we are.
In times like these, we don't need to redefine the Democratic Party; we need to reclaim the Democratic Party.
Thank you, God bless you and God bless this great country.
7 Comments:
You can view the video of Edwards' speech here:
Edwards in 08
Thanks for the video. Maybe Howie can put the link in the post somewhere.
Edwards does indeed have what it takes:
GORE / EDWARDS 2008
What about Edward's comments on Iran????
I find Edwards an opportunistic fluffy bunny.
Not much more than retoric.
He is just way to fake for me. Scratch the surface alittle and you may not like what you see.
But, you may find what is missing about him.
For me, I support Barack Obama. If you really listened to what he said today, answering his critics and his two rivals you'd understand just how brilliant it was.
He does have eloquence and class and alot to back up his words. And he's done more legislation in 2 years than Fluffy Bunny has in his 6 years. What was Fluffy doing by the way besides messing with his hair.
Obama the real deal? Ok. Polished politician is more like it.
But, what one does have to admit is that the field is attractive.
Fluffy Bunny? Wow, sounds like O'Reilly speak to me. I guess we aren't any better than they are.
As for his stance on Iran, I read both his speech and the interview about his speech. I do not find a lot in there that troubles me except his pro-Israel rhetoric. This is a standard of American rhetoric. The opposite cannot win elections no matter how much we wish it to be so, in my opinion.
But, if you get down to the finer points in his interview with Ezra Klein, he is saying what most liberals have said forever, there must be a program of carrots and sticks, there must be real action that gives the people what they need in Iran. He rightly points out the weakness of the President of Iran. And, he states that striking Iran would be a huge mistake, but to say you won't also an error.
I certainly would not allow a country that is so heavily influenced by Shiites to get a nuclear weapon. However, having said that, I don't think anyone should have one, but that is an example of wishful thinking. The truth is nuclear weapons exist.
How might we act if we had real and reliable intelligence?
Each candidate who spoke added something and each one has a weakness, such is human being. I prefer to watch, listen, and wait before I eat the candidates alive and destroy their credibility.
What I do see is that Edwards understands that domestic issues are very important. If the US were out of Iraq and we had back a position of strength which we do not have now, what would the Middle East look like, and what policies would work? What would Americans choose as important?
The candidates are presented with a chaotic war torn world of Bush insanity. No answer will be a clear cut yay or nay, not right now.
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