The Dirt on Dennis Not…

A stream of particularly excoriating emails about Dennis Kucinich, from o­ne Joe Bialek, has been making the email rounds to try to knock him out of the presidential box. I've gotten them not o­nly in group emails, but to me, personally. This guy is looking for where Kucinich's name shows up — see “Kucinich Rocks the Boat” o­n my site — to send hate mail. It was disturbing enough for me to check its veracity, in case this was true:

“This is the man, the mayor, who brought Cleveland to its knees financially…Maybe even worse, he was blamed for cementing the city's place as a national joke: The Mistake by the Lake, they called this city. Things were so bad that when he threw out the first pitch for the Cleveland Indians o­n Opening Day 1978, Mayor Kucinich wore a bulletproof jacket…Kucinich's political and fiscal crisis came in 1978 when local banks refused to refinance $15 million in short-term city debt they had routinely rolled over previously. The loans were unrelated to the electric utility, then called Muny Light. But bankers demanded its sale to the local private utility company as the price for refinancing. Kucinich refused, and the city technically defaulted when the notes expired. Voters later approved a tax increase to keep the utility and bail out the city. But Kucinich was crushed politically and personally.”

Here's the story Bialek doesn't tell.  From “Who's the Real Peace Candidate?” LA Weekly Doug Ireland

He used to be known as the Boy Wonder of Ohio politics: Cleveland city councilman at 23, mayor at 31. Kucinich inherited a city teetering o­n the edge of bankruptcy, and governed as a populist against the vested interests. Cleveland had (and, thanks to Kucinich, still has) a city-owned power plant delivering electricity at up to 60 percent cheaper than its private-sector twin. This upset Cleveland’s bankers, who had deep ties to Muny Light’s competitor, and they blackmailed Kucinich: Either sell Muny Light to pay the city’s debts, or we’ll pull Cleveland’s credit. Kucinich refused to give in, the banks canceled the city’s credit, and Cleveland was in default. Local media nicknamed the mayor “Dennis the Menace” and crusaded against him, and Kucinich was speedily ousted. For the next 15 years, Kucinich was in the political wilderness and out of office.

In 1994, a scandal plaguing a state senator created an opening for Kucinich, who took it. Two years later, Dennis the Menace snatched a seat in Congress. Now, “the passage of time has shown that Kucinich may have been more right than he was wrong,” acknowledges veteran political columnist and editorial-page director Brent Larkin of Kucinich’s hometown paper, the Cleveland Plain Dealer.

A couple of years ago, the Cleveland City Council passed a resolution thanking Kucinich for his “courage and foresight” in refusing to sell Muny Light. Cleveland area voters are so fond of Kucinich that Ohio Republicans — who detest him — didn’t even bother trying to gerrymander Kucinich out of his seat in last year’s congressional redistricting. “Kucinich is probably the most popular officeholder in Cuyahoga County,” Larkin says.

I want to tag o­n something else that came in my email, sent by Yvonne Garcia, which has the same kind of off the charts high-mindedness that Kucinich expresses:

  

WAR CAN NO LONGER BE AN INSTRUMENT OF NATIONAL POLITICS

With the Statement “War: A Crime Against Humanity” the Club of Budapest is launching a debate o­n the right of national states to declare and wage war as a means of settling issues of foreign policy. “Times are over when questions of war and peace could be decided in the context of international power politics,” says Ervin Laszlo, President of the Club of Budapest, a global think-and-action tank with a hundred members including the Dalai Lama, Mikhail Gorbachev, Archbishop Tutu, Elie Wiesel, Peter Ustinov and others. “Right cannot be decided by might, in the international field any more than in the personal domain. In an interdependent global community every war between nations is fundamentally a civil war.” Terrorists and potential aggressors must be stopped, but war is not the way to stop them. Warfare must be replaced by dialogue leading to mutual understanding as a basis of multilateral cooperation in regard to relations among nations in the political as well as in the economic and the ecological spheres.

According to the Club of Budapest, the project of creating a structure of global cooperation beyond the veto-power and special status of individual states is best pursued in the framework of a “World Futures Council” as proposed among others by Mikhail Gorbachev and Jacob von Uexkuell. The Council is to be constituted of o­ne hundred independent individuals of high integrity who place the shared human interest above any parochial national or cultural interest. The Club of Budapest takes an active part in the creation of such a Council and will promote its work with special attention to questions of civil and political values and perceptions, and the humanism and sustainability of the policies motivated by them.

———

The following Statement is signed by Members of the Club of Budapest inter alia Sir Peter Ustinov, Paolo Coelho, Pir Inayat-Vilayat Khan, Zubin Mehta, Betty Williams, Hans Küng, Sir Sigmund Sternberg, Jane Goodall, Peter Russell, Vigdis Finnbogadottir, and Lady Fiona Montagu.

WAR: A CRIME AGAINST HUMANITY

The time has come for the world community to recognize that war, rather than an instrument for the elimination of terrorists and aggressors, is a crime against humanity. It is itself an act of aggression that threatens human life, and the environment o­n which human life vitally depends.

No other species kills massively its own kind: war is a uniquely human phenomenon. Such killing was never justified, but it had a marginal warrant at a time when war was waged among neighboring groups for the acquisition of territory with natural and human resources and could be limited to the territories and the warriors of the protagonists. At a time when resources are not limited to defined territories and hostilities cannot be contained, war is neither politically nor economically justified. Given that modern warfare kills innocent civilians, inflicts serious damage o­n the life-supporting environment, and may escalate to a global conflagration, waging war needs to be declared a crime against humanity. No nation-state should have the legitimate right to wage war against any other nation-state.

The stockpiling of weapons of mass destruction is not a warrant for waging war. Weapons of mass destruction whether they are nuclear, chemical, biological, or conventional are a threat to human life and habitat by whoever possesses them. They are not tolerable in the hands of any state, whether it is large or small, rich or poor, and headed by a dictator or by an elected politician. Such weapons need to be eliminated from the arsenals of every state, a task that is not the self-declared prerogative of any government but the responsibility of the global community of all peoples and states. There will be no lasting peace o­n earth until all weapons of mass destruction are destroyed, their production and stockpiling proscribed, and strategies calling for their use replaced by strategies of dialogue, negotiation and, if necessary, internationally agreed economic and political sanctions.

Attempting to eliminate weapons of mass destruction with weapons of mass destruction is to fight violence with violence o­n the principle of an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth, a policy that can end up making everyone blind and toothless. Aggressors and terrorists must be stopped, but war is not the way to stop them.

———————————–

The Club of Budapest is an informal association of creative people in diverse fields of art, literature, and the spiritual domains of culture. It is dedicated to the proposition that o­nly by changing ourselves we can change the world – and that to change ourselves we need the kind of insight and perception that art, literature, and the domains of the spirit can best provide. The members of the Club of Budapest use their artistic creativity and spiritual insight to enhance awareness of global problems and human opportunities. They communicate their insights in word and image, in sound and motion, and in the myriad new media and technologies. They are recognized world leaders in their fields of literary, artistic, or spiritual activity; their names are assurance of insight, and their membership in the club a testimony of their dedication to our common future.”  –Ervin Laszlo

 Comments? Click here

From: Susan Steffes [ssteffes@cal-lobby.com]

I don't recall seeing anything from you about Dennis Kucinich agreeing to look at a run for the presidency. [This email came just before I put up this post….ST] I know I read a long article about him through a link in o­ne of your emails. I was soooooooooo impressed by what I read. He is truly unique in politics today, and I was praying that he would run. I sent him an email pleading for him to run, as apparently many others have too. It was because of emails, calls, and faxes like these that he agreed to look at running. When I read that, I immediately went to his website and pledged money and volunteered time towards getting him elected. I think he is a candidate that the people of TheConversation would and should support. I think he will give us someone to rally behind as we try and change the world. I think it would be great if you re-ran that article o­n him  and provided links to his websites and whatever other information might be helpful, and urged people to support him in whatever way they can.

Congressional website: http://www.house.gov/kucinich/

His personal website: http://thespiritoffreedom.com/

This is o­n the front page of his website:

Dear Friend,

Welcome! In response to tens of thousands of emails and countless phone calls, letters and personal appeals, I am moving forward to take the first step towards a candidacy for the Democratic nomination for President of the United States.

In the past year I have had the opportunity to meet with many of you in dozens of cities across our nation. The heart of America is yearning for dramatic, transformational change which can reconnect us with the vision of our nation's Founders, to be the light of the world.

In the next few months I will be returning to visit the neighborhoods of America. If the response continues to be strong, if the financial support is there, the encouragement and the participation continues, I will schedule a formal announcement of candidacy sometime in June.

I need to hear from you! I hope you enjoy our new website and I welcome your suggestions. And most of all, I need your help.

Best wishes,

Dennis.

An awesome speech: http://thespiritoffreedom.com/speech10.htm

Suzanne to Susan:

Thanks, Susan. I did know he was going to announce, but it was not for publication. Now will have to see what to do. I will give it my all. He's such a rare bird in government — the o­nly o­ne who speaks for the soul of humanity, let alone is vehemently anti-war. They say there are enough “Cultural Creatives” to elect a president. And we'd all vote for him without needing to be appealed to by massive spending o­n advertising. Capra-esque scenarios just might come into play!

Susan to Suzanne

I am so excited about the prospect, I cannot even tell you!

From: Yvonne Garcia [yvonneg@tampabay.rr.com]

I feel we should see him as winning.  “Dream” him as winning.  And just hold to that.  That's what I am going to do.    Meantime I was taking a look at his site, and it is very good.  I found that his is very much involved with Labor, and I know that the AFL-CIO has promised to see Bush is NOT elected, I imagine from this I found at his site that Kucinich might be their man…

The Soul of the Worker
and the American Restoration

I was born into the House of Labor. My father was a Teamster who drove a truck for 35 years. He died with his first retirement check in his pocket, uncashed. He and my mother raised seven children, of which I was the oldest. We lived in 21 different places by the time I was 17. Having a job doesn't solve all of a family's problems. o­ne of my first jobs was at the Plain Dealer newspaper in Cleveland. As a copyboy I joined the American Newspaper Guild. Years later, working at TV 8, I belonged to AFTRA. Today I am a member of the cameraman's union, the IATSE of the AFL-CIO.
This is my membership card. I am of the House of Labor and still building. This is my card of membership in the House of Representatives. This card (House) is where my work is. And this card (IATSE) is where my heart is.

The hopes and dreams of the men and women who sent me to congress are the stars by which I journey. Whenever there is an organizing campaign, a picket line to walk, jobs to save, working conditions to improve, laws to champion, I'm there. This is my purpose: To stand up and to speak out o­n behalf of those who have built this country and who want to rebuild this country. This is my passion: To raise up the rights of working people. Workers' rights are the key to protecting our democracy.

Workers' rights embody spiritual principles which sustain families, nourish the soul and create peace. Worker's rights are human rights.

Today, let us begin anew to rededicate our efforts to bring economic justice to those who have created the wealth through their work. A re-energized labor movement will reenergize America's politics and create a more just society. Your cause is the cause of our nation. Your dream is the American dream. The cause of union, of brotherhood and sisterhood is felt in the worker's anthem. Solidarity can be the song which echoes across this land. It can be the music which lifts up the hearts of all those who dignify work with their toil.

For decades labor has been telling the nation about the dangers of unchecked corporate power. Organizing campaigns have brought the lessons home:

Employers firing union supporters. Forcing workers to listen to anti-union propaganda from company supervisors. Bringing in outsiders to run well-funded anti-union campaigns. Threatening loss of jobs and even threatening to move out of town.

Often in these struggles labor stands alone. But we need to change this. We need a Democratic Party which will ensure the right to organize by establishing an automatic union o­nce half the workers sign up. You know, sisters and brothers, that when workers can choose a union, free of fear and intimidation, they choose to have the collective voice a union provides. As a member of the Cleveland Jobs With Justice workers rights board I have seen the community help nearly 2,000 workers to join unions. We need a national labor law which provides for democracy in the workplace.

Labor has stood almost alone while corporations have cut wages and benefits, slashed working hours, tried to undermine wage an hour provisions, reneged o­n contracts, jettisoned retirements through bankruptcy strategies. The current clamor for corporate accountability calls for honesty in stating the numbers, and faithful custody of shareholders money.

Yet there needs to be equal concern for those who created the wealth through their labor. Because the attacks o­n unions are a means of redistributing the wealth upwards. As union membership has declined, the disparity of wealth has increased. Since 1973 union membership has dropped from 24% to 14%. And the share of aggregate income of the poor, the middle class and the upper middle class has declined.

It's an old saying that the rich get richer. But it's a new convention in the American political economy that a class of working poor has emerged, including the working homeless. More than ½ the homeless families in Iowa are headed by someone who is employed. Congress will not pass an increase in the $5.15 minimum wage even though the inflation adjusted minimum wage is 21% lower today than in 1979.

Since 1981 the share of income of the richest 5% of this country has increased more than 40% while that of the lowest fifth has decreased more than 20%. An even starker contrast arises. According to Business Week, the average CEO made 42 times the average workers pay in 1980, 85 times in 1990 and 531 times in 2000. Forbes Magazine points out that the number of billionaires increased from 13 in 1982 to 149 in 1996.

In the past 20 years you sat at the negotiating table, you fought for fair wages and benefits, you were told you were just asking for too much, that your demands would make the company less competitive. And all the while the wealth kept getting accelerated upwards, with the help of NAFTA and other trade agreements which were designed to undermine workers rights and lower wages world wide.

I'd like to read a quote to you. “. . . working men have been surrendered, isolated and helpless, to the hardheartedness of employers and the greed of unchecked competition. . . the hiring of labor and the conduct of trade are concentrated in the hands of comparatively few; so that a small number of very rich men have been able to lay upon the teeming masses of the laboring poor a yoke little better than that of slavery itself.” Pope Leo XIII said this 111 years ago in his encyclical o­n Capital and Labor.

I quote a great spiritual leader because standing behind the daily efforts to lift up the human condition through improving standards of work is a great moral cause. It is about the intrinsic worth of each and every human being. When both work and workers are valued, when all men and women are given a chance to earn their daily bread; when all are paid a living wage, when hands strong and weak can clasp in common enterprise, to seek and to build a newer world, then every day will belong to workers. And every voice will praise the moment when human toil has lifted up the human condition. It is a high cause which brings us together, which causes us to put ourselves o­n the line.

We need to feel in every cell of our bodies that power which comes from union: the power which confirms our purpose, the power when focused and directed will save our nation by saving the Democratic Party from the clutches of corporate interests. Enlightened self-interest requires labor to make the Democratic Party accountable. Labor must rally the Democrats to the workers' banner. Labor must begin now to build the Democratic Party platform for 2004 to ensure that solid principles of economic justice prevail and to inspire millions of Americans, who would otherwise stay home o­n Election Day, to vote to save our democracy.

Labor cannot afford to settle for half-hearted nominees or half measures which keep in place a system which is destroying our democracy through trade agreements which transfer sovereign power to the World Trade Organization, undermine our economy and devastate workers' ability to defend themselves. “All that harms labor is treason,” said President Lincoln. “If any man tells you that he loves America (but) he hates labor, he is a liar.” Supporters of the decaying system of injustice continue to advance propositions which are an offense to basic fairness and workers' dignity. With the Team Act they attacked the right to organize. With the Rewarding Performance in Compensation Act, they wanted to strip workers of overtime. In the name of workplace flexibility, they wanted to repeal the Fair Labor Standards Act. With the Paycheck Protection Act they attacked union dues as compulsory and political. They wanted workplace safety rules set by corporate consensus and not by OSHA. They would take us back to the days when workers had no protections nor rights. Back to the days of “Sixteen Tons.”

“You load 16 tons, and what do you get? Another day older and deeper in debt. St.Peter don't you call me, 'cause I can't go, I owe my soul to the company store.”

No more 16 tons in America! The soul of the worker is not for sale. It will not be sacrificed upon the corporate altar, nor annihilated by a hostile or indifferent government. The soul of the worker will be redeemed by the enshrinement in law of workers' rights. If in 2004, Labor goes up to the Mountaintop of our nation's Capitol, it must bring back engraved in stone these rights of working people:

“People have a right to a job.
A right to a safe workplace.
A right to decent wages and benefits.
A right to organize and be represented.
A right to grieve about working conditions.
A right to strike.

A right to fair compensation for injuries o­n the job.
A right to sue if injured by negligent employers.
A right to security of pension and retirement benefits.
A right to participate in the political process.”

These basic rights ought to be inviolate in a democratic society. There can be no true corporate accountability unless corporations are accountable to workers. There can be no accountability to workers unless workers rights are protected. And workers rights cannot be protected unless the Democratic party makes it the centerpiece of its legislative program, and its drive for the White House in 2004. The Democratic Party must be challenged by Labor to truly be the party of all the people.

When the Democratic Party rises it must be with the ranks not from the ranks. “The future of labor is the future of America,” said John L. Lewis.

It is the restoration of the rights of workers which will put us at the dawn of a new political age. The rights of workers are core of principles of an American Restoration. These aren't mere political principles. These are timeless moral principles, about fairness, about equality, about justice.

In the 1660s the English Restoration brought back the royal family to power. The American Restoration will be about restoring the American working family to economic power, to ensure that all have jobs, that all have meaningful work and that all make a living wage. “The enthusiasm of falling welfare numbers,” said Cardinal Mahoney, “should be tempered by the reality of persistent poverty and wages too meager to provide for a family's needs. Many may be leaving welfare, too few have left poverty.” Twenty-five percent of all workers in Iowa earn poverty level hourly wages. Who can live at $5.15 an hour? The campaign for a living wage is fundamental to making certain that people have more than crumbs when they sit down to eat their daily bread.

The restoration of the rights of workers in America and throughout the North American continent will begin when we repeal NAFTA. NAFTA has spurred a $360 billion trade deficit, costing 363,000 high paying jobs, most in manufacturing. This is called free trade. But where is freedom when jobs are lost? Where is freedom when industries threaten to move out of the country unless wages are cut? Where is freedom when the right to bargain collectively is crushed? Where is freedom when a union is broken? Where is freedom when you can't make a mortgage payment? Where is freedom when you can't send your children to college? An economic democracy is a precondition of a political democracy. Where is freedom?

NAFTA has attacked federal laws meant to protect worker rights, human rights and environmental quality principles. It is time to repeal NAFTA. It is time to reclaim state and local sovereignty which NAFTA has usurped. No NAFTA, no Fast Track. No more back track o­n democracy. No more back track o­n workers' rights. No more back track o­n human rights. No back track o­n the bill of rights.

“The working people know no country. They are citizens of the world,” said the founder of the AFL-CIO Samuel Gompers in 1887. It is time to return to bilateral trade agreements, nation to nation. It is time for humane trading partnerships where the living wages, benefits and retirement security of workers of each nation constitute a centerpiece of trade pacts.

The American Restoration will be about restoring the physical health of our people with universal health care. I worked with the SEIU and all of organized labor in Cleveland to save two urban hospitals from closure. A market-based system of health care has brought about closure of hundreds of community hospitals, limited access to health care, denied specialized care, driven up the cost and made health care a bargaining chip in negotiations, forcing trade-offs for wage increases. A universal health care system, with prescription drug coverage will protect quality of life and reflect the improved health of our democracy. Our nation has the money to do this.

The questions are do we have the political freedom, do we have the will, do we have the courage to transform a system where for tens of millions every accident and every illness carries with fear of being unable to afford health.

We must restore the American dream of home ownership through lowering and regulating lending rates, ending predatory lending practices, increasing the percentage of the home mortgage deduction for middle income people, and stopping home insurance redlining.

“The practices of the unscrupulous money changers stand indicted in the court of public opinion rejected by the minds and hearts of men.” said President Franklin Delano Roosevelt in his Inaugural Address o­n March 4, 1933. Under FDR the government took responsibility for the economic vitality of consumers. Today, the government protects credit card companies, banks, and insurance companies.

Our nation will be restored with new manufacturing policy, where the maintenance of our industrial base is understood to be vital to our national economic welfare. We can fuel domestic steel production and consumption by rebuilding our nation's infrastructure with American made steel, utilizing the productive capacity of our mills. We need to spend at least $500 billion to rebuild our schools, roads, bridges, ports, sewer systems, water systems, our government buildings. A highly trained, highly skilled workforce backed by Davis-Bacon guarantees will make it happen. A federal bank of infrastructure modernization can be created to fund this program with zero interest loans to the states.

America needs a great new public works program to restore the dream of a full employment economy, to restore the physical health of our nation. When the American economy faltered, President Franklin Roosevelt created the WPA. Labor, inspired to rally the disaffected, the dispirited, the disenfranchised can provide new hope for our country through bringing forth new leadership responsive in word and deed to the task of rebuilding our nation.

A rebuilt infrastructure will help restore American commerce. America cannot come through crisis of confidence in corporate America simply through improving accounting practices and imprisoning wayward executives. Our country must restore the American economy by restoring competition, by breaking up monopolies, by genuine anti-trust enforcement, re-regulation, by the federal chartering of corporations and by the repeal of Taft-Hartley which deprives the American workplace of a strong, co-equal relationship with labor. “The measure of the restoration lies in the extent to which we apply social values more noble than mere monetary profit.” said FDR.

Anti-trust enforcement is needed in all areas of the economy, especially in agriculture where unfair practices, from seed to retail are driving our family farmers out of business. We must free the family farmer from the market dominance of agribusiness and its predatory policies which set prices so farmers can't survive. Americans are learning hard lessons about the dangers of monopolies in energy. When Americans learn the difference between the price the producer gets and what the consumer pays for food, when Americans realize the risk of becoming dependent o­n imports or corporate mega-farms for our national food supply, we will be o­n the path of reform which will protect independent farmers.

The largest roadblock toward the American Restoration is a corrupt campaign finance system which promotes plutocracy allowing laws, and regulations to be steathily auctioned to the highest bidder. Less than o­ne percent of the US population contributes 80% of the money in federal elections. The top o­ne percent in income also received more than half the tax cuts. Tax policy has become an engine for transferring wealth upward. Enron had been poised to dominate energy markets world wide because it controlled the White House, and gave to 71 senators and 186 house members.

Private control of campaign financing leads to private control of the government itself and schemes like the privatization of social security which would put nearly seven trillion dollars in retirement funds of Main Street workers at the disposal of Wall Street speculators over the next twenty five years. Public control of the political process requires public financing. The restoration of our American Democracy depends upon public financing. The Supreme Court, equating money with free speech, will not restrict the power of corporate interests to own government. The establishment of our democracy began with the Constitution. Let us renew the Constitution by amending it, requiring public financing to redeem from the perishable fires of corporate control an imperishable government of the people, by the people and for the people.”

Today, as we meet in Iowa, riveted upon uplifting the conditions of workers, o­n a day when IBM will cut another 15,000 jobs, and Ames Department Stores will close, throwing 22,000 out of work, and American Airlines announces they will cut 7,000 jobs, some of our nation's leaders are distracted by a desire to control oil markets and a lust for war. In his farewell address in 1961, President Eisenhower gave this warning: “In the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence . . . by the military industrial complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist,” You know and I know that it will be the children of the poor and of working men and women who will become cannon fodder unless we demand our leaders give up the arms build up, end the war talk, stop the saber rattling, and work with our allies to take up the burden of global security.

We need a new vision of America, as a nation among nations, as a strong presence but not as king of a unipolar world dictating policy o­n behalf of global corporate interests. We need a vision which connects workers and all people in the highest causes of the human spirit: peace and justice. This will be the crowning achievement of an American Restoration, the liberation of people all over the world.

As we face the challenges ahead, let us recall the plea of the Prophet Isaiah. “… to unlock the shackles of injustice? To break every cruel chain? . Then shall your light shine in the darkness. Your people…shall lay the foundations for ages to come. You shall be called repairer of the breach. Restorer of the streets to dwell in.”

You, the men and women of labor. It is your light which will shine in the darkness. It is you who will lay the foundation for ages to come. It is you who will repair the breach. It is you who will lead the American Restoration.

Thank you.