Posts Tagged ‘liberal news and politics’

Video: Fishermen question Gulf seafood safety

Evans Liberal Politics
December 5, 2010

 

Fishermen question Gulf seafood safety

Video: Rachel Maddow + Howard Dean Talk About Democrats’ Blunders – 11/29/10

Evans Liberal Politics
December 1, 2010

 

Video: Rachel Maddow + Howard Dean
Talk About Democrats’ Blunders – 11/29/10


Romney, Huckabee edge out Obama in 2012 poll

Evans Liberal Politics
November 22, 2010

 

Romney, Huckabee edge out Obama in 2012 poll


Romney, Huckabee edge out Obama in 2012 poll, The Raw Story, November 22, 2010, by Dave Edwards, used with permission, quoted verbatim: Evans Liberal Politics is happy to partner with The Raw Story to bring you cutting edge news.

A new national survey has good news for Republicans Mitt Romney and Mike Huckabee.

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Both lead President Barack Obama in a new poll released by Quinnipiac University Monday.

The poll shows Romney, the former governor of Massachusetts, leading Obama 45 percent to 44 percent. And former Arkansas governor Huckabee beats Obama 46 percent to 44 percent.

There is also some good news for the president. Obama leads former Alaska governor Sarah Palin 48 percent to 40 percent. The survey of likely voters has a margin of error of +/- 2 percent.

Republican respondents chose Palin as their favorite for presidential nominee in 2012. 19 percent of Republicans selected Palin, 18 percent selected Romney and 17 percent selected Huckabee. The survey or Republicans has a margin of error of +/- 3.1 percent.

Palin recently told ABC News’ Barbara Walters that she thought she could beat Obama in 2012.

“If you ran for president, could you beat Barack Obama?” Walters asked.

“I believe so,” Palin replied.

A British newspaper reported Sunday that Palin’s team has been searching for office space in Iowa.

“In the course of making arrangements for that tour, two aides organizing Palin’s visit to Des Moines on November 27 told locals they were looking into office space and other logistical needs for the coming year,” the Guardian reported.

“I have no doubt that she is a formidable force in the Republican Party and very well could be the most formidable force in the Republican Party,” White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs opined in Sept.

“You know, she may run away with it,” Huckabee told reporters in Des Moines Sunday. “And that’s one of those things everyone needs to be prepared for.”

WOW: See Hillary Clinton: I will never run again for elective office, The Raw Story, November 22, 2010, by Raw Story.

Why Is it I am not surprised: Bankrolling book tour, Murdoch emerges as Palin’s top 2012 supporter, The Raw Story, November 22, 2010, by Stephen C. Webster.

Hmmm: Krugman: Obama has embraced conservative worldview, The Raw Story, November 22, 2010, by Sahil Kapur.

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The Super Rich Get Richer, Everyone Else Gets Poorer, and the Democrats Punt

Evans Liberal Politics
September 25, 2010

 

The Super Rich Get Richer,
Everyone Else Gets Poorer,
and the Democrats Punt

 

The Super Rich Get Richer, Everyone Else Gets Poorer, and the Democrats Punt, Robert Reich.org, September 24, 2010, by Robert Reich, used with permission, quoted verbatim:

The super-rich got even wealthier this year, and yet most of them are paying even fewer taxes to support the eduction, job training, and job creation of the rest of us. According to Forbes magazine’s annual survey, just released, the combined net worth of the 400 richest Americans climbed 8% this year, to $1.37 trillion. Wealth rose for 217 members of the list, while 85 saw a decline.

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For example, Charles and David Koch, the energy magnates who are pouring vast sums of money into Republican coffers and sponsoring tea partiers all over America, each gained $5.5 billion of wealth over the past year. Each is now worth $21.5 billion.

Wall Street continued to dominate the list; 109 of the richest 400 are in finance or investments.

From another survey we learn that the 25 top hedge-fund managers got an average of $1 billion each, but paid an average of 17 percent in taxes (because so much of their income is considered capital gains, taxed at 15 percent thanks to the Bush tax cuts).

The rest of America got poorer, of course. The number in poverty rose to a post-war high. The median wage continues to deteriorate. And some 20 million Americans don’t have work.

Only twice before in American history has so much been held by so few, and the gap between them and the great majority been a chasm — the late 1920s, and the era of the robber barons in the 1880s.

And yet the Bush tax cuts of 2001 and 2003, which conferred almost all their benefits on the rich, continue.

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Democrats have decided to delay voting on whether to extend them for the top 2 percent of Americans or for the bottom 98 percent until after the mid-term elections.

Democrats have thereby given up a defining issue that could have enabled them to show the big story of the last three decades — the accumulation of almost all the gain from economic growth at the top — and to make a start at reversing it.

When will they ever learn?

Watch Rachel Maddow- Dems miss opportunity in Obama tax cuts, MSNBC video on YouTube — 3:15.

Now On Sale: Aftershock: The Next Economy and America’s Future [hardcover], by Robert Reich, pay only $12.96 (save 48 percent on Amazon.com).

here. Reich’s newest book, Aftershock: The Next Economy and America’s Future is going to be released September 21, and is available for Pre-ordering at this link (Amazon.com). The above article is from Reich’s new blog, and can be viewed here.

Robert Reich’s commentaries are available for listening to at Publicradio.com. Thanks to Professor Reich for permission to publish his articles on an ongoing basis.

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Robert Reich: The Real Lesson of Labor Day

Evans Liberal Politics
September 4, 2010

 

Robert Reich: The Real Lesson of Labor Day

 

The Real Lesson of Labor Day, Robert Reich.org, September 3, 2010, by Robert Reich, used with permission, quoted verbatim:

Welcome to the worst Labor Day in the memory of most Americans. Organized labor is down to about 7 percent of the private work force. Members of non-organized labor — most of the rest of us — are unemployed, underemployed or underwater. The Labor Department reported on Friday that just 67,000 new private-sector jobs were created in August, which, when added to the loss of public-sector (mostly temporary Census worker jobs) resulted in a net loss of over 50,000 jobs for the month. But at least 125,000 net new jobs are needed to keep up with the growth of the potential work force.

Face it: The national economy isn’t escaping the gravitational pull of the Great Recession. None of the standard booster rockets are working. Near-zero short-term interest rates from the Fed, almost record-low borrowing costs in the bond market, a giant stimulus package, along with tax credits for small businesses that hire the long-term unemployed have all failed to do enough.

That’s because the real problem has to do with the structure of the economy, not the business cycle. No booster rocket can work unless consumers are able, at some point, to keep the economy moving on their own. But consumers no longer have the purchasing power to buy the goods and services they produce as workers; for some time now, their means haven’t kept up with what the growing economy could and should have been able to provide them.

1. The Origin of the Crisis


This crisis began decades ago when a new wave of technology — things like satellite communications, container ships, computers and eventually the Internet — made it cheaper for American employers to use low-wage labor abroad or labor-replacing software here at home than to continue paying the typical worker a middle-class wage. Even though the American economy kept growing, hourly wages flattened. The median male worker earns less today, adjusted for inflation, than he did 30 years ago.

But for years American families kept spending as if their incomes were keeping pace with overall economic growth. And their spending fueled continued growth. How did families manage this trick? First, women streamed into the paid work force. By the late 1990s, more than 60 percent of mothers with young children worked outside the home (in 1966, only 24 percent did).

Second, everyone put in more hours. What families didn’t receive in wage increases they made up for in work increases. By the mid-2000s, the typical male worker was putting in roughly 100 hours more each year than two decades before, and the typical female worker about 200 hours more.

When American families couldn’t squeeze any more income out of these two coping mechanisms, they embarked on a third: going ever deeper into debt. This seemed painless — as long as home prices were soaring. From 2002 to 2007, American households extracted $2.3 trillion from their homes.

Eventually, of course, the debt bubble burst — and with it, the last coping mechanism. Now we’re left to deal with the underlying problem that we’ve avoided for decades. Even if nearly everyone was employed, the vast middle class still wouldn’t have enough money to buy what the economy is capable of producing.

Where have all the economic gains gone? Mostly to the top. The economists Emmanuel Saez and Thomas Piketty examined tax returns from 1913 to 2008. They discovered an interesting pattern. In the late 1970s, the richest 1 percent of American families took in about 9 percent of the nation’s total income; by 2007, the top 1 percent took in 23.5 percent of total income.

It’s no coincidence that the last time income was this concentrated was in 1928. I do not mean to suggest that such astonishing consolidations of income at the top directly cause sharp economic declines. The connection is more subtle.

The rich spend a much smaller proportion of their incomes than the rest of us. So when they get a disproportionate share of total income, the economy is robbed of the demand it needs to keep growing and creating jobs.

What’s more, the rich don’t necessarily invest their earnings and savings in the American economy; they send them anywhere around the globe where they’ll summon the highest returns — sometimes that’s here, but often it’s the Cayman Islands, China or elsewhere. The rich also put their money into assets most likely to attract other big investors (commodities, stocks, dot-coms or real estate), which can become wildly inflated as a result.

Meanwhile, as the economy grows, the vast majority in the middle naturally want to live better. Their consequent spending fuels continued growth and creates enough jobs for almost everyone, at least for a time. But because this situation can’t be sustained, at some point — 1929 and 2008 offer ready examples — the bill comes due.

2. What We Learned and Didn’t Learn From the Great Depression of the 1930s


This time around, policymakers had knowledge their counterparts didn’t have in 1929; they knew they could avoid immediate financial calamity by flooding the economy with money. But, paradoxically, averting another Great Depression-like calamity removed political pressure for more fundamental reform. We’re left instead with a long and seemingly endless Great Jobs Recession.

THE Great Depression and its aftermath demonstrate that there is only one way back to full recovery: through more widely shared prosperity. In the 1930s, the American economy was completely restructured. New Deal measures — Social Security, a 40-hour work week with time-and-a-half overtime, unemployment insurance, the right to form unions and bargain collectively, the minimum wage — leveled the playing field.

In the decades after World War II, legislation like the G.I. Bill, a vast expansion of public higher education and civil rights and voting rights laws further reduced economic inequality. Much of this was paid for with a 70 percent to 90 percent marginal income tax on the highest incomes. And as America’s middle class shared more of the economy’s gains, it was able to buy more of the goods and services the economy could provide. The result: rapid growth and more jobs.

By contrast, little has been done since 2008 to widen the circle of prosperity. Health-care reform is an important step forward but it’s not nearly enough.

3. What Else Should Be Done


What else could be done to raise wages and thereby spur the economy? I don’t pretend to have all the answers but some initiatives seem worthwhile.

[Pause for a commercial announcement. These points, and others, are developed at length in my upcoming book, "AFTERSHOCK: The Next Economy and America’s Future,” (Amazon Pre-order hardcover for $16.50) out in two weeks from Alfred Knopf.]

We might consider, for example, extending the earned income tax credit all the way up through the middle class, and paying for it with a tax on carbon. The carbon tax would raise the prices of goods and services especially dependent on carbon-based fuels, which is appropriate given that the social costs of carbon-based fuels should be included in their prices. Consider how much our society now spends on such things as foreign wars designed to secure our sources of oil, as well as oil cleanups. But the wage subsidies would more than make up for these price rises, at least for most Americans in the middle and below.

Another step would be to exempt the first $20,000 of income from payroll taxes and paying for it with a payroll tax on incomes over $250,000. This, too, seems reasonable, given that under current law only the first $106,000 of income is subject to the Social Security portion of the payroll tax – a particularly regressive system. Most higher-income people, who get good medical care, live longer and collect far more in Social Security benefits, than do lower-income people.

In the longer term, Americans must be better prepared to succeed in the global, high-tech economy. Early childhood education should be more widely available, paid for by a small 0.5 percent fee on all financial transactions. Public universities should be free; in return, graduates would then be required to pay back 10 percent of their first 10 years of full-time income.

Another step: workers who lose their jobs and have to settle for positions that pay less could qualify for “earnings insurance” that would pay half the salary difference for two years; such a program would probably prove less expensive than extended unemployment benefits.

These measures would not enlarge the budget deficit because they would be paid for. In fact, such moves would help reduce the long-term deficits by getting more Americans back to work and the economy growing again.

Here’s the point. Policies that generate more widely shared prosperity lead to stronger and more sustainable economic growth — and that’s good for everyone.

The rich are better off with a smaller percentage of a fast-growing economy than a larger share of an economy that’s barely moving. That’s the Labor Day lesson we learned decades ago; until we remember it again, we’ll be stuck in the Great Recession.

Articles About Labor Day from Around the Web


See White House Faces Political Headaches Over Jobs Ahead of Labor Day, ABC Good Morning America, September 4, 2010, by Christina Capatides and David Kerley: Amid Sluggish Job Growth, Obama Administration Promises ‘Broader Package of Ideas’

See A History of Labor Day, U.S. Department of Labor, ongoing.

Watch ‘The State of the American Worker:’ Secretary Solis’ Labor Day Address (2010).

See Labor Day History: 11 Facts You Need To Know, The Huffington Post, September 4, 2010, by Nate Hindman and Craig Kanalley.

See A Lament for Labor Day: When Unemployment Happens to You, OpEdNews, September 3, 2010, by Danny Schechter.

See Labor Day pean for underappreciated workers, OpEdNews, September 3, 2010, by Ralph Nader.

See Labor Day and the Easter Bunny, OpEdNews, September 3, 2010, by David Glenn Cox.

Please, will the fine reader I have from down in Lewis Center please contact me?

Obama Announces End to Iraq Combat Mission in Oval Office Address

Evans Liberal Politics
September 1, 2010

 

Obama Announces End to Iraq Combat Mission
in Oval Office Address

 

Obama Announces End to Iraq Combat Mission in Oval Office Address, CNN, August 31, 2010, by CNN Daily Intel, excerpt quoted verbatim:

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“The United States has paid a huge price to put the future of Iraq in the hands of its people,” the president said in his Oval Office speech Tuesday night, only the second time he has addressed the nation from the (newly redecorated) Oval Office. Obama formally announced the end of the U.S. combat role in the country, declaring that Operation Iraqi Freedom is “over” and it is time to ”turn the page.” About 50,000 troops will remain in Iraq, but the president said in the address that all U.S. troops will leave by the end of next year.Considering many of Obama’s previous speeches have been praised as passionate and stirring, this one was noticeably subdued, the president providing a status report in an almost professorial manner. Chatter before the speech focused on how Obama would refer to his predecessor’s role in beginning the war. While he did not specifically mention former president George W. Bush’s 2007 “surge” in troops, Obama avoided any criticism of how Bush launched the war … and he actually lauded him.

“It’s well known that he and I disagreed about the war from its outset. Yet no one could doubt President Bush’s support for our troops, or his love of country and commitment to our security. As I have said, there were patriots who supported this war, and patriots who opposed it. And all of us are united in appreciation for our servicemen and women, and our hope for Iraq’s future.”

The president briefly mentioned the conflict in Afghanistan, noting that Al Qaeda “continues to plot against us.” He said the removal of troops in Iraq will mean additional resources for the effort in Afghanistan, though he pledged that those troops, too, will be removed from Afghanistan by the end of next year. The final act of the speech somewhat awkwardly transitioned into a discussion of the economy, as Obama claimed the country’s “most urgent task is to restore our economy” and add jobs.

Read the rest of the story, here.

An End to Combat Missions In Iraq


See Obama Declares an End to Combat Mission in Iraq, The New York Times, August 31, 2010, by Helene Cooper and Sheryl Gay Stolberg, excerpt quoted verbatim:

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In a prime-time address from the Oval Office, Mr. Obama balanced praise for the troops who fought and died in Iraq with his conviction that getting into the conflict had been a mistake in the first place. But he also used the moment to emphasize that he sees his primary job as addressing the weak economy and other domestic issues — and to make clear that he intends to begin disengaging from the war in Afghanistan next summer.

“We have sent our young men and women to make enormous sacrifices in Iraq, and spent vast resources abroad at a time of tight budgets at home,” Mr. Obama said. “Through this remarkable chapter in the history of the United States and Iraq, we have met our responsibility. Now, it’s time to turn the page.”

Seeking to temper partisan feelings over the war on a day when Republicans pointed out that Mr. Obama had opposed the troop surge generally credited with helping to bring Iraq a measure of stability, the president offered some praise for his predecessor, George W. Bush. Mr. Obama acknowledged their disagreement over Iraq but said that no one could doubt Mr. Bush’s “support for our troops, or his love of country and commitment to our security.”

Mr. Obama spoke for about 18 minutes, saying that violence would continue in Iraq and that the United States would continue to play a key role in nurturing a stable democracy there. ….

Turn the page on Mister Bush? Never


See Turn the page on Mister Bush? Never, Daily Kos, August 31, 2010, by Meteor Blades, excerpt quoted verbatim:

I’m a big believer in mercy and forgiveness. And second chances. Had people in my life failed to forgive, chosen to be merciless, rejected the idea that those who’ve gone astray can improve themselves and make amends, there’s every likelihood I’d have spent several decades in the slam or died there. Luckily, some people reached out to me, gave me a second chance, helped me rescue myself. I’ve tried to follow their lead for a lot of years.

So I understand why President Obama underscored his call to “turn the page” regarding Iraq tonight by revealing that he had phoned President Bush. “It’s well known that he and I disagreed about the war from its outset,” Obama said. “Yet no one could doubt President Bush’s support for our troops, or his love of country and commitment to our security.”

I’d like to be able to agree. Really, I would.

a grinning stupid looking George W. Bush also looks embarrassed in this small thumbnail

However, unlike President Obama, I could and did and do doubt Bush’s support for the troops, love of country and commitment to our security. And I can wrest no mercy from the bitterness and rage that I feel every time I remember what he and the pack of thugs around him accomplished for the troops, the country and our security.

I cannot and will not turn the page until George W. Bush, Dick Cheney and the others in that cabal of scorpions are brought to justice and make amends for Iraq. Which means never. No apology, much less time in the slam. I’ll go to my grave knowing Bush and the rest got away with it. In a couple of months, Bush hopes hundreds of thousands of Americans will be turning the pages of his memoir (called Decision Points– Amazon purchase page, to be released November 9, 2010, available for preorder, hardcover, $18.), a book certain to add to the plethora of lies and pathetic, murderous rationalizations with which we became so familiar during the last seven years of his presidency.

See War Is Over — for Some, The New York Times, August 31, 2010, by Maurice Decaul.

UPDATE & Flashback: See Reid: Iraq War lost, U.S. can’t win, MSNBC Politics, April 20, 2007, by Associated Press.

Obama Address: War in Iraq is Over


thumnail image of President Obama in the Oval Office serves as a link to a speech on the end of combat operations in Iraq "Obama: The End of the Combat Mission in Iraq:" President Obama, speaking from a newly redecorated Oval Office, announces an end to combat operations in Iraq and speaks of the need to honor our servicemen and also improve the economy. Watch the video of the speech, here17:56


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A Message to Young People: How Did We Get In This Financial Mess America Is In?

Evans Liberal Politics
September 1, 2010

 

A Message to Young People

 

Question: How Did We Get
In This Financial Mess America Is In?

 

Evans Liberal Politics, September 1, 2010, by my friend Elizabeth:

A Message to Young People


You know something isn’t right. You’re not dumb

Today, Fall 2010— Many people are having a hard time. More than 10% of Americans are on food stamps. Around 17% of people are unemployed or are only working part-time.  And ever since February 2009, 10,000 people have lost their homes each day. I know. It’s so sad.

Q: Why is our economy so bad?

 

A: There are 4 major reasons we are in such bad shape. I want you to understand these reasons. I am 50. You are younger. This is your country too. Sadly, this will be your mess to clean up.  You’ll be around a lot longer than me…. Unless… hey!? Where is that fountain of youth?!

Reason #1 we have an economic crisis: Banks can gamble. If you deposit $100, the bank can loan out or play with (gamble) $900. Recently they lost a lot of money. That’s why we had the “banker bail-out” that you heard of. They were “too big to fail”. Hmmm.

Until 1999, the banks couldn’t gamble. There was a rule called “the Glass-Steagall Act that stopped them. Then in 1999 the government got rid of Glass-Steagall.

If you gambled, would your parents bail you out?   (HAHAHAHA). Ask them!

Reason #2 we have an economic crisis: A private central bank (the FED) controls our nation’s money supply.

.

The FED controls the interest rate. If interest rates are low, borrowing money is cheap. But if too much money is borrowed too easily, bubbles can form. There was a housing bubble when people who didn’t have much money could buy houses easily and housing prices rose and rose and more and more houses were built—everything looked great— until the bubble popped.  Then lots of people and banks and financial institutions lost money and many, many people lost jobs.

Note: Thomas Jefferson (the 3rd president of the United States) said, “…if the American people allow private banks to control the issuance of their
 currency, first by inflation and then by deflation, the banks and corporations 
that will grow up around them will deprive the people of all their property 
until their children will wake up homeless on the continent their fathers 
conquered.” (YIKES!)

Reason #3 we have an economic crisis: Many companies have moved their operations or
part of their operations to other countries.

This is known as “outsourcing” or “off-shoring”.

Q: Why is it that sometimes when you call a customer service number you get a person on the phone who is from another country?

A: It is because a U.S. company has moved all, or part, of its operation to another country. Those workers are usually paid much less than U.S workers.

In the 1980’s and 1990’s the government passed laws making it easier for U.S. companies to move to other countries. Ronald Reagan lowered tax on imported goods and Bill Clinton signed international trade agreements—NAFTA and CAFTA

In fact, since 2001—over 42,000 U.S. companies have moved to outside the U.S. and 2.1 million jobs have moved too!

If you start a company someday, could you please try to keep it here in the U.S?

Thanks!

Reason #4  we have an economic crisis: Our foreign policies are very expensive.

We spend more of our money on defense than nearly all other countries in the world combined.

We spend 46.5% of all military spending in the world—Is that really necessary? It will come from your paycheck.

Also, for some reason the U.S. has more than 800 military bases in approximately 130 countries— like Japan, Germany, Korea, Iraq. You have to ask yourself as an American: how would you like another country building bases here? I bet some people hate it so much that they fight us…. They become terrorists!

To Sum— Thank you for reading this. I hope you can understand know why we are in this economic mess. You don’t have to believe me. Get yourself informed. Make decisions you believe in because YOU have learned the facts.

Good luck. May you become a wise, kind, safe and generous adult. J

Palin at Beck rally: ‘I hope Dr. King would be so proud’

Evans Liberal Politics
August 27, 2010

 

Palin at Beck rally:
‘I hope Dr. King would be so proud’

 

Palin at Beck rally: ‘I hope Dr. King would be so proud’, The Raw Story, August 28, 2010, by Raw Story, photo © NY Times/Nicholas Roberts, used with permission, quoted verbatim:

Tens of thousands of people gathered Saturday at the site of Martin Luther King Jr’s 1963, “I Have a Dream Speech” to hear right-wing icons call on them to “restore America.”

photo of Fox News host Glenn Beck acting insanely screwey and looking pretty nuts

In wide-ranging and often religious terms, Fox News talk show host Glenn Beck told Americans that their country was “at a crossroads” and urged them to return to “faith, hope and charity,” while former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin told the crowd that “we must not fundamentally transform America as some would want.”

“Today we must decide, who are we? What is it we believe? We must advance or perish. I choose advance,” he said to a cheering crowd that stretched from the Lincoln Memorial to the Washington Monument.

Beck, who hosted the event to “restore America’s honor,” estimated that between 300,000 and 500,000 people attended the event. But a crowd estimate commissioned by CBS put the audience at around 87,000.

The rally drew criticism because it was staged at the very same location where King made his call for racial equality nearly half a century ago.

Critics said Beck and fellow conservative icon Sarah Palin’s political stances were sharply at odds with King’s civil rights legacy.

Asked by ABC’s Tahman Bradley how she thought the legendary civil rights leader would feel about the rally, Palin responded: “I hope that Dr. King would be so proud of us, as his niece Dr. Alveda King is very proud as a participant in this rally. This is sacred ground where we feel his spirit and can appreciate all of his efforts.”

Critics said Beck and fellow conservative icon Sarah Palin’s political stances were sharply at odds with King’s civil rights legacy.

Black leaders, including the Reverend Al Sharpton, held a competing march and accused Beck of misrepresenting the slain civil rights leader’s message of equality among all races.

“The folks who criticize our marches are now trying to march themselves,” Sharpton said. “They may have the Mall, but we have the message. They may have the platform, but we have the dream. The dream was not states’ rights.”

Beck said the timing was coincidental, and argued he had every right to commemorate King’s struggle.

“Whites don’t own Abraham Lincoln. Blacks don’t own Martin Luther King,” he said earlier this month.

– With a report from AFP

See Sharpton: Beck’s followers want ‘structural breakdown of strong national government’, Associated Press on The Raw Story, August 28, 2010, by AP, excerpt quoted verbatim:

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The Rev. Al Sharpton, leading the civil rights march, said Beck’s demonstration was an anti-government rally that advocated states’ rights — counter to the message in King’s speech, in which the civil right leader appealed to the federal government to ensure equality.

“The structural breakdown of a strong national government, which is what they’re calling for, is something that does not serve the interests of the nation and it’s something that Dr. King and others fought against,” Sharpton told C-SPAN on Saturday.

See At Lincoln Memorial, a Call for Religious Rebirth, © The New York Times, August 28, 2010, by Kate Zernike and Carl Hulse, excerpt quoted verbatim:

WASHINGTON — An enormous and impassioned crowd rallied at the steps of the Lincoln Memorial on Saturday, summoned by Glenn Beck, a conservative broadcaster who called for a religious rebirth in America at the site where the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. delivered his famous “I Have a Dream” speech 47 years ago to the day.

“Something that is beyond man is happening,” Mr. Beck said in opening the event as the crowd thronged near the memorial grounds. “America today begins to turn back to God.”

It was part religious revival, part history lecture, as Mr. Beck invoked the founding fathers and the “black-robed regiment” of pastors of the Revolutionary War and spoke of American exceptionalism.

The crowd was a mix of groups that have come together under the Tea Party umbrella. Some wore T-shirts from the Campaign for Liberty, the libertarian group that came out of the presidential campaign of Representative Ron Paul, while others wore the gear of their local Tea Party group, or of 9/12 groups, which were founded after a special broadcast Mr. Beck did in March 2009.

But the program was distinctly different from most Tea Party rallies. While Tea Party groups have said they want to focus on fiscal conservatism and not risk alienating people by talking about religion or social issues, the rally on Saturday was overtly religious, filled with gospel music and speeches that were more like sermons.

See Glenn Beck and Sarah Palin’s unholy alliance, Salon, August 28, 2010, by Joan Walsh: Abramoff ally Rabbi Daniel Lapin and bigot John Hagee help “restore honor” at the Lincoln Memorial

QUOTE from the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr’s final speech: “Like anybody, I would like to live a long life. Longevity has its place. But I’m not concerned about that now. I just want to do God’s will. And He’s allowed me to go up to the mountain. And I’ve looked over. And I’ve seen the Promised Land. I may not get there with you. But I want you to know tonight, that we, as a people, will get to the promised land!”

InformIT (Pearson Education)

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