Authors: Ed Schultz
Failing that, there is another avenue. I believe the system would function much better if there were more political parties. If a third party did emerge, even if it managed less than 20 percent of the seats in Congress, its mere presence in Washington would hopefully restore old-fashioned “what's best for the country”âstyle debate. A minority can have the power of the majority as power brokersâas evidenced by the clout wielded by the Blue Dog Democrats during the health care debate. We
have conservative Democrats and moderate Republicans, and as insufferable as the Blue Dog Democrats can be, their willingness to buck their party isn't always bad. In the long run, that kind of diversity is healthy. But when it comes to getting things done quickly, it's the shits.
I know liberals were frustrated with Ralph Nader because he may have taken enough votes to cost Gore the election in 2000. It's a weak argument. The fact is, Al Gore could not carry his home state of Tennessee. Do I think the Supreme Court robbed Al Gore? Sure. Any court that refused to allow a complete recount botched it. But any football player will tell you that you never want to let your opponent get close enough that a referee's decision decides the outcome. Even McGovern won his home state.
In comparison, while it seemingly took forever for the courts to sort through the Al Franken/Norm Coleman election in Minnesota, they took enough time to get it right.
If there was ever a classic case to show that your vote matters, it was in that senate race. Franken prevailed by just a couple hundred votes. That gave the Democrats a chance at a sixty-seat majority in the Senate! A few hundred votes shifted the balance of power in Washington.
But even that kind of majority has not broken the gridlock, and I think both parties are treading on thin ice with American voters. I think both parties are going to discover that if they cannot govern, the American people will begin to support a third party. Maybe even a fourth party. If so, those parties will dilute the power of the existing partiesâand it's hard to argue that it is not a good thing.
Ralph Nader's third-party run may have hurt Al Gore, but Ross Perot's third-party candidacy opened the door for Bill Clinton by taking votes from George Herbert Walker Bush. So Democrats and Republicans alike at one time or another have resented third parties. But, as Americans, we may discover that a viable third party is the element that revitalizes this democracy.
I'm not looking to upset the applecart for no reason. If the Democrats can get it done, I'll be happy. But if push comes to shove, my allegiance is to the middle class of America. The American citizen is the collateral damage in this political war. As jobs are lost, houses foreclosed upon, and credit card companies and insurance companies continue to pillage, they're fiddling like Nero in Washington, D.C.
I MUST BE CRAZY, BUT I STILL HAVE HOPE
FRIENDS, WE'VE COVERED A GREAT DEAL OF GROUND IN THIS BOOK.
I haven't pulled any punches and my knuckles are sore, and many of the issues we've covered continue to unravel, but I hope I have provided some optimism, too. If you are a regular listener to
The Ed Schultz Show
on the radio or a viewer of
The Ed Show
on MSNBC, you know that I tell it like it is. I tell the unvarnished truth so much my chairs have wood rot!
And I'm a little frustrated because so much opportunity lies before us and the change we fought for has come so slowly. But that's America. Participating in this great democracy has never been easy. Anyone who thinks otherwise has fallen for illusions from the shiny pages of the lesser history books, the ones disinfected of all the blood, sweat, tears, and pain. All good things in life require a heavy lift, so roll up your sleeves. We are not done yet.
I have to keep reminding myself, and you should, too, that in many ways, we are pioneers. Let me explain. I started this book talking about the importance of flying ahead of the airplaneâabout knowing where you are going, about having a vision for the future. The fact that you are
reading this book tells me you share my vision of a greater America, a country that rises higher to achieve justice and one that bends lower in compassion for those left behind.
Here's the thing about being a pioneer, a visionaryâ¦. It's a frustrating business. You eventually discover that it takes the rest of the good people a while to catch up. The good news is: They eventually do. But by that time, you will be flying ahead to the next thing. God bless the visionaries!
Man, I was so frustrated that we kept losing elections to George W. Bush by a hair. Goreâ¦Kerryâ¦
We worked so hard!
I had this vision of what these good men could help us accomplish. And maybe I was like a lot of folks, thinking that the transformational statement America made in electing an African-American Democrat meant that things were going to get easier. After all, hadn't America evolved?
Insteadâ
skreeech!
âwhat the hell? Is that another roadblock up ahead? It turns out, along with an increasingly strident Republican opposition, there were conservative Democrats blocking the way. Now, that doesn't make them bad peopleâdespite my intemperate remarks from time to timeâmaybe they're just reflecting the districts from which they come. When you have a big tent, along with the donkeys, you get a few goats and a skunk or two. That is both the strength and weakness of the Democratic Party. (The Republicans, on the other hand, have this itty-bitty tent filled with elephants and fat cats. No wonder they're so grumpy.)
Nor has President Obama lived up to his potential. Inspirational? Blessedly so. Smart? As a whip. But can he kick asses when the time comes? That remains to be seen. And on some issues, in my opinion, the time has come and gone. Take off the wingtips, Mr. President, and grab those steel-toed boots. You won nine Bush states! That's a mandate.
As hard as I have been on the president, I know that all of usâeven one as gifted as Barack Obamaâhave strengths and weakness. In the end, we are only human. Some of us are closet smokers. Others take a
wide stance in airport bathrooms. Greatness is never independent of flaws, and often greatness is achieved
in spite of them.
Let us not build our pedestals too high, because the fall can do you in. I continue to admire and support the president and have faith that Barack Obama can become a great leader. Heck, I'm an American! That was my hope for George W. Bush. I wanted America to succeed! Nothing has changed for me in that respect.
The opposition tactic is to throw a wrench into the gears of government, then blame the driver when things stall. That's not an upright thing to do, but that's what passes for statesmanship these days, and that's why Barack Obama is at the wheel of a stalled car of state from time to time. It's easy for the attention-deficit media to fall into the trap of thinking that maybe the progressive movement has failed. Not at all! It all comes down to power. There are just not enough progressives in positions of power. Not every Democrat is a progressive, just as every Republican is not a close-minded right wing zealot. SoâI know it's difficult to have patience, believe me!âbut don't get down over the slow pace of things. Now is the time for another big push. Many things come down to which side wants it more.
As I said earlier in this book, we need educated news consumers because those are the people who become engaged voters. The blessing in all of this mess is that many American voters have emerged with a much deeper understanding about the way Washington works or, in some cases, how it doesn't. We have watched health care bills born, all shiny and clean in committees, then seen the various incarnations pulled apart, amended, and kneaded all back together again. What was for many of us a mysterious process has been revealed for what it isâa painstaking, political, bare-knuckle brawl between ideologies, a brawl that's taking placeâand taking so longâat a time when the middle class of America needs prompt support and attention or else it may entirely fade away. Otto von Bismarck famously said, “Laws are like sausages. It's better not to see them being made.” But I disagree. I think the more we understand about the way the system works, the better our chances are to reform it.
The Barack Obama administration has been a whirlwind tour of the legislative process, blind alleys and all. Most presidencies have a rough first year. Barack Obama has had one of the most trying, but in spite of it all, his leadership kept the economy from crashing. Even if Republicans won't give him credit for any of that now, historians will later. And even though we fell short of getting national health care in his first year in office, Obama made great headway with health care reform. He has begun restoring America's standing in the world. He has reached out to other countries, and they've reached back. And he's managed not to invade anyone! Holy smokes! That should count for something. But this is America. We want more, and we want it now!
Here's the reality check: All of the struggle we've witnessed during Obama's first year is part of the democratic process. On rare occasions in America's history, transformational legislation has happened seemingly overnight, but most of our progress has been measured in three yards and a cloud of dust. Civil rights didn't come overnight, nor has racism disappeared. Some profound changes come with the stroke of a pen, like Medicare and Social Security. Wars start and end with a pen. Other change is measured by generations.
Endure, my friend. Keep working. Keep the faith.
The radicalism and festering hate that has infected the right casts a shadow over the light America represents. Likewise, the extremists on the left have often tainted the process with uncivil ugliness. That kind of behavior stems from fear and frustration, and I understand that, but we have to rise above it.
The stranglehold the two parties have on power seems to have choked the life out of progress, but time will tell. Maybe enough leadership will emerge to break that gridlock. I have hopes.
If old-fashioned fiscal conservatism ever returns to the Republican Partyâand don't mistake a mindless, ugly attack on social programs and the poor for any sort of fiscal restraint!âI would welcome back the Republicans. If the part of the Republican Party that was slow to rattle
sabers and that championed personal freedom emerges again, America would be better for it. We can balance the pragmatism of what once was the party of Lincoln with the progressive vision that strives to better the human condition. We can embrace good ideas, no matter from where they sprout.
I will continue to support the Democratic Party for now, but as I have shown by my unsparing criticism of some Democrats, I'm not in the tank for anyone that isn't on the right side of the issues. I'm on the airwaves every day to make a difference for the American family, for the middle-class worker. My roots are in the middle class. The middle class are my people.
I was honored when asked to run in North Dakota Senator Byron Dorgan's place, after his announced retirement at the end of his term, but I realized I can best serve the middle class from where I am now.
So where do we go from here?
The president once said something compelling and thought-provoking that I think we ought to take to heart: “This is our timeâ¦. We are the ones we are waiting for.”
What he is saying is, it's time for us to leadâtime for
you
to lead. There are many ways to do that. Get involved. Speak up at the coffee shop. Write letters to the editor. Write letters to your legislators (typed and original, my colleague Chris Matthews says). Support American businesses when you can.
Our mission is to keep working to elect progressive leaders wherever we find them. Vote for the right person who will do the right thingsâsomeone who will do the bidding of the voters, and not of the corporations. And if you cannot find the right person,
be
that person.
Understand that there will be some setbacks. So what? That's life. Huddle up and here we goâ¦three more yards and a cloud of dust. As long as we keep coming to the line, the game isn't over. Progress may not come as fast as we, in our impatience and impertinence, demand. But if we are patient and persistent, it will come.
Joseph Marshall III, a Lakota author who grew up in the Dakotas, wrote
,
“Each step, no matter how difficult, is one step closer to the top of the hillâ¦. The weakest step toward the top of the hill, toward the sunrise, toward hope, is stronger than the fiercest stormâ¦. Keep going.”
That's the mission.
Keep going.
The pagination of this electronic edition does not match the edition from which it was created. To locate a specific passage, please use the search feature of your e-book reader.
Â
abortion, 83
Adelson, Jim, 11â12
Afghanistan, 31â32, 33, 47, 62, 126â34, 135, 137, 138, 187
drug trade and, 134â35
AFL (American Federation of Labor), 156
AFL-CIO, 158
Air America Radio, 17
air pollution, 96, 97, 102, 148
al-Qaeda, 31â32, 36, 37, 126, 128, 130, 131, 132, 133â34
American Enterprise Institute, 73
America's Children: Key National Indicators of Well-Being,
56
Andrews, Mark, 86
Antos, Joseph, 73
arms business, 32â33
automobiles, 25â26, 72, 90, 92, 101, 121, 143
China and, 140, 143, 146
electric, 92â93, 97
hydrogen-powered, 98
Axelrod, David, 64â65
Â
Bachmann, Michele, 182
bailout, Wall Street, 4, 38â42, 61
Bangladesh, 143
Barbour, Haley, 125
Bartiromo, Maria, 30
Basin Electric Power Cooperative, 97
Baucus, Max, 84â85
Bazmore, Bill, 11
Beck, Glenn, 182
Bender, Tony, 59
Benowitz, Neil, 78
Bernanke, Ben, 118
Bhagwati, Jagdish, 158
Biden, Joe, 133, 153â54
big business, 183â84
Bilmes, Linda, 33
Bin Laden, Osama, 31, 36, 129â30, 134
Bismarck, Otto von, 195
Bloomberg, Michael, 186
Blue CrossâBlue Shield, 85
Blue Dog Democrats, 190â91
Boeder, Laurie, 15
Boehner, John, 67, 69
Boeing, 145
Boxer, Barbara, 189
Boyce, Phil, 1
Bratkowski, Zeke, 12
Brokaw, Tom, 5
Brown, Scott, 66
Buffett, Warren, 159â60, 166, 169
Bugajski, Janusz, 138
Bureau of Economic Analysis, 145
Bush, George H. W., 48, 58, 110, 191
Bush, George W., 4, 17, 25, 38, 85, 105, 109â11, 112, 116, 117, 119, 148, 175, 185, 188, 195
economy and, 41
election and reelection of, 187, 188, 194
Iraq and Afghanistan and, 28, 30â31, 32, 47â48, 49, 62, 126â30, 135, 137
Medicare and, 71, 73â74, 75â76, 162
national debt and, 28, 70, 73â74, 162â63
oil and, 90, 92
stem cell research and, 79
taxes and, 47, 166
terrorism and, 15, 35â37, 38
BusinessWeek,
30, 109
Â
Calderón, Felipe, 112
campaign contributions, 184â87
Campaignmoney.org, 86
Canada, 67, 68, 76, 90, 141
Cantor, Eric, 69, 75
Cap and Trade, 101â2
capitalism, 14, 73, 151, 165
Capitalism: A Love Story,
163
Carter, Jimmy, 42, 122, 188
Cash for Clunkers, 25, 101
cattle industry, 53â54
Census, U.S., 45, 60, 170, 171
Center for Responsive Politics, 85, 86
Cheney, Dick, 4, 31, 38, 41, 47â48, 49, 62, 69, 79, 124, 127, 128, 129, 161, 172, 175, 188
Cheney, Liz, 128
child labor, 147â48, 156, 161
childrensdefense.org, 55â56
China, 43, 44, 62, 93, 103, 109, 110, 111, 114â23, 143, 145, 146â47, 148
air pollution and, 102, 148
automobile industry and, 140, 143, 146
jobs outsourced to, 45, 107â8, 141, 142, 160
oil and, 90â91, 121â22
workplace conditions in, 155â56
Chrysler, 26, 46
CIA, 36, 37, 58, 130
cigarettes, 78â79
Citizens for Tax Justice, 163
Clean Air Act, 97
Clear Channel, 175
climate change, 69, 95, 96, 97, 98â102
Clinton, Bill, 28, 37, 48, 58, 72, 103, 110, 111, 115, 119, 162, 163, 178, 179, 191
bin Laden and, 129â30
Clinton, Hillary, 16, 18, 179
CNN, 181
CNNMoney, 167
Colbert, Stephen, 59, 180
Coleman, Norm, 191
college, 60â61, 110, 166, 168
Columbia Journalism Review,
176
Colvin, Geoff, 145
Common Cause, 184
Commonwealth Fund, 67
Concord Monitor,
82
Conrad, Kent, 15, 16, 39, 68, 86â87
Conservation Reserve Program, 134
Constitution, 62, 123
Fourth Amendment to, 35, 37, 38
Patriot Act and, 35, 38
COOL, 52â53
Copenhagen Consensus Center, 101
credit cards, 164
Cuba, 55, 67
Cuban, Mark, 165
Cuomo, Mario, 1
Â
Dann, Marc, 40
Daschle, Tom, 16, 190
debates, broadcasting of, 186
debt, 32, 150â53
Defazio, Peter, 165
defense, national, 24, 29â38, 62, 115, 121, 125â26
DeMint, Jim, 69
Democracy Now!,
175
Democracy Radio, 16
Depression, Great, 27, 47, 50
Dershowitz, Alan, 1
Dickinson, Tim, 69
doctors, 82
malpractice and, 82â83
dollar, 117â18, 119â20, 146â47
Donahue, Phil, 175
Dorgan, Byron, 16, 27, 50, 76, 108, 141, 142, 145, 197
Drewnowski, Adam, 54
drugs:
illegal, 111â13, 127, 134â35
pharmaceutical, 75â76, 79â80, 86
Durbin, Dick, 5, 118
Â
E. A. Schultz Construction, 21, 154â55
economic crisis of 2008â2009, 4, 19â20, 25â26, 110â11, 117, 118, 119, 126, 140â41, 143, 170
bailout and, 4, 38â42, 61
economic policy, 24, 38â49, 62â63
Economic Policy Institute, 111
Economic Times,
119
Economist,
112, 159
Economy.com, 111
Edelman, Marian Wright, 55
Ed Schultz Show, The,
2, 15, 16â18, 22, 193
Ed Show, The,
2, 9, 19â23, 174, 182, 189, 193
education, 6, 24, 29, 55â61, 63, 66, 82, 108, 121, 164, 165
college, 60â61, 110, 166, 168
Eisenhower, Dwight, 58, 183â84
Eisinger, Jesse, 40
Ekwurzel, Brenda, 100
elections, 184â88, 191
electoral process, 187â88
Electronic Business,
98
Emanuel, Rahm, 168
Emerson, Ralph Waldo, 150
Employee Free Choice Act, 46, 47, 85, 158
energy, 6, 34â35, 63, 89â102, 110, 122, 146, 183
coal and, 95â97, 98
electric cars and, 92â93, 97
electric grid and, 93â94
ethanol and, 97â98
nuclear, 98
oil, 33â35, 90â92, 95, 116, 121â22, 127, 145, 164, 166
wind, 94, 95, 122
EPA, 99
exercise, 77â78
Â
family, 56
Farm Bill, 50
farmers, 14, 15, 63, 134
big agriculture and, 51â52
subsidizing of, 49, 50, 54, 55
FBI, 35, 36, 37
FDIC (Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation), 27
Federal Family Education Loan Program, 61
Feinberg, Kenneth, 42
Feingold, Russell, 185
Feldstein, Martin, 95
Fiscal Cost of Low-Skill Households to the U.S. Taxpayer, The
(Rector), 108
fiscal policy, 24, 38â49, 62â63, 121
527 groups, 185
Flores, Clara, 143â44
Forbes,
166
Ford, Gerald, 80
Ford Motor Company, 26
Fortier, Ross, 12
Fortune,
145
Four Pillars, 24â63
defense, 24, 29â38, 62, 115, 121, 125â26
education,
see
education
fiscal policy, 24, 38â49, 62â63, 121
food,
see
food
food, 24, 49â55, 63, 121
safety of, 52â53, 148
Fox Entertainment Group, 173
Fox News, 45, 174â75, 176, 177â78
Franken, Al, 191
Friedman, Thomas, 5â6
Â
garment industry, 143â44
Gates, Bill, 168
Geithner, Tim, 154, 190
General Motors, 26, 46, 72
Gerard, Leo, 140â41
G.I. Bill, 27
Globalist,
120
Global Market Information Database, 92
Goldman Sachs, 41â42
Gompers, Samuel, 156â57
Gore, Al, 95, 130, 191, 194
Grassley, Charles E., 50, 85
Grayson, Alan, 75
Griffin, Phil, 20, 22
Guardian,
133
Gutierez, Marivel, 144
Â
Hannity, Sean, 1
Hardball with Chris Matthews,
128, 179
health care, 6, 29, 33, 44, 63, 64â88, 110, 142, 143, 158, 164, 166, 178, 187, 190, 195, 196
Clinton plan for, 80
food and, 54
insurance companies and, 64â65, 67, 75, 77, 81â82, 86, 164
malpractice lawsuits and, 82â83
medical tourism and, 76â77
Medicare, 44, 48, 66, 68, 71â72, 73â74, 75â76, 80, 81â82, 85, 86, 162, 196
pharmaceutical industry and, 75â76, 79â80, 86
Hegemon: China's Plan to Dominate Asia and the World
(Mosher), 115
Hightower, Jim, 1
Himmelstein, David, 74
Holman, Craig, 84
Hong Kong, 57
Hoover, Herbert, 25
housing market, 39
Huddy, Juliet, 45
Huffington Post, 140, 174, 180
Hughes, James, 152
Hurricane Katrina, 15
Â
immigrants, 44, 106
immigrants, illegal, 103â13, 157, 158
health care and, 83, 84
income, 3, 45, 46, 109â10, 142, 184
India, 43, 44, 107, 111, 120, 132, 147, 160
Inequality.org, 3
infant mortality, 67
Inhofe, James, 125
Institute for Policy Studies, 158
insurance companies, 64â65, 67, 75, 77, 81â82, 86, 164, 183
International Center for Technology
Assessment, 34
International Labor Organization, 109, 147
International Trade Commission, 144
Internet:
media on, 180, 182
sales on, 171
Iran, 58, 62, 121, 132, 136, 138
Iraq War, 28, 30â33, 47, 50, 59, 62, 90, 121, 126â30, 135â36, 137, 163, 174, 175
Israel, 32, 137
Â
Jackson, Andrew, 163
Japan, 57, 67, 117, 119, 120
jobs,
see
workers
Johnson, Alex, 57
Johnson, Lyndon, 69, 71
journalism, 177, 178, 180â82
Â
Kaplan, Jeffrey, 185
Karzai, Hamid, 131â32, 189
Kennedy, Edward “Ted,” 46, 66
Kennedy, John F., 30
Kennedy, Robert F., 87
Kerry, John, 185, 187, 194
KFGO, 9
Klein, Joe, 170
KNDK, 2
Korea, 57, 62, 136, 143
Korean War, 30
Krugman, Paul, 117, 165â66
KTOX, 2
Â
Landrieu, Mary, 85â86
Lay, Ken, 164
Lerner, Stephen, 41â42
Levi Strauss, 143â44
Libby, I. Lewis “Scooter,” 127
Lieberman, Joe, 69, 85
life expectancy, 67
Limbaugh, Rush, 1, 175
Lincoln, Abraham, 69, 197
Lincoln, Blanche, 85, 86
loans:
home, 39â40
small business, 153
student, 60â61
Los Angeles Times,
108, 121
Lovins, Amory B., 98
Lynch, Michael, 82
Â
Macau, 67
McCaffrey, Barry, 111
McCain, John, 18â19, 125, 185
McGovern, George, 191
McNamara, Robert, 30
Madden, John, 12
Maher, Bill, 124
malpractice lawsuits, 82â83
Manlove, Kari, 102
Marshall, Joseph, III, 198
Massing, Michael, 176
Matthews, Chris, 128, 179, 197
Meacham, Jon, 72
media, 173â82
Medicaid, 44
Medicare, 44, 48, 66, 68, 71â72, 73â74, 75â76, 80, 81â82, 85, 86, 162, 196
Mexico, 43, 90, 111, 132, 143
drug wars in, 111â13
immigrants from, 104, 105, 106, 107, 109, 157
NAFTA and, 107, 110, 141
Meyers, Seth, 125
Meza, Santiago, 112
Miller, George, 46
Moaveni, Azadeh, 137
Moore, Michael, 163
Morici, Peter, 144, 145
Morning Joe,
64â65
mortgage business, 39â40
Mosher, Steven W., 115
Mother Jones,
180
MSNBC, 2, 9, 20, 22, 23, 64, 66, 128, 174, 176, 177, 178, 179, 193
MSNBC.com, 57
Mullen, Michael, 115
Multinational Monitor, 167
Murdoch, Rupert, 173, 181
Musk, Elon, 34
Â
Nader, Ralph, 191
NAFTA (North American Free Trade Agreement), 107, 110, 141, 146
Nation,
180â81
National Commission on Children, 56
national debt, 28â29, 41, 47â48, 73â74, 162â63, 164
China and, 116â17
NATO, 31, 128, 133
Nelson, Ben, 86
net worth, 3
New America Foundation, 72, 74, 81
Newhouse, Joseph P., 76
News Corporation, 173
Newsweek,
41â42, 72, 122, 133, 136
New York Times,
5, 76, 95, 117, 143â44, 165
9/11, 15, 31, 32, 36â37, 59, 126, 130, 134