My "dream team" would have Hillary as VP, Edwards as Attorney General,
Richardson as Secretary of State, Dr. Dean Sec of Health or Commissioner of
FDA, repairing damage done to USA international by Bush Neocons and 8 years
of Corporate Kleptocracy!
New Mexico Governor Richardson: Best USA Secretary of State 2008
First Description/Sketch of Ideal Democrat Dream Team
We absolutely must demand such a dream team just to stay viable as a
nation.... All above are proven, intelligent, practical, and vital leaders.
Concerning the Bushes/Neocons criticizing Obama's wanting to speak with the
President of Iran as "appeasement," an absurd and hypocritical stance,
please read:
http://www.prlog.org/10073726-the-bushes-and-hitler
His article on Foreign Policy for a New Century from Harvard International
Review:
http://www.harvardir.org/articles/1630/
Another vital article by Bill Richardson:
http://www.foreignaffairs.org/20080101faessay87111
Everyone recognizes the endangered perception of the USA in every
international context. We are inviting ongoing trouble by allowing the most
powerful USA corporations to entirely manipulate many branches of government
like the Department. of State, even if you don't ascribe to a Hegelian or a
Marxian view of economic and political history.
The FDA also is massively malfunctioning, and the next President must
appoint a consumer protection advocate as FDA Commissioner, instead of the
tools of Big Pharma who have occupied that position for most of the past
twenty years, during both Republican and Democrat presidencies.
What could be of graver international concern for health than powerful
corporations, both food manufacturers and drug manufacturers, adding to the
destruction of health in hundreds of nations? Big Pharma corporations and
Kellogg, Brown and Root, Halliburton, and Blackwater have manipulated to
their satisfaction the functioning of the United States Department of State,
to do their bidding in contracts, programs, and throughout the State
Department and the Pentagon. (Some might say it is the other way around with
the Pentagon, which always get what it wants from the US Congress).
This has the cumulative effect of alienating all of the Islamic nations with
their 1.2 billion inhabitants, and further besmirches the USA
entrepreneurially in South America and in Africa. I am reminded of the
policies of the USA expanding in the second half of the 19th Century by
destroying millions of Native Americans, with a genocidal intent inherent in
that policy of "Manifest Destiny." I see massive similarities between the
way LBJ floundered in Vietnam and the dealings of the Bush administration in
Iraq, Pakistan, and Afghanistan. As a nation, we err terribly by tolerating
and continuing such destruction.
The next President must move to repair this obviously dangerous malaise by
appointing an international healer as US Secretary of State. I see no better
person than New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson for this job, not even
Richard Holbrooke. More important as qualifications were Richardson's
elevation of the international political dialogue amongst the candidates,
his early strident support for unequivocally ending the Iraq War, on top of
his history as Secretary of Energy and as UN Ambassador.
He would be a better Secretary of State than Condi, Colin, Madeleine, and
Warren Christopher all rolled together. Even the corporations will recognize
by the decline of their profits, in a strictly Hegelian sense, that they
need a Secretary of State who might sow the seeds of international dialogue
and conflict resolution, close Guantanamo, reduce the US military presence
and its ancillary costs by 40%, reshape a 21st Century Peace Corps, and
rapidly return America to a new level of international sanity.
After 8 years of Halliburton running the State Department, military
contractors running the Pentagon, Energy Corporations running the Department
of industry and writing the Legislation, and Big Pharma running the Food and
Drug Administration: what choice is there?
In his commencement address to the University of Pennsylvania Law School,
Richardson challenged graduates to combine their new skills with passion,
reason and courage, to work in the public interest. Richardson outlined
America's past experience and current need for courageous leadership, and
laid out initial steps for renewing America's relationship with the world by
returning to its traditional support for human rights, the rule of law, and
international law. He called on the United States to lead an international
effort to protect people trapped in situations like Myanmar and Darfur, when
their governments fail to protect their own people.
Excerpt:
"When in Philadelphia, it's customary to quote Ben Franklin. And he was
right when he said, 'An investment in knowledge always pays the best
interest.' (Of course, Ben probably didn't have to pay the interest on
student loans.) But your investment has been more than just money and years.
Whether you wanted to or not, you've invested part of yourself in this
place. And it has returned the investment."
"America needs to be impeccable in our own human rights behavior -- and that
should begin with immediately closing Guantanamo prison and all secret
detention facilities, and providing all prisoners everywhere with access to
legal counsel. If the US expects others to take us seriously, we need to
take ourselves seriously by honoring our own values and all international
treaties, including the Geneva Conventions. Once we have re-established
ourselves as a nation that honors human dignity, we can begin once again to
promote it worldwide. We must join and support enthusiastically the
International Criminal Court, so that leaders who engage in or allow crimes
against humanity know they will be held accountable. We should reward
countries that respect the Universal Declaration on Human Rights, and
negotiate, constructively but firmly, with those who do not.
America must also renew its commitment to the rule of law and to
multilateral cooperation. We must put aside the failed unilateralism of the
Bush administration and re-engage our leadership role in institutions like
the United Nations, the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe,
and the Organization of American States.
As a diplomat and a public servant, I look at past presidents who had the
courage to buck their party line and go against the conventional wisdom to
make great gains for our country. It took courage for Truman to reinvest
into post-war Europe-including Germany-- with the Marshall Plan. It took
courage for the anti-communist Nixon to open China. It took courage for
Carter to do what he did at Camp David. It took courage for Reagan to meet
with Gorbachev at Reykjavik."
"It will take courage to renew America's relationship with the world.... a
good place for us to start would be to lead an international effort to
protect people trapped in situations like Myanmar and Darfur, where their
governments fail to protect their own people. The "responsibility to
protect" is a principle that has been unanimously endorsed by 150 heads of
state at the 2005 UN World Summit. Such a norm would first demand action to
prevent crimes against humanity. But should prevention fail, then the right
to protect requires economic, political, diplomatic, legal, security and--
in the last resort-a multi-lateral, UN sanctioned military intervention to
stop an atrocity from occurring."
"The US has a special role to play in stopping genocide, especially in
Africa where the two most horrendous recent human rights abuses have taken
place, in Rwanda and now Darfur. History teaches that if the US does not
take the lead on ending these abuses, no one else will. We just need to
courage to do the right thing. We need to work with our international
partners and the United Nations to devise practical mechanisms that will
enable the world community to respond quickly, legally, multilaterally and
effectively to stop genocide and other great human rights abuses. The norm
of national sovereignty is important, and should be preserved, but it is
moot when governments fail to protect their own citizens from great
suffering."
[Further details are at:
http://www.prlog.org/10074647-new-mexico-governor-richardson-best-usa-
secretary-of-state-2008-complete-ideal-democrat-dream-team.html]
Authors Bio: In 1980, Stephen Fox founded New Millennium Fine Art, a Santa
Fe gallery specializing in Native American and Landscape, and is very active
in New Mexico Legislative consumer protection politics, trying above to get
the FDA to rescind its approval for the neurotoxic and carcinogenic
artificial sweetener, Aspartame. [see also:
http://www.prlog.org/10070694-uk- supermarket-chain-bans-aspartame-from-own-label-products-japanese-
manufacturer-ajinomoto-sues.html] In a strictly legislative context, his
most important writing has been for the Hawaii Senate:
http://www.prlog.org/10056715-hawaii-senate-aspartame-resolution-requesting-
fda-to-rescind-approval-for-united-states-markets.html In his capacity as
Contributing Editor of the Santa Fe Sun News, Fox recently interviewed
Mikhail Gorbachev:
http://www.prlog.org/10064349-mikhail-gorbachev-asked-
today-in-santa-fe-to-lead-next-usa-president-out-of-middle-east.html
Kontakt-email: stephen@santafefineart.com