

I highly recommend you watch it.
http://www.ted.com/talks/view/id/451
For the long term, we must begin to prize education again as not only a means to an end, but an end to itself. Learning should be an objective because we love it and because it makes us better human beings - more able to love, listen, understand, share, build, play and create. Education today is too much of a rite of passage, an obstacle in a way on the course of life rather than life itself. It is not an obstacle - it is the prize at the end of the course. When we look back on our lives, we should be filled with gratitude for what we learned, that we learned everything we possibly could, and that we loved learning it. Life is more than movies, video games and extra-curricular activities. Life is about learning. We need to change our mindsets and help change others as well.
If you want to be one of the lucky few to actually see what is in the bill for yourself (instead of reading the cliff notes version), click here:
http://thomas.loc.gov/home/h1/Recovery_Bill_Div_A.pdf
As you look through you will be amazed.
Do we need more domestic attention? We do - absolutely. However, you can't cut taxes and increase spending. You can't cut taxes and wage two wars. We can't cut taxes and continue planning yet another $100 billion bailout bill. We can't have it all - we need to sacrifice for our country. We all need to pull together as individual Americans and sacrifice. Some might say that this bill is that sacrifice. However, this bill doesn't require any sacrifice of us - at least not for quite some time. It requires a sacrifice of our children and our unborn and their unborn. This bill also doesn't do anything for them. It arguably won't make things better for them as it doesn't change the fundamentals of what has and is going wrong in America. Taxing the future for the status quo is reckless, dangerous and irresponsible. What is the sacrifice we must make? No one has asked us for one.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zdVP_sgCETo
To watch a short presentation on the point I made regarding the money supply increasing by 24% annually, you will need to watch this:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YDEe0Ai6lTM

Finally, AEI has a great article called "The Second Coming of Keynes." I recommend it to you. If you look at the proposed bailout relative to anything that has ever been undertaken by the government in our history, you will see how crazy this plan is.
The author closes: "The truth is that there is very little empirical support for policies such as these. They will likely provide a small boost, at an enormous cost. When the boost is gone, the cost will remain.
For those economists who are more skeptical of the theories of John Maynard Keynes, there is but one consolation: An experiment this large will provide ample opportunity for study. "
Indeed it will and we have good reason to suspect the outcome won't be pretty. Amending the Federal Reserve Act to allow money to be printed only at the rate of productivity would be the best and most sound fiscal policy for our country - gold should not be our standard nor should the great experimental ideas of the Fed bankers. Gold and the Fed are not the wealth of the nation. Smith was right - it is labor.
There are two enemies to our future - Government spending and the Federal Reserve system of unbridled freedom to set America's monetary policy. Both must be reigned in.
Communicate with Hope and Vision
It is the role of all leaders to lead us to a better place. The words we say have a powerful effect on the feelings we feel and the actions we take. If I were responsible for the country, I would hope that I would recognize this important trust and communicate the truth of the present and a vision of optimism and hope for the future.
Understand the Long Term Issues Facing the Country
One of the primary problems I see with the current economic situation is that the TARP and current stimulus plan being debated is, as most legislation is, very reactionary. Politicians are never voted in for their 10-20 year plans. They are voted in for what they can do for the problems people were facing yesterday. As a result, the actions in congress are very reactionary and sadly do little to avoid problems and create strategies for the future.
It is important to note that I believe that for those long term needs for the safety and general welfare of the People that the free market has failed to see profit in, the Government has a role to ensure the need is met. Please know up front that I do not believe that the role of government is to interfere in the marketplace where there is a marketplace but in those places where there is not one. The government cannot be, and should not be, the be all and end all of everything as it is quickly becoming. The place of government is not to prop up crippled institutions, cap executive salaries, flood markets with endless streams of cash, nationalize institutions, purchase private equities in firms or place an impossible burden of debt on the backs of the People for immidiate, short term boosts.
I would therefore not take any short term action that would adversely affect the long term future of our nation's children. Those issues that must be addressed to ensure long term success for the nation are:
1. The Breakup of the Family as the Basic Unit of Society
It is in the interest of the citizens of our nation to help ensure that each child born into our country is born to a father and a mother who honor their marital vows. Children that are raised in a loving home gain the self confidence they need to succeed in life, a foundation of love and respect for their fellow man, and a commitment to generally a sense of personal honor and commitment. The breakdown of the family will be a country of individuals whose hearts have grown cold through abuse and neglect and who will desire love but not know how to find it. The dissatisfaction with this kind of life leads many to a life of a relentless pursuit of selfishness. Selfishness only brings more misery and heartache along with the other ills of an uncivilized people. As a leader I would promote fidelity and the virtues of honor, commitment, love, respect, and forgiveness.
2. The Growing Lack of Creativity
Western civilization has primarily grown out of our ability to create. Inventions that bless the lives of individuals whether for increased work productivity or leisure are desired commodities. The United States is producing fewer and fewer creative inventions. This decline in America's ability to create will cause a real shift in global positioning that is concerning for our children.
The government must actively be finding ways to help more people become interested in engineering and the sciences. The government must understand its place in funding the sciences of all kinds and in removing barriers to the country remaining competitive on this front. Creativity in renewable energies is a key area for our nation to gain core competencies. This leads us to the next long term problem.
3. Education
Natural born citizens have fallen far behind the rest of the world in education. Our children do not learn much in school and our parents are not concerned or trying to help them learn more. Instead, they want their children's lives to be dominated by extra-curricular activities rather than academic ones. Learning must be enshrined as part of our culture - not just entertainment. As a leader, I would work with leading business and education leaders to help re-shape the American education system to help our children be prepared for and to help shape the 21st Century.
4. Immigration Reform
Because our schools are not producing the number of graduates that are needed to fill the creative jobs in our country, we must make it easier and not harder for the dreamers, the creators, the engineers of today in foreign countries to become American citizens. The doors of our country should open to the people of all nations and we should welcome them into our nation and culture.
5. Energy Independence
The long term success of the west is dependent on energy independence. The government must take a strategic role in helping our country leave behind its dependence on foreign oil. The country must enact true, long term energy policy that would greatly reduce or entirely eliminate our need for foreign oil. Just yesterday it was announced that China purchased more cars last month than the United States for the first time. Imagine what a billion more cars on the road will mean for the oil supply. We are in an insecure place if we are all relying on the same source of energy. America must see the greater need for long term energy policy. The safety of our nation largely depends on this one piece - energy independence.
Understand the Short Term Problems Facing the Country
As I see it, the true short term problems of our nation are:
1. The Housing Market
The housing market was one of the primary sources of our current economic problem. In the short term, relief must be given to those deserving home owners who are facing foreclosures. Rather than give hundreds of billions to banks to compensate them for their losses, the government should step in and force a renegotiation of contract and interest rate that ensures the people of this great country are served as well as the interest of the banks.
2. Inflation
The Government and Federal Reserve have already spent or committed nearly $10 Trillion on the economic bailout. That is a lot of extra money that has gone into the economy. Additionally, M2 - the Nation's money supply - is growing at a rate of 24%. That is scary - do you want to see 20% inflation? I don't - that is a very dangerous thing. The Federal Reserve must stop flooding the markets with money and the government must stop this as well or else I fear our economy would be incredibly hurt. So, not just those who have been unwise would be hurt - but those who have been wise as well. As a leader I would make this hard decision.
3. Credit
The lending institutions who have been given money in the TARP funds should be required to use the funds or return them to the government. The only way they will return to solvency is by earning money and they cannot do that by "strengthening their balance sheets" alone. They have to produce something and that "something" is financial services and credit.
4. Reaction
As a leader I would urge Congress to not react with haste but with positive energy and a long term strategy to create the right solutions for our nation's current and future issues.
5. Energy Costs
In reality, many people and businesses were hurt over the recent high energy costs which is a result of the country's complacency in creating alternative fuel sources. The government has a place to ensure that monopolies on energy are charging fair and reasonable prices for the fuel they provide. There needs to be some government oversight for industries where there is not a true free market.
6. Out of Control Government Spending
I need to say nothing more than the banner at the top of this page. By living way beyond our means we are quickly laying the foundation for certain economic, long term doom.
For an infrastructure bill we should understand the key structural issues that need addressing.
I do not believe that roads and bridges are a huge problem to our country's present and future growth. If there are real problems with some roads and bridges we should by all means fix them. However, the current financial crisis is not the time to be working on roads that simply need widening or freeways that need expanding for no real reason other than to create jobs.
The real structural problems that need addressing are as follows:
1. Fiscal Policy
It is my belief that the Federal Reserve Act should be amended to allow the Fed to only increase the money supply according to the increase in productivity. Any exceptions to this should be approved by the House of Representatives. Allowing a private bank to control the wealth of the nation, which is the labor of the people, puts the people at odds with business and slaves almost to the wealth they should own. The People of this nation are the wealth thereof and should be the ones responsible for the money supply.
2. Tax Reform
Our government must look at true tax reform and investigate a more representative tax system.
3. Government Oversight
For the country to not repeat the same problems that led to this, the White House should investigate and find the places where oversight failed or was non-existent and propose corrections. We have laws and police to enforce those laws. This is a place that certainly needs some attention. As a good friend posted a comment on dirivities, this would certainly be the area to monitor that.
4. True government fiscal reform
To save our country we must end the entitlement state, allow market forces and the common descency of our people to fill in the gaps, and restore Government to its proper place. By following the Long Term plan I put forth above, we would be able to better position our country for future economic success and help to create a better and safer world.
Conclusion
If I were responsible for such a monumental task, I would like to think this is where I would start. This is what I feel the proper role of government is. There are those that believe that any government involvement is bad involvement (I have found that to be mostly partisan rhetoric). I disagree and know that history would disagree along with some of our greatest founding fathers. Hamilton, Madison (as they wrote in the Federalist) and Washington would have believed in some limited involvement for the benefit of all in these types of situations.
I do not believe the government should be hands off but I also do not believe it possesses the solutions to the problems. It can only work by communicating with optimism and creating the proper structure for the true creative forces to work - the People of our great land. To do this, the government should avoid destroying the people by stealing their wealth through inflation, taxing them for their whole lives for a benefit that will last a few months, and creating a nationalized system that takes the true creative forces out of the market that blesses our lives.
The answer lies in the People and if we are true to the principles of individual liberty and justice for all, we will make tomorrow better than today for you, me and our children.

Dear Mr. Sampson:
Thank you for contacting me with regarding an economic stimulus package to assist middle-class Americans. I appreciate hearing from you on this important issue.
Day after day, the economic news in our nation grows bleaker. The national unemployment rate recently surpassed 7 percent, with more than 126,000 people unemployed in Connecticut alone. Each day, more and more families in our state find themselves struggling to stay in their homes, as the rising tide of foreclosures erodes house prices. These grim facts, coupled with rising health care and energy costs and a sagging stock market, have many middle-class Americans deeply concerned. They see their retirement savings plummet, their ability to access credit drying up, and their ability to send their children to college becoming ever more difficult.
I believe that helping the middle class is the best way to jump-start our economy. As you may be aware, Senators Harry Reid (D-NV) and Robert Byrd (D-WV), introduced a $100 billion economic recovery package geared toward helping hard working Americans in November of 2008. Regrettably, this measure met substantial opposition and was not taken up by the full Senate, though Congress was able to pass legislation providing for an additional 7 weeks of emergency unemployment benefits to all states, and an additional 13 weeks on top of that to states deemed "high unemployment states." Regrettably, Connecticut is one of these states, with an unemployment rate of 7.1 percent. This small step was designed to help the millions of Americans who find themselves facing the worst job market in 17 years.
Fortunately, with the commencement of the 111th Congress and the inauguration of a new President, the focus has shifted from partisan bickering to finding real solutions to the problems facing the American people. On January 28, 2009 the House of Representatives passed the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, a bill which represents a serious investment in the future of the United States. The House-passed legislation contains $526.5 billion in spending on important initiatives such as infrastructure improvements, renewable energy, and other programs to create jobs. The bill's spending also makes critical down-payments on our nation's future economic health, updating our nation's energy grid, education and health care systems. The legislation also contains important funding for housing and direct aid to states with severely strained budgets, such as Connecticut. Additionally, families who are dependent upon food stamps and unemployment insurance to make ends meet will see an extension of this aid. This bill also has a substantial package of middle-class tax breaks, which will further provide fast economic relief to 95 percent of working families. Altogether, the House legislation will cost a total of $819 billion. The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) predicts that the funds from this critical legislation will be pumped into the economy quickly, with 75 percent of the spending injected into the economy within 18 months of passage. So while the costs are high, I believe that the economic benefits of this legislation will be substantial, aiding million of Americans in weathering our current downturn and mitigating an ever worse economic environment.
The Senate expects to take up the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act in the coming weeks. The package, which has been primarily worked on by the Senate Appropriations and Finance Committees is similar in size and scope to that passed by the House, though some key differences do exist. As the Senate begins consideration of the measure, please be assured of my strong commitment to not only investing in the middle-class which is the backbone of our economy, but also investing in our future so that economic growth benefits all Americans. I look forward to working with my colleagues to passing this bill, and working with the House to create a final package that achieves these goals in the most transparent, effective manner. Please be assured that I will keep your views in mind throughout the bill's consideration by the Senate.
Thank you again for contacting me. If you would like to stay in touch with me on this or other issues of importance, please visit my website at http://dodd.senate.gov/ and sign up for my regular e-mail alerts. Please don't hesitate to contact me in the future if I may be of assistance to you in any way.
Sincerely,
CHRISTOPHER J. DODD
United States Senator

In what was the most pointedly partisan speech of his young presidency, Obama rejected Republican arguments that massive spending in the $819 billion stimulus bill that passed the House should be replaced by a new round of massive tax cuts.
“I welcome this debate, but we are not going to get relief by turning back to the same policies that for the last eight years doubled the national debt and threw our economy into a tailspin,” said President Obama – sounding more like Candidate Obama than at any time since he took the oath of office less than a month ago.
Obama, speaking to about 200 House Democrats at their annual retreat at the Kingsmill Resort and Spa, dismissed Republican attacks against the massive spending in the stimulus.
"What do you think a stimulus is?" Obama asked incredulously. "It’s spending — that's the whole point! Seriously.”
Stabbing hard at Republicans who once aligned themselves with his predecessor, Obama made it clear that the problems he seeks to address with his recovery plan weren’t ones of his making.
“When you start hearing arguments, on the cable chatter, just understand a couple of things,” he said. “No. 1, when they say, ‘Well, why are we spending $800 billion [when] we’ve got this huge deficit?’ – first of all, I found this deficit when I showed up, No. 1.
“I found this national debt, doubled, wrapped in a big bow waiting for me as I stepped into the Oval Office.”
After his remarks, Obama, clearly caught up in the moment, made the party get-together feel even more like a campaign rally with his signature call-and-response chant.
“Fired up?” he asked the Democratic lawmakers. “Ready to go!” a group of them shouted back."
"Obama losing the stimulus message war"
Rather than having the media focus on the who is winning and who is losing the political game like it's some type of sports coverage, the media should focus on the facts, the policy, the motives, the possible outcomes, costs and benefits. The media has colluded with our elected officials to make our government little more than a horse race. One quick scan of this paragraph illustrates my point:
"At this crucial juncture in the push to pass an economic recovery package, President Obama finds himself in the most unlikely of places: He is losing the message war. Despite Obama’s sky high personal approval ratings, polls show support has declined for his stimulus bill since Republicans and their conservative talk-radio allies began railing against what they labeled as pork barrel spending within it. "
I think the media has this one wrong. They should inform the viewers - not give a play by play of the game of politics. In a way, the parties use this type of coverage to keep from doing what we need them to.
Some things fundamentally have to change for us to really progress and one way is to have the media force the politicians to talk about policy, motives, philosophy and purpose rather than who's on first and what's on second.
To read the who article on the political game, click here: http://news.yahoo.com/s/politico/20090205/pl_politico/18444


If you were troubled, or have questions about the different Church's involvement in defeating Proposition 8, please take a few moments to watch this. I found it an incredibly profound and insightful.
What really surprised me was when I saw the following:
"Divination -
This class will introduce the student to various forms of divination: psychic readings, mediumship, channeling, tarot, etc. Come and learn how to tell a fake from a genuine diviner. This class will also teach you how to sharpen your own intuitive skills and you will learn to do 3 types of divination yourself."

I thought that there is no way this could be sponsored by my public school system; therefore, surely this must be some kind of a scam. The next class I saw was no better:
"Past Life Regression -
Utilizing hypnotherapy techniques, the student will explore the possibility of past life scenarios. The instructor is certified by the American Board of Hypnotherapy. Come and experience a hypnotic induction."
Finally, I saw the best, or worst, one of them all:
"Ghosts, Spirit Guides, and Power Animals -
Have you ever seen a ghost or heard unexplained sounds? This class invites you into the world of the shaman: a world populated by the unseen. The class is taught by a shamanic practitioner."
By the way, what is a power animal anyway? All of these incredibly non-skill, non-career oriented, based classes (which I view the primary purpose of public education) were all proudly on the page right before this statement:
"It is the policy of the Bristol Board of Education that no person shall be excluded from participation in, denied the benefits of, or otherwise discriminated against under any program, including employment, because of race, color, religion..."
I would like to think so. However, I have to wonder what would happen if a local pastor or Rabbi would have offered a Bible study class for Continuing Education? I don't think it would have happened. When they allow, in the very least, moments of silence again in public schools I may not have such a hard time with Divination, Tarot Card readings, Past-life Regressions, Power Animals and Spirit Guides, but until then, I have a problem with them. I am not mad, I am amazed at the double standard. Something must be done. If we can recognize the place for these less-than-authentic forms of spiritual instruction, then surely we can recognize a place for Judeo/Christian teachings as well. They may not agree with them - but if there is a place for one, there must be a place for the other.
Where is the equal opportunity? It has yet to be tested, but it is likely they are there may not be as much equality in the opportunity.
Nevertheless, if you really want to know what a power animal is, how to sharpen your mediumship skills, or do some past life regression, Bristol has some great classes - just for you!
To read all of the Adult Continuing Education courses offered by the Bristol Public Schools, click here:
http://www.bristol.k12.ct.us/uploaded/Adult_Ed/ACE/WinterSpring_2009.pdf

There were three resolutions for creating commemorative stamps:
http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/bdquery/D?d111:5:./temp/~bdmZsn::
http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/bdquery/D?d111:6:./temp/~bdmZsn::
http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/bdquery/D?d111:11:./temp/~bdmZsn::
And about 90 other resolutions proposed in the house. Absolutely no bills were proposed on the house floor - not a single one. And this is at a time of crisis.
One the contrary, the Senate had just a handfull of resolutions and took up about 20 different bills. Looks like the Senate is off to a better start.
There was a resolution proposing amending the constitution to do away with the electoral college - H.J. Res.9. I did like that one.
Nevertheless, if you can judge a book by its cover, not much is going to happen, we are going to have some awesome stamps this year and keep a few more post offices open. Looking forward to it - More of the Same.


Anyways, clearly the Senator never read my letter and he only has one response for every letter and every view on this subject: I agree with you and that is why I am voting for it.
December 22, 2008

"Lawrence Wilkerson, top aide and later chief of staff to former Secretary of State Colin Powell, said that as a new president, Bush was like Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, the 2008 GOP vice presidential nominee whom critics said lacked knowledge about foreign affairs. When Bush first came into office, he was surrounded by experienced advisers like Vice President Dick Cheney and Powell, who Wilkerson said ended up playing damage control for the president.
"The reality in the White House is — if you look at the most senior staff — you're seeing people who aren't personally religious and have no particular affection for people who are religious-right leaders," Kuo said.


The bodies showed signs of torture. They were left on the side of a highway about an hour north of the tourist resort of Acapulco in the southern state of Guerrero, state police said.
Their heads were stuffed in a plastic bag and left outside a shopping center.
Mexico's President Feline Calderon has deployed tens of thousands of troops and police since 2006 to take on drug cartels. The defense ministry vowed not to back down despite its latest losses.
"They are trying to scare the military. Regardless, the ministry promises to continue fighting," it said in a statement.
The ministry released the names of eight decapitated soldiers but said one of them was recovered on December 9.
Drug killings throughout Mexico have more than doubled to over 5,300 this year, scaring off investment and tourists. The United States has sent hundreds of millions of dollars in aid to help its southern neighbor fight the cartels.
The Mexican army has made some prominent captures, but the cartels seem able to quickly replace their losses. Meanwhile, a growing number of police have been gruesomely murdered.
A note left with the severed heads warned of more decapitations, the state police said.
(Reporting by Jason Lange and Armando Tovar, editing by Alan Elsner)
Accessed at http://www.reuters.com/article/worldNews/idUSTRE4BK1HO20081222 on December 22, 2008.
Ever wonder why the middle is a safer place to be to help your cause? If a picture is worth a thousand words, this video is worth a billion of them...
GLOBAL TRENDS 2025: THE NATIONAL INTELLIGENCE COUNCIL'S 2025 PROJECT
From the Chairman of the National Intelligence Council
"Global Trends 2025: A Transformed World" is the fourth unclassified report prepared by the National Intelligence Council (NIC) in recent years that takes a long-term view of the future. It offers a fresh look at how key global trends might develop over the next 15 years to influence world events. Our report is not meant to be an exercise in prediction or crystal ball-gazing. Mindful that there are many possible "futures," we offer a range of possibilities and potential discontinuities, as a way of opening our minds to developments we might otherwise miss.
Some of our preliminary assessments are highlighted below:
- The whole international system—as constructed following WWII—will be revolutionized. Not only will new players—Brazil, Russia, India and China— have a seat at the international high table, they will bring new stakes and rules of the game.
- The unprecedented transfer of wealth roughly from West to East now under way will continue for the foreseeable future.
- Unprecedented economic growth, coupled with 1.5 billion more people, will put pressure on resources—particularly energy, food, and water—raising the specter of scarcities emerging as demand outstrips supply.
- The potential for conflict will increase owing partly to political turbulence in parts of the greater Middle East.
As with the earlier NIC efforts—such as Mapping The Global Future 2020—the project's primary goal is to provide US policymakers with a view of how world developments could evolve, identifying opportunities and potentially negative developments that might warrant policy action. We also hope this paper stimulates a broader discussion of value to educational and policy institutions at home and abroad.
Click here to read the full report: http://www.dni.gov/nic/PDF_2025/2025_Global_Trends_Final_Report.pdfClick here to read what they said in 1997 what the world would look like next year:
http://www.dni.gov/nic/special_globaltrends2010.html
Click here to read what they said in 2000 what the world would look like in 2015:
http://www.dni.gov/nic/NIC_globaltrend2015.html
Click here to read what they said in 2004 what the world would look like in 2020:
http://www.dni.gov/nic/NIC_globaltrend2020.html
To get the easy read, I suggest just clicking ont he Executive Summary. I think it is fascinating to see the difference that will occur between 2020 and 2025. I hope you enjoy the read.

One thing I try to do is to post true information on my blog rather than post political tabloids. This is a very valuable and informative article from arguably one of the most influential men in the world. It is his letter to President Elect Obama. I think it would be worth your time to read.
MEMORANDUM TO: The president-elect
RE: Foreign policy
FROM: Richard N. Haass, President of the Council on Foreign Relations
There are only two and a half months—76 days, to be precise— between Election Day and your Inauguration, and you will need every one of them to get ready for the world you will inherit. This is not the world you've been discussing on the trail for the last year or more: campaigning and governing could hardly be more different. The former is necessarily done in bold strokes and, to be honest, often approaches caricature. All candidates resist specifying priorities or trade-offs lest they forfeit precious support. You won, but at a price, as some of the things you said were better left unsaid. Even more important, the campaign did not prepare the public for the hard times to come.
There will be days when you will wonder why you worked so hard to get this job. What will make it so difficult is not just all that awaits, but the constraints that will limit what you can actually do. When George W. Bush became president nearly eight years ago the world was largely at peace, the U.S. military was largely at rest, oil was $23 a barrel, the economy was growing at more than 3 percent, $1 was worth 116 yen, the national debt was just under $6 trillion and the federal government was running a sizable budgetary surplus. The September 11 attacks, for all they cost us as a nation, increased the world's willingness to cooperate with us. You, by contrast, will inherit wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, tired and stretched armed forces, a global struggle with terrorism, oil that has ranged as high as $150 a barrel, a weaker dollar (now worth 95 yen), substantial anti-American sentiment, a federal budget deficit that could reach $1 trillion in your first year, a ballooning national debt of some $10 trillion and a global economic slowdown that will increase instability in numerous countries.
You will take office two decades after the end of the cold war. What some dubbed the unipolar moment is history. Economic, political and military power is held by many hands, not all of which belong to states, not all of which are benign. This does not mean the United States is weak. To the contrary, this country is still the single most powerful entity in the world. But the United States cannot dominate, much less dictate, and expect that others will follow. There are limits to U.S. resources; at the same time the country has serious vulnerabilities. Enron, Abu Ghraib, Katrina and the financial crisis have taken their toll: America's ability to tell others what to do, or to persuade them through example, is much diminished.
Against this backdrop, you will face specific challenges. Many are to be found in the greater Middle East, the part of the world where every president beginning with Jimmy Carter has stubbed his toe. Consider Iraq, the issue that most dominated the foreign policy of Bush. There will be ample time for historians to sort out the wisdom (or lack thereof) of embarking on this costly war of choice. The priorities now are to gradually reduce U.S. force presence, back the integration of Iraq's Sunni minority into national institutions, persuade Arab states to help the government and resume a dialogue with Iran on Iraq's future. The good news is that many of the arrows in Iraq are finally pointing in the right direction and it will not dominate your presidency. The bad news is that you know you are in for a rough ride when Iraq is the good news.
The arrows are pointing in the opposite direction in Afghanistan. The Taliban is gaining ground; security is deteriorating; drugs and corruption are rampant. More U.S. and NATO troops are needed, but any increase will need to be temporary, given rising Afghan nationalism. The chief priority should be training Afghanistan's Army and police. Regular talks are needed with those with a stake in the country's future, including Iran, Pakistan, India, China, Russia and NATO. The government should be encouraged to meet with Taliban leaders willing to accept a ceasefire. Counterdrug efforts, while essential, should be targeted and low-key, lest an alienated populace grow more so.
It may be better to view Afghanistan and Pakistan as one problem, since Pakistan provides sanctuary for the Taliban. Pakistan's government appears unable or unwilling to control its own territory. The country's return to democracy is at best incomplete and fragile; its economy has slowed. The world's second-most-populous Muslim nation—home to 170 million people, several dozen nuclear weapons and many of the world's terrorists, including Al Qaeda—is failing. Promised assistance should continue to flow; additional economic and military aid should be provided to bolster the government, but only if Islamabad accepts conditions on its use. Military incursions targeting terrorists need to be limited to those instances where there is a high likelihood of accomplishing something truly substantial.
Iran constitutes another challenge where the campaign generated more heat than light. If Tehran continues its current progress in enriching uranium, early on in your presidency you will be presented with the choice of attacking Iran (or greenlighting an Israeli attack) or living with a nuclear Iran. Yogi Berra said that when you approach a fork in the road, take it. I respectfully disagree. Neither option is attractive. A military strike may buy some time, but it won't solve the problem. It will, however, lead to Iranian retaliation against U.S. personnel and interests in Iraq and Afghanistan, and much higher oil prices—the last thing the world needs, given the financial crisis. An Iran with nuclear weapons or the capacity to produce them quickly would place the Middle East on a hair trigger and lead several Arab states to embark on nuclear programs of their own.
I would suggest that we work with the Europeans, Russia and China to cobble together a new diplomatic package to present to the Iranians. Ideally, Iran would be persuaded to give up its independent enrichment capability or, if it refused, to consider accepting clear limits on enrichment and intrusive inspections so that the threat is clearly bounded. We should be prepared to have face-to-face talks with the Iranians, without preconditions. In general, it is wiser to see negotiations not as a reward but as a tool of national security.
It will be important, too, to ratchet up diplomacy vis-à-vis the Israelis and Palestinians. The current impasse threatens Israel's future as a secure, democratic, prosperous and Jewish state. It breeds radicalism among Palestinians and throughout the Arab and Muslim worlds, and is a major source of anti-Americanism. What is more, time is working against us: physical and political developments will only make it harder to achieve a two-state solution.
We cannot solve this problem quickly—those Palestinians who are willing to compromise for peace are too weak, and those who are strong are not willing to compromise—but we can bolster Palestinian moderates who, over time, could be partners for Israel. Sooner rather than later you should be prepared to articulate your vision of a fair and stable peace, press Israel to stop settlement activity and push Arab governments and the European Union to do more to raise Palestinian living standards. Hamas should be told that abiding by a ceasefire is a must if it is to participate in any Palestinian election or diplomatic effort.
A New Strategic Framework
Other challenges are equally urgent: contending with a nuclear North Korea; working to moderate a resentful and resurgent Russia; brokering peace between Israel and Syria; and taking steps to stabilize those African countries beset by civil strife. But at the same time, it's important not to lose sight of the fundamentals. Unlike most previous eras, in which the dominant threat was posed by a great-power rival, ours is the era of globalization, in which flows of just about anything—from people, dollars and drugs to arms, greenhouse gases and viruses—move across borders in great volume and with great velocity. Many of these flows represent real threats. The problem is that global arrangements have not kept pace.
The economic institutions created in the wake of World War II (the IMF in particular) require updating. We similarly lack machinery for dealing with climate change, energy security, the spread of nuclear materials, disease and the threat of terrorism. Dean Acheson, Harry Truman's secretary of state, immodestly but accurately titled his memoir "Present at the Creation." Your goal should be no less ambitious: to design and implement a foreign policy that closes the gap between this era's major challenges and the international architecture and rules meant to manage them.
America cannot do this by itself; the challenges of this era have no single national origin and no national solution. Multilateralism is the only realistic way ahead. The operative term is "integration." We need to bring other major powers into the design and operation of the world—before the century is overwhelmed by the forces globalization has unleashed. This will require sustained consultations followed by sustained negotiations. (This poses no problem, as our diplomats are much less stretched than our soldiers.) It will also require American leadership. There is a real opportunity to make progress: many of today's powers understand that they will either cooperate with one another or pay a steep price.
People Matter
There will be time to do detailed interagency reviews of policies toward these and other challenges. Let me make a few general recommendations. First, people matter. Very little about history is inevitable. You have talked about a bipartisan administration, and should make this happen. The next four years promise to be difficult, and you do not want to try to lead the country with narrow majorities.
One of these people deserves special mention. The vice president should be your counselor, a minister without portfolio, and not a cabinet secretary with a specific set of responsibilities. You need someone with an administration-wide perspective who can tell you what you need to hear, even if it isn't always what you want to hear. The one person around you (other than your spouse) you cannot fire is best placed to do this. That said, you should reduce the size and role of the VP's staff. The interagency process is sufficiently sclerotic without adding yet another national-security bureaucracy to the mix.
Avoid big reorganizations. The last two—Homeland Security and the intelligence community—have been less than total successes. Your inbox is sufficiently daunting without the added strain of reorganization; it is rarely a good idea to remodel the operating room when the patient is on the table. The one exception may be energy policy, which has never received the attention it merits. Energy policy is national-security policy.
Facing Up to Facts
Prices have come down recently as demand has dropped off, but recession cannot become our energy policy. Substantial research demonstrates that we can reduce consumption without slowing economic growth. Your campaign didn't talk much about conservation or efficiency, but the greatest potential for making a difference over the next four years is just this. I am talking not about carbon taxes but rather the setting of energy standards for what this country produces and does. We can offer tax breaks and subsidies as long as they are linked to greater efficiency and "greenness." We should devote resources to the development of alternatives, although resources will be in short supply and developing alternatives will take time.
Trade is also worth talking about now, even though it was hardly mentioned after the Ohio primary. By the time you take office it will have been 19 months since the president enjoyed trade promotion authority, which gives him the ability to negotiate complex multilateral trade agreements by limiting Congress to a straight up-or-down vote. Several bilateral free-trade agreements are languishing at considerable cost to our economy and to our relationship with friends such as Colombia.
It will be important to resurrect your ability to negotiate and conclude trade pacts. A new global trade agreement offers the best noninflationary, anti-recession tool for the American and global economies. Estimates are that a new global agreement could add as much as 1 percent growth each year to the U.S. and world economies. Trade brings an added benefit: it is an engine of development for poor countries. Access to the American market can provide jobs and wealth. This will be especially important given that we are unlikely to have as much money for foreign aid.
I'd like to think the arguments in favor of open trade would carry the day, because on the merits they do. The most successful sector of our economy right now consists of firms that export. Imports give consumers choice and keep inflation low. Job losses tend to be tied to technological change, not imports or offshoring. But I've learned that facts are only part of the story in politics. The only way you are likely to win a debate on trade is if you do more to cushion individual workers from the vagaries of modern global life. This means tax-deferred retraining and education accounts, and a health-care option not linked to jobs. So if you are going to press for health care, I suggest you link it to trade.
Trade is not the only area where America needs to make sure we stay open for business. We must encourage others to continue to recycle their dollars here—in part by buying and investing in American companies. We require $2 billion a day just to stay afloat. Blocking legitimate investments can also trigger crises in important bilateral relationships. Such protectionism must be resisted at all costs.
You ran hard against Bush in this campaign, and understandably so, given his historically low approval ratings. But you should be wary of distancing yourself too far from his administration. This is especially important because Bush already distanced himself from himself in his second term. Remarkably, he leaves behind a good deal you can build on: programs to combat HIV/AIDS around the world, diplomatic efforts in the Middle East, a strategic breakthrough with India, important consultative arrangements with China and a good relationship with Brazil, increasingly the anchor of a centrist bloc of South American countries.
One area, however, where you would be wise to put some distance between yourself and "43" involves democracy. America does not have the ability to transform the world. Nor do we have the luxury. We need to focus more on what countries do than on what they are. This is not an argument for ignoring human rights or setting aside our interest in promoting democracy. But we should go slow and focus on building its prerequisites—the checks and balances of civil society and constitutionalism—and not rush elections or impose political change through force. Bush was right when he called for a humble foreign policy. You should practice what he preached.
Let me close where I began. This is a sobering moment in American history. You begin with a good deal of popular support, but mandates must be replenished. I suggest you think of the Oval Office as a classroom, and explain to the American people what we need to accomplish and what it will require. Some 21st-century version of the fireside chat is called for. My reading of things is that the American people are ready to be leveled with. Once the campaign is over, let the leveling begin.
© 2008
Found on November 24, 2008 at http://www.cfr.org/publication/17620/


The Mount Washington Hotel was the scene of the monetary conference. In the summer of 1944, delegates from 44 countries met in the midst of World War II to reshape the world's international financial system.
The location of the meeting - in the plush Mount Washington Hotel in rural Bretton Woods, New Hampshire - was designed to ensure that the delegates would have no distractions, and no pressure from lobbyists or Congressmen, as they worked on their plans for post-war reconstruction.
The meeting was born out of the determination by US President Franklin D Roosevelt and UK Prime Minister Winston Churchill to ensure post-war prosperity through economic co-operation, avoiding the economic conflicts between countries in the 1930s that they believed contributed to the drift to war.
And chairing the proceedings was Henry Morgenthau, the US Treasury Secretary, from the only country that was likely to emerge from the war with a strengthened economy.
President Roosevelt told the conference: "The economic health of every country is a proper matter of concern to all its neighbours, near and distant."
Fixed exchange rates
The meeting was part of the process led by the US to create a new international world order based on the rule of law, which also led to the creation of the United Nations and the strengthening of other international organisations.
The delegates focused on two key issues: how to establish a stable system of exchange rates, and how to pay for rebuilding the war-damaged economies of Europe.
And they established two international organisations to deal with these problems.
The International Monetary Fund was set up to enforce a set of fixed exchange rates that were linked to the dollar.
Countries in balance of payments difficulties could receive short-term help from the IMF to avoid devaluation, and it could sanction changes in exchange rates when necessary.
The World Bank (officially the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development) was set up to make long-term loans "facilitating the investment of capital for productive purposes, including the restoration of economies destroyed or disrupted by war [and] the reconversion of productive facilities to peacetime needs".
A third organisation, the International Trade Organisation, designed to encourage free trade, was still-born when the US refused to ratify its charter in 1947 - although tariff reductions were pursued through the Gatt treaty later.
However, more ambitious proposals from the UK's John Maynard Keynes to set up a world central bank which could issue its own currency (which he called bancor) were rejected by the US.
Keynes hoped a new bank could help reflate the world economy by expanding the money supply.
He also wanted the cost of adjustment shared between countries with trade surpluses and deficits, so that countries with big surpluses would have to revalue their currencies, as well as deficit countries being forced to devalue.
And the US, which contributed the most money to both institutions, also gained the most voting rights, giving it a veto over major policy decisions.
The establishment of a rules-based system of international finance helped restore confidence in the world economy and led to an extraordinary boom in the post-war years.
The US also helped the European recovery by contributing additional funds through the Marshall Plan when the World Bank's efforts proved inadequate.
World trade among developed countries grew rapidly in the 1950s and 1960s, boosting world output and raising the standard of living, especially in Europe and Japan.
The US, still by far the richest country in the world, was happy to provide export markets for its allies, and sent dollars abroad through military and civilian aid which helped lubricate the wheels of commerce.
Breakdown of Bretton Woods
However, by the 1970s, the US currency was under pressure from a combination of factors, including the cost of the Vietnam war and the growing trade deficit.
In 1971, the US under President Nixon unilaterally went off the gold standard and devalued the dollar, a move ratified by the Smithsonian Agreement later that year.
This led to the abandonment of fixed exchange rates and the introduction of floating rates, where the value of all the main currencies was determined by market trading.
Attempts to forge a new Bretton Woods agreement on currencies in the 1970s failed, although the IMF still retained its role of helping countries cope with major currency crises - including Britain in 1976.
The breakdown of Bretton Woods had two consequences.
On the one hand, it led European countries to begin seriously considering closer monetary co-operation, which ultimately led to the creation of the euro in 1999.
Financial globalisation
The rapid reversal of such private sector flows when currencies were threatened with devaluation was the central cause of the Asian financial crisis in 1997-98, which spread to Russia and eventually Argentina.
The resources of the IMF proved inadequate to compensate for the run on their currencies, and the adjustment proved painful, with sharp falls in GDP.
New global rules
Any new agreement would have to recognise the power of the rising economies, such as China and India, and reshape the institutions created more than half a century ago.
Such changes are not likely to be either quick or easy.
You can read and listen to it here:
http://www.oyez.org/cases/1970-1979/1971/1971_70_18/argument/
A good friend posted this on his site: http://www.rightsidepolitics.com/ - I thought it was a good perspective and hopefully one that will be listened to.
Monday, November 10, 2008
By Ann Rodgers, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
BALTIMORE -- Addressing the Catholic bishops of the U.S, their president, Cardinal Francis George of Chicago, said Americans must rejoice that society has changed enough to elect a black president, but he also drew parallels between a long overturned Supreme Court ruling that upheld slavery and the Supreme Court decisions upholding the right to legal abortion.
"The common good can never be adequately incarnated in any society when those waiting to be born can legally be killed as choice," he said to lengthy applause from nearly 300 bishops at the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops meeting in Baltimore.
"If the Supreme Court's Dred Scott decision that African Americans were other people's property and somehow less than persons were still settled, constitutional law, Mr. Obama would not be president of the United States. Today, as was the case 150 years ago, common ground cannot be found by destroying the common good."
In 1857 the Supreme Court ruled that Dred Scott, a slave who had lived for a long time with his master in the free state of Illinois, could not be declared free after his master died. Seven of the nine justices ruled that no slave or descendant of a slave could ever be a U.S. citizen.
Found at http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/08315/926879-100.stm on November 13, 2008.Let us always remember though those cases of rape and incest - those were not a matter of their choice, but rather the evil and malignant choices of another. Also, when the life of the mother is in jeopardy, there should be an understanding about her life too. But with that said and that understanding of when an abortion could make moral sense based on the prayerfull decisions of those involved, that for all other cases of abortion - "The common good can never be adequately incarnated in any society when those waiting to be born can legally be killed as choice." That is powerfully stated.