Another post -
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=show_topic&forum=104&topic_id=3802031#...says "what we need is a good, concise, easily understandable . . .populist program . . . a 7-Point Plan, if you will (7 being the number because 10 seems too big , and 5 not big enough) . . . the goal of which would be to return the United States and its governance to the people . . . the seven points I'd like to see included are:
1. Ending the war in Iraq.
2. Restoring the right of privacy.
3. Restoring citizen authority over corporations.
4. Universal healthcare.
5. Preserving Social Security and Medicare/Medicaid.
6. Protecting the environment (and creating new industries).
7. Transitioning from the oil economy.
I've been wanting to get Dennis Kucinich's and Bernie Sanders' positions in front of DU for a while. See Bernie's positions at
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=104x3803055So what do you think of Dennis' positions?
http://www.kucinich.us/issues/(note - for each area under "read more, go to his website for active links).
Kucinich on the Issues
I want to inspire America to take a new path, a different direction. I envision an America which has the capacity to reconnect with the heart of the world; an America which proceeds in the world optimistically and courageously. An America which understands that the world is interdependent, that it is inter-connected, and that what we do today impacts future generations.
I want to break the shackles of fear which have deprived our citizens of rights. We need to change the way this country values humanity, so that instead of fear and lies, we can live our lives based on principles of peace and hope. We need to regain the trust of the American people and we need to have a government which trusts the American people.
It's time for America to resume its glorious journey; time to reject shrinking jobs and wages, disappearing savings and rights; time to reject the detour towards fear and greed. It's time to look out upon the world for friends, not enemies; time to counter the control of corporations over our politics, our economy, our resources, and mass media. It's time for those who have much to help those who have little, by maintaining a progressive tax structure. It's time to tell the world that we wish to be their partner in peace, not their leader in war. Most of all, it is time for America to again be the land where dreams come true, because the government is on the side of its people.
Ten Key Issues
Universal Health Care
International Cooperation: US out of Iraq, UN in
Jobs and Withdrawal from NAFTA and WTO
Repeal of the "Patriot Act"
Guaranteed Quality Education, Pre-K Through College
Full Social Security Benefits at Age 65
Right-to-Choose, Privacy, and Civil Rights
Balance Between Workers and Corporations
Environmental Renewal and Clean Energy
Restored Rural Communities and Family Farms
1. Universal Health Care Over 43 million Americans have no health care and 30 million more have only minimal coverage. Those with coverage often pay exorbitant amounts. The current profit-driven system, dominated by private insurance firms and their bureaucracies, has failed.
We must establish streamlined national health insurance, Enhanced Medicare for All. It would be publicly-financed health care, privately delivered, and will put patients and doctors back in control of the system. Coverage will be more complete than private insurance plans; encourage prevention; and include prescription drugs, dental care, mental health care, and alternative and complementary medicine.
Read more:
Universal Health Care
Prescription Drugs
Medicare Bill
Complementary and Alternative Medicine
Medical Marijuana
Mental Health
Disability Rights
Back to list
2. International Cooperation: US out of Iraq, UN in America must return to its role as the most admired -- not hated -- nation. The doctrine of "pre-emption" must be retired, as well as the current aggressive, unilateralist foreign policy that makes our homeland less secure, not more. Our security will be enhanced by working with other nations and the UN instead of acting like an Empire, arrogantly undermining international agsreements such as the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty, the Biological and Chemical Weapons Conventions, the Small Arms Treaty, the International Criminal Court, and the Kyoto Climate Treaty. I continue to work to implement two measures I sponsored in Congress: the Space Preservation Treaty, which bans space-based weapons, and a cabinet-level Department of Peace, to establish nonviolence as an organizing principle in both domestic and international affairs.
We must cut bloated and unneeded weaponry from a military budget that now almost equals the military spending of all other countries combined. The resulting peace dividend can then be invested in education, health care, environmental clean-up, urban infrastructure, Social Security, veterans' benefits, and other pressing domestic needs.
Read more:
Iraq
International Cooperation
Aid to Africa
AIDS
Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty
Cuban Embargo
Department of Peace
Depleted Uranium
Haiti
Korea
Middle East
Military Spending
National Security
Nuclear Weapons
Veterans
Terrorism
Weapons and Non-Proliferation
World Hunger
Back to list
3. Jobs and Withdrawal from NAFTA and WTO The global trade regime of NAFTA and WTO has enriched multinational corporations. But for workers, family farmers, and the environment, it has meant a global race to the bottom. Companies leave the U.S. in search of low wages, low commodity prices, anti-union climates, and lax environmental laws. NAFTA has been used to whipsaw workers at the negotiation table, forcing wages and benefit concessions under threat of moving jobs overseas. Trade treaties must be conditioned on workers' rights, human rights, and environmental principles.
The U.S. must withdraw from NAFTA and the WTO -- and replace these with bilateral fair trade agreements.
Read more:
Trade
Sweat Shops
Cuban Embargo
Jobs and Infrastructure
H-1B and L-1 Visas
Outsourcing Jobs
Back to list
4. Repeal of the "Patriot Act" The "Patriot Act" is not what American patriots have fought and died for. To allow our Bill of Rights to be nullified without judicial supervision invites tyranny. The Attorney General has been handed unfettered power to wiretap, search, jail, and invade our most sacred right to privacy. The government must not be allowed, without probable cause or warrant, to snoop on our communications, medical records, library records, and student records.
Read more:
Patriot Act
Civil Liberties
Back to list
5. Guaranteed Quality Education, Pre-K Through College Since education is the only proven way to reduce poverty, it is unacceptable that a child's education be dependent on where they are born or the financial status of their family. The federal government spends only 2.9% of its budget on education. This must change. Quality education is a core American right and value.
Education must emphasize creative and critical thinking, not just test-taking. Schools need money to decrease class size, increase teachers' salaries, renovate decaying facilities, and include hands-on job training for those not going to college. Pre-kindergarten and after-school programs should get increased funding, and the soaring costs of college must be reversed.
Read more:
Education
Vouchers
Children's Issues
The Arts
Back to list
6. Full Social Security Benefits at Age 65 Social security is the basic covenant our society has with workers who have built our economy. At a time when CEOs earn 531 times the pay of the average worker, it is unconscionable not to return full retirement benefits to age 65.
This can be accomplished through a progressive tax structure and reordered national priorities. Social Security must not be privatized. Retirement years cannot be dependent on the rise and fall of the stock market.
Read more:
Social Security and Pension Protection
Seniors
Taxes
Back to list
7. Right-to-Choose, Privacy, and Civil Rights A woman's right-to-choose must be protected as essential to personal privacy and gender equality. Only those who agree to uphold Roe v. Wade should be nominated for the Supreme Court. Civil rights (and voting rights) enforcement must be intensified. Lesbians and gays must be afforded complete equality throughout society, including in marriage. Affirmative action must be maintained as a tool for racial and gender equality. Drug policy should emphasize treatment over criminalization, and not a rampaging war that erodes Constitutional freedoms, privacy, and law enforcement resources. An end to capital punishment must be sought.
Read more:
Reproductive Rights
DC Statehood
Voting Rights
LGBTQ Rights
Affirmative Action
Drug War
Marijuana Decriminalization
Death Penalty
Back to list
8. Balance Between Workers and Corporations American workers are working longer and harder for less pay than 20 years ago. What is needed is a resurgence of organized labor; the rights of workers to organize and bargain collectively must be tenaciously defended. Since the purchasing power of the minimum wage has dropped 21% in two decades, it's time for living wages, not minimum wages. And it's time to reverse tax cuts that benefit only the wealthiest Americans. Investing $500 billion to rebuild schools, roads, bridges, ports, and sewage, water and environmental systems will do more to stimulate our economy than tax breaks for the wealthy.
Read more:
Workers' Rights
Taxes
Corporate Power
Economic Justice
Minimum Wage
Small Business Growth
Public Services
Back to list
9. Environmental Renewal and Clean Energy Clean air and water, as well as an intact ozone layer, are not luxuries, but necessities for our children's future.
The U.S. must toughen environmental enforcement; support the Kyoto Treaty on global climate change; reduce oil dependence; and spur investment in alternative energy sources, including hydrogen, solar, wind, and ocean. Clean energy technologies will produce new jobs. Tax and other incentives will favor sustainable businesses that conserve energy, retrofit pollution prevention technologies, and redesign toxins out of their manufacturing processes. The right to know (for example, when food is genetically engineered) must supersede corporate secrecy. Globally, the U.S. should become a leader in sustainable energy production and a partner with developing nations in providing inexpensive, local, renewable energy technologies.
Read more:
Clean Air
Clean Water
Electronic Waste
Energy
Environment
Forests and Logging on Public Lands
Genetically Engineered Food
Hemp
Nuclear Safety
Organic Farming
Back to list
10. Restored Rural Communities and Family Farms Agriculture, trade, and economic policies that favor agribusiness conglomerates have devastated family farmers, rural communities, and the environment. While the number of family farmers has plummeted, profits have soared for a handful of agribusiness giants that increasingly control everything from seed to shelf.
Agricultural monopolies must be broken up and a strong, independent family farm system restored, with fair prices for farmers and healthy food for consumers. Contamination of our air, water, and food from factory farms must be monitored, with strong USDA enforcement of tough new food safety laws.
Read more:
Farm Policy
Genetically Engineered Food
Organic Farming
Mad Cow Disease
Go to
http://www.kucinich.us/issues/ for links to these other issues (see right side of page)
Campaign Issues:
Campaign Finance
Campaign Reform and Instant Runoff Voting
Electronic Voting
Media Reform
Open Debates
Crime/Law Issues:
Crime
Death Penalty
Drug war
Gun Laws, Gun Rights & Violence
Mandatory Minimum Sentences
Marijuana Decriminalization
Economic/Financial Issues:
Corporate Power
Economic Justice
Farm Policy
H-1B and L-1 Visas
Jobs Programs / Infrastructure
Manufacturing
Minimum Wage
Outsourcing Jobs
Public Services
Small Business Growth
Social Security and Pension Protection
Space Exploration
Taxes
Workers' Rights
Environmental Issues:
Clean Air
Clean Water
Electronic Waste
Energy
Environment
Forests and Logging on Public Lands
Genetically Engineered Food
Hemp
Nuclear Safety
Organic Farming
Family/Social Issues:
The Arts
Children's Issues
Domestic Violence
Education
Housing
Poverty
Predatory Lending
Seniors
Vouchers
Health Issues:
AIDS
Complementary/Alternative Medicine
Mad Cow Disease
Medical Marijuana
Medicare Bill
Mental Health
Prescription Drugs
Universal Health Care
International Issues:
AIDS
Aid to Africa
Cuban Embargo
Haiti
International Cooperation
Iraq
Korea
Middle East
Sweat Shops
Trade
World Hunger
Military/Defense Issues:
Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty
Department of Peace
Depleted Uranium
The Draft
Military Spending
National Security
Nuclear Weapons
Terrorism
Veterans
Weapons & Non-Proliferation
Race/Ethnicity Issues:
Affirmative Action
African American Issues
American Indians and Hawaiian and Alaskan Natives
Arab Americans
Irish Americans
Racial Discrimination
Rights Issues:
Animal Rights
Civil Liberties
DC Statehood
Disability Rights
Immigrants' Rights
LGBTQ Rights
Patriot Act
Reproductive Rights
Voting Rights
Water as a Human Right
Workers' Rights