The new Democratic majority has some good intentions but the following should be considered:
- End the war...enough said, our brothers & sisters do not need to die to end a civil war; send in the Blue Helmets (with our support, but under a foreign commander)
- Free trade (not preferential trade; I don't subscribe to the right-winger takeover of the term) does benefit people as long as there are social programs to help the transition
- In the same line, China is not to be feared, but accepted and recognized
- Our commitments (as Americans) to the international conventions should be paramount (especially Kyoto & the Geneva conventions)
- Universal health insurance is a necessity to protect our workers and protect our competitive advantage.
- Minimum wages do make a difference in ordinary workers' lives (not just 'high-schoolers'). It makes a living wage possible with little if no impact on unemployment.
- Whatever your views, preservation and sustainability of the natural environment is valuable in a social and economic way.
- RELIGION HAS TO BE KEPT SEPARATE FROM POLITICS. I consider myself devoted to my faith (Unitarian Universalist), and to preserve the integrity of all religion, it cannot be drawn into politics (although it should be a lobby on governmental affairs)
- Politics need demonetization; money and corporate influence play too much of a role in politics and hurt the democratic process. Corporations should, if they value their Railroad-era protections, subject themselves to individual campaign limits. If they are persons under U.S. law, they should not donate amounts exceeding those allowed by me or Joe Worker.
- Education needs to be held as sacred; funded & enhanced and devoid of religious indoctrination.
- While this re-emphasizes an earlier point about the Geneva Conventions, the U.S. should actually condemn torture and desist from using the controversial interrogation tactics. I have met individuals unfairly targeted (and jailed) by the U.S. in the so-called "Global War on Terror" whose only crime was being Muslim. I have also met people tortured under U.S. policy in Latin America (the person I met was subjected to what is now euphemized as 'waterboarding').
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