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Are you one of those people who is always
wondering, "what can I do to help?" The
Democratic Party of Orange County (and the
Democratic Party of California) has an answer!
You can sign up with the new
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Check
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interested,
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She will forward your information to the proper
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We need
you to help prepare for wins in the November
election, and to prepare for the Presidential
election in 2008!
Everyone should see the movie
"An Inconvenient Truth" If this
doesn't get you interested in activism, nothing
will! Al Gore tells it like it REALLY is, and
at the end of the film, you'll see many things,
small and large, that you can do. Go see it
now!
Yes, we do have
Meetups! Go to Meetup.com
and put in your
zip code to find the Meetups near you.We
have a meetup in Santa Ana on Wednesday, August
8, Spoons California Grill
2601 Hotel
Terrace (Dyer exit off 55) Turn right at Grand,
left at Hotel Terr
Santa Ana , CA 92705,
7:00 pm, and also regular South County meetups
at El Adobe in San Juan Capistrano (buffet at 6
pm, meeting at 7 pm).
Sent by a friend.
Lengthy, but quite to the
point...
The
only way we can truly effect change and take
back America is to stop
allowing others to conquer and divide, reach
out across "party" lines
on the issues, and elect those who can truly
make a difference.
==============================================
This is an excerpt
from Lee Iacocca's book. He has put
into words what many of us are
trying to verbalize
ourselves. I think this is
something that really
should be passed along to as many
people as possible.
It unites us in the way we
question our current
leadership. (The text has been
verified by
snopes.com.)
Where Have All the Leaders
Gone?
By Lee Iacocca with Catherine
Whitney
Had enough? Am I the only guy in
this country who's
fed up with what's happening? Where the
hell is our
outrage? We should
be screaming bloody murder. We've
got a gang of clueless bozos steering
our ship of
state right over a
cliff, we've got corporate
gangsters stealing us blind, and we
can't even clean
up after a
hurricane much less build a hybrid car.
But
instead of getting mad, everyone sits
around and nods
their heads when
the politicians say, "Stay the
course." Stay the course?
You've got to be kidding.
This is America, not the damned
Titanic. I'll give you
a sound bite: Throw the bums out!
You might think I'm
getting senile, that I've gone off my
rocker, and
maybe I have. But
someone has to speak up.
I hardly recognize
this country anymore. The President
of the United States is given a free
pass to ignore
the Constitution,
tap our phones, and lead us to war
on a pack of lies. Congress responds to
record
deficits by passing
a huge tax cut for the wealthy
(thanks, but I don't need it). The most
famous
business leaders
are not the innovators but the guys
in handcuffs. While we're fiddling in
Iraq, the Middle
East is burning and
nobody seems to know what to do.
And the press is waving pom-poms
instead of asking
hard questions.
That's not the promise of America my
parents and yours traveled across the
ocean for.
I've had enough. How about
you? I'll go a step
further. You can't call yourself a
patriot if you're
not outraged. This
is a fight I'm ready and willing to
have. My friends tell me to calm
down. They say,
"Lee, you're
eighty-two years old. Leave the rage
to
the young people." I'd love to?
As soon as I can pry
them away from their iPods for five
seconds and get
them to pay
attention. I'm going to speak up
because
it's my patriotic
duty. I think people will listen to
me. They say I have a reputation as a
straight
shooter. So I'll
tell you how I see it, and it's not
pretty, but at least it's real. I'm
hoping to strike a
nerve in those young folks who say they
don't vote
because they don't
trust politicians to represent
their interests.
Hey, America, wake
up. These guys work for us.
Who
are these guys, anyway? Why are we in
this mess? How
did we end up with
this crowd in Washington? Well, we
voted for them. Or at least some of us
did. But I'll
tell you what we
didn't do. We didn't agree to suspend
the Constitution. We didn't agree to stop
asking
questions or
demanding answers. Some of us are
sick
and tired of people
who call free speech treason.
Where I come from that's a
dictatorship, not a
democracy.
And don't tell me
it's all the fault of right-wing
Republicans or liberal Democrats.
That's an
intellectually lazy
argument, and it's part of the
reason we're in this stew. We're
not just a nation of
factions. We're a people. We share
common principles
and ideals. And we
rise and fall together. Where
are
the voices of leaders who can inspire
us to action and
make us stand
taller? What happened to the strong
and
resolute party of Lincoln? What
happened to the
courageous,
populist party of FDR and Truman?
There
was a time in this
country when the voices of great
leaders lifted us up and made us want
to do better.
Where have all the
leaders gone?
The Test of a Leader
I've never been
Commander-in-Chief, but I've been a
CEO. I understand a few things about
leadership at the
top. I've figured
out nine points. Not ten (I don't
want people accusing me of thinking I'm
Moses). I call
them the "Nine Cs
of Leadership."
They're not fancy
or complicated. Just clear, obvious
qualities that every true leader should
have. We
should look at how
the current administration stacks
up. Like it or not, this crew is
going to be around
until January 2009. Maybe we can learn
something
before we go to the
polls in 2008. Then let's be sure
we use the leadership test to screen
the candidates
who say they want
to run the country. It's up to us to
choose wisely.
So, here's my C
list:
A leader has to show CURIOSITY. He has to listen to
people outside of the "Yes, sir" crowd
in his inner
circle. He has to
read voraciously, because the world
is a big, complicated place. George W.
Bush brags
about never reading
a newspaper. "I just scan the
headlines," he says. Am I hearing this
right? He's the
President of the
United States and he never reads a
newspaper? Thomas Jefferson once said,
"Were it left
to me to decide
whether we should have a government
without newspapers, or newspapers
without a
government, I
should not hesitate for a moment to
prefer the latter."
Bush disagrees. As
long as he gets his daily hour in
the gym, with Fox News piped through
the sound system,
he's ready to
go. If a leader never steps
outside
his comfort zone to
hear different ideas, he grows
stale. If he doesn't put his
beliefs to the test, how
does he know he's right? The inability
to listen is a
form of arrogance.
It means either you think you
already know it all, or you just don't
care.
Before the 2006 election, George Bush
made a big point
of saying he didn't
listen to the polls. Yeah, that's
what they all say when the polls stink.
But maybe he
should have
listened, because 70 percent of the
people
were saying he was
on the wrong track. It took a
"thumping" on election day to wake him
up, but even
then you got the
feeling he wasn't listening so much
as he was calculating how to do a
better job of
convincing everyone
he was right.
A leader has to be CREATIVE, go out on a limb, and be
willing to try something
different. You know, think
outside the box. George Bush prides
himself on never
changing, even as
the world around him is spinning out
of control. God forbid someone should
accuse him of
flip-flopping.
There's a disturbingly messianic fervor
to his
certainty. Senator
Joe Biden recalled a conversation
he had with Bush a few months after our
troops marched
into Baghdad. Joe
was in the Office outlining his
concerns to the President? The
explosive mix of Shiite
and Sunni, the disbanded Iraqi army,
the problems
securing the oil
fields. "The President was serene,
Joe recalled. "He told me he was sure
that we were on
the right course
and that all would be well. 'Mr.
President,' I finally said, 'how can
you be so sure
when you don't yet
know all the facts?'" Bush then
reached over and put a steadying hand
on Joe's
shoulder. "My
instincts," he said. "My instincts."
Joe
was flabbergasted. He told Bush, "Mr.
President, your
instincts aren't
good enough." Joe Biden sure didn't
think the matter was settled. And, as
we all know now,
it
wasn't.
Leadership is all about managing
change? Whether
you're leading a
company or leading a country. Things
change, and you get creative. You
adapt. Maybe Bush
was absent the day
they covered that at Harvard
Business School.
A leader has to
COMMUNICATE. I'm not talking about
running off at the mouth or spouting
sound bites. I'm
talking about
facing reality and telling the truth.
Nobody in the current administration
seems to know how
to talk straight
anymore. Instead, they spend most of
their time trying to convince us that
things are not
really as bad as
they seem. I don't know if it's
denial or dishonesty, but it can start
to drive you
crazy after a
while. Communication has to start
with
telling the truth,
even when it's painful. The war in
Iraq has been, among other things, a
grand failure of
communication. Bush
is like the boy who didn't cry
wolf when the wolf was at the door.
After years of
being told that all
is well, even as the casualties
and chaos mount, we've stopped
listening to him.
A leader has to be a person of
CHARACTER. That means
knowing the difference between right
and wrong and
having the guts to
do the right thing. Abraham Lincoln
once said, "If you want to test a man's
character,
give him power."
George Bush has a lot of power. What
does it say about his character? Bush
has shown a
willingness to take
bold action on the world stage
because he has the power, but he shows
little regard
for the grievous
consequences. He has sent our troops
(not to mention hundreds of thousands
of innocent
Iraqi citizens) to
their deaths? For what? To build
our oil reserves? To avenge his daddy
because Saddam
Hussein once tried
to have him killed? To show his
daddy he's tougher? The motivations
behind the war in
Iraq are
questionable, and the execution of the
war
has been a disaster. A man of character
does not ask a
single soldier to
die for a failed policy.
A leader must have
COURAGE. I'm talking about balls.
(That even goes for female leaders.)
Swagger isn't
courage. Tough talk
isn't courage. George Bush comes
from a blue- blooded Connecticut
family, but he likes
to talk like a cowboy. You know, my gun
is bigger than
your gun. Courage
in the twenty-first century doesn't
mean posturing and bravado. Courage is
a commitment to
sit down at the
negotiating table and talk.
If
you're a politician, courage means
taking a position
even when you know
it will cost you votes. Bush can't
even make a public appearance unless
the audience has
been handpicked and
sanitized. He did a series of
so-called town hall meetings last year,
in auditoriums
packed with his
most devoted fans. The questions were
all softballs.
To be a leader
you've got to have CONVICTION. A fire
in your belly.
You've got to have passion. You've
got
to really want to get something done.
How do you
measure fire in the
belly? Bush has set the all-time
record for number of vacation days
taken by a U.S.
President? Four
hundred and counting. He'd rather
clear brush on his ranch than immerse
himself in the
business of
governing. He even told an
interviewer
that the high point
of his presidency so far was
catching a seven-and-a-half-pound perch
in his
hand-stocked
lake. It's no better on Capitol
Hill.
Congress was in
session only ninety-seven days in
2006. That's eleven days less than the
record set in
1948, when
President Harry Truman coined the
term
do-nothing
Congress. Most people would expect to
be
fired if they worked so little and had
nothing to show
for it. But
Congress managed to find the time to
vote
itself a raise.
Now, that's not leadership.
A leader should
have CHARISMA . I'm not talking about
being flashy. Charisma is the quality
that makes
people want to
follow you. It's the ability to
inspire. People follow a leader because
they trust
him. That's my
definition of charisma. Maybe George
Bush is a great guy to hang out with at
a barbecue or
a ball game. But
put him at a global summit where the
future of our planet is at stake, and
he doesn't look
very presidential. Those frat-boy
pranks and the
kidding around he
enjoys so much don't go over that
well with world leaders. Just ask
German Chancellor
Angela Merkel, who
received an unwelcome shoulder
massage from our President at a G-8
Summit. When he
came up behind her
and started squeezing, I thought
she was going to go right through the
roof.
A leader has to be COMPETENT. That
seems obvious,
doesn't it? You've
got to know what you're doing. More
important than that, you've got to
surround yourself
with people who
know what they're doing. Bush brags
about being our first MBA president.
Does that make
him competent?
Well, let's see. Thanks to our first
MBA President, we've got the largest
deficit in
history, social
Security is on life support, and
we've
run up a
half-a-trillion dollar price tag (so far)
in
Iraq. And that's just for starters. A
leader has to be
a problem solver,
and the biggest problems we face as
a nation seem to be on the back
burner.
You can't be a leader if you don't have
COMMON SENSE.
I call this Charlie
Meacham's rule. When I was a young
guy just starting out in the car
business, one of my
first jobs was as Ford's zone manager
in Wilkes-Barre,
Pennsylvania. My
boss was a guy named Charlie, who was
the East Coast regional manager.
Charlie was a big
Southerner, with a
warm drawl, a huge smile, and a
core of steel. Charlie used to tell
me," Remember,
Lee, the only thing
you've got going for you as a
human being is your ability to reason
and your common
sense. If you don't
know a dip of horseshit from a dip
of vanilla ice cream, you'll never make
it." George
Bush doesn't have
common sense. He just has a lot of
sound bites, you know?
Mr. "they'll-welcome-us-as-liberators,
no-child-left-behind,-heck-of-a-job-Brownie,-mission
accomplished Bush". Former
President Bill Clinton once
said,
"I grew up in an alcoholic home. I
spent half my childhood trying
to
get into the
reality-based world. And I like it
here." I think
our
current President
should visit the real world once in a
while.
The biggest C is CRISIS. Leaders are made, not
born.
Leadership is
forged in times of crisis. It's easy
to
sit there with your feet up on the desk
and talk
theory. Or send
someone else's kids off to war when
you've never seen a battlefield
yourself. It's another
thing to lead when your world comes
tumbling down. On
September 11, 2001,
we needed a strong leader more
than any other time in our history. We
needed a steady
hand to guide us
out of the ashes. Where was
George
Bush? He was
reading a story about a pet goat to
kids
in Florida when he
heard about the attacks. He kept
sitting there for twenty minutes with a
baffled look
on his face. It's
all on tape. You can see it for
yourself.
Then, instead of taking the quickest
route back to
Washington and
immediately going on the air to
reassure the panicked people of this
country, he
decided it wasn't
safe to return to the White House.
He basically went into hiding for the
day. And he told
Vice President Dick
Cheney to stay put in his bunker.
We were all frozen in front of our TVs,
scared out of
our wits, waiting
for our leaders to tell us that we
were going to be okay, and there was
nobody home. It
took Bush a couple
of days to get his bearings and
devise the right photo-op at Ground
Zero.
That was George Bush's moment of truth,
and he was
paralyzed. And what
did he do when he'd regained his
composure? He led us down the road to
Iraq. A road his
own father had
considered disastrous when he was
President. But Bush didn't listen to
Daddy. He
listened to a
higher father. He prides himself on
being faith based, not reality
based.
If that doesn't scare the crap out of
you, I don't
know what
will.
A Hell of a Mess
So here's where we
stand:
We're immersed in a bloody war with no
plan for
winning and no plan
for leaving.
We're running the
biggest deficit in the history of
the country.
We're losing the manufacturing edge to
Asia, while
health care costs
are slaughtering our once-great
companies.
Gas prices are skyrocketing, and nobody
in power has a
coherent energy
policy.
Our schools are in
trouble.
Our borders are
like sieves.
The middle class is
being squeezed every which way.
These are times that cry out for
leadership. But
when you look around, you've got to
ask: "Where have
all the leaders
gone?" Where are the curious,
creative communicators? Where are the
people of
character, courage,
conviction, competence, and common
sense?
I may be a sucker for alliteration, but
I think you
get the
point.
Name me a leader who has a better idea
for homeland
security than
making us take off our shoes in
airports
and throw away our
shampoo. We've spent billions of
dollars building a huge new
bureaucracy, and all we
know how to do is react to things that
have already
happened.
Name me one leader
who emerged from the crisis of
Hurricane Katrina. Congress has yet to
spend a single
day evaluating the
response to the hurricane, or
demanding accountability for the
decisions that were
made in the crucial hours after the
storm. Everyone's
hunkering down,
fingers crossed, hoping it doesn't
happen again.
Now, that's just crazy. Storms happen.
Deal with it.
Make a plan.
Figure out what you're going to do
the
next time.
Name me an industry
leader who is thinking creatively
about how we can restore our
competitive edge in
manufacturing. Who would have believed
that there
could ever be a
time when "the Big Three" referred to
Japanese car companies?
How did this happen? And more
important, what are we
going to do about it?
Name me a government leader who can
articulate a plan
for paying down the
debt, or solving the energy
crisis, or managing the health care
problem.
The silence is
deafening. But these are the crises
that are eating away at our country and
milking the
middle class
dry.
I have news for the
gang in Congress. We didn't elect
you to sit on your asses and do nothing
and remain
silent while our
democracy is being hijacked and our
greatness is being replaced with
mediocrity.
What is everybody
so afraid of? That some bobblehead
on Fox News will call them a name? Give
me a break.
Why don't you guys
show some spine for a change?
Had enough? Hey, I'm not trying
to be the voice of
gloom and doom here. I'm trying to
light a fire. I'm
speaking out
because I have hope. I believe in
America. In my lifetime I've had the
privilege of
living through some
of America's greatest moments.
I've also
experienced some of our worst crises?
The
Great Depression, World War II, the
Korean War, the
Kennedy
assassination, the Vietnam War, the 1970s
oil
crisis, and the struggles of recent
years culminating
with
9/11.
If I've learned one thing, it's this:
You don't get
anywhere by
standing on the sidelines waiting for
somebody else to take action. Whether
it's building a
better car or
building a better future for our
children, we all have a role to
play. That's the
challenge I'm raising in this book.
It's a call to
action for people
who, like me, believe in America.
It's not too late, but it's getting
pretty close.
So let's shake off the horseshit and go
to work. Let's
tell
'em all we've had enough.
Excerpted from
Where Have All the Leaders Gone?
(Copyright) 2007 by Lee Iacocca. All
rights reserved.
"Never doubt that a
small group of committed people can change the
world. It's the only thing that ever
has." --Margaret
Mead