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Governor Bill Richardson for President

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They’re Beating Me Up!

Posted by Tom Awtry on November 18, 2007

My Beliefs, Life & TimesI’m American who has been residing in Thailand for the past fifteen years and have heard, not from the Thai people, but from international expats and travelers about their concerns on Global Warming and the US’s lack of enacting policies to address this issue.

It’s a tough battle defending this issue for me, knowing that we failed to sign the Kyoto Agreement years back and also being aware this same agreement will soon expire within the next four years; and the US, to date as not produced an alternative plan to replace the Kyoto agreement. For that fact, I haven’t even heard our present administration evening beginning a plan in earnest to address Global Warming.

What I have learned, we have a number of technology companies in the US diligently working on ways to develop Renewable Energy, such as wind power and spent nuclear fuels, but their progress has been limited by funding. It’s my feeling these companies, along with new start-up companies, should be encouraged with greater tax incentives, and equally investors in these companies should also receive tax incentives for their investments.

I also believe, we as Americans, in our homes and workplace’s can be creative and come up with ways to “re-use” what we discard or replace energy consuming devices with more efficient methods. Presently with oil nearing $100 a barrel we’re almost forced to converse energy, but I’m not talking about “conservation”; I’m referring to with “new concepts” and “alternative methods”, in our everyday lives to implement “renewable energy”.

I’m a Democrat, and my candidate for president is Governor Bill Richardson, for two reasons; first his policy on ending the war in Iraq, and second, I firmly believe he has the needed experience in the field on Energy, since in a past administration he held the position of Secretary of Energy, under the Clinton Administration. I’ve listened to the televised debates and read his plans on both of these aforementioned concerns and feel his plans offer the optimum solutions.

Please listen to what Governor Richardson has to say about Renewable Energy.

 

“The future is renewable energy”

Former Energy Secretary Gov. Bill Richardson discusses solutions to the energy challenges facing the United States at the CNN Debate in Las Vegas, Nevada.
November 16, 2007

Related:
U.N. Chief Seeks More Climate Change Leadership
NYT & Washingtonby ELISABETH ROSENTHAL
UN Panel Gives Dire Warming Forecast
ABC News: Intl
U.N. Global Warming Report Sternly Warns Against Inaction
Wash Post – Politics by Doug Struck
Court’s Fuel-Economy Ruling May Prod Congress to Set Even Higher Requirements
NYT & Washington by MICHELINE MAYNARD
Midwest governors take up climate change
UPI – Top News
Video: Strong warming warning
MSNBC.com: Video

Bill Richardson for President 2008

The Governor’s Presidential Campaign’s web site is here.

Here’s what I’m following

Please Note:
This URL Address of https://tdadigital.wordpress.com/ is the Official and only address of Tom Awtry’s Blog. Those copying this Blog should read this article here, closely.

Posted in My Candidate | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment »

Governor Richardson and Energy

Posted by Tom Awtry on November 17, 2007

My Beliefs, Life & TimesI can’t exactly remember how long ago I read the Exxon had one of the largest profit earnings ever in the company’s history, but when oil is near $100.00 a barrel and we may be headed for a recession; I think it’s time a presidential candidate come forward with a sound plan addressing our energy needs and conservation in the future.

What ever plan is implemented, by who ever, is going to hurt and as an American I know I’ll resist the change in my driving habits and perhaps auto performance when a plan is enacted. So, if I’m going to suffer these burdens I want an energy plan that works and I feel Governor Bill Richardson’s plan makes the most sense.

Also, I trust in him, since he is the only candidate that has the needed experience to devise and implement an affect plan that will hopefully reduce America’s dependence on foreign oil.

Please consider rendering a careful review of Governor Richardson’s Energy Plan and the video where Mr. Lee Iacocca and the Governor discuss possible future goals.

Related News Articles:
Chavez Uses OPEC Summit To Blast U.S.
CBS News.com
Bush, Confident on Economy, Vetoes Domestic Spending Billfrom
NYT – Washington by EDMUND L. ANDREWS and ROBERT PEAR
‘It’s all about the energy, stupid!’
MSNBC.com: Politics
Economy tops concern list
UPI – Top News
Lawmakers Grapple with How to Cut Oil Dependency
NPR Topics: Politics

 

Gov. Bill Richardson and Lee Iacocca on Money & Politics

New Mexico Governor and Democratic Presidential candidate Bill Richardson appears with former Chrysler CEO and Richardson supporter Lee Iacocca on Bloomberg TV’s Money & Politics.
November 14, 2007

Energy

 

We must “Act Boldly and Act Now” in order to make America a Clean Energy Nation like I made New Mexico a Clean Energy State. Consider this a call to action, for Congress, the energy industry, and the public. I am calling for a New American Revolution — an energy and climate revolution.

 

Cut Oil Demand: 50% by 2020

 

That means reducing oil imports from around 65% to 10-15%. We can do this in part by getting the 100 mile per gallon (mpg) car into the marketplace. We must work to double the Corporate Average Fuel Economy standards, or CAFE, to 50 mpg by 2020. And we will set a life-cycle low-carbon fuel standard that reduces the carbon impact of our liquid fuels by 30% by 2020.

 

Create New Efficiencies And Energy Sources in the Electrical Sector: 50% by 2040

 

I am calling for a national renewable portfolio standard of 30% by 2020 that will rise to 50% by 2040. This is aggressive, but necessary as we start using more electricity for automobiles. I will push for an energy productivity law requiring a 20% improvement in energy productivity by 2020. We could save customers $21 billion a year by 2020.

 

Dramatically Reduce Greenhouse Gas Emissions: 90% by 2050

 

20% by 2020, 80% by 2040 — ten years faster than scientists say is necessary because we must lead the world, and we can’t afford the possibility of backsliding and inaction. We will start with a market-based cap and trade system for greenhouse gas emissions to create incentives for the electric and industrial sectors to make significant reductions in their carbon emissions. Economists say the world can protect itself from drastic climate change at a cost of 1-3% of our economic activity. We can afford to protect the climate. Given the risks of catastrophic climate change, we can’t afford not to do it.

 

Lead By Example and Restore America as the World’s Leader

 

We must return to the international negotiating table and support mandatory world-wide limits on global warming pollution. We will work closely with fast-growing nations. I will cooperate with the European Union, the World Bank, and other allies to help finance the incremental cost of “doing it right.” I will create a North American Energy Council with Mexico and Canada, which supply about 20% of our oil, and make sure our relations with these neighbors are firm and friendly. As we reduce our demand for foreign oil, we should work with the Persian Gulf nations, and our partners at the UN, to create a multilateral system for protecting the Persian Gulf so that within ten years, the U.S. presence there could be sharply and safely reduced.

 

Get It All Done Without Breaking the Bank

 

We will raise some revenue, from the sales of carbon permits, for example. Further, I will get out the “green scissors” to cut back on wrongly-placed tax subsidies. Over time, this program will yield huge productivity increases in our economy, as well as significant budget savings and revenues. We will create more than ten times as much value in the American economy by reducing our oil imports as we spend to make this program happen.

 

Invite the Oil Companies to Become Energy Companies

 

I know people love to hate the oil companies. They have been raking in huge profits. But I want to invite them to become energy companies, and invest in our thriving new energy economy. They are invited to the table, but they aren’t going to run the table the way they have for the last six years.

 

The Bottom Line

 

Americans need energy to get to work, we need heat and electricity in our homes, schools and workplaces. We are hurt by unpredictable energy price cycles, and by our nation’s energy policy failures. The way out of the cycle is to create competition, to support energy productivity, new technologies and alternative fuels. And everyone — every American — must make an effort to make us energy independent and combat global warming. Our national security and our planet depend on it. It’s about creating a new energy economy here in the United States, and doing it quickly, with broad, bold strokes. It’s the way to a bright, strong, prosperous future for the United States — and for the world. I called for an energy revolution — and now, today, I call on you to join it.

 

The aforementioned may also be found here.

Related Documents:

Bill Richardson for President 2008

The Governor’s Presidential Campaign’s web site is here.

I’ve seen many blogs where there owners copied articles from established web sites, and in some cases implying the scripted content was authored by themselves, which I dislike and disapprove of. It may appear in this posting that I have done the same, which is only partly true.
Currently I am working and residing in Thailand, with plans to return to the states within the coming months and actively campaign for Governor Richardson, in his quest for the Presidency. Since I’m limited to Internet participation only and cannot personally attend formal functions, rallies, or physical assistance; this blog and posting to past along the “Word” is the only way I can provide support to the Governor’s campaign.
Hopefully the readers of this posting will be able to understand what I have personally authored from that of what I have copied from Governor Richardson’s web site or transcribed from the campaign’s posted videos.
My feelings and opinions are my own within this blog; I do not have any affiliation with the Governor or any part of his campaign or members of his staff.

Here’s what I’m following

Please Note:
This URL Address of https://tdadigital.wordpress.com/ is the Official and only address of Tom Awtry’s Blog. Those copying this Blog should read this article here, closely.

Posted in My Candidate | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments »

Leadership

Posted by Tom Awtry on November 16, 2007

My Beliefs, Life & TimesFor the moment let’s forget about who is going to be our new president, but instead what issues will our next president have to address during, not his/her first term in office, but instead the “first year” in office.

The American people want an end to the War in Iraq, how’s that going to be attended to, also coming up quickly and perhaps more importantly is Iran, which will really present a strain on our governing bodies, perhaps the military and our economy. Pakistan will also present an additional drain on the president’s time to insure its nuclear resources are not taken over by undesirable elements within the country.

Us Baby Boomers are getting along in age, and the Social Security system that was suppose to insure our golden years were somewhat easier for us is “broke”, since every administration has borrowed from our funds for the last thirty-five years or more. The next president will need to implement a Health Care reform plan instantly that works straight out of the old preverbal box.

Our economy is headed for a recession and reading the cost of oil is nearing $100 dollars a barrel and the new housing starts are almost at an all time low, coupled with the lending companies’ woes; it’s going to demand strong leadership from a president who has a successful track record of experience in energy related matters and is able to restore confidence in the stock market and financial institutions.

The Kyoto Agreement will soon expire in the next four years, and to date, the US really does not have a plan to stop the environmental pollution and come to the rescue of the effects of global warming.

Leadership will not only be required to address these aforementioned issues, but the next president must be a leader in congress, to stop all the in-row bickering that have taken place over the past years.

The election of 2008 is possibly the most important election that I’ll ever have and my fellow Americans have the opportunity to vote in. We should not let polls decide who the next president should be, nor should we be swayed by personalities, instead we must vote for a candidate that has both success and experience to lead the country.

Governor Bill Richardson, understands the importance of this coming election, he has authored his plans within his web site and spoken directly and candidly to the American people, ever opportunity he has received to explain his plans in detail to us.

Please consider giving the video a listen, the video is somewhat dated, but to me it proves Governor Richardson knew of our troubles eleven months and the importance of the 2008 Election:

 

Gov Richardson Announces Presidential Exploratory Committee

New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson today announced the formation of a Presidential campaign exploratory committee, with the clear intention of seeking the Democratic nomination for President in 2008.

 

“I am taking this step because we have to repair the damage that’s been done to our country over the last six years,” said Richardson. “Our reputation in the world is diminished, our economy has languished, and civility and common decency in government has perished.”

 

“The next president of the United States must get our troops out of Iraq without delay. Before I became Governor of New Mexico, I served as Ambassador to the United Nations and as Secretary of Energy. I know the Middle East well and it’s clear that our presence in Iraq isn’t helping any longer,” said Richardson.

 

“Our next President must be able to bring a country together that is divided and partisan,” said Richardson. “It is clear that Washington is broken and it’s going to take a return to bipartisanship and simple respect for each other’s views to get it fixed. Most public policy solutions these days are coming from Governors and state government. On issues like the environment, jobs, and health care, state governments are leading the way. And that’s because we can’t be partisan or we won’t get our jobs done. That’s a lesson I’ve learned as Governor and that’s what I’ll do as President.”

 

January 20, 2007

Update:
Bill Richardson Nominated For Nobel Prize
CBSNews – Politics
Feds: 35.5M In U.S. Struggle To Buy Food
CBS News.com
Veterans Cite Mental Health Issues
ABC News: Politics
UN: Climate Change Here And Getting Worse
CBS News.com
Cost of wars may reach $3.5 trillion, report says
L.A. Times – Politics

Bill Richardson for President 2008

The Governor’s Presidential Campaign’s web site is here.

I’ve seen many blogs where there owners copied articles from established web sites, and in some cases implying the scripted content was authored by themselves, which I dislike and disapprove of. It may appear in this posting that I have done the same, which is only partly true.
Currently I am working and residing in Thailand, with plans to return to the states within the coming months and actively campaign for Governor Richardson, in his quest for the Presidency. Since I’m limited to Internet participation only and cannot personally attend formal functions, rallies, or physical assistance; this blog and posting to past along the “Word” is the only way I can provide support to the Governor’s campaign.
Hopefully the readers of this posting will be able to understand what I have personally authored from that of what I have copied from Governor Richardson’s web site or transcribed from the campaign’s posted videos.
My feelings and opinions are my own within this blog; I do not have any affiliation with the Governor or any part of his campaign or members of his staff.

Here’s what I’m following

Please Note:
This URL Address of https://tdadigital.wordpress.com/ is the Official and only address of Tom Awtry’s Blog. Those copying this Blog should read this article here, closely.

Posted in My Candidate | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments »

Energy: Buying from Countries Who Hate Us

Posted by Tom Awtry on November 10, 2007

My Beliefs, Life & TimesRemember waiting in the gas lines of the 70’s?

Presently we are locked into word battles and imposing sanctions against Iran, Venezuela and have difficulties with Iraq and Saudi Arabia; and we’re depending on the aforementioned countries to provide us with approximately sixty-five percent of our nations oil, isn’t that verging on ridiculous? Are the folks in Washington part of this country we refer to as America? Don’t we have an Energy plan to become self sufficient?

Former Secretary of Energy, Governor Bill Richardson’s proposed energy plan is beginning to look better and better to me. It’s not going to be easy for Americans to adapt to Governor Richardson’s plan, but we must start some time, and if we’re going to do so, we have to have a plan with merit, I feel his plan does.

I’m really upset this morning! Below is a video, where an inexperienced news commentator is interviewing Governor Richardson about our serious energy problem and while the Governor is trying to explain his energy plan it seems that the News Director of the program feels it more important to make light of both the problem and the only presidential candidate with experience to provide a solution to the energy situation we have gotten ourselves into. After seeing this video CNBC will receive little of my time in the future.

Please consider reviewing Governor Richardson’s proposed Energy plan with all seriousness, listed below the video.

Related:
Oil Price Rise Causes Global Shift in Wealth
Wash Post – World News by Steven Mufson
Gas Prices Continue To Rise
CBS News.com
4 States To Sue For Tougher Emission Rules
CBS News.com
Big Jump In Oil Heating Costs Expected
CBS News.com

 

Gov. Bill Richardson Discusses Rising Oil Prices on CNBC

Governor Bill Richardson talks about rising oil prices and his energy plan on CNBC’s “Squawk Box.”
November 08, 2007

Update:
Salt Lake City, UT Mayor Rocky Anderson writes in The Nation magazine.

If ending the tragic, self-destructive occupation of Iraq is indeed a line-in-the-sand issue, only Bill Richardson stands out among the leading candidates as the choice for President.

 

While Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama and John Edwards refuse to pledge an end to the occupation, even by 2013, Bill Richardson commits clearly to pulling out all US troops. He recognizes that the occupation is widely despised, aiding in the recruitment of terrorists beyond Osama bin Laden’s wildest dreams. With Clinton, Obama or Edwards, we will get more of the same: many billions of dollars spent on ruinous military efforts, with more hatred toward the United States, more terrorism, and more death and destruction. If you can’t support that result, let it be the line beyond which you will not step in supporting any candidate who is on the wrong side.

Energy

 

We must “Act Boldly and Act Now” in order to make America a Clean Energy Nation like I made New Mexico a Clean Energy State. Consider this a call to action, for Congress, the energy industry, and the public. I am calling for a New American Revolution — an energy and climate revolution.

 

Cut Oil Demand: 50% by 2020

 

That means reducing oil imports from around 65% to 10-15%. We can do this in part by getting the 100 mile per gallon (mpg) car into the marketplace. We must work to double the Corporate Average Fuel Economy standards, or CAFE, to 50 mpg by 2020. And we will set a life-cycle low-carbon fuel standard that reduces the carbon impact of our liquid fuels by 30% by 2020.

 

Create New Efficiencies And Energy Sources in the Electrical Sector: 50% by 2040

 

I am calling for a national renewable portfolio standard of 30% by 2020 that will rise to 50% by 2040. This is aggressive, but necessary as we start using more electricity for automobiles. I will push for an energy productivity law requiring a 20% improvement in energy productivity by 2020. We could save customers $21 billion a year by 2020.

 

Dramatically Reduce Greenhouse Gas Emissions: 90% by 2050

 

20% by 2020, 80% by 2040 — ten years faster than scientists say is necessary because we must lead the world, and we can’t afford the possibility of backsliding and inaction. We will start with a market-based cap and trade system for greenhouse gas emissions to create incentives for the electric and industrial sectors to make significant reductions in their carbon emissions. Economists say the world can protect itself from drastic climate change at a cost of 1-3% of our economic activity. We can afford to protect the climate. Given the risks of catastrophic climate change, we can’t afford not to do it.

 

Lead By Example and Restore America as the World’s Leader

 

We must return to the international negotiating table and support mandatory world-wide limits on global warming pollution. We will work closely with fast-growing nations. I will cooperate with the European Union, the World Bank, and other allies to help finance the incremental cost of “doing it right.” I will create a North American Energy Council with Mexico and Canada, which supply about 20% of our oil, and make sure our relations with these neighbors are firm and friendly. As we reduce our demand for foreign oil, we should work with the Persian Gulf nations, and our partners at the UN, to create a multilateral system for protecting the Persian Gulf so that within ten years, the U.S. presence there could be sharply and safely reduced.

 

Get It All Done Without Breaking the Bank

 

We will raise some revenue, from the sales of carbon permits, for example. Further, I will get out the “green scissors” to cut back on wrongly-placed tax subsidies. Over time, this program will yield huge productivity increases in our economy, as well as significant budget savings and revenues. We will create more than ten times as much value in the American economy by reducing our oil imports as we spend to make this program happen.

 

Invite the Oil Companies to Become Energy Companies

 

I know people love to hate the oil companies. They have been raking in huge profits. But I want to invite them to become energy companies, and invest in our thriving new energy economy. They are invited to the table, but they aren’t going to run the table the way they have for the last six years.

 

The Bottom Line

 

Americans need energy to get to work, we need heat and electricity in our homes, schools and workplaces. We are hurt by unpredictable energy price cycles, and by our nation’s energy policy failures. The way out of the cycle is to create competition, to support energy productivity, new technologies and alternative fuels. And everyone — every American — must make an effort to make us energy independent and combat global warming. Our national security and our planet depend on it. It’s about creating a new energy economy here in the United States, and doing it quickly, with broad, bold strokes. It’s the way to a bright, strong, prosperous future for the United States — and for the world. I called for an energy revolution — and now, today, I call on you to join it.

 

The aforementioned may also be found here.

Related Documents:

Bill Richardson for President 2008

The Governor’s Presidential Campaign’s web site is here.

I’ve seen many blogs where there owners copied articles from established web sites, and in some cases implying the scripted content was authored by themselves, which I dislike and disapprove of. It may appear in this posting that I have done the same, which is only partly true.
Currently I am working and residing in Thailand, with plans to return to the states within the coming months and actively campaign for Governor Richardson, in his quest for the Presidency. Since I’m limited to Internet participation only and cannot personally attend formal functions, rallies, or physical assistance; this blog and posting to past along the “Word” is the only way I can provide support to the Governor’s campaign.
Hopefully the readers of this posting will be able to understand what I have personally authored from that of what I have copied from Governor Richardson’s web site or transcribed from the campaign’s posted videos.
My feelings and opinions are my own within this blog; I do not have any affiliation with the Governor or any part of his campaign or members of his staff.

Here’s what I’m following

Please Note:
This URL Address of https://tdadigital.wordpress.com/ is the Official and only address of Tom Awtry’s Blog. Those copying this Blog should read this article here, closely.

Posted in My Candidate | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Do they Understand the Issues Ahead?

Posted by Tom Awtry on November 8, 2007

My Beliefs, Life & TimesThere’s a difference I feel in identifying the issues facing our nation, and having a working plan to resolve these identified issues, which will affect our nation. I’ve been carefully looking over the Democratic and Republican candidates for this coming election in an attempt to see which candidate offers the most viable plan to address issues that I feel our of importance, both to our nation and the world.

These issues of importance, I feel, are; global warming, the war in Iraq, stopping the out pouring of American jobs, renewable energy, education, health care and a stable, respected foreign policy.

It seems like most candidates are aware of these concerns and of these candidates that are aware of the important issues, a small few have somewhat workable ideas for possible solutions, but for me, the only candidate that has a presentable, fully total plan and solution is Governor Bill Richardson.

Governor Richardson has a proven “track record” of accomplishment, both in Washington and his home state of New Mexico, he has solved many of the problems he inherited in New Mexico and he has met with world leaders who honor him with respect and understanding. Please review and consider the video below when planning to announce his candidacy for president and a speech the governor made in Iowa, concerning the importance of this coming election next November.

Related issues of importance in the coming election:
Oil Price Rise Causes Global Shift in Wealth
Wash Post – World News by Steven Mufson
Stocks Plunge As Dollar Hits New Low
CBS News.com
Man robs bank to pay medical bills
UPI – Top News
2007 Toll A Record For U.S. In Iraq
Wash Post – World News by Amit R. Paley
Gas Prices Continue To Rise
CBS News.com
First Read: Angry Americans want change
MSNBC.com: Politics

 

Gov Richardson Announces Presidential Exploratory Committee

New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson today announced the formation of a Presidential campaign exploratory committee, with the clear intention of seeking the Democratic nomination for President in 2008.
January 20, 2007

Facing Down the Threats of the 21st Century

 

10/18/2007

 

Thank you for that kind introduction. It’s always good to be back here in the heartland.

 

I want to speak with you about urgent threats that America and the community of nations face. Global challenges that pose serious dangers to the future welfare of the human race.

 

For decades, we believed that the only Apocalyptic threat to human civilization was the possibility of nuclear war.

 

Now we know better.

 

We know that poverty and overpopulation affect us all.

 

Refugee crises. Pandemic diseases. Climate change. Environmental degradation. Resource Depletion. Ethnic and political instability. These are not just the problems of individual nations. They are the problems of an interdependent world.

 

These threats are insidious. They may take decades to develop. And they respect no borders. Problems that span time and continents can only be solved through coordinated and cooperative global efforts.

 

From the deserts of Mesopotamia to the jungles of Central America, civilizations of the past, great and small, have been overcome despite the invincibility of their armies. Famine has wiped out entire peoples. Disease has crippled whole nations. Overpopulation has sunk full continents.

 

In the past, resource shortages destroyed civilizations. Today, they could destroy civilization itself.

 

We are the most powerful nation in the history of the world. Yet, we are not immune from such threats. It will take vigilance and bold action now, to preserve our safety for the future.

 

If we wait ten or twenty or fifty years to address these problems, it will already be too late.

 

Environmental degradation takes many forms, but the most urgent is global climate change. There is an overwhelming scientific consensus that the planet is getting hotter. This is a fact, not a forecast.

 

The ice caps and glaciers are melting.

 

Sea levels are rising.

 

300 million human beings live less than fifteen feet above sea level. Unless we act now, homes, villages, cities, and entire nations will be submerged.

 

Those not displaced by rising waters may go hungry as our unrestrained addiction to fossil fuels threatens both regional and global food shortages. Already severe drought has cut the world’s maize crops by as much as 15%, and wheat supplies will soon be at their lowest level in 26 years.

 

In a world where hundreds of millions go to bed hungry, major losses in staple crops foretell a time when we wake up to billions starving.

 

In America … in a nation that has long fed the world…catastrophically rising temperatures threaten to decimate our farmland.

 

Here in Iowa, the foundation for an entire way of life could melt away.

 

Meanwhile, the destruction of forest continues at an alarming rate. Forests absorb carbon from the atmosphere, slowing the pollution that causes global warming. They are critical to the air we breathe and the soil that sustains us. But unsustainable development pollutes that air and erode that soil. Slashing and burning threatens the mesh of life itself. Every species is entangled with the lives of others. As we slash away individual strings, it is increasingly likely that the entire web will collapse.

 

Our unsustainable habits extend across the land and into the ocean — from sea to dying sea. If we continue on the present course of exploitation, world fisheries will be virtually depleted by the middle of the century. Many once-productive fisheries have already been destroyed. Only 23% of world fish stocks are in good condition.

 

More than one billion people depend on fish as their main source of protein. We are wiping out not only food for hundreds of millions of people, but also threatening the awe-inspiring diversity of ocean life. Our oceans are a precious, but not an infinite resource.

 

Neither are fresh water supplies. Today, one out of every five human beings on the planet does not have access to safe drinking water. Studies conclude that droughts caused by climate change could leave up to one and a half billion people without enough water to survive. Changes in the global distribution of fresh water will cause long-term droughts in some of the world’s most fertile food-producing regions. India and China could be devastated.

 

In some poverty-stricken parts of the world, like Somalia, governments have been replaced by warlord gangs. Stability has given way to chaos and even famine.

 

The West African nation of Ghana was long one of the region’s most promising economies. The water that once roared through the nation’s Volta Dam has been reduced to a trickle. Drought is crippling that nation’s economy.

 

In the face of these cascading global threats, Congress and the President have been largely paralyzed. Rather than rallying the nation and the world to face up to the dangers of climate change, the Bush administration claimed for years — against the overwhelming scientific consensus — that the “science was unproven.” Dick Cheney wrote our energy policy with oil companies, behind closed doors. The congress has gone along for the ride. The power of lobbyists, rather than the power of science, has determined our environmental policies. Washington is broken.

 

Time has run out. It is now urgent that Congress stand up to this President now, and that the next President provide energetic leadership to address these crises. We must be determined, courageous, far-sighted and bold.

 

At stake, is our national survival and our survival as a species. Al Gore’s tireless and inspiring work to rally the world to confront these grave dangers has now been awarded the Nobel Peace Prize and I congratulate him.

 

Earlier this year, a report issued by eleven retired U.S. generals and admirals confirmed his warnings and described the climate crisis a “serious threat to America’s national security.”

 

Our national safety is more than enough reason to act. But it is not the only reason that we must. At stake, is the health and welfare of the human race.

 

The world is looking to America for leadership. We cannot fail.

 

Americans are a generous people, and a courageous people. We rescued Europe from fascism, and generations from despair. Our farms have been the breadbasket to the world, and our scientists have saved millions of lives through such discoveries as antibiotics and the polio vaccine. And we are the nation that lit the fire of human freedom.

 

But the Bush Administration has failed to live up to our unmatched record of human achievement. Many of the fights that America used to lead are now being lost.

 

Consider the health of humankind. Over the past 35 years we’ve seen the emergence of more than thirty new incurable and infectious diseases, such as AIDS and Ebola. At the same time, older pathogens — malaria, cholera, tuberculosis and many others — have become more resistant to treatment. They are spreading with a vengeance.

 

Malaria alone takes a human life every thirty seconds — most of them children.

 

And disease disproportionately strikes those with the least resources to fight back. More than a billion people survive on less than a dollar a day, and nearly half of the world’s 2 billion children live in poverty.

 

But we cannot comprehend the crushing burden of global poverty through statistics alone. Even in America, I have walked in communities with no access to clean water. We have all seen shamefully inadequate housing, and we know that even in our own country there are children that go to bed hungry every night.

 

In my travels abroad, I have seen human desperation — first hand. In the Sudan, I have been to camps filled with families who have lost every worldly possession.

 

I was on the ground in Turkey during a terrible earthquake, where I saw impoverished mothers on their knees, digging through rubble for their lost children.

 

I’ve spent time in Darfur which today is the best-known example of environmental pressures cascading into instability and violence. A prolonged drought decimated the region’s grazing lands and nomadic herders moved south in search of water and food. They encroached upon farming land that belonged to other tribes, igniting the conflict that now has turned into a genocide.

 

We urgently need to find the courage and the will to address such crises. Not only because we are a decent and compassionate people, but also because of this inescapable reality: America will never be safe in a world riddled by poverty, desperation, hatred and violence.

 

A hungry world will also hunger for scapegoats. A thirsty world will thirst for revenge. A world in crisis will be a world of anger and violence and terrorism.

 

And unless and until we have the wisdom and the skill to secure all the nuclear weapons and fissile material in the world, that terrorism could result in unthinkable death and destruction.

 

The global community needs leadership that will take the bold steps necessary to address wide-scale poverty, environmental degradation, and societal unrest. I have travelled the world again and again, on many international delegations and personal missions. And it has been me — the American — from which the most has been asked.

 

And so it should be. The world expects much from America. And we must expect even more from ourselves.

 

I believe that the United States alone can rise to the challenge of leading a worldwide effort to avert these global threats.

 

Today I lay out a new path … and I ask Americans to join me.

 

We will craft a new foreign policy adapted to a world of complex challenges. Challenges which will require thoughtful and global solutions. No nation can defend its own inter­ests without blending them with the interests of others … and seeking common solutions to common problems. This “New Realism” will at once require us to anchor our diplomacy with time- tested, reality-based principles … and it will unleash our potential to achieve dramatic change.

 

The first momentous step will be to partner with developed nations, the UN, non-profit organizations, and private sector companies, to create a Marshall Plan for the 21st Century. We need a massive, multilateral effort to assist the developing world in eliminating poverty, protecting the environment, combating pandemics, conserving water supplies, and stimulating economic opportunity.

 

This 21st Century Marshall Plan will be composed of several initiatives to face down global threats.

 

First, I will make the U.S. the world leader in the fight against global poverty. We must have the resolve to honor our UN Millennium goal commitments. And we must have the audacity to demand that others meet theirs. A Commission on the Implementation of Sustainable Devel­opment Goals, composed of world leaders and prominent experts, should be created to help all countries realize their Millennium commitments.

 

When I am President, the United States will again lead on debt relief, and shifting aid from loans to grants. We will focus on primary health care and affordable vaccines.

 

I also believe that the World Bank is the not the place for politics. Its only ideology must be the relief of suffering, with a single-minded focus on poverty reduction. The IMF must recognize that social safety nets are no barrier — indeed they are essential — to promoting economic growth around the world.

 

The United States must increase its financial contribution to these international protection and development initiatives. We must ask other wealthy nations to do the same.

 

Stimulating small-scale business in poor countries is essential. And we know what works. Clearly, we should focus more resources on micro-lending. The Nobel Prize winner Muhammad Yunus, has shown us the way. A 50 dollar loan can sometimes do more good than a million dollars when you make sure it gets to the right place.

 

We need to focus also on education in developing nations. 115 million of the world’s children — 60% of them girls — do not receive any schooling. In too many countries, a virtual apartheid exists, where women are frozen out of the workforce and civic life. Unleashing the economic power of women through education can be the silver bullet that makes every problem easier to fight.

 

I commend the efforts of the ONE Campaign, which is increasing awareness of the effects of AIDS and extreme poverty on developing nations. The ONE Campaign is asking the United States to double our development assistance to 2% of our federal budget. I wholeheartedly support this goal, and as President I will work to make it a reality.

 

Our aid efforts must be guided by the principles of good governance and protection of human rights. As hard as we fight to fulfill the expectations that we have for ourselves … we have the obligation to expect beneficiary nations to live up to these enduring values.

 

The second part of our global initiative, will be to take immediate, bold steps toward clean energy.

 

The foundation for our international action will be my comprehensive energy program, which the Sierra Club and the League of Conservation voters have called the most aggressive of any candidate for the Presidency.

 

We should start by instituting a nation-wide, market-based cap and trade system that reduces carbon emissions in the US by 80% by 2040.

 

We must lead the world in the development of clean, alternative energy, and we must work with other governments and private business to make sure that these technologies are adopted worldwide. Above all, we need to make sure that China and India develop using clean energy.

 

In my upcoming book, “Leading by Example,” I outline a specific and comprehensive path domestically and internationally to drastically reduce greenhouse gas emissions and stop the devastation of climate change.

 

We need to accelerate research into cellulosic ethanol and other low-carbon input bio-fuels, and we need to construct distribution networks so that retailers can offer ethanol and bio-based fuels alongside traditional fuels.

 

As the mandatory national emission cap declines, the market will decide which fossil fuel uses are no longer efficient or should be converted to new technologies. I am already working on a regional cap and trade system in the West, along with Governor Schwarzenegger and other governors. This system will limit the amount of greenhouse gasses. George Bush doesn’t follow the Kyoto Protocols, but my state is on track to.

 

Along the way to making New Mexico the Clean Energy State, I’ve learned some lessons. The most important is that Americans are ready to act. All they need is a President who is ready to lead. Once you lead, you find allies in corners that you never knew existed. Businesses. Non-profits. Activists. Former enemies and future friends. We can build the first true global coalition since America united the world to defeat the communism.

 

The third part of my plan is introducing Republicans to a basic reality. The United Nations is a necessary and important framework for building the international cooperation that will be necessary to confront problems like environmental degradation and poverty. We must reform and invigorate it. As a former UN ambassador, I more than anyone in this race understand the shortcomings of that institution. I’ve worked to solve them. And I also know the incredible power that the legitimacy of international cooperation can lend to peacekeeping. To humanitarian relief. To addressing climate change. And to economic development.

 

International cooperation will not always succeed, but cowboy diplomacy will almost always fail.

 

We need to work with others now, through existing UN mechanisms, to prepare for the possibility that millions of people could be displaced as a result of global-warming-related flooding of deltas and costal areas.

 

We also must prepare to shift infrastructure and food production to new regions.

 

We will develop crops that are more resistant to heat and drought, and distribute these new crop strains to vulnerable regions of the world.

 

We must develop cost-effective methods for harvesting fresh water and cleaning up polluted rivers and streams.

 

We need aggressive reforestation programs and protection of tropical rainforests.

 

And we need to develop new international treaties to prevent over-fishing and species loss.

 

Fourth, my 21st Century Marshall Plan will fight cross-border crime. Sophisticated criminal networks running black market trade in arms, drugs, endangered species, counterfeit goods, and human beings threaten the security of us all. We must end slavery forever. Financial assistance to developing nations should be tied to swift and solid progress toward the eradication of human trafficking.

 

And the United States needs to show the world that it can be done by ending slavery here in the US — where an estimated 50,000 women and children are trafficked each year.

 

It is unacceptable and I will direct the necessary efforts to end it.

 

The US also must step up our efforts in the fight against global disease. I have proposed unprecedented increases in medical research. One of the great contributions the United States has made, should make, and will make again when I am President … is to discover new cures to humanity’s great afflictions. Cancer, heart disease, malaria, AIDS, TB — all can and must be defeated.

 

Religion today too often tears us apart. But poverty is a case where every single religion on the face of the planet should be able to unite. I refuse to believe that there is a person on this Earth that is not disgusted by the fact that a child born in Swaziland can only expect to live half as long as a child born in the United States.

 

If we cannot lead global action based on this universal agreement, then we are not worthy of the great traditions of human dignity upon which this nation was founded.

 

As we gather our strength for this effort, we must remember that preserving your popularity is no recipe for inspiring a nation, let alone the world.

 

I owe my success in bringing people together and solving problems to taking risks. Sometimes you have to lay things on the line to get results.

 

I recall when one of my constituents was taken hostage in Sudan. He was an American journalist from my own state and he was captured with two aides from the African nation of Chad. They were imprisoned on phony charges of espionage — I had no reason to be optimistic about their release. But the journalist’s wife asked me to go and try to get him out. So I went.

 

The dictator of that country — al-Bashir — he said: “You can have the American, but the other two from Chad — they stay.”

 

At this point I could have left with the American, but I said “No. I am bringing them all out.”

 

It was not the easy choice but it was the right choice.

 

We went back into the negotiation and I left with all three men.

 

There was no time then for polls or consultants.

 

Nor is this a time for political calculation.

 

We cannot afford leadership that has not been tested. My colleagues in this race have my respect, but it is a simple fact that the next international deal negotiated by any one of them will be their first.

 

We also cannot afford another President who doesn’t understand that stubborness is not strength. Consultation with friends, coordination with allies — and negotiation with enemies — is not weakness. It is what you need to do to get things done. It is the basis for restoring America’s international leadership.

 

I ask all Americans to join me in rebuilding our global leadership.

 

Together we need:

 

The compassion to commit the necessary resources.

 

The courage to stand fast in the face of inevitable setbacks.

 

And the faith to return to American principles …

 

Equality.

 

Freedom.

 

Human dignity.

 

These are the values that every American has inherited.

 

Let us be worthy of them.

 

Thank you.

The aforementioned may also be found here.

Bill Richardson for President 2008

The Governor’s Presidential Campaign’s web site is here.

I’ve seen many blogs where there owners copied articles from established web sites, and in some cases implying the scripted content was authored by themselves, which I dislike and disapprove of. It may appear in this posting that I have done the same, which is only partly true.
Currently I am working and residing in Thailand, with plans to return to the states within the coming months and actively campaign for Governor Richardson, in his quest for the Presidency. Since I’m limited to Internet participation only and cannot personally attend formal functions, rallies, or physical assistance; this blog and posting to past along the “Word” is the only way I can provide support to the Governor’s campaign.
Hopefully the readers of this posting will be able to understand what I have personally authored from that of what I have copied from Governor Richardson’s web site or transcribed from the campaign’s posted videos.
My feelings and opinions are my own within this blog; I do not have any affiliation with the Governor or any part of his campaign or members of his staff.

Here’s what I’m following

Please Note:
This URL Address of https://tdadigital.wordpress.com/ is the Official and only address of Tom Awtry’s Blog. Those copying this Blog should read this article here, closely.

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