October 29, 2005: Headlines: Figures: Staff: Journalism: Joplin Independent: Ten reasons Bill Moyers should be president by Scott Beckman
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October 29, 2005: Headlines: Figures: Staff: Journalism: Joplin Independent: Ten reasons Bill Moyers should be president by Scott Beckman
Ten reasons Bill Moyers should be president by Scott Beckman
Mr. Moyers is a fearless advocate. He is unafraid to say that many politicians are simply the shills of selfish, greedy corporate interests; that false prophets are heretics; and that powerful media and lobby groups are peddling corruption. Journalist Bill Moyers was the Deputy Director of the Peace Corps under founding Director Sargent Shriver.
Ten reasons Bill Moyers should be president by Scott Beckman
Ten reasons Bill Moyers should be president
by: sbeckman
Updated: 2005-10-29 19:44:09-05
[Excerpt]
1. Mr. Moyers has a genuine, civil, positive, hopeful courage of conviction that we the people can and will serve our own common good if we are properly informed and use the tools of our great democracy wisely. His passion for our country is rooted in a deep understanding, respect for, and unswerving adherence to the bedrock values and principles our Founding Fathers left us for us to preserve.
2. Mr. Moyers has a profound vision about how the United States of America can be unified again by the fullest exercise of self-government by we the people around our basic commitments to simple, commonly accepted all-American values and policies such as equality of opportunity and caring for your neighbor and telling the truth.
3. Mr. Moyers is a fearless advocate. He is unafraid to say that many politicians are simply the shills of selfish, greedy corporate interests; that false prophets are heretics; and that powerful media and lobby groups are peddling corruption.
4. Mr. Moyers espouses and upholds very high standards of professional ethics and personal integrity.
5. Mr. Moyers brings significant hands-on White House experience to bear on his thinking about America’s future.
6. Mr. Moyers lifetime of public service as an honest political journalist has earned him national esteem and the respect of millions of people.
7. Mr. Moyers talks openly and comfortably about the role spiritual values play in his progressive outlook without abusing or disrespecting the line that is supposed to separate religious belief and political thought in America.
8. Mr. Moyers is an exceptionally smart person. He has a truly impressive command of the facts underlying the fundamental connection that exists between progressive policies and electoral results. Further, he has demonstrated a unique ability to think ahead of the curve and craft and manage creative, state-of-the-art, successful enterprises, including ones that involve media planning.
9. Mr. Moyers is a mesmerizing public speaker.
10. Mr. Moyers understands expressed the view that the perfection of our union will require new and perhaps unprecedented sacrifices by all of us. He would be a captain who bravely acknowledges the turbulent waters roiling all about and inspires us to do the right things needed to safely sail through them.
For many years I have reached out but unsuccessfully tried to bridge the differences between Democrats and myself despite the fact that these efforts never have resulted in anything more than dashed political hopes. My simple plea has been for Democrats to earn my vote—and most of America’s—by standing on a people-centered platform and selecting a world-class Presidential candidate to champion it. The current leadership of the Democratic Party is timid, off-message, and strategically bankrupt.
I simply disagree with my friends who say that superior leadership doesn’t make a difference. Therefore, in the face of their constant discouragement, I have continued to reflect on what the leadership I can support would look like and who in the Democratic Party might embody it. At this moment in time, I’ve concluded that it is found in the person of Mr. Bill Moyers.
When this story was posted in November 2005, this was on the front page of PCOL:




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 | Why blurring the lines puts PCVs in danger When the National Call to Service legislation was amended to include Peace Corps in December of 2002, this country had not yet invaded Iraq and was not in prolonged military engagement in the Middle East, as it is now. Read the story of how one volunteer spent three years in captivity from 1976 to 1980 as the hostage of a insurrection group in Colombia in Joanne Marie Roll's op-ed on why this legislation may put soldier/PCVs in the same kind of danger. Latest: Read the ongoing dialog on the subject. |
 | Peace Corps at highest Census in 30 years Congratulations to the Peace Corps for the highest number of volunteers in 30 years with 7,810 volunteers serving in 71 posts across the globe. Of course, the President's proposal to double the Peace Corps to 15,000 volunteers made in his State of the Union Address in 2002 is now a long forgotten dream. With deficits in federal spending stretching far off into the future, any substantive increase in the number of volunteers will have to wait for new approaches to funding and for a new administration. Choose your candidate and start working for him or her now. |
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Story Source: Joplin Independent
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