Sunday, February 24, 2019

Campaign 2020: "Shared Dreams," Amy Klobuchar's Announcement

On Sunday, February 10, 2019, U.S. Senator from Minnesota Amy Klobuchar stood in swirling snow and announced she is running for President. Remarkably, she is now the fifth woman running for the White House in this 2020 campaign.

I saw an interview later where Klobuchar joked about the snow: she said it looked like she was aging during her speech as her hair got whiter and whiter.

I have heard a pundit say there should have been some sort of roof over Klobuchar, but others have said that standing in the snow showed her strength and determination. I think the latter is true, especially since she is competing for the chance to run against a man who once cancelled a trip to a veteran's cemetery because of rain.

The crowd waved solid red "Amy" signs or solid blue "Amy" signs as the new candidate said she is running "for every parent who wants a better world for their kids" and promised that she is "running for every American."

One of the themes of the announcement was restoring democracy and Klobuchar called on the American people to "organize, galvanize, and take back our Democracy." She described her plans to:

  • Automatically register young people to vote when they turn 18,
  • Restore the Voting Rights Act, and
  • Push for a Constitutional amendment to reverse the Supreme Court's Citizen's United decision so we can get "dark money" out of politics.

Another theme of the speech was protecting the environment and Klobuchar promised that within her first 100 days in the White House she would:

  • Restore clean power rules,
  • Restore gas mileage standards, and
  • Invest in green jobs and infrastructure
  • And, she also promised that on "day 1" she would rejoin the International Climate Agreement the current President has pulled the United States out of.

On the themes of technology and jobs Klobuchar promised to:

  • Promote new rules to protect privacy on the internet
  • Promote net neutrality
  • Promote the training of workers for new jobs with a focus on certificates and two-year degrees
  • And, most dramatically, the candidate called for having every household in America connected to the internet by 2022.

Turning to health and safety Klobuchar outlned plans to:

  • Allow safe drugs from other countries to be sold in the United States
  • Lift the ban that currently prevents Medicare from negotiating cheaper drug prices
  • Require universal background checks for gun purchases
  • And, in another big move, Klobuchar called for universal healthcare.

In simultaneous nods to fiscal responsibility AND populism the candidate called for bringing down the national debt by closing tax loopholes for the wealthy while still making it easier for workers to afford childcare, housing, and education.

There was not much about foreign policy in this speech but, in a statement that also poked the current president, Klobuchar promised to respect our troops, our diplomats, and our intelligence officers by not running her foreign policy with tweets.

One of the closing remarks sounded like a very good over-arching theme for Klobuchar's campaign right at the beginning: "We all live in the same country of shared dreams."

It was a good announcement. Let's see how Senator Amy Klobuchar holds up in the political battles to come.

You can listen to Amy Klobuchar's announcement speech here:
https://video.search.yahoo.com/yhs/search?fr=yhs-etav-001&hsimp=yhs-001&hspart=etav&p=amy+klobuchar#id=1&vid=4d9c8cd9bb4bccbdad805bb5c1bd448d&action=click

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[This should a great book for learning about Amy from her own words. If you read it before I do please send me a review I can publish here at Anything Smart.]

[If you want to support "Anything Smart" just click on book links like the one below and the other ones throughout this blog to buy your books. "Anything Smart" will receive a commission. Thanks!]

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Copyright © 2019 by Joseph Wayne Gadway

Saturday, February 9, 2019

Journalism and Truth

With the recent accusations against Virginia Lieutenant Governor Justin Fairfax the debate about what the news media should publish, and what it should not publish, has erupted again. We saw the same kinds of questions about the accusations against Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh. Should these kinds of accusations be published, or should they be kept secret?

From what I have read about the new Virginia scandal, Associate Professor at Scripps College Vanessa Tyson contacted The Washington Post in late 2017 with her story about Fairfax sexually assaulting her some 13 years before. The Post investigated the story and, when they could not find corroboration, decided not to publish it.

Despite The Post's hesitation back in 2017 Tyson's story has now surfaced again and this time it is being widely publicized.

So, what is the media supposed to publish, and what should it keep secret?

Some people seem to think the press should not publish any statement or claim or accusation unless they can PROVE that it is true. I think that is wrong. I don't believe the press is supposed to publish only what they can prove to be true after a long and careful investigation. I think the press is supposed to tell the truth in a different way: reporters are supposed to tell us truthfully what they see and what they hear, what they read in official documents and what people tell them about newsworthy figures.

I worked briefly for a small town newspaper years ago and my specialty was covering obscure town meetings. I saw my job as being the eyes and ears of the public. I saw my job as telling people, "If you had been at this meeting, this is what you would have seen and heard."

If somebody in a meeting said something I thought was true, I reported what they said. If somebody in a meeting said something I thought was false, I reported what they said. This is what I believe day-to-day journalism is supposed to do.

Day-to-day journalism cannot wait days, months, or years to report on some "final truth." Day-to-day journalism is supposed to publish what reporters see and hear, what they read and what they are told, as one step - maybe an EARLY step - in the truth-seeking process. It is this kind of reporting that can help to uncover the truth by encouraging other people to come forward with additional information, by encouraging other news outlets to ask questions, by putting pressure on official agencies to start investigations.

There are other kinds of journalism, of course. Investigative journalism has more research in it. It is more of a methodical effort to get at the truth. It is halfway between journalism and history. Editorializing has more personal judgment in it and more reflection on what the facts mean. It is halfway between journalism and philosophy.

But "normal" journalism, what I call day-to-day journalism - that's something simpler - that's just a reporter telling people, and telling them every single day: "This is what I saw. This is what I heard."

That's the job.

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[This is a great book about the career of an investigative journalist.]

[If you want to support "Anything Smart" just click on book links like the one below and the other ones throughout this blog to buy your books. "Anything Smart" will receive a commission. Thanks!]

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Copyright © 2019 by Joseph Wayne Gadway