I have not, as yet, decided for whom I will vote, although I have a
very good idea who I will NOT vote for. The 'debates' are supposed to be
for us to see which candidate expresses our views best. The League of
Women Voters use to sponsor these debates .
NBC - whose parent
company is General Electric - has changed the rules. In a recent
political debate, GE decided who can and cannot be present in the debate
televised on NBC. Dennis Kucinich was invited, and accepted. At the
last minute GE said no, he could not be present.
The lower court
ruled otherwise. In the 11th hour, GE had the Nevada Supreme Court rule
the debate was private and NBC could decide who could, and who could
not, be present in a nationally televised presidential debate.
This
is fine, if NBC had said at the beginning of the debate they only
invited certain people to attend. Instead, NBC tried to give the
impression this was an open debate and all candidates were invited to be
present.
This led to a lot of questions in my mind. GE - those
people who bring good things to life - also happens to be the biggest
arms dealer in the world. There is more profit in bringing death to
people than good things to life. Now, why would they not want Dennis
Kucinich present at the debate they sponsor? Could it be because he is
against this 'war' in Iraq? In case you loved this article and you would like to receive more details with regards to election songs please visit our own web-site. If America started pulling out now, then GE would sell fewer weapons to kill people with and therefore make less profit?
The
next question that came to mind is - exactly how much behind the scenes
influence corporate America has on the coming election? If they say who
can and cannot be heard expressing views does that not mean they have
already decided who will win primaries and the general populace
basically has no voice in the decision?
What can we, as average
citizens, do to counteract the influence of corporate America? I
strongly suggest forget who the media claims are the front runners and
read the views and positions of the ignored candidates.
We
recently heard there seems to have been a problem with the voting
machines in New Hampshire's primary. This did not surprise me. In the
2004 presidential election, I was a volunteer in one of the poorer
neighborhoods in West Palm Beach. There were three voting machines, one
which did not work. People were lined up for up to four hours waiting to
vote. Of the two machines that did work, one automatically changed
every 50th vote to G. Bush. In my neighborhood, which is a little more
affluent and heavily republican, there were 12 voting machines and they
all worked fine.
I am not going to list all the illegal things
done in the last two elections. Either people remember for themselves or
ignore the obvious. It is the coming election that is important. We all
have to vote this year. The more people that vote, the less likely the
election is manipulated. If Iowans could turn out in record numbers in
below freezing weather to vote in their caucus, there is no excuse for
the rest of the country not to vote, unless of course, people like the
direction this country is headed.
Bruce Pomer had served on the Sacramento California Democratic Central
Committee for many years. For business reasons he opted to leave his
commit
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