Dear President Obama,
Your administration and your party are in trouble. That is clear from the elections in Massachusetts and Virginia, from the drop in your approval rating, from the rise of conservative opposition groups.
This is a time when progressive forces in this country need to mobilize to prevent a backlash that will take this country further to the right. But progressives are disappointed and demoralized. Look at me.
In 2008, I was one of millions united for hope and change. As 2010 dawns, change looks to me like more of the same. Instead of peace, we got more war. Instead of health care reform, we have an industry win that requires Americans to buy health insurance without any real cost controls. On the environment, one of your top priorities, you came back from Copenhagen with yet another non-binding resolution and more clean coal, to boot. Instead of helping struggling homeowners and small businesses during the financial crisis, bank executives were rewarded and we have yet to see reform. Wall Street firms ended 2009 with record bonus and profits while unemployment remains in double digits.
Obama, I am losing hope. This is not the change I believe in. The change I believe in puts people and our planet before industry, it promotes peace, international law and human rights instead of militarism. As you are asking Congress to approve the largest Pentagon budget in history, plus another $33 billion to pay for your Afghan surge, the prophetic works of Dr. Martin Luther King sound a clarion call: A nation that continues year after year to spend more money on military defense than on programs of social uplift is approaching spiritual death.
Obama, we need renewed leadership, we need you to show us--not in words but in deeds--that you can stand up to corporate interests that are blocking us from real health care, environmental and financial reform. We need you to show us-not in words but in deeds-that you will stand up for the Constitution, for due process, for the rule of law. We need you to show us-not in words but in deeds-that you lead this country out of endless war to a nation that lives in peace with its neighbors.
In the meantime, I pledge to keep pushing your administration and Congress, and mobilizing others-not for partisan politics but for policies of social and environmental uplift.
May 2010 be a year of renewed commitment and movement toward the change we so desperately need.
Sincerely,
Jodie Evans
National progressive leaders gathered outside the White House today, on the one year anniversary of Obama's inauguration, with the message of Losing Hope and Taking Action.
How often a year ago did we hear the chorus "Yes WE Can"? As we voice our frustrations to Obama we renew our commitment to bringing about change -- join us in signing the letter and don't stop there! Be the leader you want Obama to be by taking these personal, concrete actions for change.
Follow Jodie Evans on Twitter: www.twitter.com/codepinkalert
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Not only have Obama's actions disillusioned supporters who expected clear, strong, sensible leadership; but he has left open his own branding to opponents and critics. He has not declared a strong position on ANYTHING. I never expected him to fix the Bush dismantling and destruction in the wink of an eye, but at least look like you're headed that way.
Get rid of the cronies and crooks. "Birds of a feather" has proven true again and again.
Get out of the wars, why do you think we hired you?
Let the banks and brokerages fail if they won't play by rules.
Call some of your old neighbors to see how insurance companies are treating them, then grow a heart.
Remember: "Saying is not doing."
* Healthcare for All!
* Tough Financial Reforms not Bonuses for Bailed Out Wall Street Execs
* Ending the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan
* A sustainable energy policy including funding for green jobs
* Redirect military and defense budgets toward human needs such as jobs, healthcare, education