Here’s What
We Want
My supporters and I want real change in this
country.
By Bernie Sanders
June 23, 2016
"Information
Clearing House" - "Washington
Post"
- As we head toward the Democratic National
Convention, I often hear the question, “What does
Bernie want?” Wrong question. The right question is
what the 12
million Americans who voted for a political
revolution want.
And the
answer is: They want real change in this country,
they want it now and they are prepared to take on
the political cowardice and powerful special
interests which have prevented that change from
happening.
They
understand that the United States is the richest
country in the history of the world, and that new
technology and innovation make us wealthier every
day. What they don’t understand is why the middle
class continues to decline, 47
million of us live in poverty and many Americans
are forced to work two or three jobs just to cobble
together the income they need to survive.
What do we
want? We want an economy that is not based on
uncontrollable greed, monopolistic practices and
illegal behavior. We want an economy that protects
the human needs and dignity of all people —
children, the elderly, the sick, working people and
the poor. We want an economic and political system
that works for all of us, not one in which almost
all new wealth and power rests with a handful of
billionaire families.
The current
campaign finance system is corrupt. Billionaires and
powerful corporations are now, through
super PACs, able to spend as much money as they
want to buy elections and elect candidates who
represent their interests, not the American people.
Meanwhile, we have one of the lowest
voter turnout rates of any major country on
earth, and Republican governors are working overtime
to suppress the vote and make it harder for poor
people, people of color, seniors and young people to
vote.
What do we
want? We want to overturn the disastrous Citizens
United Supreme Court decision and move toward
public funding of elections. We want universal
voter registration, so that anyone 18 years of
age or older who is eligible to vote is
automatically registered. We want a vibrant
democracy and a well-informed electorate that knows
that its views can shape the future of the country.
Our
criminal justice system is broken. We have 2.2
million people rotting behind bars at an annual
expense of $80
billion. Youth unemployment in a number of
inner-cities and rural communities is 30 to 50
percent, and millions of young people have
limited opportunities to participate in the
productive economy. Failing schools all around the
country produce more people who end up in jail than
graduate college. Millions of Americans have police
records as a result of marijuana possession, which
should be decriminalized. And too many people are
serving unnecessarily long mandatory minimum
sentences.
What do we
want? We want a criminal justice system that
addresses the causes of incarceration, not one that
simply imprisons more people. We want to
demilitarize local police departments, see local
police departments reflect the diversity of the
communities they serve and end private ownership of
prisons and detention centers. We want to create the
conditions that allow people who are released from
prison to stay out. We want the best educated
population on earth, not the most
incarcerated population.
The debate
is over. Climate
change is real. It is caused by human activity,
and it already is causing devastating damage in our
country and to the entire planet. If present trends
continue, scientists tell us the planet will be 5
to 10 degrees Fahrenheit warmer by the end of
the century — which means more droughts, floods,
extreme weather disturbances, rising sea levels and
acidification of the oceans. This is a planetary
crisis of extraordinary magnitude.
What do we
want? We want the United States to lead the world in
pushing our energy system away from fossil fuel and
toward energy efficiency and sustainable energy. We
want a tax on carbon, the end of fracking and
massive investment in wind, solar, geothermal and
other sustainable technologies. We want to leave
this planet in a way that is healthy and habitable
for future generations.
What do we
want? We want to end the rapid movement that we are
currently experiencing toward oligarchic control of
our economic and political life. As Lincoln put it
at Gettysburg,
we want a government of the people, by the people
and for the people. That is what we want, and that
is what we will continue fighting for.
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