Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

KENNEDY OFFERS VISION IN STARK CONTR AST TO TRUMP

- Brian Greenspun is editor, publisher and owner of the Sun.

the memo was opposed by the Department of Justice as well as the FBI because it caused “grave concerns about material omissions of fact that fundamenta­lly impact the memo’s accuracy.”

Congressma­n Kennedy said, “Many have spent the last year anxious, angry, afraid. We all feel the fractured fault lines across our country.” He added, “We hear the voices of Americans who are forgotten and forsaken. We see an economy that makes stocks soar, investor portfolios bulge and corporate profits climb but fails to give workers their fair share. A government that struggles to keep itself open. Russia, knee deep in our democracy. An all-out war on environmen­tal protection. A Justice Department rolling back civil rights by the day. Hatred and supremacy proudly marching in our streets. Bullets tearing through our classrooms, concerts and congregati­ons, targeting our safest and sacred places. And this nagging and sinking feeling, no matter your political beliefs, that this is not right, this is not who we are.”

He also said that “this administra­tion isn’t just targeting the laws that protect us, they are targeting the very idea that we are all worthy of protection.”

When Trump tried, unsuccessf­ully, to convince the nation he had helped to divide that he wanted to unify us, Kennedy proclaimed that “we are all equal, that we all count in the eyes of our laws, our leaders, our God, and our government. That is the American promise.”

He further separated his vision of America from that of our pretend populist of a president when he said, “They are turning American lives into a zero-sum game. Where for one to win, another must lose. … We are bombarded with one false choice after another. Coal miners or single moms, rural communitie­s or inner cities. The coast or the heartland. … So here is an answer that Democrats offer tonight. We choose both.”

Kennedy’s words, his vision and his challenge to Americans soared while those of our president just stumbled from one self-congratula­tory sentence to another. While Trump talked about significan­t progress in fighting America’s enemies overseas, and for which every American should be grateful, he barely, if ever, mentioned the challenges of climate change and the environmen­tal outrages being visited upon our communitie­s by his administra­tion’s callous actions.

The young Kennedy did present a vision worthy of our considerat­ion:

“We choose the thousands of American communitie­s whose roads are not paved with power or privilege, but with an honest effort, with good faith and the resolve to build something better for your kids. That, that is our story. It began the day our Founding Fathers and mothers set sail for a new world fleeing oppression and intoleranc­e. It continued with every word of our independen­ce, the audacity to declare that all men are created equal. An imperfect promise for a nation struggling to become a more perfect union.”

Now, that is the kind of vision delivered with sincerity that can unite our country, rather than the words of our current leader who chooses to divide us.

Two ideas for America while our country teeters on the brink.

There is no guarantee that our democracy or any democracy survives from one century to another. A democracy takes hard work, understand­ing and the commitment of its people to work every day to make sure that the government of, by and for the people “shall not perish from the Earth.”

Friday, the GOP-controlled House of Representa­tives and President Donald Trump went to war with the FBI and the Justice Department. Congressma­n Devin Nunes and every Republican member of the House Intelligen­ce Committee, aided and abetted by the president, released a memo that was intended to do one thing and one thing only: obstruct special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion.

Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., decried what he claimed was a partisan attack on our nation’s law enforcemen­t agencies.

“The latest attacks on the FBI and the Department of Justice serve no American interests — no party’s, no president’s, only Putin’s,” McCain said. “The American people deserve to know all the facts surroundin­g Russia’s ongoing efforts to subvert our democracy, which is why special counsel Mueller’s investigat­ion must proceed unimpeded.”

McCain continued, “Our nation’s elected officials, including the president, must stop looking at this investigat­ion through the warped lens of politics and manufactur­ing partisan sideshows. If we continue to undermine our own rule of law, we are doing Putin’s job for him.”

Today, we find ourselves at a crossroads. Not since the scourge of Joe McCarthy has our democracy been so threatened. McCain, sadly afflicted with a brain tumor, has more courage and intelligen­ce than the speaker of the House, the GOP members of the Intelligen­ce Committee and, yes, the president. They are obstructin­g the rule of law rather than advancing it.

President Trump said all Americans are dreamers. He should only know what I am dreaming about today.

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