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A Historic Filibuster on Corporate Greed and the Decline of Our Middle Class
Author Self-Published
March 2011
On Sale: March 11, 2011
ISBN: 1468178474 EAN: 9781468178470 Kindle: B004L9M1EE e-Book
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Non-Fiction Political
On Friday, December 10, 2010, Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders
walked on to the floor of the United States Senate and began
speaking. It turned out to be a very long speech, lasting
over eight and a half hours.
And it hit a nerve.
Millions followed the speech online until the traffic
crashed the Senate server. A huge, positive grassroots
response tied up the phones in the senator’s offices in
Vermont and Washington. President Obama reportedly held an
impromptu press conference with former President Clinton to
deflect media attention away from Sanders’ speech.
Editorials and news coverage appeared throughout the
world.
In his speech, Sanders blasted the agreement
that President Obama struck with Republicans, which extended
the Bush tax cuts for millionaires and billionaires, lowered
estate tax rates for the very, very rich, and set a terrible
precedent by establishing a “payroll tax holiday” diverting
revenue away from the Social Security Trust Fund, and
threatening the fund’s very future.
But the speech
was more than a critique of a particular piece of
legislation. It was a dissection of the collapse of the
American middle class and a well-researched attack on
corporate greed and on public policy which, over the last
several decades, has led to a huge growth in millionaires
even as the United States has the highest rate of childhood
poverty in the industrialized world. It was a plea for a
fundamental change in national priorities, for government
policy that reflects the needs of working families, and not
just the wealthy and their lobbyists.
Finally,
Sanders’ speech—published here in its entirety with a new
introduction by the senator—is a call for action. It is a
passionate statement informing us that the only people who
will save the middle class of this country is the middle
class itself, but only if it is informed, organized, and
prepared to take on the enormously powerful special
interests dominating Washington.
Senator Bernie
Sanders is the longest-serving Independent in the history of
the United States Congress. He has represented Vermont in
the Senate for four years and in the House for sixteen
years. He served four terms as Mayor of Burlington,
Vermont, during which time the city was recognized as one of
the most livable cities in America.
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