RP-logo2.tif (9299 bytes)

 

It’s Time!

Campaign Statement by Robert M. Bowman

 

The world which enters the new millennium is very different from that which emerged from World War II a half century ago. Technology has led to quantum leaps in productivity. New means of communications have brought people together as never before. Here in the United States, we have had eight years of unprecedented sustained economic growth under a supposedly liberal Democratic president. The world is awash in wealth.

This should be the Golden Age of prosperity. In this country, at least, there should be no poverty, no joblessness, no homelessness, no malnutrition, no lack of health care. Every American worker should be able to support his or her family comfortably with one job, working 16 to 20 hours per week. With the necessities of life provided for, people should be free to pursue the arts, engage in creative pursuits, and spend more time with their family.

And yet, there is more poverty today than there was before — more than when the expansion began eight years ago, more than in the years of double-digit inflation, more than any time since the great depression of the 1930s. The standard of living has been declining for forty years. In spite of soaring productivity, real wages have gone down. It has become harder and harder for one wage earner to support a family. Our youth, all too often without a parent at home, and besieged by an alien culture of violence and drugs, are at risk. Family farmers have been forced into bankruptcy. Seniors worry about the future of Social Security, while many must choose between buying food and medicine. The middle class is becoming an endangered species.

Why? Is it bad luck? Stupidity? Incompetence? No. It is a political choice!

The average American manufacturing worker produces over $52 worth of product per hour. Yet his take-home pay is about $8 per hour. Where did the rest go? Some blame taxes, but that is not the answer. About $2 per hour goes to taxes. And $42 per hour is siphoned off by the corporation for profit and overhead, including obscene salaries for CEOs. In 1950, CEOs earned about 20 times as much as the worker on the shop floor. Today, that ratio is nearing 500 — and that’s for American workers. Thanks to war, gunboat diplomacy, and free investment agreements like NAFTA and GATT, the corporations can also use foreign workers. The ratio there is more like 50,000. It would take a Disney worker in the Dominican Republic 360 years to make as much as CEO Michael Eisner pays himself in one hour! And his enormous compensation package is a tax-deductible expense for the corporation. We taxpayers are picking up the tab for Eisner’s salary. Well, you know what? We don’t have to. Corporations can pay their executives whatever they want. But we don’t have to give them a tax deduction for it. We can limit the deduction to some reasonable multiple (say 20) of the salary of the lowest-paid worker in the company. The rest would come out of profit. And if the company in turn chose to tie the CEO’s salary to those of his workers, you can be sure he’d raise the pay of his lowest workers, so his pay could go up. If American workers got the same proportion of the wealth they created as they got in the 1950s, a person could support his family by working one job ... two days per week!

The plight of the American worker is due to the failure of trickle-down economics. They pumped all the wealth to the top ... and then siphoned it off before it could trickle down. In 1970, the richest 1% of Americans owned 20% of the nation’s wealth. By 1989, it was 40%. Today, it’s approaching 60%.

This has been made possible because the billionaires who lead the Trilateral Commission, the G8, the World Bank, the IMF, and the World Trade Organization have bought up political power in this country and in much of the industrialized world. Through their corporate media, they manipulate public opinion, assuring that their hand-picked members receive the nomination for President in both the Republican and Democratic parties. And through our archaic system of private financing of election campaigns, they assure themselves of having the best Congress money can buy, as well as a president beholden to them

This has resulted in a series of treaties and agreements falsely portrayed as supporting free trade, but in reality negating U.S. laws protecting workers and the environment and putting American workers in competition with those in the Third World.

It has also resulted in a series of wars, from Vietnam to El Salvador, from Lebanon to Iraq, from Nicaragua to Bosnia, from Grenada to Kosovo, from Somalia to Colombia — wars which are never in the interest of those fighting them, or of the families left behind ... wars which only serve the insatiable greed of the global investor class. (If you have been led to believe that the war in Kosovo was about ethnic cleansing, please see the Chronology on our web site. It was about money.)

There is a direct connection between economic injustice, the wars being waged against any country not capitulating to the New World Order, and our political system.

I come before you today determined to sever the connection between big money and political power, begin restoring our democracy, and end the pillaging of the American farmer, worker, and small businessman by the New World Order elite. Thanks to Ross Perot, that’s what the Reform Party stands for, and Jesse Ventura’s victory in Minnesota has made the Reform Party a major factor on the American electoral scene. I am seeking your help to become the nominee of the Reform Party for President of the United States.

I’ve been told that it doesn’t take a rocket scientist to be president. Nevertheless, I am one. I’m also a career military officer, the father of seven children, and the grandfather of nineteen. I’ve been a corporate slave, a song-and-dance man, a stuffy college professor, an itinerant preacher, a fighter pilot, a radio talk show host, and a husband to the same wonderful woman for 43 years. One thing I have never ever been is a politician. Heck, I’m not even a lawyer. (I hope you won’t hold that against me!)

So why am I running for president? Quite simply, I’ve come to believe that it’s the only way we can restore our democracy and put the American people in control. We’ve tried the Republican and Democratic parties, and found them wanting. The "Republocrat" parties are bought and paid for. They are wholly-owned subsidiaries of the New World Order. One might expect it of the Country-Club Republicans. But we might have expected better from the party of FDR. President Clinton promised to "Put People First," then sold us out with NAFTA, GATT, and the World Trade Organization. He campaigned against the arms trade, then doubled it in his first term. He spoke against Reagan’s "Star Wars" lunacy, and now is resurrecting it, while soldiers and their families are still on food stamps. He campaigned against militarism, but has used it unmercifully against the people of Iraq and Yugoslavia — not in support of democracy and human rights, as the corporate-owned media would have you believe, but on behalf of the financial interests of multinational corporations. He gave lip-service to family farmers, but allowed farmers in both the United States and Mexico to be forced off the land and into sweat-shops by NAFTA and the giant agribusiness conglomerates. It’s time to elect someone for the people.

Both Republocrat parties talk about family values, but their global neo-liberal capitalist policies have forced families to have two wage earners, three jobs, and no health care — all because the New World Order forces American workers to compete with Chinese slave labor and workers earning eight to twelve cents an hour. The free investment and unfair trade policies of NAFTA and GATT must be abolished. And if I am elected, they will be, and that’s a promise! We can no longer accept a government which serves the interests of global robber barons at the expense of its own people. It’s time to put people and families first — and mean it!

We can no longer accept a government which allows us to be number one among industrialized nations: number one in child poverty, number one in the gap between rich and poor, number one in unimmunized children, number one in teen pregnancy, number one in deaths by gunfire, number one in poverty among the elderly, number one in citizens without medical coverage, number one in homeless veterans, number one in citizen incarceration ... and yet has a trillion dollars worth of new weapons on the books at a time when we just ran out of enemies. It’s time for our priorities to change.

The resources are available. It’s time to end poverty, homelessness, joblessness, and malnutrition in this country. Poverty breeds desperation and criminals. Financial security breeds dignity and consumers. This is not liberalism or welfare or charity; it is common sense and common decency.

This may mean cancelling unneeded Cold War weapons and useless nukes, but it does not mean reducing our national security. It means redirecting our defense dollars to meet the needs of today and tomorrow, not yesterday. It means putting the needs of the people in our military services ahead of the greed of the weapons manufacturers. (And I’ve been on both sides of this game, so I know how it’s played.) It doesn’t do any good to have high-tech weapons if you don’t have well-educated, highly-trained people to operate them. And these people are not going to stay in the military unless we keep our promises to them and their families and to the veterans who served before them. Veterans of the Vietnam War came home afflicted with Agent Orange, unappreciated, and traumatized by what they saw and what they were asked to do. More Vietnam vets have died of suicide than were killed in combat. Tens of thousands of Gulf War veterans have had their lives destroyed by a combination of depleted uranium, anthrax vaccine, and chemical weaponry. They are still being told it’s all in their head. Our men and women in uniform were promised better than that. It’s time for us to keep our word to those who put everything on the line for us.

One of the best investments this country ever made was the GI Bill after World War II. It gave returning servicemen a chance to further their education, and it staggered their entry into the job market. It’s time for a new GI Bill giving expanded educational opportunities to those who are no longer needed to defend our country in the post-Cold War world.

We can no longer accept a government which allows the medical needs of its veterans to be unmet, which allows our elderly to be bounced back and forth between Medicare and Medicaid, and which allows millions of working Americans and their children to have no health coverage at all — just because that’s the way the insurance companies and giant HMOs want it. I don’t want an insurance company running my health care; I don’t want an HMO running my health care; and I don’t want the government running my health care. I want my doctor running my health care. I don’t want the government deciding who my doctor should be. I don’t want the government deciding whether I need to see a specialist. I don’t want the government deciding when I need an operation. I only want the government to do one thing — pay the bill. It’s time to end the myriad of piecemeal medical programs. It’s time to kick the insurance companies out of the medical business and end the stranglehold of the hospital conglomerates. It’s time for the United States to finally join the rest of the civilized world. It’s time for a single-payer national health system.

We tax what we want to discourage. And it works. So why do we tax small businesses for providing jobs? Why do we impose payroll taxes when paychecks are what fuel the economy? We want entrepreneurs to build businesses which provide jobs. So why impose taxes on them even before they become profitable? A business should only be taxed on its net, not its gross. It’s time to sever the connection between employment and health care, unburden our small businesses, and eliminate payroll taxes altogether. It’s time to tax profits, not payrolls.

And why should the tax burden fall on the small business which uses American suppliers and hires American workers, while the big multinationals use offshore suppliers, offshore slave labor, and offshore bank accounts to avoid US taxes altogether? The Fortune 500 companies control 25% of the world’s output and 70% of the world’s trade, but employ only 0.05% of the world’s population, and pay almost none of its taxes. Why penalize an honest businessman for not creating a paper headquarters in Switzerland or the Bahamas? It’s time for the giant multinationals who sell their products here to pay their fair share of taxes.

There is one form of welfare that is particularly loathsome — corporate welfare. We the taxpayers actually pay the bill for some corporations to move plants overseas, taking what were good jobs for Americans and turning them into sweatshop jobs for people in developing nations. We also allow multinational corporations to profit while polluting our land, water, and air. Again we the taxpayers pay for the cleanup, if it ever gets done. Instead, the polluters should pay for their own cleanup, and tax money should be used to help small businesses here at home and to help family farmers develop sustainable agriculture. It’s time to end corporate welfare as we know it.

We can no longer accept a government which promotes and subsidizes arms sales around the world, especially to dictators who use our weapons to control their own impoverished people. We are the world’s supplier of everything from small arms to F-16s, from landmines to Trident submarines, from cluster bombs to depleted uranium. All too often, these weapons wind up being used against our own men and women in the military. It’s time to stop pandering to the merchants of death.

The young people in our armed forces are idealistic. They certainly didn’t join the military for the pay or for the working conditions. It is wrong to ask them to participate in immoral ventures. It is wrong to imprison those who, as a matter of conscience, refuse. And it is wrong to corrupt those who, in their innocence, cooperate. We can no longer accept a government which uses our youth and our money to train death squads in the techniques of torture, intimidation, and assassination. It’s time for The School of the Americas to be closed.

We can no longer accept a government which gives Most Favored Nation status to the butchers of Tianenmen Square and places an illegal secondary embargo on the impoverished people of Cuba. Trying to isolate Castro hasn’t done any good. The rest of the world is doing business in Cuba. All we’re doing is isolating our own businesses. It’s time to repeal the Helms-Burton law, end the embargo, and establish normalized relations with Cuba.

We can no longer accept a government which promotes instability, insurrection, tyranny, torture, terrorism, and murder around the world in our name and with our money through the Central Intelligence Agency. If the multinational corporations want to engage in industrial espionage, let them hire their own spooks. Once and for all, the CIA must be abolished.

Finally, we can no longer accept — we will no longer accept — a government which sends our sons and daughters around the world to kill Arabs so the oil companies can sell the oil under their sand, making us the target of terrorists. Do we want our children and grandchildren used as cannon fodder for multinational corporations? Do we want them to be used as hired killers for Folgers, Chiquita Banana, and Exxon? Or do we want them used to defend our borders and, when necessary, to feed starving children and rebuild shattered cities. If the giant corporations want to go to war with Yugoslavia so they can destroy socialism, steal their resources, and control the oil from the Caspian Sea, let them hire their own mercenaries. Why should we taxpayers pay the bill, our sons and daughters do the fighting, and the American people get the blame? It’s time for us to be the good guys once again. No more Iraqs. No more El Salvadors. No more Kosovos. No more gunboat diplomacy ... anywhere! Are you with me? Is it time?

Many on the right and on the left have protested these individual acts of militarism. But we must not see them as isolated acts of stupidity. They are not. They are part of a long bloody history of foreign policy conducted for the financial interests of the wealthy few. It is a new colonialism, and it must end.

We must build an America at peace with the world and with its own people. We must build an America that leads the world — not by dominating and manipulating other nations, but by earning their respect and admiration. We must build an America that strives not to be king of the hill, nor to be subservient to the World Trade Organization, but to be a responsible sovereign member of the family of nations. We must build an America that leads the world — not with military might, but with its vision, its compassion, its democracy, its productivity, its standard of living, its treatment of its own people, and its goodness.

We must speak the truth to the American people — about the growing economic injustice of the New World Order, about what has been done to American democracy, and about why there never seems to be an end to war. We the people have been lied to, manipulated, and ignored. We must wake the people and restore the dream.

We must unite those in the Reform Party, the Libertarian Party, the Green Party, the Taxpayers Party, the New Party, the Natural Law Party, the Peace and Freedom Party — all those of the left and the right, conservatives and liberals, disenchanted Democrats and repulsed Republicans, doves and hawks — because there is one great cause on which we all agree. We must take political power from the multinational corporations and banks, the arms merchants, and the lobbyists and restore it to the people of America.

Once the people are empowered, war will be abolished, because it has never been the people who made war. Abolishing war is as easy, and as difficult, as taking power away from those who profit by it. This is what we must do. It’s time! And together, we can do it. Mine is not a protest candidacy. Once the American people understand the truth, the candidates of the Republocrat parties won’t stand a chance. I intend to win. Thank you, and God bless you!

 

Bowman2000

Bob Bowman (Reform Party) for President ... For the People!

5115 S. A1A Hwy, Melbourne Beach, FL 32951

(407) 952-0601; Toll-free (877) 853-7465

e-mail: Bowman2000@rmbowman.com

Web site: www.rmbowman.com/Bowman2000

 

 

 Biographical Highlights for Dr. Robert M. Bowman

President, Institute for Space and Security Studies 82-99. Presiding Bishop, United Catholic Church 96-99. Executive Vice-President, Millennium III Corporation 83-99. Executive Director, SHALOM International Interfaith Network 85-95. Vice-President, Space Communications Company 81-82. Manager, Advanced Space Programs, General Dynamics 78-81. Director, Advanced Space Programs Development, DoD, 76-78 (directing all the "Star Wars" programs and developing systems for super-secret National Reconnaisance Office spy satellites). Deputy Director, Ballistic Systems, Advanced Ballistic Reentry Systems, DoD, 75-76. Chief of Aeronautics, European Office of Aerospace Research and Development, London 71-74 (directing contracts and grants in Europe, Africa, the Middle East, and Southern Asia). Lt. Col., USAF, ret. Flew 101 combat missions in Vietnam. Taught at 4 universities. Served as Department Head and Assistant Dean. Ph.D. in Aeronautics and Nuclear Engineering from Cal Tech. Recipient of the Eisenhower Medal, the George F. Kennan Peace Prize, the President’s Medal of Veterans For Peace, six Air Medals, the Republic Aviation Airpower Award, the Society of American Military Engineers Gold Medal (twice). Been on Larry King, Donohue, Firing Line, McNeil-Lehrer. Addressed Academies of Science of six nations, UN, Congressional caucuses, House of Lords.

Paid for by Bowman2000 Presidential Campaign Committee

Return to  #Top of Page

Return to Bowman2000 Home Page

Return to Master Hosting Site:  www.rmbowman.com