Adventure Journal Post
Former Interior Secretary Babbitt Calls Out Obama — And Here’s His Speech
A fellow Democrat urges the President to be a better a leader for land and water conservation -- "something he has not yet done" and to fight harder against Congressional riders dismantling environmental law.By Steve Casimiro, Guest Writer, 7-21-11
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| BRUCE BABBITT | |
Politicians generally don’t level shotgun blasts at sitting presidents of their own party, but in June that’s exactly what former Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt did. He brought to the bully pulpit of a former Cabinet member a broadside against President Obama for a lack of leadership on environmental and climate change issues, calling the current Congress the most radical in history and Obama’s failure to engage it “appeasement”. From within the highest levels of the Democratic party, he expressed the frustration with Obama that so many environmentally oriented people have felt, to some a betrayal, to other discouragement and the sense that what might be perhaps the one and only opportunity to tackle the issues of climate change and environmental degradation before it’s too late is slipping away. If not Obama, then who?
Babbitt’s remarks were covered moderately widely in the press, but it did not spark a debate and the response from the establishment was muted, to say the least. It’s true that Obama has made some positive moves, but most reasonably conscious observers can see that the challenges to the global environment are orders of magnitude greater than what we’ve dealt with previously, and Babbit’s speech, along with Al Gore’s powerful and frightening call to action in a recent Rolling Stone, is a much deserved, well needed, and overdue alarm from a voice that carries more weight than most.
Here is his speech, in its entirety.
Secretary Bruce Babbitt
Speech at the National Press Club
Washington, DC
June 8, 2011
It is now more than ten years since I left public office. I am returning to the public stage today because I believe that this Congress, in its assaults on our environment, has embarked on the most radical course in our history. The Congress, led by the House of Representatives, has declared war on our land, water and natural resources. And it is time for those of us who support our conservation tradition to raise our voices on behalf of the American people.
It is clear to me that the House of Representatives will not only block progress, but will continue to sustain an assault on our public lands and water. Therefore, it is imperative that President Obama take up the mantle of land and water conservation – something that he has not yet done in a significant way. President Obama and the Executive Branch are the best, and likely only, hope for meaningful progress on this critical issue.
So I am here today to call on the President to lead us in standing up to the radical agenda of the House of Representatives, and to replace their draconian agenda with a bold conservation vision.
The opening salvos in this war were fired in April, when the new Congress enacted a budget measure, called a Continuing Resolution, to appropriate funding for the balance of this fiscal year. Beneath the cover of that budget process, however, the House leadership inserted unrelated “riders” to begin dismantling our environmental laws.
Here are three examples of these “riders.”
In the April resolution, the Congress removed the grey wolf from the Endangered Species list. The restoration of the grey wolf to Yellowstone and our northern forests was an historic achievement, now threatened by this Congress.
In the April budget resolution, the Congress terminated an Administration program to rebuild our depleted ocean fisheries. The program, called “catch shares” was amazingly successful in restoring fish populations and providing fishing jobs and was on the way to becoming the most innovative environmental initiative of the Obama Administration.
In the April budget resolution, Congress axed an initiative by the Secretary of the Interior to identify and maintain the natural character of our most important remaining undesignated public lands.
Viewed singly, in isolation from one another, these rider provisions might not appear to justify my characterization of this Congress as the most radical in history. Yet viewing them together, along with pending legislative proposals, a larger outline emerges. It is a pattern of a broad, sustained assault on nearly all our environmental laws.
The intent is to chip away, a blow at a time, at the edifice of environmental laws and regulations, avoiding a frontal assault that would call attention to the overall objective.
To illustrate, I would like today to single out for discussion, just one such area, and that is the public land laws that are so meaningful to me as a westerner and that are so much a part of our great American heritage.
The best place to observe what is happening is by reference with our two great public laws, the Antiquities Act of 1906 and the Wilderness Act of 1964.
The Antiquities Act is a great American innovation. It was enacted into law in 1906 on June 8th, the very date on which I am making these remarks. It was sponsored by a Republican Congressman and signed by a Republican President, Theodore Roosevelt.
Way then, more than a hundred years ago, the sponsor, Representative John Lacey (R-IA), made this observation: “The immensity of man’s power to destroy imposes a responsibility to preserve.”
Since then the Act has been used by nearly every President, laying the foundation for many of our best known National Parks and other protected areas.
President Clinton used the Antiquities Act to establish the Grand Staircase Escalante National Monument, a widely acclaimed decision.
President George W. Bush used the Act to protect the marine reefs and waters of the Northwest Hawaiian Islands, the largest area ever set aside under the Act. The radical leaders of the House voiced few objections to that action by their President, perhaps because oil and gas companies have evinced little interest in the Islands.
This past April, a House rider to gut the Antiquities Act failed by a mere four votes. Now that the public has been awakened, I doubt that Congressional leaders will try another frontal attack.
However, what they are continuing to do is to chip away with piecemeal bills and amendments some of which will likely be transmuted into budget riders during the course of the summer in budget negotiations.
Here are a few examples. Congressman Rehberg (R-MT) has introduced legislation to exempt Montana from the Antiquities Act and Congressman Labrador (R-ID) to exempt Idaho. Similar legislation was introduced in the Senate to exempt Nevada.
Perhaps the ultimate objective of these piecemeal attacks is best revealed by a bill introduced by Representative Rob Bishop of Utah and others that would amend the United States Constitution to grant states the power to nullify Federal law.
The Wilderness Act of 1964 is the other great, generic public land law of our Nation. The National Wilderness Preservation System, with units established by Congress in virtually every state in the Union, is an enduring achievement of many successive Congresses.
The radical leaders of the House, however, are relentlessly attempting to chip away at this law as well. Not only are certain members of congress prohibiting any new Wilderness designations, a bill recently introduced in both houses by Senator Barrasso (R-WY) and Congressman McCarthy (R-CA) would eliminate our nation’s Wilderness Study Areas – millions of acres no longer protected for conservation. In addition it would remove protections for National Forest Roadless Areas – watersheds that provide our drinking water, and protect the best fish and game habitat in the West. In total, this extreme bill would undo protections for more than 40 million acres of public land.
As these attacks escalate the urgent question for those of us who support and advocate for our conservation tradition is how to respond.
One alternative is to lie low, hoping that this storm will soon pass by without too much lasting damage.
Failure to respond, however, is a form of appeasement that has not worked in the past and it will not work this time. Our adversaries prefer to operate in the shadows, outside the sunshine generated by public knowledge and participation. For our opponents know that when anti-environmentalism becomes a public issue they will lose. They know that American support for our environmental heritage is wide and deep.
We made the appeasement mistake when I was Secretary. Back in 1995, another Congress, in thrall to then House Speaker Gingrich, inserted a “salvage rider” to increase logging in our National Forests onto an appropriations bill. Pressured by the timber industry and the House leadership, we capitulated and President Clinton signed the bill with the rider intact.
It was a big mistake that set off a prolonged and destructive episode in the history of our National Forests.
We did learn from that experience however. President Clinton vowed to veto any additional anti-environmental riders. The Congress, aware that when the President commands the high ground, he will carry public opinion, backed off. We did not face another rider crisis.
I’m not here, however, to dwell on the past. I am here to look forward. To sound the alarm about the assault on our natural resources by the Republicans in Congress, and also to remind the President that he has the power, the responsibility and the public support to stand up to those who would destroy our heritage.
The current debt limit and budget negotiations will provide President Obama an opportunity to demonstrate that he has learned from the events of April. He should stand strong against environmental riders, in whatever guise, whether legislative amendments, funding moratoria, or limitations on agency initiatives.
Drawing a line against riders is a good beginning. However, we cannot measure conservation progress by the number of bad ideas that are blocked. We should measure progress in healthy rivers and streams, forests protected, species saved and restored, wilderness areas added and national monuments created.
The Antiquities Act is a good place for this Administration to begin building a conservation legacy. The Antiquities Act is a remarkable conservation tool that has been used to protect renowned areas including Grand Canyon, Zion, Olympic National Park and Joshua Tree National Park. It was used extensively by President Obama’s immediate predecessors. President Clinton used the Act to establish the Grand Staircase and more than twenty other Monuments. President George W. Bush set aside a larger area than any of his predecessors –the marine reefs and waters of the Northwest Hawaiian Islands.
The Antiquities Act has, for more than a hundred years, granted the President authority to establish National Monuments. Monuments should be established through a process of public consultation both local and national, with a chance for all to be heard. But that process cannot begin until the Administration puts forth specific proposals for public
consideration.
There are numerous proposals, and many important cultural, historical and environmental sites are awaiting protection. Many of these proposals have wide public support, including the endorsement of members of Congress from the areas in question.
The best way to defend the Antiquities Act is for the President to use it.
The Wilderness Act is also in need of more vigorous advocacy from its friends, including the Administration.
The critics who complain that we already have too much Wilderness have it all wrong. We have too little designated Wilderness.
Here are some facts; the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) administers more than 250 million acres of public land. More than 41 million acres of that land is leased for oil and gas. To date only 9 million acres of public land managed by the BLM has been designated as Wilderness. It is past time to bring some balance back to the public lands
with the creation of more Wilderness Areas.
The designation of Wilderness is a Congressional prerogative. And every member of Congress, from whatever part of the country, has an equal voice and vote in designating Wilderness. For the public lands, wherever located, are the common patrimony of this nation, belonging to each and every citizen of this country.
President Obama should call upon the Congress to expand the National Wilderness Preservation System. A good place to begin is with the wilderness bills already introduced, most of them by members of Congress from the states where the lands are located.
And the President should remind the Congress that where wilderness legislation is being bottled up by an intransigent few, that he has the power to designate those areas as National Monuments, a designation which can carry protection comparable to a Wilderness designation.
By voicing his willingness to use the Antiquities Act as an alternative to Wilderness designation, the President can bring Congress to the table to work out conservation measures acceptable to reasonable stakeholders. President Clinton used the Antiquities Act in this fashion to work with the Congress, and it produced good results in such places as Steens Mountain in Oregon, the Colorado Canyons, the San Jacinto Mountains and Otay Mountain in California and Las Cienegas in Arizona, among others.
We also need to hear this Administration in support of protection for our ocean resources. For too long the beauty and diversity and productivity of ocean life and fisheries has been taken for granted, as limitless and beyond destruction. That is no longer the case. Every day we are learning more of the impending destruction of coral reef systems and declining productivity of our oceans.
This Administration has frequently spoken of the need for responsible expansion of offshore oil exploration and production.
Well and good, but we have not heard equally strong support for enhanced
conservation and protection of the most important places in our offshore waters and along our coastlines.
The link between offshore oil and the imperative for conservation of our natural resources was recognized by the Congress more than fifty years ago by creating the Land and Water Conservation Fund (LWCF). LWCF is based on a simple idea: use revenues from the depletion of one natural resource- offshore oil and gas—to support the conservation of another precious resource -our land and water.
Interior Secretary Ken Salazar has made a strong and continuing effort to persuade Congress to fund the LWCF at the level originally intended by Congress. He needs the President’s firm support in budget negotiations to assure adequate permanent funding.
The most important place to demonstrate Administration leadership for mitigating the impacts of offshore drilling is in Alaska. Offshore drilling in Arctic waters poses high risks that must be mitigated with strong conservation measures.
Bristol Bay, the passageway for the myriad salmon runs that travel through the rivers system of Alaska is the greatest and most productive fishery on the planet. President Obama should use the Antiquities Act to designate the federal waters of Bristol Bay, as a National Monument, permanently off limits to oil and gas.
And as the Administration opens the western Arctic slope lands to oil and gas leasing, there will be another opportunity to strike a balance between oil production and wildlife conservation. More leasing and drilling on the Arctic slope should await and be conditioned upon passage of legislation establishing protected shoreline areas and wetland regions in the far western Arctic frontier, including breeding and migration corridors for the fabled western Arctic caribou herds.
There is no issue as lasting or as worthy as the preservation of our natural and cultural heritage. Theodore Roosevelt, more than a hundred years ago, put it this way: “We have fallen heir to the most glorious heritage a people ever received, and each one must do his part to show that the nation is worthy of its good fortune.”
Mr. President, America’s great outdoors is under attack as never before. We need you to stand up to this assault as only the President can. You will have the lasting gratitude of the American people for generations to come.
Steve Casimiro is the founder of Adventure Journal, where this post originally appeared.
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Comments
He may not consider himself radical for destroyoing the Yellowstone elk herds, but others do.
Steamrollering opposition with the Antiquities Act is extraordinarily hostile to one of the core principles of a representative republic: Consent of the governed.
That Babbitt shows so little respect for this central concept only underscores how misguided he really is. Or maybe he's not misguided, just malignant.
And yes, Casimiro, I wrote for you in a previous life.
It appears Babbitt was called to the podium by the trust puppies and their causes because America is not totally immersed in environmental activism and reordering of the landscape to meet their particular view of the world. Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya, Yemen, Somali pirates, conflagration wildfires due entirely to fuel buildup created by the likes of Babbitt and his fellow travelers, a deep recession poised on the second precipice of debt, falling value of the dollar, joblessness, and energy prices driven up by a falling dollar, and Babbitt is blathering from the bully pulpit of the Antiquities Act and his reserving US coal from the market to appease Clinton's Indonesian and Chinese campaign supporters. How soon we forget. Utah hasn't.
Babbitt was Interior Secretary. He drew up the agreement that limited the Westlands Irrigation District's withdrawal of water from the Trinity River, the fully half of the lower Klamath flow, and the Klamath's cold water tributary that comes from high mountain snow fields, and the not warm water streams from the high desert plateaus, an agreement that lets the lower west side of the San Joaquin valley irrigation district take 68% of the total stream flow of the North Fork of the Trinity and take it out of the Klamath watershed, to flow down the Sacramento River to expend all the electricity is produced getting to the Delta to drive the pumps that pump that water uphill, alongside the San Joaquin River, to irrigation of a 600,000 acres of desert without an outflow. The resulting irrigation waste water and tail waters end up in ponds and lakes, fully contaminated by heavy metals and salts, to kill wildlife and waterfowl. So what part of that agreement saves salmon? The rich guys in the Central Valley get their water, and now it is up to small ranchers and Oregon power rate payers to fix it?? The rich elitists like Babbitt take care of their own. And sue to make the little guys sell out to the bigs. Give the Econazi lobby and BigAg Equal Access to Justice Act funds for legal expenses, and then make the prevailing small guys pay all their legal expenses until they have to sell to pay their bills. Democrap justice from the trust puppy in chief. Babbitt is a fraud and just another elite and entitled American.
Babbitt responds to money, as does his Democrat camp followers. The money and votes come from ethnic minorities and farmers looking for the free ride from Congress and Democrat Presidents. They get what they pay for from the scion of the Indian trading post chain. "Give ya fifty cents for that basket".."Ten dollah for that rug."
You can send the charlatans to Notre Dame, to Harvard, and they are still what they are, but in a better suit.
Notice Babbitt is not out there supporting fuel reductions in the forests from his home state where they just had the largest forest fire in their history, and the two largest in their history in this century. And so goes New Mexico. No sawmills, no markets for thinning logs, no pulp mill at Snowflake. All gone because the Clinton cabinet wanted them gone. And now we get the results, and we will get them every spring from now on because the laws are so damaging and so never going to be changed for the better. We have a government out of control, and a government for government, unto government, and the voters are just pawns in a game with few players. 'Hoes and pimps", the body politic of the USA today. And Babbitt is a player. The elder statesman of government by government for government.
We have trading posts today. They are called medical marijuana shops. or pawn shops. Instant collateralized loan stores, or fencing operations in lay language. List it with Craiggie.
The US is up to its ass in debt, and the spenders don't want to quit and now offer more taxes as the answer. Our economy is in the tank because our shit costs too much to make because we have so many layers of "protections" and regulations and in the end, business fails. They fail today because the cascade of failure heaped on failure continues unabated and there is now no good answer and no way out. The social agenda trumped economics, and we are now broke on our collective asses. Hang on, because it is going to be a bumpy ride, and from this Babbitt essay, you now know where Democrat priorities lie. And it ain't about making jobs for Americans. When you come from an elitist family parasitizing poverty stricken Indians on the Rez, and get the full wally elitist education, and live the Democrat life of lawyering and redistributing money, other people's money, when the going is tougher than whang leather, pontificate for more Wilderness and fewer jobs, more land grabs by the Feds. Your wealth is safe. We will need another revolution before this all works its way to the end game.
I always look forward to your opinions, Bearbait!
They own all congresses, parliaments, and legislatures.
If it cannot be done by executive order it will not be done at all.
I find discussions of shadowy conspiracies amusing...
It really pains me to see my geriatric mother-in-law in deep worry about where and what to do with her meager savings because she believes the Congress is not going to work together to get this country's federal finances under control by whatever means that are needed, including cutting entitlements and raising taxes. A daughter of the Great Depression, she would rather go without than go under. And not one frigging eviro green liberal understands her fears. Sell the excess horses to the Belgians and the French, use the money from horse sales to fund rural schools and have conservation and income and sanity in this runaway government for government by government driven by the process of doing whatever you have to in order to get re-elected. Government by streetwalker. And the Congress just another hot bed no-tell motel.
If all you can do is puff insults, at least make the effort to be creative.
What do you think of the Antiquities Act, and why?
Why do I support it? The reasons should also already be apparent to you. First, look at what it has given us. Devil's Tower would be sporting an undignified, unnecessary, and grotesque crown of antenna towers by now and the Petrified Forest would have long ago been converted to key chains and bathroom tiles, all now scattered amongst a host of garbage dumps, were it not for the Antiquities Act. Look at the history of the Grand Canyon; given the manipulative depravity of Ralph Cameron, one of the most corrupt politicians in history, there was no way that state or local government or even Congress was going to save the Canyon; it took a responsible president using the Antiquities Act. State and local corruption is often so entrenched that it even tries to block the generosity of private citizens who wish to give valuable lands to the national public; this was the case with the Tetons and a number of other monuments and former monuments that are now national parks. The use of the Antiquities Act by Carter stopped the wholesale purchase of Alaskan lands at a time when the local populace was even more vulnerably clueless than they are now and its use by Clinton stopped a horrifically damaging sweetheart deal with a foreign mining company that would have exchanged a miniscule temporary "boom" that would have created no more than a handful of jobs for damage that would have lasted centuries.
Why do I support the philosophy behind it in the face of local greed? Again, the answer should be clear already. As I grew up, my father and I had to watch priceless assets, created with staggering amounts of time and effort, turned over to carping ne'er-do-wells who couldn't be bothered to add to this heritage, but only to milk it, harvest it, spend it, waste it, and ultimately lose it all just as fast as their childish greed could chew it up and excrete it out. What we watched happened all over the West. Instead of delaying their lust for personal gratification, the miscreants who gained control of these assets couldn't be bothered to educate themselves and learn to support themselves without having to liquidate these resources. Now, so many of these resources are gone ...and for what? ...acres and acres of five acre parcels surrounded by torn-up barbed wire fences and sporting dilapidated trailers and defunct muscle cars, junked old motorcycles, and other various "thrillcraft" in the process of being parted out. The point is that, although there is corruption at every level of society and government, the corruption gets ever more petty as you descend to the bottom and you need a mechanism, at the very top, in the hands of the president, that can be used to rise over the degeneracy of people like Ralph Cameron.
That you would call Alaskans "clueless" about Carter, call "corruption" as you "descend to the bottom" is the sort of snooty elitist dreck I fully expected.
The Antiquities Act requires that the designations be as small as possible to accomplish the purposes of preservation. The Grand Staircase was certainly not limited to just a mine, nor were any of the what, 27 monuments, a fair proportion of which came in congressional districts where Clinton lost?
And while we're on Utah and coal, why the heck is it that the agency guy fostering the, um, "sweetheart deal" somehow finds himself ELECTED by the people most affected by the Monument designation, and further finds himself testifying before Congress on the same hearing and topic is the esteemed Babbitt?
I guess consent of the governed is incomprehensible to minds like yours. No wonder you're ashamed to name yourself.
BUT---I don't recall saying anything at all about Babbit here. Not a word. I sure don't carry his water. He does have a better perspective on this stuff than anyone here, though.
Do you guys even bother to read what I write the way i write it ? Nah....
I regressed as usual. Gramps said that the Interior Dept was awash in petty corruption all the time, and sometimes in great corruptive schemes. He found Senators from both S.D. and Nebraska buying phony homestead claims, and then selling them to Armour Meat Co., and others. Gramps gathered all his evidence, and took the train from Rapid City to D.C., and had an audience with Binger Herrman, the notoriously corrupt sometimes Senator from Oregon, who was head of GLO. Hermann took Gramps "proof" and dumped it in a metal wastebasket and set it afire. Told him to go back to SD and his job or find another. Gramps quit and moved to OR. And when Hermann was gone, signed on again and was a GLO commissioner in Lake county, ORegon. And then moved to the State Office and then to a regional job. He retired after WWII in Sacramento, still prosecuting crimes against the Public Domain, although then an employee of the new BLM.
Interior has a lot of floors, all about one agency under the helm of the Secretary of Interior. Parks, BIA, UFSWS, BLM, Bur Rec,
and a zillion other "offices" and other duties, all with the attendant asst. under sec of interior boss. Every office, department, posting, has a chance to be corrupted, and you have to wonder how many are at any one time. It is all by political appointment, and Interior is the place for loyal minions of political winners to land in a cushy government job. Mining, drilling, mapping, wildfire fighting rules, emergency response teams, the list is seemingly endless. It is staffed by the aptly named SES Pool. Salaried Employee Service. All trained government grafters, and all loyal to the party in power.
So do I think Babbitt a shill for Babbitt?? sure. He wanted to be a Supreme Court Justice. Why do you think he is on the podium today?? He is running for Justice of the Supreme Court. Not vaginally advantaged, or of some hue other than white, he is not going to get appointed by Obama. But he does have to keep up appearances, and polish his wise and knowing demeanor. The thought that the "best" legal mind out there is going to be a Supreme is so false and so not going to happen. The Supremes are a political appointment made by a President. Like a baseball manager, he has 9 spots to keep filled to field a full court. There is no tie breaker for a 4-4 decision. But to win the game in the mind of the President, and his party, you chose a Justice not on legal ability, but on sublimely noted prior work and the content of past writings and speeches. It is, after all, a body making law in absence of the Legislative branch. They can have their decisions trumped by the Congress, if a bill to change the decision can pass the Congress and a President will sign it. But not often does that happen. Bad law in the US tends to stay bad law, and we suffer because there is not the political will or power to change bad law. And we outgrow laws. The world and society changes, and the law does not. Right this very minute this country is up to its ass in fiscal alligators snapping at the economy and the pursuit of happiness because of this overwhelming body of rules, regulations, and law that is no longer appropriate or sane, but still it drives the process.
I made a living for 30 years beating the USFS timber sale contract. I knew it better than the TSO. The Ranger. And used the contract as a tool to make money by buying sales and selling lumber, and logs. And today, we have Congress doing the same thing on behalf of constituents and campaign donors of note. Money talks, and bullshit walks. If you don't like our government, come up with enough dough to change the system. Or the people running the system.
So I guess I did like Interior Secretary McKay...he at least trimmed the number of employees from the Dept of Interior. He had fewer working there when he quit to run for the Senate, than he did when Ike appointed him Sec. We need some of that today. And a whole lot of Interior needs to be put into other cabinet positions. The USFS should stay where it is with DOA, because Interior is now like dysentery, in that is mostly runs itself no matter what you try to do to stop it. And no. Watt et al, up to and including Salazar are minor league creeps Peter Principled two jobs ago. I have no idea what this country could do with a good Interior Sec. However, we don't have anyone alive who can run such a disparate organization with any kind of effectiveness. And still make policy decisions. Impossible to do. To little time, and too little brainpower. So it runs itself. Like most of government in this country today. Only the Congressional power of the purse can rein in an agency, and I no longer think that is possible. We can't even budget without borrowing forty cents of every dollar spent, and half those spent dollars are interest on prior borrowing. Wiping our collective ass on a hoop. August 2, there is no clean spot to grab for the next wipe.
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Is there some relationship with polygamy and logging I don't know about?? Most loggers couldn't afford one wife, let along a gaggle of them.
Warren Jeffs is just a guy with a Jones for Islamic mtarriage customs and law. You know, like the young bull that says to the old bull "Look at all those heifers. Let us run down there and breed some." And the old bull replies "We shall walk down there and breed them all." I think the limit is four in Islam. But there is a codicil that says you can FIFO wives. First in, first out, by divorce. Rotational wives game. Now that you think about it, are you sure you want to involve Jeffs in the political rant?? After all, he is no more or no less Mormon than Senator Harry Reid. And Harry is Obama's chief negotiator in Congress because he leads a majority, albeit one that cannot over ride a filibuster.
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