People, across the country, marching in the streets against police brutality and murder.
Over 100,000 Americans dead from the coronavirus, and millions infected.
Tens of millions of workers losing their jobs, struggling to put food on the table, pay their rent, keep their homes or afford a visit to the doctor.
We are in the midst of an unprecedented moment in American history and our people are hurting in a way we have never experienced in our lifetimes. That is the simple truth. And, in the midst of all this suffering, it would be unforgivable if we did not learn some profound lessons from the failures of policies and institutions which have made this difficult situation much worse than it had to be. If all the death, pain and struggle are to mean anything, it must be that we develop a new vision for America and a government based on the principles of justice, not greed.
Tragically, racism and police brutality in America are not new. They have been an integral part of American history. But now, we are seeing people of all races and backgrounds stand up and fearlessly say: "Enough is enough. No more." We will not accept the torture and murder of George Floyd by Minneapolis police officers. We will not forget the police killings that, in recent years, took the lives of so many African-Americans including Eric Garner, Sandra Bland, Laquan McDonald, Tamir Rice, Alton Sterling, Breonna Taylor, Freddie Gray, Rekia Boyd and Walter Scott.
Now is the time for real police department reform. Every death of a person held in police custody must be investigated by the U.S. Department of Justice. Every police officer involved in a killing must be held accountable, and those found guilty must be punished with the full force of the law.
Now is the time for real criminal justice reform. We must invest in our young people in jobs and education. Not more jails and incarceration. We must end the disgrace of the United States having more people in jail than any other country on earth — disproportionately Black, Latino and Native American.
Now is the time for real health care reform. It is a tragedy that, in the last several months, 40 million Americans have lost their jobs. It is totally absurd that many of them are also losing their health insurance. We are the only major country on earth that ties health care to employment. That irrational and dangerous policy has got to end. The time is long overdue for us to understand that health care is a human right, not an employee benefit. Are the unemployed less in need of visiting a doctor or a hospital than those who have jobs? Are they less likely to come down with the coronavirus, cancer, heart disease or mental illness? Whether the insurance companies like it or not, the absurdity of tying health care to employment must end. We need Medicare for All.
Further, as Americans are painfully aware we pay, by far, the highest prices in the world for prescription drugs. While the pharmaceutical industry makes tens of billions a year in profit and gives their CEOs exorbitant compensation packages, one out of five Americans are unable to afford the medicine their doctors prescribe.
That situation is likely to become even more grotesque. Right now, the federal government is providing billions to major drug companies as they search for a COVID-19 vaccine. Fine. But, as of now, there is no assurance from the government that the new vaccine will be delivered free to the American people, the people who are paying for the research. Unbelievably, we may well end up paying for the vaccine twice. First, through research funded by our tax dollars. Second, when we purchase the product. And that means that if you have the money for the vaccine, you can stay well and stay alive. If not, well, good luck. That is not an acceptable approach. The vaccine, when it is developed, must be free to all.
Now is the time for real economic reform, and an economy that works for all and not just the few. The current crisis has not only revealed the cruelty and the dysfunctionality of our health care system, it has also shown us the extraordinary inequities in our economy. In America today half of our workers live paycheck to paycheck. Not surprisingly, it turns out that when you have nothing in the bank and your existence is dependent upon your last paycheck, and that paycheck ceases to come, you go from poverty into desperation. Hunger, because there's no money for food. Homelessness, because there's no money for rent. Sickness, because there's no money for the doctor.
What the pandemic has taught us is that a relatively low unemployment rate, which is what we had before the current crisis, does not constitute a "great" economy, and does not adequately guarantee for the security and well-being of working families. When tens of millions of workers earn starvation wages, that is not a "great" economy. When 40% of the people in our country do not have the savings to pay for a $400 emergency, that is not a "great" economy. When over 500,000 Americans are homeless and 18 million families spend at least half their incomes on housing, that is not a "great" economy. When 87 million are uninsured or underinsured, that is not a "great" economy.
At a time of massive unemployment, starvation wages and enormous unmet needs, we need a federal jobs program that guarantees employment for all who are able to work. We can create millions of good-paying jobs by rebuilding our crumbling infrastructure, transforming our energy system away from fossil fuel into energy efficiency and sustainable energy, building the 10 million units of affordable housing we need, educating our kids and expanding access to health care.
Right now it is up to us to envision what kind of country we want to become, which is why I am asking you directly:
Add your name to say you are committed to our fight for racial justice, economic justice, social justice and environmental justice and to call on Democratic leadership to adopt a strong progressive agenda.
In my view, the great lesson to be learned from this terrible moment in American history is that we cannot rely on unfettered capitalism to protect us. The rich, the powerful and wealthy campaign contributors are doing just fine. Too many others are being left behind, struggling hard just to survive. The question now is whether, as a nation, we will finally learn that lesson and make the bold changes we desperately need in order to become a more just society.
In the richest country in the history of the world we need strong policies to ensure that every man, woman and child has a decent standard of living. We must understand, as President Franklin D. Roosevelt did 80 years ago, that when we talk about "freedom" we are talking about economic rights as human rights.
What does that mean in specific terms? It means that:
We must end starvation wages in America. People cannot live on $7.25 an hour, or $10 an hour or $12 an hour. We must raise the minimum wage to at least $15 an hour, make it easier for workers to join unions, and guarantee a good-paying job to everyone who is able to work.
We must end our wasteful and dysfunctional employer-based private health insurance system and move to Medicare for All. The function of a rational health care system is not to provide huge profits for the insurance companies and the pharmaceutical industry. It is to provide high-quality health care to every man, woman and child in this country in a cost-effective way.
We must fundamentally alter our approach to education. We need a universal, high-quality, affordable childcare system. We need to adequately fund public education so that every school district in the country, regardless of zip code, is able to attract high-quality teachers and provide reasonably sized classes. We need to make public colleges and universities tuition-free and cancel student debt.
I realize that some people will say that these ideas are "radical" or "utopian" — never to be accomplished. I disagree.
Here is what Nelson Mandela said about transformative politics. "It always seems impossible until it is done." This from someone who walked out of a prison cell after 27 years to become president of South Africa and end apartheid.
The great opposition we face to progressive and humane change in our society comes not just from Wall Street, the insurance companies, the pharmaceutical industry, the fossil fuel industry, the military-industrial complex, the corporate media or the enormous wealth and power of the 1%. It also comes from the limits of our imagination.
If we believe that real, fundamental change is impossible, it will never occur. If we believe that justice — economic justice, social justice, racial justice and environmental justice — is unachievable, it will never be achieved.
In this very difficult moment for our country and the world, now more than ever, we must stand in solidarity in the fight for a new and better society. Despair is not an option. This struggle is not just about us. It is for our children, future generations and the survival of the planet.
Let us go forward together.
In solidarity,
Bernie Sanders
Paid for by Friends of Bernie Sanders
PO BOX 391, Burlington, VT 05402
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