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- Newsgroups: alt.drugs,talk.politics.drugs
- From: shetterl@maroon.tc.umn.edu (Will Shetterly)
- Subject: Grassroots Party Newsletter v.4 #1
- Message-ID: <shetterl-0402951938130001@dialup-4-43.gw.umn.edu>
- Date: Sun, 5 Feb 1995 01:38:13 GMT
-
- The Canvas
- The Newsletter of the Grassroots Party of Minnesota
- Vol. IV No. 1 Ç Winter 1995 Ç Will Shetterly, Editor
-
- │A wise and frugal Government, which shall restrain men from injuring one
- another, shall leave them otherwise free to regulate their own pursuits of
- industry and improvement.▓
- ïThomas Jefferson
-
-
- GRP 1994 Election Results
-
- The Grassroots Party had candidates on the Minnesota ballot for every
- statewide office this November. We╣re the first third party to accomplish
- that since the Farmer-Labor Party in 1942. In the election, our candidates
- got more votes than any other small-party candidate except for Dean
- Barkley of the Independence Party.
- Here are our numbers:
-
- U.S. Senate: Candy Sjostrom,15,920 votes
- Governor & Lt. Governor: Will Shetterly/Tim Davis, 20,785 votes
- Secretary of State: Dale Wilkinson, 54,009 votes
- Attorney General: Dean Amundson, 69,776 votes
- Auditor: Steve Anderson, 80,811 votes
- Treasurer: Colleen Bonniwell, 84,486 votes
- U.S. Representative, Dist. 4: Dan Vacek, 6,211 votes
-
- The total of votes cast state-wide was 1,770,315; in District Four,
- 210,193 votes were cast. We did much better in the Twin Cities area than
- we did in the rest of the state. In the races for governor and senator,
- Will and Tim finished third in a field of six, and Candy finished fourth.
- Steve╣s presence in the auditor╣s race may have swung the victory to
- Republican Judi Dutcher. Colleen, Steve, and Dan all got about 5% of the
- vote in their races, but to qualify in Minnesota for major party status, a
- candidate must get 5% of all votes cast in a state-wide race; we fell a
- few thousand votes short of that. Though we are disappointed, we did
- qualify for check-off status on the 1995 tax form, which may be more
- useful to us now.
-
-
- GRP Wins Check-off Status on 1995 MN Tax Form
-
- When you get your 1995 Minnesota tax form next year, you will be able to
- check off a $5 donation to the Grassroots Party that will not add a penny
- to what you pay the state. There╣s no way to know how much money the party
- might receive, but if the votes for Candy Sjostrom indicate our hard-core
- support, that could mean $70,000 next year for us to spread the word that
- there are more solutions than the Democrats and the Republicans have been
- offering.
-
-
- Can Third Parties Work Together?
-
- The Grassroots Party has been meeting with members of other small parties
- to learn what we might accomplish together in a loosely organized
- coalition.
- The New Party wants to restore the principle of fusion candidacy, which
- was permitted in Minnesota elections until about fifty years ago, when the
- Farmer-Labor Party merged with the Democrats and Minnesota became a
- two-party state. A fusion candidate is one who is officially endorsed by
- more than one party.
- The Independence Party recently won major party status, but there are
- rumors that the state legislature may make it harder for small parties to
- get candidates on the ballot, to win major party status, or to get tax
- check-off status. The Grassroots Party supports easy access to the ballot
- in order to guarantee real choice to the voters.
- The Libertarian Party supports individual liberty. We could work
- together to pass a privacy amendment to the Minnesota constitution
- guaranteeing that the government could not use force to limit the personal
- choices of adult citizens.
- The Green Party and the Nutritional Rights Alliance believe the
- government must protect Minnesota╣s air, land, and water. We do, too.
- It╣s too early to tell whether anything will come from these
- discussions, but we╣re glad that they╣re happening. The Grassroots Party
- will be holding a conference on May 6 (see upcoming events) as part of the
- process of deciding our future course.
-
-
- News Notes: Prisons, Prostitution, and the GRP
-
- Articles about our tax status appeared in the Washington Post and the
- Minneapolis Star Tribune. Steve Sack╣s editorial cartoon in the Star
- Tribune (at right) may present our 84,000 supporters in Minnesota as aging
- hippie cliches, but being ridiculed is the second step in every party╣s
- progress from being ignored to being victorious. The Star Tribune ran a
- letter from GRP Secretary Steve Anderson,who pointed out, │To the best of
- my knowledge, we╣ve never used campaign money for food; nor, unlike the
- DFL and IR parties, do we have any paid staff. Every dollar that goes into
- our war chest is spent on campaign advertising and informational flyers
- designed to educate voters on the issues we feel strongly about. We
- believe this is the highest calling of political parties in a
- representative democracy: to educate the electorate so the popular mood
- supports the wisest course of action.▓
- The Powderhorn Paper╣s January issue had an article about the South
- Side Prostitution Task Force╣s │Flush the Johns▓ protest. A dozen
- counter-protesters associated with the Grassroots Party appeared carrying
- signs with slogans like │Honk If You Like Sex.▓ As you might expect, there
- was a lot of honking along Lake Street that night.
- The Heidi Fleiss trial prompted former New York Times columnist Anna
- Quindlen to write │Why should law treat the sale of sex as a crime?▓ (Star
- Tribune, 11/29/94). She says, │Once prostitution was blamed for spreading
- syphilis, today for passing on the AIDS virus. Condoms, not
- criminalization, are solutions to both. Of all the public campaigns
- against street crime, probably the most unsuccessful, over time, has been
- the one to drive people out of the business of selling sex. Police,
- judges, court officials: Hours of law enforcement time are wasted on a
- practice that shows no signs of abating, either in supply or demand.▓
- Doug Grow╣s Sept. 25, 1994 Star Tribune column, │Building additional
- prisons won╣t curb Minnesota╣s crime problem▓ points out the expense and
- folly of America╣s love affair with incarceration. A new high-security
- state prison scheduled to open in 1999 will cost $80 million. The Hennepin
- County Jail will cost │anywhere from $120 million to $170 million.▓ The
- Carver County jail will cost $8 million. The Dakota County juvenile
- detention center will cost $4 million. This year╣s legislative crime bill
- appropriates $20 million dollars. Will that $282 million expense make
- Minnesotans any safer?
- Jim Bruton, a deputy commissioner in the corrections department,
- doesn╣t think so. │We╣re adding 2000 beds, but they╣d laugh at that number
- in Texas or California. California╣s got something like 120,000 inmates
- right now, a need for 50,000 more beds and tougher laws that will create a
- need for 80,000 more beds. But you can╣t build yourself out of this [the
- crime problem]. Every state that╣s tried has seen no reduction in crime.▓
-
-
- About the Grassroots Party
-
- America╣s frontier past gave birth to two ideas that all Americans value:
- You should help people who want help, and you should leave people alone
- who aren╣t hurting anyone. Most political parties choose to focus on one
- of these principles, but, like America╣s founders, the Grassroots Party
- believes social responsibility and individual liberty are equally
- important in a free society.
- The traditional political divisions of conservative and liberal cannot
- describe us. We see contemporary political thought as divided between
- tolerance and repression: we share the goals of tolerant members of the
- right and left. Like Republicans such as William F. Buckley, we believe
- it╣s time to apply the lessons of alcohol prohibition to drug prohibition
- and legalize, tax, and regulate hemp (a.k.a. marijuana). Like Democrats
- such as Paul Wellstone, we believe Americans deserve a single-payer health
- insurance plan similar to those already enjoyed by Canadians, Japanese,
- Germans, and Australians, all of whom live longer, have lower infant
- mortality rates, and pay less for health care than Americans.
- The Grassroots Party began in 1986 when several Minnesotans saw the
- inevitable consequences of mandatory minimum drug sentences. Today, our
- federal prisons are over 60% full of non-violent drug offenders, and
- America has a greater percentage of its citizens in prison than any other
- nation in the world. Our politicians continue to throw additional billions
- of tax dollars into building more prisons, hiring more police, and
- expanding the military while the national debt grows and education, health
- care, the environment, workers╣ rights, and consumers╣ rights are all
- neglected.
- But America is ready for change. In the last election, 60% of the
- eligible voters did not choose to support any of the current political
- options. The Republican claim of a mandate comes from winning the support
- of 20% of the eligible voters in close-fought races. Someone needs to
- restore America╣s faith in democracy. The Grassroots Party is willing to
- try, but we can only do it with your help.
-
-
- PRT: Personal Rapid Transit
- Copyright: Citizens for PRT/Ground Zero
-
- In the Twin Cities, all the options being presented for the I-35W, I-94,
- and I-494 expansions are 100-year-old technologies. Today╣s transportation
- problems need solutions for today and the 21st century. We don╣t need to
- destroy our homes and businesses and the economic vitality they bring our
- cities. Using old technology like cars and streetcars requires massive
- amounts of land. Almost 50% of our land is used for transportation. We can
- have efficient, attractive transportation systems without taking down one
- more house. The answer is Personal Rapid Transit.
- PRT systems use small, computer-controlled electric vehicles. The
- vehicles ride in elevated guideways mounted on small poles that can be
- placed along curbs or existing freeway medians. When a passenger buys a
- ticket, a vehicle is summoned to the station and takes the passenger
- directly to the destination, bypassing all intermediate stops. Each
- station is on a bypass track so everyone can have a fast trip. Passengers
- have their own cars, but in a public system. One elevated guideway can
- carry as many vehicles as four freeway lanes, at half the cost of Light
- Rail Transit (LRT).
- The Raytheon Company is developing PRT systems for the City of
- Chicago. Chicago will have a PRT system running in 1998, the same year
- Minneapolis is supposed to start ripping up homes to put in more freeway
- lanes and LRT.
- For more information, call (612) 335-1025 or write Citizens for
- PRT, PO Box 39692, Edina, MN 55439-0692.
-
-
- The Capitalist │Free Press▓
- by Aldous Huxley (written in 1958, true today)
-
- Today the press is still legally free; but most of the little papers have
- disappeared. The cost of wood-pulp, of modern printing machinery and of
- syndicated news is too high for the Little Man. In the totalitarian East
- there is political censorship, and the media of mass communication are
- controlled by the state. In the democratic West there is economic
- censorship and the media of mass communication power in the hands of a few
- big concerns is less objectionable than State ownership and government
- propaganda; but certainly it is not something of which a Jeffersonian
- democrat could possibly approve.
- In regard to propaganda the early advocates of universal literacy
- and a free press envisaged only two possibilities: the propaganda might be
- true, or it might be false. They did not foresee what in fact has
- happened, above all in our Western capitalist democraciesïthe development
- of a vast mass communications industry, concerned in the main neither with
- the true nor the false, but with the unreal, the more or less totally
- irrelevant. In a word, they failed to take into account man╣s almost
- infinite appetite for distractions.
- Only the vigilant can maintain their liberties, and only those who
- are constantly and intelligently on the spot can hope to govern themselves
- effectively by democratic procedures. A society, most of whose members
- spend a great part of their time, not on the spot, not here and now in the
- calculable future, but somewhere else, in the irrelevant other worlds of
- sport and soap opera, of mythology and metaphysical fantasy, will find it
- hard to resist the encroachments of those who would manipulate and control
- it.
- In their propaganda today╣s dictators rely for the most part on
- repetition, suppression, and rationalizationïthe repetition of catchwords
- which they wish to be accepted as true, the suppression of facts which
- they wish to be ignored, and the arousal and rationalization of passions
- which may be used in the interests of the Party or the State. As the art
- and science of manipulation come to be better understood, the dictators of
- the future will doubtless learn to combine these techniques with the
- non-stop distractions which, in the West, are now threatening to drown in
- a sea of irrelevance the rational propaganda essential to the maintenance
- of individual liberty and the survival of democratic institutions.
-
-
- WWW Hemp page: If you have access to the World Wide Web, there╣s a new
- page that╣s worth a look: http://www.hempbc.com/HEMPWEB/HEMPMAIN.HTML
-
-
- Make a Difference! Join the Grassroots Party!
-
- If you received this paper in the mail and you would like to receive
- future issues of The Canvas, join us. If you found a copy of The Canvas
- with other free literature or were e-mailed a copy through the Internet
- and you think information like this should continue to be available, join
- us. To spread the word in the U.S. that there is a party that knows the
- government can spend less and accomplish more, we need your help.
-
- Do you believe:
- Ç The U.S. should legalize, tax, and regulate hemp? (Over 60% of our
- federal prisoners are non-violent drug offenders.)
- Ç Americans deserve a single-payer universal health insurance plan?
- (Every other major industrialized nation provides universal health care.)
- Ç America should spend less money on prisons and the military? (We have a
- larger percentage of our population in prison than any other nation in the
- world, and we spend more money on our military than all other nations
- combined.)
- Ç Your state should pass a privacy amendment to guarantee your right to
- do whatever you choose, so long as it does not hurt anyone else?
-
- If so:
- Can you contribute time? We need people to help organize chapters of
- the Grassroots Party throughout the U.S. We plan to hold at least two
- conventions in the Twin Cities this year; we need volunteers who can help
- plan and run them.
- Can you contribute office furniture or equipment? Every organization
- needs tools to do its work.
- Can you contribute money? Politics in the U.S. is expensive. To be
- noticed by the commercial media, you must spend money. The Grassroots
- Party has produced a few commercials for cable TV and local radio and
- newspapers, but we have not been able to advertise through broadcast
- television networks or national radio or magazines. Mounting petition
- campaigns and printing our literature is a constant drain of our
- resources. We can only be as efficient as our supporters. Please, help us
- continue the two-hundred year struggle to build America into a land of
- liberty, opportunity, and justice for all.
-
-
- Grassroots Party of Minnesota, PO Box 8011, St. Paul 55108
- Phone 612 722-4477
-
- Yes! I want to help the Grassroots Party and receive future issues of The
- Canvas.
-
- Contribution enclosed: $_____________
-
- Full membership*: $25.00
-
- Basic membership*: $15.00
-
- Hard-times membership*: Free for prisoners and anyone else going through
- economic hard times.
-
- I would like to volunteer time or equipment.___________
-
-
- Name: ___________________________________________
-
- Phone:___________________________
-
- Address:
-
- ____________________________________________________________________________
-
- ____________________________________________________________________________
-
- * Full membership, basic membership, and hard times membership are exactly
- the same except for the price you choose to pay.
-
- --
- Will Shetterly
- shetterl@maroon.tc.umn.edu * Box 7253, Minneapolis, MN 55407
-
-
-