TO: Reince Priebus
Republican National Committee
310 First Street SE,
Washington, DC 20003
4 November 2014
Dear Chairman Priebus,
First, I as a registered Democrat swallow my pride and congratulate your party on whatever victories you achieve. But please don't gloat over your victories tonight. I try to be a gracious loser. At the same time, I am dismayed and seriously concerned. Your party has spent the last six years attacking a president and his party on their views. Yes, Obama's not the best and brightest (look at his appointees for many ambassador posts and some of the people in his administration), but he's trying his best.
Let's start with the social issues. I believe that families are families, no matter what form they take. I believe in marriage equality simply because it is the right thing. I don't care if a child has two moms or two dads. What matters is if that (those) child(ren) live in a stable, positive, nurturing environment. And marriage is no longer about procreation. In regards to my faith, I put humanity before my belief in God. America was not designed to be a theocracy. I am pro-choice because not all pregnancies are viable, and a woman shouldn't have to carry a miscarried fetus. I believe in the right to die with dignity because dying is already a challenge. Although I am fortunate to have never had a cancer diagnosis, there are millions of Americans who suffer from cancer, which takes me to my next subject.
Your party's attacks on Obamacare is unfortunate. Sure, it's not perfect (neither is our nation, thank you very much, and feel free to call me unpatriotic), but it allows me to work a menial job and still be on my parent's health insurance. I suffer from Asperger's disorder, and to be a fully functional human being I need medication to deal with the issues related to Asperger's: the anxiety, depression, mood issues. I believe that healthcare is a right, not a privilege. And don't blame Obama for not creating jobs that provide healthcare: we're competing against China, a nation known for currency manipulation. Your party has members guilty of outsourcing jobs overseas. I know I have what some might call a preexisting condition, and I strive to lead a normal life, whatever that is. If anything, we need to cut down on how much trade we do with China. America was a much better off nation a century ago because China was not an industrialized nation and we didn't have air conditioners.
Your party preaches fiscal restraint and yet is penny wise and dollar foolish. Cutting programs like NPR, National Endowment for the Humanities, National Endowment for the Arts, Amtrak (a big one for me) and other programs is not my way of dealing with the deficit. We don't have a deficit issue, okay, we have a little bit of one but we also have a revenue issue. Corporations in this country are getting tax breaks up the wazoo, and if reforming the tax codes not only brings in more revenue but allows this tax dodging to stop, I'm all for it. I want to know that if I have children that they have access to a great public education and that I can travel on safe roads, or if I choose not to drive, have public transportation accessible. While I do understand the aspects of high labor and material costs in regards to major infrastructure projects, at the same time those labor costs provide men and women with living wages. What happened to America thinking big, the country that built the Hoover Dam, the Golden Gate Bridge and the Transcontinental Railroad?
And let's get to economics: while yes, most of the Obama administration's job growth has been low wage employment, you guys have made it difficult for his administration to launch efforts to allow for . And while we're at it, I believe in class warfare, albeit in a subtle form. There are more millionaires and billionaires in this country's history today than at any point in its history. Elderly Caucasian men are only a small percentage of this nation's population. And to promote causes that go against the rights of women, well here's something: women often have better outcomes compared to men when there are times of crisis. I hope our next president is a woman, whether it be Elizabeth Warren, Hillary Clinton or even Olympia Snowe. Women are my equal, I don't see them as lesser beings. Heck, women reopened the government after men shut it down. Sure, we might have different gender biology, but I see the opposite sex as just as capable as I am to do anything, regardless of the task or role.
Many members of the Republican Party believe that climate change is a myth. I am glad that my congressional district is represented by a Republican who believes that climate change is real. We've lived the movie The Day After Tomorrow when Superstorm Sandy struck the Northeast, and I don't want to see it happen again. We only have a finite amount of energy reserves, and the alternatives (wind, solar, hydroelectric, geothermal) are not just near-limitless, they are also cleaner. I am mostly a water drinker, and if I were living near the Ogallala Aquifer, I would be scared right now. Building the Keystone pipeline is a risk we cannot take. If anything, we need more solar power and less hydrofracking. Until we find a safe way to extract natural gas and transport it, I am against further drilling. Potable drinking water comes first. Plus, what happened to research into using hydrogen as a fuel?
And I agree we need government reform, but that also means things like term limits and limits on campaign donations. My belief in free speech is not just figurative, it's also literal. Every person's voice is important, no matter where they stand in our society. There should be respectable limits on campaign spending. In some areas, other nations are lightyears ahead of us.
I am glad that some issues are non-partisan, like autism treatment and research. We can all agree that finding effective treatments for autism is important. An assemblywoman from Upstate New York, Janet Duprey, is one of my political heroes. She is a Republican who votes her conscience. I don't agree with her on everything, but she has represented her constituents faithfully for the last eight years. Sure, she's a bit of a social liberal but she's in favor of sensible gun laws that don't punish responsible gun owners and is a fighter for taxpayers.
Listen, I have another eighty or so years to live, and I want to know that my planet will be able to sustain my footprint for that long (by the way, we're one of over 180 of them). I feel that the Republican Party has become too much a nationalist party in recent years. What happened to the Eisenhower Republicans?
No, I'm not rehashing what Michael Moore says. This is truly what I believe. Maybe it's my personality. I believe in a more just and equal world. But does what I say mean I don't want to work with Republicans? I agree with some on certain issues. Kevin Cramer, the Congressman from North Dakota has been a supporter of Amtrak during his tenure, winning the Golden Spike Award from NARP. I might be a partisan Democrat, but I'm willing to put aside those differences to make America a better place.
My dream for America is one where every adult has the right to vote (and if you're going to require voter ID, make it easier for voters to get ID), one where every American has a living wage, healthcare, savings for retirement. Call me a socialist, but when every American can achieve their dreams, we're much better off for it. Want to eradicate a huge aspect of why some individuals enter a life of crime?
America should always be moving forwards, not backwards. Extremism has no place in politics.
Sincerely,
Alexander Ivanoff
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Well said. Thank you.
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