Conversation | 05/02/2008 12:00 am
Marlo Thomas: The Media Steals Our Chances of a Fair Election

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MARLO: They’ve made so much money off of this country, isn’t it time that they use their brilliant brains to help us figure out how to have a fair election? We’ve got Jimmy Carter traveling all over the world trying to make sure that peoples’ elections are fair. And we’re getting our elections stolen in this country.
MARY: Well then, why don’t we take it on as a cause, you know?
MARLO: I think we should.
MARY: People do get what they ask for. What they’re willing to pay for. Then they’ll say, “We don’t know what to do. There’s no way to start.”
MARLO: That’s one thing we could do. We have two elections that we know were fake.
JOAN: There’s a lawyer in Albuquerque called John Boyd who managed to get paper ballots mandated for New Mexico and a couple of other states. And he did a countrywide campaign for paper ballots in every state four years ago. He had fund-raisers in L.A. and nobody came.
MARY: You’ve just got to think — a little bit — about the fact that you get what you pay for, you get what you’re willing to take, you get what you’re willing to accept.
MARLO: And I think people have accepted that it’s all corrupt. You can’t have this much corruption for this long. People step back and say, “OK. Let me take care of my family. Let me do my work well. Let me pray to my god. And let me just get through life because it’s too corrupt.” Because it just feels like a mushroom of corruption. You read the paper and you just say, “Oh, don’t do that. Don’t do that to people, for God’s sake.” The government is continuously doing really, really destructive things to this country.
MARY: Well, why don’t we get on our site — something that happens every single, solitary day — an area where we report something, and we get people to join us, because we’re getting more and more women to join us?
MARLO: To think about the terrible thing of the day, and what could be done about it. Because I think it’s going by —
MARY: You know, you get a gang of women together, they can be very effective.
JOAN: We’ll have the “shame of the day.” In fact, it’s already part of Change the World, which isn’t —
MARY: It should be a thing of its own because it’s not about helping people who need things, or making things better. It’s really about getting rid of the criminals. And seeing them as criminals and making other people see them as we see them, because we’re right and we have facts.
MARLO: Have you seen this documentary called “Who Killed the Electric Car?” I haven’t seen it, but a friend of mine asked, “What do you think about the electric car?” And I said, “It doesn’t really work, does it? You can’t go very far or can’t do this or can’t do …” This whole documentary is about the fact that the auto industry just sent out misinformation to destroy the whole electric car thing, when it could have really been successful.
MARY: But an awful lot of people overrode that stuff and went ahead and got the first combination cars. The hybrids really happened in California.
MARY: Well then, why don’t we take it on as a cause, you know?
MARLO: I think we should.
MARY: People do get what they ask for. What they’re willing to pay for. Then they’ll say, “We don’t know what to do. There’s no way to start.”
MARLO: That’s one thing we could do. We have two elections that we know were fake.
JOAN: There’s a lawyer in Albuquerque called John Boyd who managed to get paper ballots mandated for New Mexico and a couple of other states. And he did a countrywide campaign for paper ballots in every state four years ago. He had fund-raisers in L.A. and nobody came.
MARY: You’ve just got to think — a little bit — about the fact that you get what you pay for, you get what you’re willing to take, you get what you’re willing to accept.
MARLO: And I think people have accepted that it’s all corrupt. You can’t have this much corruption for this long. People step back and say, “OK. Let me take care of my family. Let me do my work well. Let me pray to my god. And let me just get through life because it’s too corrupt.” Because it just feels like a mushroom of corruption. You read the paper and you just say, “Oh, don’t do that. Don’t do that to people, for God’s sake.” The government is continuously doing really, really destructive things to this country.
MARY: Well, why don’t we get on our site — something that happens every single, solitary day — an area where we report something, and we get people to join us, because we’re getting more and more women to join us?
MARLO: To think about the terrible thing of the day, and what could be done about it. Because I think it’s going by —
MARY: You know, you get a gang of women together, they can be very effective.
JOAN: We’ll have the “shame of the day.” In fact, it’s already part of Change the World, which isn’t —
MARY: It should be a thing of its own because it’s not about helping people who need things, or making things better. It’s really about getting rid of the criminals. And seeing them as criminals and making other people see them as we see them, because we’re right and we have facts.
MARLO: Have you seen this documentary called “Who Killed the Electric Car?” I haven’t seen it, but a friend of mine asked, “What do you think about the electric car?” And I said, “It doesn’t really work, does it? You can’t go very far or can’t do this or can’t do …” This whole documentary is about the fact that the auto industry just sent out misinformation to destroy the whole electric car thing, when it could have really been successful.
MARY: But an awful lot of people overrode that stuff and went ahead and got the first combination cars. The hybrids really happened in California.
LILY: I have a Prius. It runs fine. But I’m sure there’s a way better technology that could be created for the mass market. And they will … and it will be, eventually. In Vanity Fair just the other day, Graydon Carter quoted Bobby Kennedy, Jr., as saying that the Midwest is sort of the Saudi Arabia of wind.
Read more about: Barack Obama, Bill Clinton, Dick Cheney, Elizabeth Edwards, Hillary Clinton, Joel Klein, The New York Times























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