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The Washington Times Online Edition

How best to push America forward

The first of two excerpts of the book “Real Change: From the World That Fails to the World That Works.”

The stakes, I believe, have never been higher. America today is at an extraordinary crossroads. We’re standing on the edge of a potential golden age for America. Advances in technology, science, engineering, and medicine hold the promise of benefits our parents couldn’t even dream of. If we make the right choices now, America will enjoy a level of prosperity, safety, and freedom unknown to previous generations. But if we make the wrong choices, we will suffer very serious consequences from a set of challenges we choose to ignore. Our country could be devastated by terrorist attacks, our prosperity diminished by the rising commercial giants of China and India, and our children and grandchildren unable to pay for the needs of their families and for the health, pension, and Social Security burdens of their parents.

America’s natural majority

Hope lies, as it always has, in the American people. America has a natural, overwhelming center-right majority — and it’s a majority that has a better grasp of the challenges facing us than the Washington bureaucrats, politicians, and lobbyists who don’t think of finding solutions to problems but of managing “the system.” On issues across the board — from permitting a moment of silence for prayer in our public schools to the issues of war and peace — the American people speak with one voice. I know, because we’ve asked and we’ve listened.

Ask the American people if they want a moment of silence for children to pray if they desire in public school, and 94 percent say yes.

Ask the American people if they support making English the official language of the United States, and 87 percent say yes.

Ask the American people if al Qaeda poses a serious threat to our country, and 93 percent say yes.

Ask the American people if they believe it is possible to negotiate with terrorist groups like al Qaeda, and 79 percent say no.

Ask the American people if the Social Security system is broken, and 80 percent say yes.

Ask the American people if it is important for the president and Congress to address the Social Security mess within the next few years, and 96 percent say yes.

Ask the American people if they support the option of a single income tax rate of 17 percent for everyone, with standard exemptions for each adult, married couple, and child dependent, and 71 percent say yes.

Ask the American people if they support drilling for oil off America’s coasts to reduce our dependence on foreign oil, and 73 percent say yes.

Ask the American people if they support building more nuclear power plants to cut carbon emissions and reduce our dependency on foreign oil, and 65 percent say yes.

Ask the American people if they support laws that criminalize advocating terrorism or advocating violence against American citizens, and 83 percent say yes.

If the American people agree on so much, why is it that our politicians agree on so little? And why can’t we get the policies America wants?

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