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美總統參選人 該醒醒 美國不能再滿世界充當教師爺了

(2023-07-06 07:06:56) 下一個

美總統參選人拿中國提醒美國:該醒醒了!美國不能再滿世界充當教師爺了

2023-07-06 09:07:48 來源:CCTV4

近日,2024年美國總統選舉參選人瑪麗安娜·威廉森(民主黨)在新罕布什爾州參加競選電視演講時稱,中國周邊有313個美軍基地,“美國人需要醒醒了,這個世界已經不一樣了!美國不能再滿世界充當教師爺了”!

據悉,在參加競選電視演講期間,當被問到“將采取什麽策略來應對傳聞中的‘中國和古巴正就在古巴新建聯合軍事訓練設施進行談判’”時,威廉森立即反問提問者:“你知道美國在中國周圍有多少個軍事基地嗎?313個!美國人需要醒醒了,這個世界已經不一樣了!美國不能再滿世界充當教師爺了!”

美總統參選人拿中國提醒美國:該醒醒了!美國不能再滿世界充當教師爺了

美國總統選舉參選人瑪麗安娜·威廉森在新罕布什爾州參加競選電視演講(視頻截圖)

公開資料顯示,瑪麗安娜·威廉森出生於1952年,現年70歲。

作為美國知名暢銷書作家的威廉森,於2014年投入政壇。2023年3月,威廉森成為首個宣布參加2024年美國總統選舉的民主黨籍參選人,將與現總統拜登競爭黨內初選。不過,美媒廣泛認為威廉森“是一位勝算不大的候選人”。

美國總統參選人:中國周邊有313個美軍基地,其他國家會覺得誰對全球安全威脅更大?

(觀察者網訊)自6月初,美媒和美政客便聯合炒作“中國在古巴搞間諜活動”話題。近日,2024年美國總統選舉民主黨籍參選人瑪麗安娜·威廉森(Marianne Williamson)參加節目時被問及相關問題。對於若當選總統將如何回應的提問,威廉森反問道:“你知道,美國在中國周圍有多少個軍事基地嗎?313個!”

威廉森表示,美國在南海搞了那麽多事情,“中國當然會不高興,就像我們不希望他們來古巴一樣”,“看看世界其他國家是如何看待這一點的,各國都在關注伊拉克和阿富汗……他們是會將中國視作全球安全的更大威脅者,還是美國?”

她認為,當今世界已是多極世界,“曾幾何時,美國可以為所欲為,但如此行為讓美國揮霍了自己的軍事權威和道德權威”,“現在的美國不能再滿世界充當教師爺了”。

威廉森:美國人,該醒醒了

根據美國廣播公司(ABC)旗下WMUR頻道發布視頻,當地時間6月30日,民主黨籍總統參選人瑪麗安娜·威廉森參加電視節目“與參選人對話”,同現場選民進行溝通。

期間,有人就所謂“中國在古巴搞間諜活動”話題詢問威廉森,如果當選總統,將采取什麽策略來應對傳聞中的“中國和古巴正就在古巴新建聯合軍事訓練設施進行談判”?

“你知道,美國在中國周圍有多少個軍事基地嗎?”威廉森告訴提問者,“足足313個”,且美國在80個國家有大約750處軍事設施。

美總統參選人拿中國提醒美國:該醒醒了!美國不能再滿世界充當教師爺了

威廉森(左)回答選民提問,視頻截圖(下同)

她強調:“美國人該醒醒了,這個世界已經不一樣了。事實上,其他國家會說,‘既然你要這樣對我們,我們也會開始這麽對你’。這就是我們現在生活的世界。”

“我意識到,我相信布林肯國務卿和拜登總統也意識到,這是一個嶄新的世界,”威廉森繼續稱,現在的美國“不能再滿世界充當教師爺(can't just go around telling people what to do)”。她認為,美國在全世界存在很多“不應存在的”軍事設施,“我不相信擁有這麽多軍事基地可以讓我們更安全”。

威廉森承認,美國在南海搞了那麽多事情,“中國當然會不高興,就像我們不希望他們來古巴一樣”。

當提問者試圖辯駁“美國軍事基地並不存在安全威脅意圖”時,威廉森的回答直截了當:“看看世界其他國家是如何看待這一點的,各國都在關注伊拉克和阿富汗……你覺得,他們是會將中國視作全球安全的更大威脅者,還是美國?”

威廉森稱,若她當選美國總統,她將幫助美國“照鏡正冠”。她說:“美國人並不愚蠢……但兩黨政治體係並不想讓美國人看到事情真相。”

威廉森向在場選民表示,如今美國身處一個多極世界,而非單極世界。“曾幾何時,美國可以為所欲為,但如此行為讓美國揮霍了自己的軍事權威和道德權威,並讓美國和全世界民眾付出了安全和生命的代價。”

“美國必須後退一步,變得更加謙遜。美國不能再繼續與世界為敵了。”威廉森如此說道。

美總統參選人拿中國提醒美國:該醒醒了!美國不能再滿世界充當教師爺了

“一名遊離在華盛頓主流之外的參選人”

公開資料顯示,瑪麗安娜·威廉森出生於1952年,現年70歲。

作為美國知名暢銷書作家的威廉森,於2014年投入政壇,以無黨派人士身份競選美國加州第33國會選區美國眾議院議員,但未能成功。2019年,威廉森投入美國2020年總統大選,競爭民主黨提名資格,後於2020年轉而支持民主黨參選人桑德斯。2023年3月,威廉森成為首個宣布參加2024年美國總統選舉的民主黨籍參選人,將與現總統拜登競爭黨內初選。

威廉姆森的總統綱領包括,呼籲提高聯邦最低工資、對種族不公正進行賠償、應對氣候變化、推進建立全民學前教育和免費大學係統,以及創建“美國和平部”等。

美媒廣泛認為威廉森“是一位勝算不大的候選人”。美國《新聞周刊》3月末曾援引一份民調數據指出,威廉姆森的支持率很可能在兩位數以下:至多有10%的民主黨選民表示,他們“可能”或“肯定”支持她;而支持拜登的比例為73%。

威廉森已經習慣了自己遊離於華盛頓主流之外。她5月份接受美國政治新聞網“Politico”采訪時稱,自己關於競選公職的想法已經醞釀了幾十年。她說,約20年前生活在底特律時,她“看到很多人的生活由於糟糕的公共政策而陷入深深的痛苦”,認為他們是“被操縱”的經濟體係的受害者。

威廉森還將自己定位為“局外參選人”,但同時認為,恰恰是因為自己缺乏在華盛頓特區任職的經驗,也多了一份“改變製度的勇氣”。

《新聞周刊》提到,盡管威廉森的支持率不具備優勢,但3月末的民調結果顯示,約有52%的民主黨初選選民更希望拜登以外的人成為民主黨的2024年大選提名人。當前,越來越多的民主黨人對於拜登“相對溫和的政治立場”感到沮喪,他們希望民主黨可以在應對氣候變化和經濟平等方麵推出更強有力的議程。

美總統參選人拿中國提醒美國:該醒醒了!美國不能再滿世界充當教師爺了

威廉森5月接受Politico采訪,視頻截圖

自《華爾街日報》6月9日最初報道“中國在古巴搞間諜活動”後,美國媒體和政客、議員便聯合炒作,並為渲染“中國威脅論”多次更換說辭。對此,我方和古巴方麵已多次做出有力駁斥。

在美國,無中生有“中國建設海外軍事基地”早就不是什麽稀罕事兒。但事實聲明,一直癡迷於擴大軍事存在、提升武力、為維護霸權不擇手段、所作所為嚴重危害世界和平和地區穩定的國家正是美國自己。

“我們(美國)有約800個海外軍事基地,為此花費了數額難以想象的金錢。誰是世界上最不折不扣的‘麻煩製造者’?”美國記者、普利策獎得主西摩·赫什去年在接受媒體采訪時問道。在他看來,答案不言而喻:美國。

美國智庫昆西負責任治國研究會2021年數據顯示,美國在海外80個國家和地區設有750個軍事基地,幾乎是美國駐外使領館和使團數量的3倍,遍布亞洲、歐洲、中東、非洲、拉美各個地區,每年運行成本或高達550億美元。另據半島電視台報道,這些海外基地中,駐有200名以上軍事人員的大型基地有約400個。(責任編輯:傅鑫)

Marianne Williamson's 'This Week' interview: Full transcript about her 2024 campaign

https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/marianne-williamsons-week-interview-full-transcript-2024-campaign/story?id=97633670

The bestselling author talked about Biden, Trump and more.

By ABC News  March 5, 2023

Marianne Williamson on Saturday announced her 2024 campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination. On Sunday, ABC's "This Week" aired her interview with ABC Chief Washington Correspondent Jonathan Karl. Below is their complete conversation. For previous show transcripts, visit the "This Week" transcript archive.

JONATHAN KARL, CHIEF WASHINGTON CORRESPONDENT: Thank you for taking the time to talk to us.

MARIANNE WILLIAMSON, PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE: Oh, thank you for having me.

KARL: Why do you want to be president?

WILLIAMSON: I want to be president because this country needs to make an economic U-turn. Over the last 48 years, according to the Rand Corporation, $50 trillion has been transferred from the bottom 90% of Americans to the top 1%. And the system that effectuates and perpetuates that kind of income and opportunity inequality is not changing itself.

It tweaks itself every once in a while. There are some incremental change. But the devastation, the ubiquitous economic despair and human devastation that is produced by this sociopathic economic system is not changing. And it's not going to change if we continue to elect the same-old same-old.

KARL: So you -- so you said Washington is filled with good political car mechanics.

WILLIAMSON: Yes.

KARL: The problem is that we are on the wrong road.

WILLIAMSON: Mm-hmm.

KARL: So what's the plan? I mean, I understand your diagnosis of the problem. What's the plan for changing that?

WILLIAMSON: Well, it will help, first of all, with the whole system's breakdown. No one person is going to make all the difference. No one elected official is going to make all the difference. It's the people of the United States who have to rise up. But a president who lays down the truth and tells it like it is would help.

A -- a president who actually gets in there and actually makes appointments and takes actions that obstructs the overreach of unfettered, unregulated capitalism, that would help a lot.

KARL: You -- you have been called, I think it was the Associated Press said you are the longest of long shots. And, you know, look, you've never held elected office before.

WILLIAMSON: Mm-hmm.

KARL: You -- you've run before. You've lost.

WILLIAMSON: Mm-hmm.

KARL: What -- why do you think you can do this?

WILLIAMSON: I would bet that the Associated Press also said that Hillary Clinton was a shoo-in. I'm sure that they would --

KARL: I don't know if --

WILLIAMSON: -- have said --

KARL: -- they would've used that language, actually.

WILLIAMSON: Maybe not. But that --

(CROSSTALK)

WILLIAMSON: -- system, you know exactly what I'm saying.

So the system that is now saying that I'm unserious, I'm not credible, or I'm a long shot is the very system that protects and maintains this idea that only those whose careers have been entrenched within the system that drove us into a ditch should possibly be considered qualified to lead us out of that ditch.

My qualification is not that I know how to perpetuate that system. My qualification is that I know how to disrupt it. And that is what we need --

(CROSSTALK)

KARL: Disrupt it how?

WILLIAMSON: Oh, well, the first thing you can do is you can cancel all college loan debt. You can make sure --

KARL: Now Biden just tried that and then the courts --

WILLIAMSON: He tried.

KARL: -- stopped him.

WILLIAMSON: He -- he tried, yes. And some people think if he had just canceled the entire thing that -- and he had done it immediately, that would not have given his opponents the opportunity to wage the kind of battle against that that it has.

But it is so much more than that.

KARL: I mean, you still have the courts, you know?

WILLIAMSON: It is so much more than that. Let's stop pretending that there has been such a gargantuan effort that has been made. We were promised that the -- that the -- that the minimum wage would be raised for everyone, and then when the parliamentarian said no, we hide behind the skirts of the parliamentarian?

KARL: But there are rules of how you -- how you could accomplish things. And you do have to work through Congress. I mean, we don't have a dictator in this country.

WILLIAMSON: There are many things that the president can do without working through Congress. There are many things. The president declassify marijuana right now. The president could cancel college loan debt. The president could cancel all contracts --

KARL: Again, he tried to do that. He tried to do that.

WILLIAMSON: He tried to do that in which way are we saying?

KARL: Cancel -- cancel college loan debt.

WILLIAMSON: Well, he tried with the part that he has. And that is part of a larger picture. He also could demand that there be an audit of every single cent that is being spent by the Pentagon. We could also cancel all of the contracts with union-busting companies. We could also influence Congress and -- and support Congress in calling by subpoena every CEO of every -- every industry, whether it's airlines or big pharma or big food or anyone else that has been price-gouging the people of the United States.

There are many things that the president could do. This president -- and this -- I don't see myself as running against Joe Biden. I see this campaign as challenging a system. But this administration has given more oil (ph) --

KARL: But you do have to beat Biden to -- I mean --

WILLIAMSON: Well, yes, I do.

KARL: -- if you're going do this, you have to --

WILLIAMSON: Yes, I do. And I plan on pointing out, not with any kind of negativity on a personal level, I have -- I have no interest in taking potshots on any person, let alone to this president, he's a nice man. And he has given more oil-drilling permits to fossil fuel extraction companies than Trump did. He has talked about what a -- what a existential crisis it is, the climate change, on the -- at the same time, the Inflation Reduction Act gives 5%, the money that we give to the military only 5%.

This is how I see President Biden. He is helping people -- I think he has a good heart. He is helping people survive an unjust system. We need to do more than that. We need to end an unjust system. It's like when Eleanor Roosevelt said to Franklin Roosevelt, we need more than the amelioration of stress. We need genuine economic reform.

That would be universal health care. That would be tuition-free college and tech schools. That would be free child care. That would be --

KARL: I mean -- I mean, Biden has had initiatives on each of those. But you have to -- I mean, to make changes like that, you do have to get Congress to -- to pass laws.

WILLIAMSON: Not all of them. No, that's not true.

In this June 5, 2021, file photo, Project Angel Food Founder Marianne Williamson is seen at the AIDS Monument Groundbreaking in West Hollywood, Calif.

KARL: I mean, universal health care, you're going to do that by executive order?

WILLIAMSON: Well, I will say this, what Libby, Montana, got -- where Libby, Montana, got that they got Medicare-for-All because of their emergency? So should Jackson, Mississippi. So should East Palestine. But it is more than that. This president has never used the bully pulpit to call for universal health care. This president has never --

(CROSSTALK)

KARL: I mean, he has been talking about health care for decades, to be fair. I mean, and -- and --

WILLIAMSON: That's right. But --

KARL: -- he was a big part of passing Obamacare and -- and --

WILLIAMSON: The -- the president has tried to improve Obamacare. Even with improved Obamacare, which I think he has accomplished to some extent, that is not universal health care. We have one in four Americans living with medical debt. We have 18 million Americans who cannot afford the prescription drugs that their doctors give them. We have 80 -- 68,000 Americans who die every year from lack of health care.

This kind of thing does not exist in other advanced democracies. Every other advanced democracy has universal health care. This is a moderate position in those countries. And it should be considered a moderate position here.

We're in a position, particularly as Democrats, when someone even makes the slightest effort, we go, “oh, that's so good”. And if they can't make it happen, “oh, poor baby”. You think the Republicans would treat their president that way if they failed to give them the blessings of democracy as they define them?

KARL: Well -- well, let me ask you this, because you endorsed Bernie Sanders when you got out of the race.

WILLIAMSON: I sure did.

KARL: You -- you called Elizabeth Warren -- I think you said she was a legend. I mean, you --

WILLIAMSON: She is. She -- I love those people.

KARL: Both of them have said that Biden deserves re-election.

WILLIAMSON: Well, that's their opinion. And this is the thing --

KARL: Are they wrong? So they're wrong?

WILLIAMSON: No, it's not about -- no. No, no, no. This is a democracy. This is not about what I think is wrong. Obviously I believe the American people should be offered an agenda for genuine, fundamental economic reform. And it should be the voters who decide. It should not be the DNC that decides. It should be the voters who decide. That is what a democracy is.

We -- this is not 100 years ago when a bunch of men smoking cigars get to sit around a table and decide the nominee.

KARL: Do you expect the DNC to have debates?

WILLIAMSON: Pardon?

KARL: Do -- do you expect to -- do you expect that Biden will debate you?

WILLIAMSON: He certainly should debate me. It's called democracy. And I'm running as well.

KARL: And -- and what about this notion of taking New Hampshire out of its -- out of its position as first? You're going to New Hampshire.

WILLIAMSON: I can tell you that New Hampshirites are not happy about that. The fact that the --

KARL: So will you be competing in the New Hampshire Primary?

WILLIAMSON: Absolutely --

KARL: Even though the DNC has said --

WILLIAMSON: -- I will. This is a democracy. This is the thing.

KARL: Yes.

WILLIAMSON: The DNC should not be rigging this system. They don't even pretend anymore. They're not even covert about their -- their swaying the -- the primary season. They're very overt about it. They're going to get --

(CROSSTALK)

KARL: So that's what's going on, is they're rigging the system for Biden.

WILLIAMSON: They even admit that, Jonathan.

KARL: OK.

WILLIAMSON: They admit that. They know that the president did not do well in New Hampshire. They know that New Hampshirites are very open to independent and more progressive voices.

KARL: Mm-hmm.

WILLIAMSON: And they know that they -- he did very well in South Carolina. They're not even -- you know this, I know this, they know this. And they're not even pretending otherwise.

KARL: Do you think Biden is too old to run for re-election?

WILLIAMSON: No. I -- I'm -- I'm not going there. I don't think ageism has any place in our -- in -- in our thinking. But I do think that the American people obviously know what the statistics are. They -- they know that --

KARL: What statistics?

WILLIAMSON: Well, the -- just the statistics as we get older. And -- and -- and the importance of who the vice president is, et cetera.

But once again, it should be the people who decide whether or not they feel any factor, the president's agenda or the president's personhood, would make them either vote for him or not vote for him.

KARL: So what is -- I mean, you're basically saying -- I know you're not going to make this personal, but you're basically saying that Biden doesn't deserve a second term.

WILLIAMSON: I wouldn't -- the word “deserve” is not what comes up for me. Those are your words. I'm saying that the president --

KARL: OK. But you're saying that he should -- he -- he should not be president again.

WILLIAMSON: Well, I'll tell you this. I do not believe that that is the winning ticket for 2024.

KARL: Will you endorse him if he wins the nomination?

WILLIAMSON: I will certainly endorse the candidate who I feel can beat the Republicans, absolutely.

KARL: So but -- but if he's the Democratic nominee, will you endorse him?

WILLIAMSON: I -- I will -- I will do whatever I feel I can do as an American to make sure that the neo-fascist threat that is represented by some aspects of the Republican Party does not win in 2024.

KARL: But you wouldn't run as a third party candidate if you lost --

(CROSSTALK)

WILLIAMSON: I'm not saying that I would run as a third party candidate. And I certainly wouldn't --

KARL: Are you saying you wouldn't, though?

WILLIAMSON: I'm saying that I will do what I can, as an American, a patriotic American to make sure that the overriding issue is addressed. And that's that the Neo-fascist threat of authoritarianism that is far too present in the current establishment of the Republican Party does not win the White House in 2024.

KARL: Is America better off? The old question is America better off. Were you better off now than you were four years ago? How would you Is America better off because Biden was elected president.

WILLIAMSON: 20% of Americans are doing very well in this economy. But that 20% are living on an enchanted island that is surrounded by a vast sea of economic despair and anxiety. That’s why--

KARL: So is the answer no, you don't think America is better off because Biden --

WILLIAMSON: America is over 360 million people. What I'm saying is the 20% of Americans are probably better off–

KARL: What about the other 80%?

WILLIAMSON: The other 80% are drowning, the other 80% are filled with people 1/3 of America's workforce that lives on less than $15 an hour, the other 80% of Americans, 64% of Americans, who are living paycheck to paycheck that people who are working full time at less than minimum wage, can't even afford a place to live. We're talking about 85 million Americans who are underinsured and underinsured. No for them, the economy is not going well. And they know that.

KARL: Let me ask you a bigger picture–

WILLIAMSON: So If I may say so,

KARL: Yes.

WILLIAMSON: If I may, for the Democrats to run in 2024 on the idea that the economy is doing well. That right there shows the unbelievable disconnect between DC think tanks and the visceral experience of the majority of Americans.

KARL: Do you think Trump could beat Biden?

WILLIAMSON: I would do everything I could to make sure that didn't happen. But it's not you know. This predictive thing is so silly. Nobody thought that Trump could beat Hillary, you know, this is not a football game. This is the state of our democracy, our environment and our economy that we're talking about. It's not a football game.

KARL: But let me ask you about your candidacy. You said last cycle that the media got you wrong by portraying you as anti-science, anti-vax, a crystal lady.

WILLIAMSON: Yeah.

KARL: So, how should Democrats view your candidacy?

WILLIAMSON: Well, I am an American, but I am Excuse me? Well, I am a Democrat, but I am an FDR Democrat. I think that I returned to the principles of FDR, a significantly unabashed advocacy for the working people of the United States is the great unfinished business of the Democratic Party. There are a lot of corporatist elite, establishment Democrats who look at progressives, such as myself and say, we're trying to hijack the party, they hijacked the party. I'm old enough to remember a time when the Democratic Party more than not, did make an unequivocal stance, we're now at a point where we have a Democratic president siding with the railroad, as opposed to with the workers on that railroad who only want sick pay. No, the Democratic Party needs to be a conduit for the healing of this country. But first, the Democratic Party needs to look in the mirror and heal itself.

KARL: You've talked a lot about cutting defense spending, how much? How much would you cut --

WILLIAMSON: You know, I'd like to see 30%. But that's not going to happen. So, you know, I understand that. I think what we need to have as a serious conversation about the fact that it was $858 billion, that it is today, so much more than any other nation, there are people within the military themselves. Who would say that this is more than we need for actual --

KARL: Where would you cut

WILLIAMSON: -- actual security.

KARL: -- for security?

WILLIAMSON: I don't know specifically where I would cut it from. But I'll tell you this much, when -- when you're looking at what should the United States be concerned about in terms of dangers coming down the road? I think climate change in many people's minds is a bigger danger. And I'm not under estimating or minimizing some of the international dangers that exist. But I think that if we're really talking about keeping this country secure, this has more to do with money for defense contractors for Northrop Grumman for Boeing for Raytheon, then it has to do with the genuine security concerns of the American people. And the difference between now and even four years ago, is how many people now see that.

KARL: You've supported much of what the administration has done–

WILLIAMSON: Pardon?

KARL:You've supported much of what President Biden has done in Ukraine. But I want to ask you something you said right after the invasion, you said Putin is a madman, but his madness has been matched by a madness of our own. Do you really --

WILLIAMSON: But not in this situation.

KARL: But do you believe?

WILLIAMSON: What do you think Iraq was? I think the imperialism of Iraq the imperialism of the last 20 years, not --

KARL: Do you think that's the same as Putin invading Ukraine?

WILLIAMSON: There, there-- listen, we're talking about a bad guy versus a really, really, really bad guy. Let's be very clear here. The United States needs to look in the mirror. Vietnam should-- War should not have occurred. The Iraq war should not have occurred. The last 20 years in in Afghanistan were a moral and military failure, millions of people Around the world and thousands of Americans died --

KARL: But this is entirely different than a war of conquest, isn't it? I mean, Putin invaded another country --

WILLIAMSON: And I'm -- oh, and I -- excuse me, I support the President's basic policy here. If we were to if we were to withdraw military support from Ukraine right now, there would be no Ukraine. That is not acceptable to me.

KARL: So, you support, you support the funding of the Ukrainian military, the sending of weapons over there --

WILLIAMSON: Right now -- well, I feel --

KARL: -- setting up tanks.

WILLIAMSON: I feel the President is being careful he is being considered. He has said no jets for now. So, right now, I basically I while I do not support all of the rhetoric of the president regarding -- regarding this war, for the most part, for the most part, I support that policy.

KARL: I'm gonna ask you something else that you said, though, in the earlier stages of this war, you said “there is certainly enough blame to go around, and that includes the United States. For years, we've been encouraging Ukrainian behavior that posed a threat to Russia's sphere of influence. Any American can appreciate that if Canada or Mexico aligned itself with the Russian military interests, we would cry foul to say the least”.

WILLIAMSON: I do not think the United States should be proud of some of the ways we dealt with NATO. I think it is a general consensus even in this town that the missiles in Poland, the HHS missiles were not a good idea. But please don't get me wrong. And don't let your viewers get me wrong. I am not equating America's behavior in this situation with Vladimir Putin. Nothing that the United States has done justifies the this is a brutal dictator, dictator, and nothing that the United States has done, justifies what he is doing.

If we're going to be anti-imperialist about America, we have to be anti-imperialist about Russia. What the United States needs to stand for in every situation is negotiation and diplomacy. The only question right now even Milley said the RAND Corporation said, General Milley and the RAND Corporation have both said, this is going to end with negotiation, this is going to be negotiated into a conflict. The only question now is, at what point is that possible in a way that supports Ukraine the most? And I think that’s what we’re trying to do--

KARL: Yeah at what point can you get Putin to negotiate?

WILLIAMSON: That's well, not -- not -- not right now, because he feels he's winning the war. And that is why I support our policies at this time.

KARL: Do you think America is the greatest nation on Earth?

WILLIAMSON: I think that the -- no, I don't think that God -- I think God created all people equal. So, that kind of talk is seventh grade, and sophomoric and does not serve us. I think that there are exceptional principles, the exceptional principles at the core of our Declaration of Independence, that all men are created equal is -- is exceptional, that God gave all men inalienable rights of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, that's exceptional, that governments are instituted to secure those rights. And it's the right of the people to alter it if the if it is not doing so that is exceptional. However, the fact that your principles are exceptional, doesn't mean you're actualizing those principles some generations have in really brilliant ways and some haven't, and we are right now experiencing the same struggle, as other generations have between those who seek to expand the democratic -- democratic franchise and those who seek to narrow it.

KARL: Let me ask you about China, because President Biden suggested is the biggest long term threat facing the United States. How, as President, would you handle China if they invaded if China invaded Taiwan?

WILLIAMSON: First of all, I don't like the saber rattling that's even involved in that question. China's economy is not doing well. We must keep our competition with China off the battlefield. China knows that we and other Western and Western allies could cause a lot of problems for them economically, if they were to do that, just as we know that they could mess with us. We must be very careful, we must be very firm, we must not let them bully us or our allies. But we -- as much as we must make a stand for such things as human rights. At this point, we must be committed that this not spill over into a military confrontation.

KARL: But should we be committed to defending Taiwan?

WILLIAMSON: There are ways to defend Taiwan other than military. And I don't think I don't think that Taiwan appreciates that Americans are having this conversation the way they are. They have played this very carefully. They keep their heads down. They don't even go there--

KARL: They invited Nancy Pelosi to come--

WILLIAMSON: Did they invite her? There are many there were many Taiwanese who were not happy that she was coming there at all.

ABC News’ Jon Karl interviews Marianne Williamson on “This Week.”

KARL: OK, last question. You in a in a blog post talking about possibly running for President recently you said “Change is inevitable in this country. We are either going to have a peaceful revolution or a violent one". What do you mean by that?

WILLIAMSON: Excuse me, did you not cover January 6th?

KARL: Yes, oh I did.

WILLIAMSON: What is happening in this country is that people who -- who are experienced vast amounts of economic fear anxiety, when you have this much economic anxiety, and millions and millions of people experiencing that kind of desperation-

KARL: Do you think January 6th was about economic anxiety?

WILLIAMSON: No, I did not say that.

KARL: Well --

WILLIAMSON: But I do think that the election of President Trump the first time in many ways was. Just as I feel that the support of Bernie Sanders, Bernie Sanders and Donald Trump have both said to the American people, “I understand your rage. I understand you're upset with an obviously economically rigged system.” And that is what the Democrats need to offer in 2024, a president who isn't just saying, “oh, it's going well,” to millions of people for whom nothing like that is true, but rather we understand that you are living at the effect of an unjust economic system. And we are going to change that.

KARL: But do you think we may see a violent revolution in this country?

WILLIAMSON: Hear me out. We -- I think people, particularly people living in this town, it's so interesting in this town, I'd always heard it was a bubble. It's actually more like a walled city. Sometimes I don't think people in this town even know what's going on out there. Obviously didn't know what was going on there in 2000s, out there in 2016. I think that people who are at their wit's end are closer to the gates of the Bastille than we have any idea. All kinds of chaos could erupt, all kinds of chaos is already erupting in our society, chaos inside people, their addictions, their suicides, their depression, we must address the suffering that is going on within the hearts of so many millions of people.

KARL: That sounds a little bit like American carnage. I mean, your -- your -- your description.

WILLIAMSON: American Carnage? Yeah, that was -- oh, no, absolutely it is not, because this is what I'm saying. He wanted to exploit that pain for his own. What you're referring to the president, the president exploited that pain for his own political purposes. His own, his own Son in law said that he had said to his father-in-law, there are a lot of angry people out there, we could harness all that and elect you president. I'm saying there's a lot of dignity, decency, intelligence and love out there. And we can harness that for political purposes, we but we must make that U turn. We are supposedly a country based on liberty and justice. We do not have economic justice, or environmental justice, or criminal justice or racial justice in this country. And candidates who pretend otherwise, are not going to be able to reach into the hearts of the American people in lit and win in 2024. And even more importantly, will not be able to repair the incredible damage that has been done to this country over the last 50 years.

KARL: All right. Well, thank you for taking the time to talk with us and we'll be following your campaign.

WILLIAMSON: Thank you very, very much.

瑪麗安·威廉姆森捍衛領導地位,反駁“無法控製的憤怒”的說法

Marianne Williamson defends leadership, pushes back on claim of 'uncontrollable rage'

作者:弗裏茨·法羅 2023 年 6 月 29 日

“我認為這場競選是對一個體係的挑戰”:瑪麗安·威廉姆森

“我認為這場競選是對一個體係的挑戰”:瑪麗安·威廉姆森

美國廣播公司新聞的喬恩·卡爾在“本周”節目中采訪了瑪麗安·威廉姆森。
民主黨總統候選人、受歡迎的演說家和暢銷自助書籍作者瑪麗安·威廉姆森 (Marianne Williamson) 在初選中向總統喬·拜登發起黑馬挑戰,在英國逗留一個月後,她正認真地重返競選活動。 孫子。

“現在我回來了,我將立即開始行動,”威廉姆森告訴美國廣播公司新聞。

這是一條明顯不同的競選路線。 在那段時間,威廉姆森失去了第二位競選經理,前總統唐納德·特朗普因他否認的聯邦指控而被起訴,總統的兒子亨特與檢察官達成認罪協議,六名主要候選人進入共和黨初選。

隨著威廉姆森重新出現在新罕布什爾州、密歇根州、馬薩諸塞州和伊利諾伊州,她在接受美國廣播公司新聞采訪時談到了其中一些話題。

本月,在代理競選經理彼得·達烏 (Peter Daou) 離開幾周後,羅紮·卡爾德龍 (Roza Calderón) 也以競選經理的身份離開了威廉姆森的團隊。 據 Politico 報道,威廉姆森 2020 年競選活動的一些工作人員詳細介紹了他們與一名候選人合作的經曆,據稱這名候選人表現出“無法控製的憤怒”,導致工作人員哭泣,這是一次人事變動。

更多信息:瑪麗安·威廉姆森談總統競選、新的民主黨全國委員會初選日程:“本周”獨家
“有人不喜歡我直率的性格、我的直接,那麽我很抱歉。那麽,顯然,這對他們來說不是合適的競選活動,”威廉姆森在回應這些員工的說法時說道。 “有很多為我工作過的人都說了很多好話,而且我和他們相處得很好。”

威廉姆森的競選團隊辯稱,她所麵臨的批評通常隻會困擾其他女性。 當美國廣播公司新聞問威廉姆森對她最公正的批評是什麽時,她似乎接受了自己的直率。

“也許我可以很強硬,但不像他們說的那樣強硬,”她說,並補充道,“畢竟我正在競選總統。我認為你需要一個強硬的人。”

照片:2019 年 7 月 30 日在密歇根州底特律福克斯劇院舉行的民主黨總統辯論期間,民主黨總統候選人瑪麗安·威廉姆森 (Marianne Williamson) 發言,眾議員蒂姆·瑞安 (D-OH) 聆聽。

2019 年 7 月 30 日,密歇根州底特律福克斯劇院舉行的民主黨總統辯論期間,民主黨總統候選人瑪麗安·威廉姆森 (Marianne Williamson) 發表講話,眾議員蒂姆·瑞安 (Tim Ryan) 聆聽。
賈斯汀沙利文/蓋蒂圖片社
然而,這位精神顧問表示,據報道,前工作人員對她的評論,以及困擾她競選活動的高層更替,並不能反映她的領導能力。

“我們有一支優秀的團隊,”她堅持道。 “實現這一切需要時間。亞伯拉罕·林肯經曆了 12 位將軍才到達尤利西斯·S·格蘭特,我認為沒有人會說他不是一位優秀的經理。”

威廉姆森麵臨著與拜登的一場艱苦戰鬥,拜登對她進行初選辯論的呼籲不予理睬,自 75 年前現代辯論巡回賽開始以來,現任總統還沒有參加過初選辯論。

據 FiveThirtyEight 報道,拜登在民意調查中繼續以大幅領先優勢領先於她; 本月,他舉辦了八場大型籌款活動,周四還計劃在紐約舉行另外兩場籌款活動,預計他也會在金錢競賽中輕鬆超越她。 值得注意的是,正如美國廣播公司附屬機構 WMUR 當時報道的那樣,威廉姆森在 2020 年的競選活動中遇到了資金短缺的問題,迫使她在第一次初選之前解雇了全部員工。

但她仍抱有希望。

“美國政治非常非常難以預測,”她說。

威廉姆森表示,她不會把比賽變成個人的事情。 對她來說,這包括不將亨特·拜登與檢察官達成的協議武器化——仍在等待法官的批準——在該協議中,他將承認兩項輕罪稅務指控,並進入審前分流計劃,以避免因槍支重罪指控而被起訴 。

更多:瑪麗安·威廉姆森“很傷心地看到”卡琳·讓-皮埃爾開玩笑說她的候選資格渺茫
威廉姆森說:“我認為我們需要記住的是,亨特·拜登沒有競選總統。” “亨特·拜登不是他的父親,所以亨特·拜登的法律問題不關我的事,也不應該關你的事。”

她後來補充說,“這確實與這場比賽無關。”

2019 年 7 月 30 日,密歇根州底特律福克斯劇院舉行的民主黨總統辯論期間,民主黨總統候選人瑪麗安·威廉姆森 (Marianne Williamson) 發表講話,眾議員蒂姆·瑞安 (Tim Ryan) 聆聽。
然而,這位精神顧問表示,據報道,前工作人員對她的評論,以及困擾她競選活動的高層更替,並不能反映她的領導能力。

“我們有一支優秀的團隊,”她堅持道。 “實現這一切需要時間。亞伯拉罕·林肯經曆了 12 位將軍才到達尤利西斯·S·格蘭特,我認為沒有人會說他不是一位優秀的經理。”

威廉姆森麵臨著與拜登的一場艱苦戰鬥,拜登對她進行初選辯論的呼籲不予理睬,自 75 年前現代辯論巡回賽開始以來,現任總統還沒有參加過初選辯論。

據 FiveThirtyEight 報道,拜登在民意調查中繼續以大幅領先優勢領先於她; 本月,他舉辦了八場大型籌款活動,周四還計劃在紐約舉行另外兩場籌款活動,預計他也會在金錢競賽中輕鬆超越她。 值得注意的是,正如美國廣播公司附屬機構 WMUR 當時報道的那樣,威廉姆森在 2020 年的競選活動中遇到了資金短缺的問題,迫使她在第一次初選之前解雇了全部員工。

但她仍抱有希望。

“美國政治非常非常難以預測,”她說。

威廉姆森表示,她不會把比賽變成個人的事情。 對她來說,這包括不將亨特·拜登與檢察官達成的協議武器化——仍在等待法官的批準——在該協議中,他將承認兩項輕罪稅務指控,並進入審前分流計劃,以避免因槍支重罪指控而被起訴 。

更多:瑪麗安·威廉姆森“很傷心地看到”卡琳·讓-皮埃爾開玩笑說她的候選資格渺茫
威廉姆森說:“我認為我們需要記住的是,亨特·拜登沒有競選總統。” “亨特·拜登不是他的父親,所以亨特·拜登的法律問題不關我的事,也不應該關你的事。”

她後來補充說,“這確實與這場比賽無關。”

相反,威廉姆森表示,她將重點關注喬·拜登作為總統的工作,以及她所批評的他的政府在解決美國人麵臨的問題上的“漸進方法”,並表示拜登競選團隊吹捧的立法——包括《通貨膨脹削減法案》——並沒有起到作用。 走得足夠遠。

威廉姆森的政綱包括倡導“根本性經濟改革”、全民醫療保健、免學費大學和免費兒童保育。

拜登的連任競選得到了威廉姆森本人的盟友政客的支持,其中包括佛蒙特州參議員伯尼·桑德斯。 她的 2024 年競選網站稱,桑德斯是 2016 年唯一一位承認存在“被操縱”係統並“想要對此采取行動”的候選人。

威廉姆森告訴美國廣播公司新聞:“如果桑德斯參議員認為以這種漸進的方式實現這一目標就足夠了,我尊重他的觀點。” “但這不是我的。”

照片:2023 年 3 月 11 日,瑪麗安·威廉姆森在新罕布什爾州曼徹斯特的 Bookery Manchester 與公眾討論她的競選綱領。

2023 年 3 月 11 日,瑪麗安·威廉姆森在新罕布什爾州曼徹斯特的 Bookery Manchester 與公眾討論她的競選綱領。
威廉姆森對拜登 2020 年競選的主題以及他在連任競選中再次部署的主題進行了猛烈抨擊,他說:“在我們幫助人們修複他們的生活之前,我們不會修複美國,而為了做到這一點,你可以” 不僅僅是說我們要治愈美國的靈魂。”

她不會給拜登的表現打分,不過她表示,在 2020 年大選中擊敗唐納德·特朗普後,她會給他打“A”。

根據美國廣播公司新聞和其他媒體獲得的錄音,特朗普連任總統的前景“真的很可怕”,因為他在卸任後發表的言論似乎承認並炫耀了一份敏感的軍事文件。

她表示,她對特朗普的言論“並不感到震驚”,特朗普否認自己在錄音中的互動中擁有機密材料。

威廉姆森說:“我認為,最令人震驚的是他在如此重要的事情上缺乏理智上的清醒。” “這些文件涉及非常非常嚴重的軍事問題。這個人甚至沒有認真對待民主本身、總統傳統,或者顯然是總統的責任。”

威廉姆森還表示,她覺得自己應該受到更認真的對待。 她說,她對那些人給她的競選貼上“希望渺茫”的標簽感到不滿,試圖使她的候選資格失去合法性。 她說她認為對她最大的誤解是她是一個“瘋狂的、水晶般的潑婦”。

從未擔任過民選公職的威廉姆森認為,缺乏政治經驗不是障礙,而是一種優勢。

“問題不在於我們華盛頓沒有優秀的政治汽車修理工,”她引用了她向選民宣傳的部分內容。 “問題是我們走錯了路。這就是我所知道的。”

但當被問及她是否會選擇一名民選官員作為她的副總統競選搭檔時,威廉姆森說:“當然。”

“我認為這是個好主意,是的”她說。 “因為我們確實需要房間裏有一個了解這些政治機製的人。”

Marianne Williamson defends leadership, pushes back on claim of ‘uncontrollable rage’

By Fritz Farrow  June 29, 2023
 
'I see this campaign as challenging a system’: Marianne Williamson

Marianne Williamson, the Democratic presidential candidate, popular speaker and bestselling author of self-help books who is mounting a dark horse primary challenge to President Joe Biden, is returning to her campaign in earnest after a monthlong stay in England for the birth of her first grandchild.

"Now that I'm back, I'm going to be hitting the ground running," Williamson told ABC News.

It's a campaign trail that is markedly different. In that time, Williamson lost a second campaign manager, former President Donald Trump was indicted on federal charges that he denies, the president's son Hunter reached a plea deal with prosecutors and six major candidates entered the Republican primary.

As Williamson reappears on the trail, with a slew of events scheduled in New Hampshire, Michigan, Massachusetts and Illinois, she addressed some of those topics in an interview with ABC News.

This month, Roza Calderón departed Williamson's team as campaign manager just weeks after acting campaign manager Peter Daou left. It's a shake-up that comes after some staffers on Williamson's 2020 campaign detailed their experiences working with a candidate who allegedly exhibited "uncontrollable rage" and made staff cry, according to Politico.

"Somebody doesn't like my blunt personality, my directness, then I'm sorry. Then, obviously, this wasn't the right campaign for them," Williamson said in response to these staffers' accounts. "There are a lot of people who have worked for me who had nice things to say and with whom I get along very well."

Williamson's campaign argues the kinds of criticism she is facing usually only plagues other women. When ABC News asked Williamson what the fairest criticism of her is, she seemed to embrace her bluntness.

"Probably that I can be tough, but not tough like they say," she said, adding, "I'm running for president after all. I think you need somebody who's tough."

PHOTO: Democratic presidential candidate Marianne Williamson speaks while Rep. Tim Ryan (D-OH) listens during the Democratic Presidential Debate at the Fox Theatre July 30, 2019 in Detroit, Michigan.Democratic presidential candidate Marianne Williamson speaks while Rep. Tim Ryan (D-OH) listens during the Democratic Presidential Debate at the Fox Theatre July 30, 2019 in Detroit, Michigan.

However, the spiritual adviser said the reported comments attributed to her by former staff, and the top-level turnover plaguing her campaign, are not a reflection of her leadership abilities.

"We've got a good team," she maintained. "And it takes time to get all that. Abraham Lincoln went through 12 generals to get to Ulysses S. Grant, and I don't think anybody would say he wasn't a good manager."

Williamson faces an uphill battle against Biden, who has brushed off her calls for primary debates, something incumbent presidents have not participated in since the modern debate circuit began 75 years ago.

Biden continues to outpace her in polling by a yawning margin, according to FiveThirtyEight; and he is expected to easily lap her in the money race, too, having held eight big-dollar fundraisers this month, with two more planned in New York on Thursday. Notably, a lack of money troubled Williamson's campaign in 2020, forcing her to lay off her entire staff before the first primary contest, as ABC affiliate WMUR reported at the time.

But she is holding out hope.

"American politics is very, very unpredictable," she said.

Williamson said she's not going to make the race personal. For her, that includes not weaponizing the agreement that Hunter Biden struck with prosecutors -- still awaiting a judge's approval -- in which he would plead guilty to two misdemeanor tax charges and enter into a pretrial diversion program to avoid prosecution on a felony gun charge.

"I think what we need to remember is that Hunter Biden is not running for president," Williamson said. "Hunter Biden is not his father and so Hunter Biden's legal problems aren't my business and they shouldn't be yours."

She later added that "it really has nothing to do with this race."

Instead, Williamson said she will focus on Joe Biden's job as president and what she criticizes as his administration's "incremental approach" to addressing issues facing Americans, saying legislation the Biden campaign touts as victories -- including the Inflation Reduction Act -- don't go far enough.

Williamson's platform includes championing "fundamental economic reform," universal health care, tuition-free college and free child care.

Biden's reelection bid has received the backing of politicians whom Williamson herself aligns with, including Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont. Her 2024 campaign website states that Sanders was the only candidate in 2016 who acknowledged there was a "rigged" system and "wanted to do something about it."

"If Sen. Sanders thinks that the incremental approach getting there that way is enough, I respect that that's his opinion," Williamson told ABC News. "But it's not mine."

PHOTO: Marianne Williamson discusses her campaign platform with members of the public at Bookery Manchester in Manchester, New Hampshire, March 11, 2023.

Marianne Williamson discusses her campaign platform with members of the public at Bookery Manchester in Manchester, New Hampshire, March 11, 2023.

Taking a swipe at a theme of Biden's 2020 run and one he's deploying once again in his reelection bid, Williamson said, "We're not going to repair America until we help people repair their lives, and in order to do that you can't just say we're going to heal the soul of America."

She wouldn't assign a grade to Biden's performance, though she said gives him an "A" for defeating Donald Trump in the 2020 election.

The prospect of a second Trump presidency is "really terrifying," she said, in light of comments he made appearing to acknowledge and show off a sensitive military document after leaving office, according to an audio recording obtained by ABC News and other outlets.

She said she was "not shocked" by what Trump said, who has denied he had classified material in the interaction on the recording.

"What was, I think, most stunning about it is his lack of intellectual sobriety, you know, about something so important," Williamson said. "These documents were about very, very serious military matters. And this man doesn't even take seriously that democracy itself, the traditions of the presidency, or obviously the responsibilities of the president."

Williamson also said she feels she should be taken more seriously. She resents her campaign being labeled a "long shot" by those, she said, seeking to delegitimatize her candidacy. She said she believes the biggest misconception of her is that she is a "crazy, crystal lady shrew."

Williamson, who has never served in elected office, believes her lack of political experience is not an obstacle but rather an asset.

"The problem is not that we don't have good political car mechanics in Washington," she said, quoting a part of her pitch to voters. "The problem is that we are on the wrong road. And that's what I know about."

But asked if she would pick an elected official to be her vice presidential running mate, Williamson said, "Absolutely."

"I think that would be a good idea, yes" she said. "Because we do need somebody in the room who knows those political mechanics."

KARL: Thank you. Excellent.

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