Announcing NAWAPA, the TVA of the 21st Century

July 26, 2010 -- As my campaign has repeatedly emphasized, we must think beyond today's wasteland society, wrought by an insane Nero president, to the better world we wish to see, once we have forced his resignation.

Since September is the month marking a physical-economic boundary condition, the boundary that economist Lyndon LaRouche has warned marks the onset period of global hyperinflation -- unless Obama is removed, and our commercial banks are protected by Glass-Steagall regulations -- then September should be the month by which we commit ourselves to finally building the TVA of the 21st Century, the North American Water and Power Alliance (NAWAPA). After decades of small thinking has brought our nation to it's ruin, only such big ideas as NAWAPA can give our children a future.

Originally outlined in the 1960s, but shelved after the politically motivated assassination of President Kennedy, NAWAPA is how we solve the nation's water and energy crises, while preparing the ground for even bigger infrastructure projects.

The basic idea is to divert runoff water from Alaska and Canada into a continent-sized aquifer, canal, and irrigation system, transforming the Great American Desert into a fertile breadbasket, while simultaneously providing clean water for our cities and industrial centers. This will necessarily employ millions in productive work, maintain national sovereignty, and develop massive amounts of domestic hydroelectric and nuclear power. It will also necessarily force a repeal of the century old environmentalist policies of Teddy Roosevelt, which have kept the central U.S.A. underdeveloped, and our coastal cities overcrowded.

An undertaking of such magnitude can only be thought of as parallel to the Apollo Mission science driver. It represents the kind of big thinking we need, after over a decade of Presidents who have conditioned us to think like underlings, while they crush our civil liberties, and standard of living.

Expect more on this from my campaign, in the near future.

--Kesha Rogers

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