Choking up twice during a farewell speech on the Senate floor, Sen. John Kerry delivered a dissenting opinion about Washington's so-called dysfunction days before taking over as the next secretary of state.
"On occasion, we have all heard a senator leave here and take their leave condemning the Senate for being broken, for having become an impossible setting in which to try to do the people's business," said Kerry, D-Mass. "I do not believe the Senate is broken, certainly not as an institution. There's nothing wrong with the Senate that can't be fixed by what's right about the Senate."
Kerry, a 29-year Senate veteran, admitted that when he first came to the Senate in 1985 everything seemed to work easier. These days, he said, part of the problem on Capitol Hill is a lack of "courage" from individual senators.
"If the Senate favors inaction over courage and gimmicks over common ground, the risk is not that we will fail to move forward," he said. "It is that we will fall behind, we will stay behind and we will surrender our promise."
But the senator, 69, said those problems are not insurmountable, avoiding casting the whole Senate as a body paralyzed by dysfunction like so many of other departing senators have done recently.
If anything, Kerry said he believes the spirit of the Senate is starting to turn around.
"There are new whispers of desire for progress, rumors of new coalitions and a sense of possibility, whether it is on energy or immigration," he said. "I am deeply impressed by a new generation of senators who seem to have come here determined not to give in to the cynicism but to get the people's business done."
Kerry called on his colleagues, many of whom were sitting at their desks on the Senate floor to watch his speech, to make the change within themselves in the bitter debates that are ahead for the Senate.
"Only senators, one by one in their own hearts, can change the approach to legislating," Kerry said. "The Senate cannot break unless we let it."
During his tenure in the Senate, Kerry, a decorated Vietnam veteran, rose to chairman of the powerful Senate Foreign Relations Committee. His legislative and international affairs victories included the 2010 U.S.-Russia treaty, his early work on the Iran-Contra scandal and veteran's affairs.
He noted that during his time in the Senate, huge strides were made on turning a page on gay rights, a reflection of how the body can change and develop over time.
"In 1993, I testified before Storm Thurmond's armed services committee pushing to lift the ban on gays serving in the military," he said. "And I ran into a world of misperceptions. I thought I was on a 'Saturday Night Live' skit. Today, at last, that policy is gone forever and we are a country that honors the commitment of all willing to fight and die for our country. We've gone from a Senate that passed DOMA over my objections to one that just welcomed its first openly gay senator. "
After a farewell tour of Massachusetts Thursday, Kerry will be sworn in as the next secretary of state on Friday afternoon in a private, small ceremony at the State Department, replacing Hillary Clinton.
As he prepares for his diplomatic post, Kerry said that he's aware that his credibility and the country's credibility are determined by what happens in Washington.
"If we use the time to posture politically in Washington, we weaken our position across the world," he said. "If democracy deadlocks here, we raise doubts about the democracy everywhere."
The senator - who was the 2004 Democratic nominee for president - joked that this was not the original track that he'd envisioned for leaving the Senate.
"Eight years ago, I admit that I had a very different plan, slightly different, anyway, to leave the Senate - but 61 million Americans voted that they wanted me to stay here with you," Kerry said. "I learned that sometimes the greatest lesson in life comes not from victory but from dusting yourself off after a defeat and starting over when you get knocked down."
Kerry is the 10th-most-senior senator and the second-longest-serving senator in his seat.
Also ReadSource: http://news.yahoo.com/kerry-gives-senate-farewell-223142160--abc-news-politics.html
joseph kony 2012 arian foster dennis kucinich apple ipad kony kony 2012 jim irsay

John Trim was a remarkable figure in the European language education community. He had a long and distinguished career, first?as a German scholar at UCL, then as Lecturer of Phonetics and later Director of Linguistics at Cambridge, where the Language Centre is named after him.
buy more groceries. There are magazines, candy, and other products to buy while someone waits in line, which increases impulse sales.
We have a very good Spam filter, but still every now and then a phishing email will slip through.? My business email is easy to find so I get? a wide assortment of unsolicited emails. This week I received a deviation on an scam that has been around for years ? your package was returned and click this link to get it.? I also received one that my LogMein SSL Certificate had been suspended?- click here to fix.?Of course, the links are malicious and at least, would come with some irritating pop-ups and at worse, steal your identity, seize your system and ruin your computer.
Samsung already gave us a hint of what to expect in its latest quarterly financials, but now the Korean consumer electronics titan has released its earnings for all to see. Here's the gist of the company's fiscal Q4 2012 figures: Samsung reported a whopping 56.06 trillion won (which works out to $52.4 billion) in revenue, along with 8.84 trillion won (roughly $8.27 billion) in operating profit.