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  • #118861
    zn
    Moderator

    Ryan Knight Rose@ProudSocialist
    Chuck Schumer spent all that money pumping up corporate extremist Amy McGrath who never had any chance of defeating Mitch McConnell when they could’ve had Charles Booker. Once again Democrats snatch defeat from the jaws of victory.

    #118865
    Mackeyser
    Moderator

    Yeah… this is a weird time where I dunno what’s worse.

    Normally, we can see shit and think, yeah, I can’t afford shoes, but I’m gonna go with the Shinola. I can’t use it, but it ain’t shit.

    Now… everywhere I turn, I’m being asked to choose which BRAND of shit… and it’s not even fertilizer… it’s like “you remember that shit you had after a night of drinking and binging on Del Taco??? Well, it’s that shit or the shit you had a few years ago when you lost your damn mind and ate that gas station sushi…

    The survivalist in me wants to just get Trump out of office and then fight for better policies.

    The leftist in me sees that and just thinks, “this shit…again? yeah, not interested.”

    But yeah. Once again, Chuck Schumer would rather have McConnell in there than Charles Booker.

    Sports is the crucible of human virtue. The distillate remains are human vice.

    #118879
    wv
    Participant

    Progressive wins primary:
    “I’m still in shock”

    #118903
    wv
    Participant

    huffpost:https://www.huffpost.com/entry/rashida-tlaib-wins-democratic-primary-michigan_n_5f29ad9fc5b68fbfc888ac3a?guccounter=1&guce_referrer=aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZ29vZ2xlLmNvbS8&guce_referrer_sig=AQAAAImD7Ev77U7M0fGfauTQUzRZe-1wexAtGLhIh1F0OIgX_8JeQuo9KRoY_pdGfgJ_vevIjXgqjFGPZDiKeAlObMTpMdngg79XTfSk9e1dWxfhE4L97zViSDQhEnB05KcX2Ij83fipKlJk_osgseEkcsaO_lRqTISPHunSIekBtxs8

    Rep. Rashida Tlaib Wins Democratic Primary Challenge In Michigan

    The “Squad” member defeated Detroit City Council President Brenda Jones for the second time.

    Rep. Rashida Tlaib, an outspoken Michigan progressive, defeated Detroit City Council President Brenda Jones in the Democratic primary for Michigan’s 13th Congressional District on Tuesday. Her primary win in one of the most Democratic House districts in the country all but officially confirms that Tlaib will be returning to Washington.

    “I’m confident in the movement that we started,” Tlaib told supporters on a video livestream as results came in Tuesday night. “Our country is ready ― is ready for someone like me and others that are saying, enough, enough with corporate greed, enough with the assault on our families.”

    Tlaib’s victory dashes the hopes of some moderate Democrats, who were eager to humble the activist left by unseating a member of the progressive “Squad” of freshman House women.

    The first-term congresswoman, a Palestinian American, also overcame some constituents’ skepticism that she could adequately represent a majority-Black seat held for decades by the late civil rights leader John Conyers.

    “She’s smart, she’s a fighter and most importantly, she’s the incumbent,” said Dr. Jimmy Womack, a Detroit pastor, physician and former state representative.

    Womack, who does not live in Tlaib’s district and counts both Tlaib and Jones as friends, noted that local Democratic Party institutions, including the 13th Congressional District Democratic Party, rallied to Tlaib’s side.

    “Clearly they feel she’s served the community in a capacity that would allow them to endorse her reelection,” he said.

    #118912
    zn
    Moderator

    #119008
    wv
    Participant

    #119027
    zn
    Moderator

    Originally posted by Zooey in another thread.

    #119134
    wv
    Participant

    Interesting stuff.

    #119139
    zn
    Moderator

    ‘They don’t know what I know’: why Cori Bush is poised to change politics
    Her team made half a million calls, recruited 2,000 volunteers, and knocked on 25,000 doors. It paid off: in a stunning upset, she ended a half-century Democratic dynasty in Missouri

    https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/aug/11/cori-bush-interview-missouri-congress-michael-brown

    August ninth was always going to be a difficult day to interview Cori Bush. Just five days before, Bush was propelled into the spotlight after winning her primary race in Missouri’s first congressional district, unseating the Democratic incumbent and ending a half-century family dynasty in Missouri.

    In the days since, Bush has barely had a chance to catch her breath.

    The win is the result of years of hard work and two unsuccessful campaigns – first for Senate in 2016 and again in 2018 for Congress. This time around, Bush’s team made almost half a million calls; signed up more than 2,000 volunteers; and knocked on 25,000 doors. Her grassroots campaign shunned corporate Pac money in favor of individual donations – and in the end, she both outraised the incumbent William Lacy Clay and outspent him on television advertisements.

    But when we talk via Zoom on a Sunday afternoon, it’s not the exhaustion or the back-to-back interviews that are on Bush’s mind. 9 August is the anniversary of the death of Michael Brown, an unarmed, 18-year-old who was shot dead by police in Ferguson, Missouri, in 2014 – and Bush has just been at his memorial service.

    “It’s hard looking at Michael Brown’s father and knowing that just last week he found out again that this officer won’t be charged,” she says, referencing the result of a five-month review that was decided last week.

    “Just looking at him in his face, and seeing the other activists crying is tough. It has been six years and we keep coming back here every single year and we’re not seeing change,” she adds, fighting tears.

    Following Brown’s death, Bush spent some 400 days campaigning on the streets of Ferguson. For her, six years marks the culmination of one of her areas of work – to get into politics – but not the other: to find justice for Black lives.

    “Today is just a rough day, period, because it is when all of our lives changed,” she explains. “It changed and it went into such a dark, dark, unbelievable place for such a long time.”

    •••

    Just two months before Michael Brown’s death, Lacy Clay, then Missouri’s representative, voted against a Democratic amendment that would stop the military from providing police forces with heavy weapons and vehicles.

    Then, on 10 August 2014, the Ferguson uprisings began.

    A nurse and ordained pastor, Bush would often arrive at the protests still in her scrubs. People knew her by sight, calling her Mom or Pastor Cori. In the ensuing months, Bush walked so much she wore down two pairs of shoes – one was a brand-new pair of Nike Hi-Tops.

    There were some pretty terrifying times out there
    Bush and her fellow activists would sometimes have a moment’s respite, when they could break bread together, cranking up the volume on the speakers and dancing in the early evening while still on the frontlines. But those moments of joy only briefly punctuated the long battle against police, which featured teargas, armoured vehicles and violent clashes – and an incident in which Bush herself was assaulted.

    “We were teargassed so heavily. Not being able to breathe and knowing other people couldn’t breathe, watching people laying on the ground, hurt or in pain … There were some pretty terrifying times out there,” she says.

    The assault itself is a source of deep upset for Bush; she begins to tear up when I ask her about it. She still seems bewildered at how her body came to be lifted into the air by the same cops called on to protect people. When her body hit the ground moments later, she felt numerous officers’ steel boots on her face and wondered whether she would die.

    “My face was pressed up against the ground and I [was] feeling all of these steel-toe boots stomping me and my body was going from side to side. And I was just thinking; who do I scream out to?” asks Bush.

    The fury of having to ask that question was what led her to return to the protests day after day, and it is what shapes her support for the growing movement calling for the police to be defunded. For her that means reallocating funds, drastically downsizing police budgets and investing in health services, social workers and hospitals instead of armed police.

    “I know some people have said that the police don’t have enough money or officers, but we have plenty of money for teargas and Swat gear stockpiled in warehouses. Bear spray, pepper spray, skunk spray, rubber bullets – where does that money come from?” she asks.

    Soon, she will move from being a political outsider to an insider and will be called to do her part to fix these problems. But Bush believes she is uniquely placed to have those conversations.

    “I can talk to congresspeople now, and say: I know you read this, but this is what actually happened,” she explains.

    After seeing the county’s first black prosecutor reach the same outcome as his predecessors – not to charge the officer who killed Brown – is she overwhelmed by the responsibility?

    “No, I feel relief,” says Cori, and she smiles for a moment.

    “Now we have some type of hope. I feel that little bit better knowing that I may be able to do something on a bigger scale for these families and these activists that have worked so hard for our community,” she says.

    •••

    If Bush wins Missouri in November (which she probably will – the seat has been blue since 1949, with Clay and his father in power since 1969) her life will change again, forever.

    She will have to get used to not being able to always pick up the phone when her children call (her daughter, 19, and son, 20, both call during our interview – and Bush stops me for a second to make sure a member of her team answers).

    She certainly won’t be able to drive her son home like she does nowwhen he is visiting her at her campaign office, out of fear that something bad will happen to him on the way back if she doesn’t.

    I am excited for it to finally be the people’s house
    “With the climate of our country and our world I worry about my children. My son is 20 years old, he is taller than me. He’s a black boy. I worry about [him], every single day. Every minute of the day. I’m not exaggerating,” she says.

    Bush has never been inside the Capitol. “I’m kind of glad that I haven’t because, the first time I get to cross the threshold [might] be as the congresswoman,” she says. “I am excited for it to finally be the people’s house.”

    Bush was backed by Justice Democrats, the group responsible for kickstarting the political careers of other outsiders such as Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Rashida Tlaib and Ilhan Omar. They won 11 of the 15 primary races they vied for this election cycle.

    But while their candidates are characterized by an unwillingness to take corporate Pac money and backing a slate of progressive policies – a $15 minimum wage, Medicare for All and a universal basic income of $2,000 a month – the party is still dominated by more moderate candidates.

    Joe Biden, the Democratic nominee for president, won’t back Medicare for All; meanwhile, during the presidential primary debates, racism, police reform and criminal justice reform were seldom mentioned.

    I believe Medicare for All is right: you breathe, you deserve healthcare

    Bush, who ran for Congress without insurance and has spent chunks of time living out of a car, knows her priorities. She is deeply committed to Medicare for All, as well as a $15 minimum wage: “Some of our essential workers were going to work for $9 an hour. But some of them lost their lives because they kept going to work – and then some of them contracted Covid,” she says.

    “Medicare for All – I know that is really not one of Joe Biden’s priorities … but I am going to continue to fight for it because I believe that is right: you breathe, you deserve healthcare.”

    When I ask Bush what she thinks of Biden, she can barely keep herself from laughing.

    “I think … He is the nominee for Democratic president,” she replies, before shaking her head. She adds: “We have what we have, and we have to get Trump out of the seat.”

    This could prove tricky. Bush will have to build support across the party if she wants any of her ideas to filter through. And if defunding the police is one of her cornerstone commitments, she may have to be ready to compromise. Does that concern her?

    “No, not really,” she responds, looking defiant. “Maybe [in] other areas we might have to do things a little differently than what I planned, but in this area, no … We haven’t been strong enough in this area in this country and I feel that’s why we are here,” she says.

    So she isn’t intimidated thinking about meeting her new colleagues on her first day on Capitol Hill, not even one bit?

    “No. I feel like, they don’t know what I know. I may not be an attorney, I’m a nurse – but when it comes to activism and advocacy, there are a lot of things I can do that they cannot.”

    #119171
    wv
    Participant
    #119255
    JackPMiller
    Participant

    I’d advise you to watch you all 43 minutes

    #119256
    TSRF
    Participant

    We all get caught in traps of our own devising. I’m willing to bet that Trump wishes he never ran for president right about now.

    This is not in defense of him, and gods know, I want anybody but him in office, but I’m starting to feel a strange emotion. Certainly nothing I ever felt growing up, but I think it is “pity”.

    When all is said and done, and there is nothing left to say or do, he may unleash nuclear hell for all I know, but I can’t help but feel sorry for his lonely, scared inner child. I heard an Abe Lincoln quote that went, “I don’t like that man; I need to get to know him better.” Not sure what he meant by “know”, but whatever.

    Maybe Donald needs to be locked in a room and forced to listen to Pink Floyd’s “The Wall” non-stop for a few days…

    #119257
    Billy_T
    Participant

    We all get caught in traps of our own devising. I’m willing to bet that Trump wishes he never ran for president right about now.

    This is not in defense of him, and gods know, I want anybody but him in office, but I’m starting to feel a strange emotion. Certainly nothing I ever felt growing up, but I think it is “pity”.

    When all is said and done, and there is nothing left to say or do, he may unleash nuclear hell for all I know, but I can’t help but feel sorry for his lonely, scared inner child. I heard an Abe Lincoln quote that went, “I don’t like that man; I need to get to know him better.” Not sure what he meant by “know”, but whatever.

    Maybe Donald needs to be locked in a room and forced to listen to Pink Floyd’s “The Wall” non-stop for a few days…

    TSRF,

    Just my own two cents: Don’t pity him. Evah. He’s flat out evil. Seriously. And I don’t mean that in the religious sense. I mean it in the sense of his actual deeds. What he’s done. Before and during the presidency.

    The list is endless and we’re becoming numb to it. Mob ties, racist business practices, self-dealing from his own charity, Trump U, his serial lying and sexual predations . . . and on to his kids and cages, selling off millions of acres of protected public lands, reopening pipe lines on indigenous lands, gutting our all too meager environmental laws and regs, . . . . and currently, openly attempting to bottle up the mail system so only GOP votes count.

    We have not seen his like as far as psychotic, morally reprehensible and dangerously ignorant behavior, ever . . . and his actions regarding the pandemic have cost the lives of well over 100,000 Americans. IMO, it’s completely correct and “fair” to pin the blame for that on Trump, directly.

    Yes, Clinton would have governed as a moderate Republican, and would have sucked up to corporate America. But she also never would have let 168,000 Americans (and counting) die of Covid-19 to this point. America might not have been in the South Korea range (300, roughly), much less New Zealand (25, roughly). But I have no doubt that she would have listened to the science enough to keep things at least in the very low thousands.

    Of course, one death is one too many. But 1% or 2% of current totals means a massive reduction in lost dreams, hopes and mourning.

    Trump is beneath contempt, and he’s getting worse by the day.

    • This reply was modified 4 years, 1 month ago by Billy_T.
    #119259
    wv
    Participant

    Cornell, talking the usual leftist-talk. Which is good, of course.

    “i dont endorse them, i vote for them…”

    #119260
    Billy_T
    Participant

    Omar won her primary
    https://twitter.com/i/events/1293444813874847744

    That’s really great news. I admire her a ton. She’s brave, like the entire Squad. They receive an endless stream of death threats, and until recently, weren’t even supported by their own party.

    As you note, it’s still only 99-1 in the Senate. But the way our (glacial) system typically works, is that the House is the farm team for future senators. I’m betting AOC (or someone like her) moves on to the Senate in a few years. The more folks like AOC, Omar, Tlaib, Cori Bush win House seats, the better shot this will translate to an increase in progressives* in the Senate.

    *Personally, I’m not a fan of using that word to describe “leftists.” But I’m not the Mayor of the Political Spectrum. My own take — and it’s obviously not a big deal, one way or another — is that “leftists” are to the left of progressives . . . and that “progressive” can be used interchangeably with “liberal” in many cases. I think it exists as a term today because “liberals” got sick and tired of seeing that term being abused by wingnuts, and too few had the courage of their own convictions to be fight for and be proud of the word.

    Of course, all too many liberals aren’t liberal about much beyond culture war stuff, so there’s that, too. But the same can be said about some “progressives,” too, unfortunately. So, to me, the best catch-all term for those of us who include “systems,” economics, the environment, imperialism, empire, the carceral state, foreign policy . . . and so on . . . is leftist.

    I really have to get a life.

    ;>)

    #119262
    Billy_T
    Participant

    Cornell, talking the usual leftist-talk. Which is good, of course.

    “i dont endorse them, i vote for them…”

    Good stuff, but timing is everything. As are mixed messages.

    As mentioned elsewhere, I’d suggest that left-public-intellectuals and any lefty with an audience simply refrain from the “Trump is horrible and we need to vote him out, but so are Democrats!” — for now. Give it a pause. Just three months. Then return to our normally scheduled legitimate and absolutely necessary critiques. Make the points about Trump, the GOP, and the far-right instead, and stop there.

    There’s just no way around the fact that the “but so are Democrats” balancing act encourages confusion in voters — consciously and/or subconsciously — which likely results in fewer people voting overall, which likely helps Trump win reelection.

    So if the aim truly is to defeat Trump, which West said must be done, then it’s logical to avoid largely canceling out that message with “Harris is empty and Biden single-handedly created our carceral system disaster,” etc. etc.

    We leftists can’t work with Biden/Harris on reforms, or push them leftward, if we leftists provoke too much “Fuck this, I’m staying home!” — thus helping Trump win reelection in the process. Again, to me, this is just common sense, human psychology, and the way politics works.

    #119265
    Billy_T
    Participant

    Also, more from the “I need to get a life” column.

    I think the host of that video misuses the term “neoliberal,” and I’ve noticed that with other lefty Youtube folks, like Krystal Ball.

    Neoliberalism was never, and is not now, the exclusive domain of the Dems, nor does it have anything to do with “liberals” or “liberalism.” It’s all about “liberalizing the markets,” at least as a euphemism for ceding even more power to the ultra-rich and corporate America. But the liberal part of the word has nothing to do with political liberalism per se.

    It’s a right-wing economic philosophy that rose in opposition to Keynesianism and the Keynesian Consensus, and basically supplanted it in the 1970s. It’s also sometimes called “freshwater economics,” Chicago School economics, or Reagan/Thatcherism. Ironically, it had and still has vastly more adherents among Republicans — basically the entire GOP, including Trump — and the Republican version is far more hard-line. Its main tenets are:

    1. Slash taxes for rich people and corporations
    2. Deregulate the markets, business in general, and Finance especially
    3. Sell off and otherwise privatize public goods and services

    Dems have a “soft” version of this; Republicans have a “hard” version. The latter goes much further in scope and kind.

    ___

    Oh, and while we’re at it, we need to get rid of shaky cams, too. They’re almost as bad as microfiche, which, thank goddess, are nearly dead and buried, except in a few Cathar libraries in Southern France which escaped the Inquisition.

    #120013
    wv
    Participant

    #120027
    wv
    Participant

    Another one, to fall in love with:https://www.jacobinmag.com/2020/08/jess-scarane-us-senate-dsa-delaware

    Jess Scarane Wants To “Create a Government That Puts People Over Profit”

    An interview with
    Jessica Scarane

    Jess Scarane is challenging incumbent Chris Coons for a Senate seat in Delaware. In an interview with Jacobin, the thirty-five-year-old candidate endorsed by the Democratic Socialists of America and her local Sunrise Movement hub talks about her vision of a better society, Coons’s use of “Republican talking points against the policies that we need,” and why a return to the status quo before the coronavirus is nowhere near good enough.

    Jess Scarane is a thirty-five-year-old Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) member running for Senate in Delaware against Democratic incumbent Chris Coons. Scarane is running on a platform that includes Medicare for All, Housing for All, a Green New Deal, criminal justice reform, and strengthening the labor movement. She has been endorsed by Brand New Congress, the Working Families Party, 350 Action, the local Sunrise Movement hub, and Rep. John Kowalko (D-DE).

    If elected, Scarane would be the first woman senator from Delaware and the first millennial in the Senate. Scarane spoke with writer Indigo Olivier about why she decided to run for office and what a just COVID-19 response should look like….

    #120036
    zn
    Moderator

    #120087
    zn
    Moderator

    Originally posted by Jack in a different thread

    #120157
    wv
    Participant

    The Senate race in Kentucky is close. The lady-marine-pilot Centrist
    vs the Thug.

    Unlikely the dem will win, but its interesting that its close.

    —————-

    #120171
    wv
    Participant

    #120206
    JackPMiller
    Participant

    This is about an hour long

    #120226
    Zooey
    Moderator

    Stay to the end, and listen to my favorite political slogan of all time.

    #120412
    wv
    Participant

    This was an interesting race. Saagar’s question was interesting.
    ========================

    #120558
    wv
    Participant

    “It will be rigged, but not in the way you think”

    #120594
    wv
    Participant

    58 Days to the Election.
    =======================
    Pa:https://www.monmouth.edu/polling-institute/reports/monmouthpoll_pa_090220/
    September 2nd.

    Pennsylvania
    “… Among likely voters, the race is a tight 1 to 3 points, depending on the expected turnout level. This shift from Biden’s larger lead just over six weeks ago is due to declining support for the challenger among men, voters under age 50, and voters in key swing counties…”

    #121143
    wv
    Participant

    Progs did well in Rhode I-land, i see.

    #121706
    wv
    Participant

    Progressive running in WV. Biggest donation has been 26 dollars. She’s raised a million dollars.
    ——————-

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