Category Archives: Politics
Reading the translated responses to Christiane Taubira’s post that she will vote for Macron in the runoff, I’m getting vibes of #BernieOrBust from Melenchon voters pissed at her support of Hamon over “true left” Melenchon in the first round. The most vocal pro-Melenchon anti-Macron voters are using the hashtag #SansMoiLe7Mai, blasting “liberals” like Macron.
This shows that France, without an electoral college nor party duopoly, is better than the U.S. in presidential voting, but not by much.
YDG Minority Caucus(es) Questions
Here’s my feelings and questions about breaking up the YDG Minority Caucus. If this steps on toes, I apologize in advance.
First off, I think it’s not the best name. Like, who’s idea was it to name it the “Minority” Caucus? Should have rolled w/ POC Caucus or something like.
Second, breaking up this caucus into AA/Black, AAPI and Latinx caucuses would mean that we’ll have more narrowly-purposed caucuses with their own leadership. What will be the purpose of these caucuses relative to YDG? How will the YDG’s mission and target demographic – engaging progressive-minded youth into electoral politics – be better served with more narrow ethnic caucuses over a “Minority”/POC Caucus?
Will these caucuses, like the GALBC, be structured in a way that will address the range of issues which face Black, AAPI and Latinx people (i.e., committees)? Will these caucuses provide vital resources for not only the caucuses or YDG, but for the DPG as a whole?
Also, I’m assuming that Afro-Latinx would find a home in both Black and Latinx caucuses?
I can see narrow YDA caucuses existing since there is also a wider demographic distribution of each of these demographics in the U.S. population and among Democrats across the country. But Georgia?
So that’s it.
#YDG
First off, women need #EqualPayForEqualWork.
Second, if stay-at-home dads can be destigmatized, then why can’t adults who stay with their parents be destigmatized?
After offensive comment, Miami state senator fends off calls for resignation, condemnation
WTF
TALLAHASSEE — A Miami state senator is fending off calls for his resignation, a possible Florida Senate complaint and the condemnation of fellow Republicans after he oddly referred to six white colleagues as the N-word during a heated discussion with a black lawmaker, one of whom who he called a “bitch.”
As pressure mounts, state Sen. Frank Artiles plans to formally apologize to the entire Florida Senate on Wednesday and ask for forgiveness. He apologized Tuesday evening — after his alcohol-fueled racist language the night before was reported to Republican leadership, and the Miami Herald and Florida Times-Union began asking questions.
Artiles insists he is not a bigot and noted that he used the phrase to refer to white GOP senators, not blacks.
via After offensive comment, Miami state senator fends off calls for resignation, condemnation
Congrats to:
- Khalid Kamau for his runoff win to the new South Fulton City Council,
- Christine Slevin Treibsch for 1st place in the State Senate 32 race,
- Macon-Bibb’s LGBT community and allies for getting an employment NDO past first reading in the Commission
- Jon Ossoff for 1st place in the 6th Congressional district race.
Wins and leads for progress in GA.
VIDEO: CNN is Not Our Savior
Good article on the alphabet soup of Democratic Party organizations
It’s not unusual to see confusion about the roles that various Democratic Party campaign committees play, though it seems to have peaked recently following Democrat James Thompson’s unexpectedly close loss in the special House election in Kansas’ dark-red 4th Congressional District, based around Wichita. What I’m talking about, more than anything, is cries of “WHY DIDN’T THE DNC DO ANYTHING ABOUT THIS RACE?!?”
That’s kind of like coming across the scene of a bus accident, and asking “WHY ISN’T THE COAST GUARD COMING TO THE RESCUE?!?” There are certainly valid reasons to critique the Democratic National Committee (DNC) and the ways it does business, but the committee’s non-involvement in a House race isn’t one of them. It isn’t their jurisdiction—that’s simply something they don’t, by definition, do.
If you’re interested in having your comments about dysfunction by Democratic organizations taken seriously, it helps to at least have some knowledge of where to correctly point your finger. With that in mind, let’s take a few minutes to review the alphabet soup of organizations in Washington that raise money for, and spend money on, Democratic candidates.
via DNC, DCCC, DSCC: How to decipher the alphabet soup of Democratic Party organizations
1 year ago, a bird became a meme
So we totally missed the 1yr anniversary of the bird landing on #BernieSanders’ podium 3/24/16. #NeverForget #PDX
Equality and/or Diversity
Reading this article by David Frum (yes, THAT David Frum) which posited that diversity and equality haven’t gone together as equal goals for the political left until very recently. He argues that xenophobes have historically championed equality as a means of drawing citizens together to the exclusion of foreigners and foreign contributions, while cosmopolitan advocates of diversity and immigration have traditionally looked down upon equality.
This reminds me of how White suffragettes at the turn of the century found the means to advocate for women’s suffrage by way of subscribing to fears of domination by Black voters.
This reminds me of how so much digital ink was spilled in arguing that the White working class needs to be won back through social policies which center citizens over (undocumented) immigrants, rural dwellers over urbanites, “Middle America” over the overeducated “bicoastal elite”.
It gives us a dichotomy: either equality (of citizens) or diversity (of resident labor), one of which we can esteem over the other.
But I think separating the two is unwise. The men who separated the two lived in a time when colonialism, racism and imperialism were rampant. They lived in a time when people had much less connection and access to each other.
While we live in a world where the United Nations, the Internet, automobiles and jet planes exist, along with many more nation-states diplomatically recognizing each other in areas once under colonial or imperial rule, we’re still not much more tied to each other or aware of what bridges us beyond these borders. As our species’ population and diversity has grown, our equality has no kept apace. Our lack of equality has resulted in a resurgent xenophobia seeking to reclaim the equality of a bygone era against the diversity of the present.
An equality which is compatible with the diversity of the present, or even with our awareness of diversity in the world around our countries, is struggling to be birthed. We still fear foreign or immigrant competition for jobs, factories, trade, unemployment benefits, taxpayer-funded resources and votes.
Labor unions, shying away from organizing internationally in developing countries, exemplify an anti-diverse equality, while multinational corporations, shying away from paying living wages and corporate taxes in favor of cheaper labor in developing countries, exemplify an unequal diversity.
We can, like the short story by Larry Niven, invent displacement booths which allow for instantaneous teleportation across the world for the masses, exposing people even more to the affairs of other countries than we are exposed right now, but what about an international universal basic income to allow refugees from impoverished, war-torn countries to escape more easily (through these booths) to more well-off countries and afford standard amenities to help themselves and others bring peace and prosperity to their native and adoptive countries?
Technological bridges will continue to further our awareness of diversity, but socio-economic equality must also follow along those bridges.
We need diversity and equality to keep apace together, and we can dare to make equality as real and available as the diversity we see in the world right now. It takes a reassessment of how we view ourselves in relation to this planet.
This is why I don’t think xenophobia, a sibling of racism, works as an equalizer of “citizens”. Xenophobia is easy and regressive. The equality of the 21st century is difficult but liberating.