You didn't read my response about Corey Booker which I'm now going to have to
find an insert. Really? I've been listening to him and he horrifies me. He's a
shill for the nuclear industry which is completely subsidized by the government
because it isn't financially self sustaining. It has not ever built a safe
nuclear plant. The age and deteriorate. New ones will age and deteriorate. And
no one has ever figured out how to handle the nuclear waste. It never goes
away. It leaks and l eaks, and the leaks are not publicized, nor are the
illnesses they cause. If the money used to subsidize nuclear plants were
invested in clean energy science, we wouldn't need nuclear energy. If they put
the kind of financial investment and scientific effort into dealing with
climate change that they did into arming the country to fight world war 2, we
wouldn't need nuclear energy. Booker is the same guy who promotes charter
schools, a way of giving hedge fund operators public money so they can own
schools that divert students from the public school system. He's a slick
operator and a fast talker, like Obama but probably worse.
Miriam
-----Original Message-----
From: blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx On Behalf Of Carl Jarvis
Sent: Saturday, November 16, 2019 1:49 PM
To: blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [blind-democracy] Re: Elizabeth Warren Won't Admit It, but the Primary
System Is Racist
Did I mention that Elizabeth's reply and her tone caused me to lower her bright
and shining star a couple of notches? But also, I found her "single payer
health care" plan a bit too complicated. Most of the efforts of politicians
health plans, as well as their plans for social reform, appear to be designed
full of loopholes. I often wonder why we are told that we need to accept a
piece of legislation that leaks like a sieve, in order to have any reform at
all, and we have to spend years carefully altering the legislation to get it
where it begins to include the folks needing the help. But when it comes to
removing social, economic, environmental, education and health assistance, the
Ruling Class can simply stamp it out. I know that's an over statement, but it
does seem to work that way.
Did I tell you that Cory Booker is looking better and better to me...if I do
get involved in the upcoming "election reality game"?
Amy Goodman played his comments from the South Carolina discussion...or
debate...or whatever .
Carl Jarvis
e
On 11/16/19, Miriam Vieni <miriamvieni@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
I posted the article to show that Amy Goodman thinks that Warren's
response is significant enough to have not only posted it separately
on the website, but written a whole article about it. And by the way,
several people on a number of left wing podcasts have mentioned,
derisively, the "debate" on her program about whether or not there was
actually a coup in Ecuador. They didn't mention Democracy Now by name,
but they mentioned hearing a debate on another program and how
ridiculous they thought it was to have a debate when the fact that
there was a coup, was obvious. Among them, were Katie Halper and Matt
Taibbi on Rolling Stone's podcast, Useful Idiots, and, of course, Brian
Becker and John Keriakou on Loud and Clear.
Miriam
-----Original Message-----
From: blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx On Behalf Of Carl Jarvis
Sent: Saturday, November 16, 2019 12:02 PM
To: blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [blind-democracy] Re: Elizabeth Warren Won't Admit It, but
the Primary System Is Racist
While I support tweaking our election system to include a more equal
participation by voters, in the long run it will be necessary to
replace the entire System, beginning with the seizing of the
Government and of the Ruling Class. But we must warn ourselves that
in bringing down the Ruling Class, there must be a well planned
replacement. If not, the United States will look no different than Liberia
or Iraq.
Carl Jarvis
On 11/15/19, Miriam Vieni <miriamvieni@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Here's Amy's explanation of why that question to Warren is so important.
Miriam
Elizabeth Warren Won't Admit It, but the Primary System Is Racist
Elizabeth Warren Won't Admit It, but the Primary System Is Racist
Screen shot / YouTube
As the United States becomes increasingly diverse, and the Democratic
Party even more so, the presidential nomination process remains
heavily weighted by two states that are among the whitest in the
nation, Iowa and New Hampshire. When we asked about this racial
disparity at a presidential candidate forum that the "Democracy Now!"
news hour co-hosted in South Carolina last week, Democratic candidate
Elizabeth Warren bristled, replying, "I'm just a player in the game."
Warren and the other Democratic candidates need to answer why their
party's primary process favors these two small, rural, aging and
almost entirely white states, and they need to explain how this "game"
that weeds out candidates so early in the process is anything other
than a glaring example of systemic racism.
The forum was held at South Carolina State University, an HBCU
(historically black college or university) in Orangeburg, S.C. Here
is the question and answer, in full:
AMY GOODMAN: Senator Warren, just 30 seconds left. But speaking about
racial injustice, do you think the order of the primary states should
change? You have Iowa and New Hampshire -
SEN. ELIZABETH WARREN: Wait, let me make - let me just - before you
finish, are you actually going to ask me to sit here and criticize
Iowa and New Hampshire?
AMY GOODMAN: No, I'm asking about the order.
SEN. ELIZABETH WARREN: No, that is what Iowa and New Hampshire are
all about.
AMY GOODMAN: But let me just ask. They're two of the whitest states
in the country, and then we move to South Carolina with a very
significant population of people of color, and it means the
candidates spend so much of their time catering to those first two states.
Overall, do you think that should change?
SEN. ELIZABETH WARREN: Look, I'm just a player in the game on this
one. And I am delighted to be in South Carolina. Thank you.
Warren's irritated reaction to the question betrays the Democratic
Party's rigid orthodoxy on first-in-the-nation status for both the
Iowa caucus and the New Hampshire primary.
In 1972, Iowa Democrats moved the caucus up to Jan. 24, to give
themselves extra time to process the results from all the precincts
(currently numbering 1,678). That early date made the Iowa caucuses
the nation's first indicator of each candidate's standing, and thus
attracted extraordinary media attention.
Sensing they were on to something, the Iowa Democratic and Republican
parties agreed to always hold their caucuses early, and on the same
day, to maximize national press coverage. New Hampshire then managed
to cement its hold as the first primary state, immediately following
the Iowa caucuses.
This has been the status quo since the 1970s, but nothing says it has
to stay that way.
MSNBC played our exchange with Warren for Democratic presidential
hopeful Julian Castro, who responded,
"I actually believe that we do need to change the order of the
states, because I don't believe that we are the same country that we
were in 1972.
.
Our country has changed a lot in those 50 years, the Democratic Party
has changed a lot. Demographically it is not reflective of the United
States as a whole, certainly not of the Democratic Party. And I
believe that other states should have their chance. So yes, of
course, we need to find other states. I don't believe that forever we
should be married to Iowa and New Hampshire going first."
There are already four majority-minority states: California, Hawaii,
New Mexico and Texas, along with the District of Columbia. Holding
caucuses or primaries in these states first would likely have a
dramatic effect on the outcome.
The lead-up to both Iowa and New Hampshire now are so long, with
candidates, in some cases, spending more than a year making frequent,
extended campaign swings through both states. Imagine if they were
spending that much time in more diverse states, like South Carolina.
Elizabeth Warren, to her credit, did travel to Orangeburg to
participate in this first-ever presidential candidate forum on
environmental justice. The forum was co-moderated by Mustafa Santiago
Ali, former Environmental Protection Agency official, now at the
National Wildlife Federation. At the top of the forum, Mustafa
defined environmental justice:
"Environmental justice is the disproportionate impacts that continue
to happen in our communities. The things that no one else wants, they
place them in communities of color, low-income communities and
indigenous lands.
They become the sacrifice zones, the sacrifice zones for coal-fired
power plants, for certified animal feeding operations, for waste
treatment facilities, for unhealthy housing."
The concerns of the first states in the presidential nomination
process disproportionately impact the agenda for the entire race.
Democracy is about representation. The primary and caucus system
needs to be reformed now.
Amy Goodman and Denis Moynihan
Amy Goodman