Trump comes to Rhode Island: The Good, the Bad and the Ugly


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

2016-04-25 TRUMP 082The best and the worst that Rhode Island has to offer was on display during Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump‘s visit Monday. Members of the White Noise Collective, DARE (Direct Action for Rights and Equality), PrYSM and more came out in opposition to Trump’s message of fear, racism and misogyny. Inside the venue, Trump’s stump speech was interrupted four times by protesters, who were escorted out of the Crown Plaza Hotel without violence.

Jessie Justin, an organizer with White Noise Collective and Rhode Island resident, explained in a statement why she has come to protest, “Trump is actively building a culture of hate that directly threatens my Muslim, immigrant, and black neighbors, and we want to make it clear that here in Rhode we are united as a community. His anti-immigrant actions, racism, and Islamophobia are not welcome here.”

In a statement, the White Noise Collective explained that they…

…came to the event today as an affiliated group of Showing Up for Racial Justice (SURJ), a national network of groups and communities organizing white people for racial justice with passion and accountability to person of color leaders and organizations. SURJ groups around the country have been showing up to Trump rallies to speak out against racism, Islamophobia and xenophobia since the Trump’s campaign began in 2015, including a recent blockade action at Trump’s event venue in Wisconsin where six protesters were arrested.

“For us today was not about a presidential race,” says Beth Nixon, a member of White Noise Collective and Rhode Island native, “it’s about presenting an alternative vision to Trump’s: that the US can be an equitable country that welcomes and includes all people. As one of the wealthiest countries in the world, there are enough resources for everyone here to live with safety, health, and dignity.”

Meanwhile, outside, things became very heated. Once Trump’s motorcade entered the Crowne Plaza driveway, and Trump stepped from his car to wave at supporters, those outside the venue, including Trump supporters, Cruz supporters and Trump opponents, crossed the street and followed Trump as near to the tent behind the hotel where Trump was speaking as security would allow .

Trump fans, perhaps exasperated to have waited hours, only to find the venue too small to accommodate the full crowd exchanged words and chants with Trump opponents. While Trump supporters chanted “Build the Wall” and “Ten Feet Higher” opponents countered with “Black Lives Matter” and “Love Trumps Hate”.

Perhaps the darkest moment came when a Trump supporter assaulted a man. The police took the man who was punched into custody, handcuffing him. Trump opponents were outraged because the police seemed only interested in arresting the person with the darker skin, who was in fact the victim. Ultimately the man was released by police when video and photographic evidence proved the man was assaulted and only defending himself.

Trump fans also splashed two Trump opponents with liquid from a water bottle and grabbed a camera from another Trump protester and threw it on the ground. If there were more incidents like this, I did not see them.

Another moment that was worrisome occurred when a group of young male Trump supporters thought it funny to chant “Dicks out for Trump” at a young woman with a Black Lives Matter sign in her hands. This was a rape threat, plain and simple, even if it was delivered “humorously” as a police officer stood near by. This event highlighted the misogynistic undertone of Trump’s candidacy. Shirts were being sold outside and worn inside the event saying “TRUMP THAT BITCH!” on the back and in case that was too subtle, the front of the shirt features pictures of Hillary Clinton and Monica Lewinsky and the words, “Hillary sucks, but not like Monica”.

Perhaps the best way to describe the tenor of the event is to point out that one of the first speakers at the event, the warm up act, if you will, was WPRO radio “personality” John DePetro. In many ways the event was like a live, interactive version of his radio show… or a circle in Dante’s Hell.

Despite the incidents above, the protest and the event was largely peaceful, given the high level of emotions on both sides. Trump may have been interrupted, but he was never shut down or prevented from giving his fans the full Trump experience. In fact, disruptive protests have become so common at Trump rallies that the campaign runs a sort of public service announcement at the beginning of each show saying that protesters should not be touched but simply pointed out to security to be taken away.

Below are some pictures.

2016-04-25 TRUMP 001

2016-04-25 TRUMP 002

2016-04-25 TRUMP 003

2016-04-25 TRUMP 004

2016-04-25 TRUMP 005

2016-04-25 TRUMP 006

2016-04-25 TRUMP 008

2016-04-25 TRUMP 009

2016-04-25 TRUMP 010

2016-04-25 TRUMP 012

2016-04-25 TRUMP 013

2016-04-25 TRUMP 016

2016-04-25 TRUMP 020

2016-04-25 TRUMP 021

2016-04-25 TRUMP 022

2016-04-25 TRUMP 023

2016-04-25 TRUMP 025

2016-04-25 TRUMP 028

2016-04-25 TRUMP 029

2016-04-25 TRUMP 030

2016-04-25 TRUMP 033

2016-04-25 TRUMP 035

2016-04-25 TRUMP 036

2016-04-25 TRUMP 037

2016-04-25 TRUMP 038

2016-04-25 TRUMP 039

2016-04-25 TRUMP 040

2016-04-25 TRUMP 041

2016-04-25 TRUMP 042

2016-04-25 TRUMP 044

2016-04-25 TRUMP 045

2016-04-25 TRUMP 046

2016-04-25 TRUMP 048

2016-04-25 TRUMP 050

2016-04-25 TRUMP 051

2016-04-25 TRUMP 052

2016-04-25 TRUMP 053

2016-04-25 TRUMP 054

2016-04-25 TRUMP 056

2016-04-25 TRUMP 057

2016-04-25 TRUMP 059

2016-04-25 TRUMP 060

2016-04-25 TRUMP 061

2016-04-25 TRUMP 064

2016-04-25 TRUMP 065

2016-04-25 TRUMP 066

2016-04-25 TRUMP 067

2016-04-25 TRUMP 068

2016-04-25 TRUMP 069

2016-04-25 TRUMP 070

2016-04-25 TRUMP 072

2016-04-25 TRUMP 073

2016-04-25 TRUMP 074

2016-04-25 TRUMP 075

2016-04-25 TRUMP 078

2016-04-25 TRUMP 081

2016-04-25 TRUMP 086

2016-04-25 TRUMP 087

2016-04-25 TRUMP 088

2016-04-25 TRUMP 089

2016-04-25 TRUMP 090

2016-04-25 TRUMP 091

2016-04-25 TRUMP 092

2016-04-25 TRUMP 094

2016-04-25 TRUMP 095

2016-04-25 TRUMP 096

2016-04-25 TRUMP 097

2016-04-25 TRUMP 098

Patreon

What Sanders and Trump have in common


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

SandersfansIt’s hard to imagine two more different snapshots of Rhode Island than when Bernie Sanders and Donald Trump visited this week in their respective upstart campaigns to become the next president of the United States.

Sanders chose an outdoor venue at a public park in Providence. He played Steve Earle and Bob Marley songs. People threw frisbees and sang protest songs. Trump set up a tent outside a hotel in Warwick. He went with classic rock standards like the Rolling Stones and Elton John. The police broke up several fights in the parking lot outside the event.

Throngs of young people came to see Bernie. The audience was diverse and colorful. They seemed happy and well-off. The vibe was beyond positive. It was a celebration of what’s possible in politics. Even the jeers for Goldman Sachs seemed in good spirits.

trump supportersThe jeers at the Trump event did not seem in good spirits. The audience was mostly older, white people. They were angry. The vibe was more of a protest. It seemed the rigged economy had genuinely left them behind.

There are great differences between Sanders, the socialist-leaning Senator from Vermont who is leading a progressive revolution in the Democratic primary, and Trump, the ionic Manhattan businessman who seems to have already taken over the Republican Party. But there was one striking similarity too.

Both Trump and Sanders railed against free trade agreements in general and lamented the loss of manufacturing jobs in Rhode Island when China joined the World Trade Organization in particular.

Like Sanders, Trump laments the loss of American jobs. He said he wants Apple to make its product in the United States. He said Hillary Clinton “is controlled by the people who don’t want those jobs to come back” and he mocked Ted Cruz for supporting the Trans Pacific Partnership. Sanders mocks Clinton for supporting the TPP, and says Americans have to exercise their consumer power by not supporting corporations that outsource jobs.

Anti-globalization economic populism is the nexus between Bernie Sanders’ political revolution and Donald Trump’s promise to make America great again. I’m not sure if these two constituencies could or should ever come together, but they definitely have that in common.

Bernie Sanders for Rhode Island


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

2016-02-29 Bernie Sanders 034From the largest political rally in Rhode Island since JFK to the morning talk shows on the day after, I feel whiplash more than I feel the Bern.  But that is because most political pundits don’t get the point of the political revolution Bernie Sanders articulates.  I need to get the Bern back.  And so do the people of Rhode Island, the people of the United States.

Yes it’s about winning the Democracy Party nomination, and yes there is a narrow path to victory which depends on doing exceptionally well in the primaries tomorrow – in Maryland, Connecticut, Delaware, my ancestral home in Pennsylvania and my beloved home today in Rhode Island. But the potential for victory tomorrow is only part of the story. It is, as Bob Plain properly emphasized, about moving beyond the status quo. It’s about the long haul and the power of truth.

The truth of Bernie Sanders is not just about his consistency over more than three decades.  His message about the injustice of inequality has been the same, unlike other conventional political candidates who move with the political winds.

It’s not just about the fact that he speaks truth to power: his truth has not been shaped by the donations of the people he claims to challenge. His message is funded by donations of millions of everyday people.  Political favors are the coin of the realm, but his currency comes in popular support.  And that’s the point.

I understand why so many of my friends support Secretary Clinton.  Like me, they also see that she is far better than Trump.  That’s true. They also believe she can get things done. Certainly, but her pragmatism works within a system that is rigged, that is broken.  And that’s more about compromise with the powerful than about the power of truth.

As Bernie said yesterday, as he does in each speech: our nation ought be judged not by our wealth and power but by how we treat those least privileged among us. With 40 percent of Providence’s children living in poverty (and 20% of the children of our state – http://www.providencejournal.com/article/20150121/NEWS/301219986 ), with Pennsylvania and Rhode Island having the greatest percentage of structurally deficient bridges (http://www.governing.com/gov-data/transportation-infrastructure/bridge-data-by-state-inspections-structurally-deficient-totals.html), and the list could go on, we can’t just get things done.  We need to make things right.

Bernie is not a typical politician. He will not always say the “politic” thing.  The reason everyday people #FeelTheBern is because he says things that you only hear in your sociology classes in university, and in sermons by those activists who are moved by the spirit of liberation theology.  I was with two of them yesterday in Roger Williams Park listening to Bernie.  They were moved.  We were moved. And we are not millennials.  But we each have been working for decades to teach about, and to change, the injustice of this system.   We have worked with social movements for decades to make a difference.  And that difference is on the horizon.

We need to learn from each social movement on which Bernie Sanders has built this political revolution.  Here are just a few.

The Civil Rights movement from the 1960s began with civil rights, but continues to build momentum through today to search for political, social and basic human rights too. Black Lives Matter is more than a name for that movement’s expression today. It’s about assuring that the police represent the community they police.  It’s about assuring jobs and education, not jail and incarceration, for youth, as Bernie would say.  It’s about rights, and it’s about respect.

Respect is all over Bernie’s campaign. His previous work in support of veterans is well known, but not because he is supported by a military industrial complex.  As he himself argues, we might differ about when to go to war and when not, but we cannot debate the support our veterans deserve given their service to our country.  His support for veterans and for the Black Lives Matter movements, simultaneously, indicates that this is not a conventional campaign.  This is a campaign that brings people together in recognition of the injustice that animates.

It’s about the Occupy Movement too.  Too many think that movement failed, but they are wrong.  Thanks to them, we talk about the inequality and the 1% in politics, nobody more forcefully than Bernie.  That movement is no longer apparent in their occupation of city parks, but it is apparent in the heart of a political revolution that marks gross inequality as injustice and health care as a right for all.

That movement, of course, builds on the union movement in this country whose struggle for equality and a decent wage ought grow more vigorous with Bernie as president if history is any guide. Remember that America’s union movement consolidated its gains with that radical Franklin Delano Roosevelt as president.

The environmental movement can readily work within the system, but the dangers of that accommodating view are apparent everyday as compromise leads incrementally toward planetary crisis. Bernie sets his sights differently from Hillary on principle, a difference most evident in their divergent approaches to fracking. Hillary is conditionally for it, but Bernie opposes it.  Period.

Evidence of the impact of different iterations of the feminist movement are apparent in Bernie’s campaign, but I see it most fundamentally in his commitment to empowerment.  Injustice is not only in the system, but it’s also in the ways inequality is expressed behind closed doors, in ways that some treat as religious or natural.  The political revolution is about pushing for equality in everyday life, by everyday people.  It’s about empowerment.

Nowhere did Bernie express yesterday that right to everyday equality better than in declaring, simply, that people have the right to love whomever they want. LGBTQ people and their allies have made a revolution in this country already, even if reaction rears its ugly head. But love, in the end, might be too powerful to quash, especially when love and good business climates go together.

Love can make for strange bedfellows, and the image of Pope Francis and Bernie speaking in a hallway following a conference in the Vatican on the moral economy is one of them. But the fact that that seems strange is another sign of a broken and rigged system.  Part of love’s power, and why it seems to animate Bernie’s political revolution is because the golden rule – do unto others as one would have them do onto you – is enough for Bernie to express his religious sensibility.  And it’s that kind of religiosity that extends solidarity rather than division.

Entrepreneurs might even Feel the Bern.  In fact, most entrepreneurs are likely to be in the category that will benefit most from the kind of health care reform Bernie advocates.  Instead of putting it on small business, embed those costs, as most advanced industrial nations do, in the government so that that public good does not fall on the shoulders of those who try to innovate. That was Bernie’s message yesterday too.

“Yes, Yes, Yes, “ you can hear Bernie say, “how am I going to pay for it?”.  Not only does Bernie propose to tax income more progressively and wealth more aggressively, but he can also tax that part of the economy that has been getting away with money making scott free, or tax free.  Why not tax financial transactions? That’s a growing part of the economy, and a source of increasing inequality simultaneously.  This IS about class struggle too.

I identify all these social movements that have shaped the presidential campaign of Bernie Sanders not only to illustrate that his prospects are based on his embrace of and learning from all sorts of progressive social movements.  It’s also because his political revolution is a movement, and not a campaign. His goal is not only to win a nomination and election. His goal is to build a movement that not only changes the Democratic Party platform, but changes the way in which our economy, politics, and society are run.

That’s why I may not be alone in feeling the whiplash.  When we enter the movement, we recognize the challenge, but we also feel solidarity and recognize the power of truth , the integrity that comes with naming the inequality and injustice that work to crush the soul of our people.  We can feel progress in the movement, because we can feel the spirit of so many people coming together under the banner of a truthfulness that politics dares not speak.  But when we listen to the pundits, they only tell us that Bernie cannot win the nomination in July.  They miss the point.

This is a political revolution that is not about July or a presidential campaign. It’s about a movement for justice and equality.  That can’t be won with an election, but it can be built by voting for Bernie.  And that is a small step toward the political revolution that we need in order to make America as it ought to be.

Voting in the Democratic Primary for Bernie Sanders is not about assuring he wins the nomination.  It’s about assuring that we have a movement that can make a future we believe in. We need a vision that goes well beyond the status quo that is, fundamentally, unjust.  And that’s the truth that may change America.  That’s why people #FeelTheBern.

Brown poll shows Hillary leading, PPP has Sanders ahead


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Polling show it’s a close race to win the Democratic presidential primary in Rhode Island.

A local poll from Brown University’s Taubman Center for Politics and Policy indicates a slight lead for Hillary Clinton, while the nationally-recognized Public Policy Polling version shows a slight lead for Bernie Sanders. The Taubman Center poll found likely primary voters prefer Clinton to Sanders 43 to 34 percent, with 16 percent undecided. The PPP poll asked only people who intend to vote in the Democratic primary and found Sanders had an advantage, 49 to 45 percent, with 6 percent undecided.

According to the Taubman Center: “Results of the poll are based on a telephone survey of a random sample of 600 registered, likely voters in Rhode Island. The sample included likely voters who identified as Democrat (320), Republican (99) and Unaffiliated (181). Likely voters were defined as anyone who voted in November 2014, September 2014, April 2012, or registered since November 2014. The poll had a overall margin of error of 4 percent. The sample reporting that they would vote in the Democratic primary was 436 with a margin of error of 4.6 percent.” The PPP poll asked 668 likely Democratic primary voters on Friday, Saturday and Sunday.

The Taubman Center found Clinton’s best demographic advantage over Sanders comes from the Black vote (63% to 13%). Sanders does best among unaffiliated voters (42% to 22%).

taubman center clinton sanders

Read the Taubman Center’s full results here. Other important takeaways: 55 percent of Rhode Islanders want the state to tax and regulate marijuana. Gina Raimondo isn’t very popular, nor are truck tolls. But charter schools and tourism spending are.

taubman marijuana