What does Wisconsin want?


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berniehillaryThe Democratic Primary in Wisconsin has a lot on the line ideologically, and it could reverberate East.

After Sanders swept six of the last seven contests, by a margins averaging about 75 percent, the contest moves into Wisconsin where progressivism and the unionism face a historic ideological challenge. Will Wisconsin vote for the principles of political revolution they were founded on or will they default to neoliberal pragmatism?

Laborers or labor unions

A little discussed fact is that it is the unions and their members have been the major contributors to Bernie Sanders campaign. Most notably are the Machinist Union, Teamsters Union, National Education Association, United Auto Workers, United Food and Commercial Workers, Communication Workers of America and the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, not to mention the US Postal Service and the Laborers Union.

However, there is a schism. Unions like the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME),  which was central in the fight with Governor Walker on the right to organize, endorsed the reformist darling of the Democratic Party establishment Hillary Clinton. Since Sanders seems more popular with the membership than the leadership, it is not clear how this will translate into votes. The AFL-CIO, the largest national union, has declined to endorse either candidate.

Which labor movement will show up? The one who fights for workers rights or the one who believes they already have a seat at the table that it could lose?

Independent voters

Wisconsin has an open primary and at this point it looks like the blue collar workers will largely support Sanders and not be tempted to cross over to Trump like they did in Ohio.  Though Trump has also has taken an anti-NAFTA position, it is Bernie Sanders who has clearly articulated a pro-worker vision from the $15 minimum wage to a pledge to rewrite all of the so-called free-trade agreements. It is Sanders appeal with independents that his campaign bases there claim that he is the stronger candidate in the general election and they may break his way on Tuesday.

Wisconsin’s progressive roots

And then there is the question of ideology. There’s been much discussion in this campaign about progressivism. After Bernie Sanders laid out a clear progressive, social democrat platform, Hillary Clinton claimed that she was “a progressive who can get things done.”  This was particularly startling since Hillary, a household name, has been practicing triangulation and transactional politics which was started by her husband Bill Clinton through her career. Clintonism, which has dominated the Democrats ideology for decades, claimed that by moving the discussion to the middle, the Democrats could get the Republicans to compromise. What happened, which is what many on the left predicted, is that this tactic pulled the whole party to the right.

Wisconsin should know what the term means. The Progressive Movement was founded there by Bob La Follette, who is known as “Fighting Bob.” At the age of 64, the former governor and staunch supporter of Socialist Eugene V Debs, ran for president largely on an anti-corruption platform, demanded investigations into the war profiteering and corrupt monopolies, and that the big banks be broken up. His platform called for taking over the railroads and private utilities, calling for child labor laws, the right to organize and increasing civil liberties ending racism.

He campaigned for the presidency on a pledge to “break the combined power of the private monopoly system over the political and economic life of the American people” and denouncing, in the heyday of the Ku Klux Klan’s resurgence, “any discrimination between races, classes, and creeds.”

This laid the groundwork for the Progressive Party of Wisconsin which influenced Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s New Deal, and was carried on by his son establishing the progressive platform as core values in progressive politics for decades.

Bernie for Wisconsin

What is on the line Tuesday is whether Wisconsin stays true to its progressive roots, or if after years of being clobbered by the Koch brothers, it takes on the mantle of neoliberal centrism. Its progressive roots still live on, at least, at the an annual event called the Fighting Bob Fest where, in October 2014, Bernie Sanders spoke on his familiar topic- Democracy or Oligarchy. You can read the full speech here – or watch the video.

After eviscerating the Koch brothers and the racist right wing fringe, pillars of power in the Republican Party, Sanders lays out the Progressive Platform that he is currently campaigning on – demanding campaign finance reform, breaking up the banks, single-payer health care and strengthening the safety net with a passionate plea for social, environmental and economic justice.

He said we are in the midst of the greatest crisis since the Civil War.

And this is not an easy fight. They have huge resources. They have think tanks. They have media. You name it, they’ve got it.

But there is one thing they don’t have. While they have unlimited sums of money, what we have is the people.

And if we can overcome some of our differences, we can focus on the broad issues facing America: jobs, health care, education, the environment, the needs of children. And on these issues, believe it or not, we are a united nation.

So let us reach out to our brothers and our sisters, fellow workers, fellow family members, and let us create a movement that tells Washington: We are not asking you, we are telling you.

Change will take place in America not through some backroom negotiations.

Change takes place in America when millions of people demand it.

Wisconsin decides Tuesday if it wants systemic change or the status quo primacy of the 1 percent and Wall Street. The same question faces Rhode Islanders on April 26th.

Bernie Sanders can pull off an upset


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2016-01-02 Bernie Sanders 246A bird landed on Bernie Sanders’ campaign podium. Then quicker than a scream destroyed the last Vermonter’s chance of being president, the most leftist elected official in Washington swept three western states by incredibly large margins and now trails war-supporting, Wall Street Democrat Hillary Clinton by only 268 delegates.

It’s all of a sudden a legit barn-burner for the heart and soul of the Democratic Party that either side can win.

Clinton and the status quo Democrats still have a solid lead. But Bernie’s political revolution, the fruits of seed planted by Occupy Wall Street and Black Lives Matter, enjoy all the momentum. And momentum is the most valuable commodity in politics – more valuable than maybe even money, as the 2016 primary season seems to be proving.

Hillary’s delegate advantage is like a nine point lead with two minutes to play in college basketball. It sounds a lot safer than it really is. If Bernie can win New York, which is totally possible, it’s a one possession game – and Bernie gets the last look at the basket. Meanwhile, Camp Clinton is attacking Donald Trump as if they’ve already reached the finals. This is a textbook scenario for a March Madness upset of epic proportions, even if it the results aren’t final until April, May or even June.

And what better than a little bird on a podium in Portland, Oregon to serve as the key play in the game when the momentum shifted from the hands of the conservative wing of the Democratic Party back to the progressives.

Sanders campaign: A defining moment


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2016-02-29 Bernie Sanders 024In every Presidential campaign season there is a cathartic moment.  This moment sometimes catapults a candidate to success and other times can destroy a candidate’s hopes.  On March 25th Bernie Sanders had that cathartic moment, with a bird.

At a rally attended by over 10 thousand people in Portland, Oregon a little bird landing on Bernie’s podium catapulted the campaign from grassroots effort to national obsession.  There have been at least 13 million views of the Bird video and 27 million hits if you Google Bernie and Bird. It was the trending topic on Twitter and Facebook seemed to literally explode in delight.

This one minute video of pure joy resonated with me to my deepest core. Not only did the bird land on the podium, it was fully engaged in the moment. Bernie’s reaction was priceless. His authenticity was almost magical and his response, a message of no more wars and peace for all, was a message that will be heard throughout the world.

To add to the moment were those 10 thousand  attendees who were beyond ecstatic.  They knew they were part of history and they loved every moment. You could see it in their eyes, in their smiles and you could hear it in their deafening cheers.

This one moment defined Bernie Sanders perfectly. Bernie is a man devoted to the good of the people, a man who brings people together, a man who respects the environment and all the creatures that reside within it, including birds.

If Jon Stewart was still the host of The Daily Show it would have been his moment of Zen.

Truly it was an inspirational moment.

Make sure you vote for Bernie on April 26th.

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To volunteer in this last month for the RI Bernie 2016 Campaign call 401-710-7600 – or email Lniedel@gmail.com

I also wanted to let you know that in RI we need to register to vote before March 27th, and you can still register today!


Registration info: http://www.elections.state.ri.us/voting/registration.php
Other questions? Click here: https://vote.berniesanders.com/RI/

Every single vote counts this election, so please register and pass this on to your friends too.

You can use http://www.berniefriendfinder.com

You do realize Rhode Island is a social democracy, right?


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socialist-internationalPerhaps God, in a clever bid to tell me He exists despite my secularism, deemed in his Almighty wisdom to hit me with a cruel double-whammy this past weekend by putting a NCAA tournament downtown, making thousands say in unison how much they love Providence, while in the midst of a presidential primary that suddenly has New Deal Liberals saying they are Socialists.

The lines of Jonathan Edwards, the ghastly Puritan preacher who scared the bejesus out of a generation with his 1741 Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God, seem like they were written just for me! There is no want of power in God to cast wicked men into hell at any moment. Men’s hands cannot be strong when God rises up. The strongest have no power to resist him, nor can any deliver out of his hands.-He is not only able to cast wicked men into hell, but he can most easily do it. 

Oh the joys of being young and in La Prov!

Harrington
Harrington

Let’s just start with a basic fact, just what exactly is the Democratic Socialists of America?

As I have written elsewhere, the DSA was created in 1982 from the remains of several defunct socialist parties, including the one of Eugene V. Debs and Norman Thomas. But when Michael Harrington and Irving Howe got to it, they tried a new approach, instead of running candidates they decided they would use an Old Left tactic of entryism, suggesting that the surviving Old and New Lefties from the previous five decades enroll en masse in the Democratic Party and push it Leftwards in the face of the neoliberal behemoth called Reaganism.

This strategy was a total failure for two reasons. First, Harrington and Howe had no grasp of neoliberalism as a bipartisan project and how the Democrats were selling their longtime union worker base out in the name of Wall Street donors, with Harrington being so naive he once said that the Democratic Party was the labor party the Left had been looking for all along. Yeah, okay, whatever, just like the Dunkin’ Donuts Center is the punk rock spot par excellence we have been looking for since Fort Thunder closed.

Howe.
Howe.

Second, and more importantly, they were a little full of themselves as typical members of the trendy Manhattan cocktail party class of intellectuals who were not in the tradition of Debs as much as the British Fabian Society, the proto-think tank made up of bourgeois intellectuals who used the Labour Party as a release valve for populist angst by creating a set of policies and positions that gave the working class a steady diet of welfare state protections in exchange for the rejection of revolutionary politics that would give a feast by nationalizing the means of production.

Another issue was their longtime anti-Communism, Howe was a former Trotskyite turned Labor Zionist while Harrington had infamously blown his chances of creating a political party to coincide with the social protests of the 1960’s by showing up at the drafting of the Port Huron Statement, the manifesto of the radical Students for a Democratic Society, so to hector and lecture the anti-war movement about a totalitarian Stalinist boogeyman they would be giving comfort to by standing in solidarity with the Soviet-aligned North Vietnamese. Harrington was such a square it took him until well into the 1970’s to come out against the war, something that takes real talent when you consider Noam Chomsky, Howard Zinn, and Walter Cronkite, all non-Communists, were anti-war before he was. What has passed for a Democratic Socialist party in this country for over three decades is a pale farce of what Debs was about and is essentially a Left-sounding caucus of the Democrats, not unlike the Progressive Democrats, and really should be called Democratic socialists of America, with a heavy emphasis on that D and a small letter s.

Now that we understand the reality of that mirage, consider the nature of the social contract that came into existence at the end of World War II.

Historians are now putting forward a new way of talking about the war that is extremely useful for these purposes. What happened was not a four year conflagration as much as a Second Thirty Years War, a European Civil War that began in 1917 with the Bolshevik revolution and ended in 1948 with the consolidation Eastern Bloc. On one side you had the Communists trying to initiate a worldwide revolution and on the other you had Fascism, the most vocal and militaristic form of reaction to what Gramsci called the revolution against capital. At first this anti-Communist effort was a series of isolated battles on various fronts. But when the stock market crashed and what was called “liberal” or alternatively “bourgeois” democracy stopped working effectively as a system to take care of its people, the entire world began to look for answers in the extreme Left of Communism or the extreme Right of Fascism. What followed over the next nineteen years was open combat between these two sides. And when the Nazis opened fronts in the East and West, the underground partisan resistance movement, led by Communists, fought back in a popular front with socialists and liberals.

But after the war, the Allied powers decided to turn their backs on Stalin and the country that had the most military and civilian losses of anyone. Part of this in Western Europe included the embrace of the Labour and Socialist Parties in the West by the ruling class while throwing the Communist partisans under the bus, who created a welfare state to stave off open class warfare, and part of it included the beginning of a Cold War.

America is a fascinating example of how this should have worked. At the time, the Communist Party was led by Earl Browder, who urged his membership to stay true to the no-strike clause during wartime and vote for FDR. With the end of the war, anticipating a peaceful co-existence with the Soviet Union that would have the two superpowers cooperating in a worldwide peace under the auspices of the United Nations, he dissolved the Party and created the Communist Political Association from the infrastructure, hoping to serve as a Left pressure group within the two party system. Part of the reason this happened was because he had no idea Franklin Roosevelt was about to drop dead and be replaced with the anti-Communist Harry Truman and part of it was because he was egotistical enough to think he actually was able to make an impact on social policy and governance.

However, this episode does serve as an insight. The American social contract was supposed to be based within the two party system and the CIO unions, organized by Communists, were meant to serve as the arbiters of the social safety net. There never was, under this vision, any place for a third party, particularly a Social Democratic one, instead the unions were meant to play that role. One can see another marker of this by looking at Dwight Eisenhower’s rebuke of the anti-labor elements of the GOP, exemplified by Joseph McCarthy, Barry Goldwater, and Robert A. Taft.

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And in that sense, one should see Rhode Island as the perfect example of this. Is it corrupt? Yes. Is it prone to ethnic and sexual chauvinism? Yes. Are its unions that political punching bag politicians use and abuse except for when it serves their own ends? Yes. Is the ruling party that has been in majority for decades a mess? You bet.

But so is the social democratic system in Europe, especially Scandinavia!

Take a look at the writings of Stieg Larsson, creator of The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo. His vision is the reality that Bernie Sanders idealizes, a land of blatant misogyny and covert neo-Nazism that is falling apart. Or just look at Tony Blair, who turned the Labour Party into a corporate boot-licker after they had ousted the militant Trots from the party in the previous few decades. Or check out the amazing film CONCERNING VIOLENCE, now available on Netflix, which shows some of our blessed Scandinavians busting a labor union in a Liberian mine and kicking the organizers out of their company-owned homes, literally leaving them in the dark on the side of the road. Neoliberalism has turned the social democratic project into a shambling mess. In response, Europe is in the grip of a genuine Fascist renaissance that makes Trump look moderate.

Now consider the idea of a basic income. Daniel Zamora, author of a recent critique of Michel Foucault’s embrace of neoliberalism, has this to say in an interview with Jacobin:

[M]y research on this issue led me to think about how over the past forty years we’ve gone from a politics aimed at combatting inequality, grounded in social security, to a politics aiming to combat poverty, increasingly organized around specific budget allocations and targeted populations.
But going from one objective to the other completely transforms the conception of social justice. Combatting inequalities (and seeking to reduce absolute disparities) is very different from combating poverty (and seeking to offer a minimum to the most disadvantaged). Carrying out this little revolution required years of work delegitimizing social security and the institutions of the working class

[H]e not only challenged social security, he was also seduced by the alternative of the negative income tax proposed by Milton Friedman in that period. To his mind, the mechanisms of social assistance and social insurance, which he put on the same plane as the prison, the barracks, or the school, were indispensable institutions “for the exercise of power in modern societies.”…

Given the many defects of the classical social security system, Foucault was interested in replacing it with a negative income tax. The idea is relatively simple: the state pays a benefit to anyone who finds themselves below a certain level of income. The goal is to arrange things so that without needing much administration, no one will find themselves below the minimum level… An important argument runs through his work and directly attracted Foucault’s attention: in the spirit of Friedman, it draws a distinction between a policy that seeks equality (socialism) and a policy that simply aims to eliminate poverty without challenging disparities (liberalism).

For Stoléru, I’m quoting, “doctrines. . . can lead us either to a policy aiming to eliminate poverty, or to a policy seeking to limit the gap between rich and poor.” That’s what he calls “the frontier between absolute poverty and relative poverty.” The first refers simply to an arbitrarily determined level (which the negative income tax addresses) and the other to overall disparities between individuals (which social security and the welfare state address).

In Stoléru’s eyes, “the market economy is capable of assimilating actions to combat absolute poverty” but “it is incapable of digesting overly strong remedies against relative poverty.” That’s why, he argues, “I believe the distinction between absolute poverty and relative poverty is in fact the distinction between capitalism and socialism.” So, what’s at stake in moving from one to the other is a political issue: acceptance of capitalism as the dominant economic form, or not.

From that point of view, Foucault’s barely masked enthusiasm for Stoléru’s proposal was part of a larger movement that went along with the decline of the egalitarian philosophy of social security in favor of a very free-market-oriented fight against “poverty.” In other words, and as surprising as it may seem, the fight against poverty, far from limiting the effects of neoliberal policies, has in reality militated for its political hegemony.

So it’s not surprising to see the world’s largest fortunes, like those of Bill Gates or George Soros, engaging in this fight against poverty even while supporting, without any apparent contradiction, the liberalization of public services, the destruction of all these mechanisms of wealth redistribution, and the “virtues” of neoliberalism.

Combatting poverty thus permits the inclusion of social questions on the political agenda without having to fight against inequality and the structural mechanisms that produce it. So this evolution has been part and parcel of neoliberalism. [Emphasis added]

Zamora elaborates in another interview:

First, it is impossible to create a generous version of universal basic income without cutting social spending. For example, consider a simple mathematical formulation for a basic income scheme: only 1,000 dollars for Americans 18 years old and above. Obviously, you can’t choose “not to work” with only 1,000 dollars per month if you want a decent life for you and your family. So this would essentially becomes a government subsidy for low-wage industries. The reality is that a version of UBI in which you could choose not to work couldn’t ever happen under capitalism, it would be too expensive.

Look, this basic scheme of 1,000 dollars would cost more than 2.7 trillion dollars a year. The total federal budget for social security, Medicaid, Medicare and all the means-tested programs is about 2.3 trillion dollars. So if you supply a universal basic income by replacing all those programs, you get a massive privatization of the public good. All the money that was hitherto socialized to give social rights will be therefore privatized.

We give people money rather than rights because, of course, as Milton Friedman would say, ‘they know how to use their money better than the state.’ This demise of the idea of public good itself or of socialized wealth for the common good cannot, in my view, ever lead to social progress. Obviously we could say that we should finance UBI by new, very high taxes on income, so we could have both social security and basic income. But the amount of income tax increase needed to finance this scheme would be very high. So why not use that money for free health care, free education, and public housing instead? Rather than expanding the market – rather than giving more people the “chance” to participate in it with basic income – let’s instead get some of the most important things in our lives out of the market.

Second, as Seth Ackerman has pointed out, UBI does not address the problem of the unequal distribution of work. Indeed, unemployment or “Mcjobs” are not randomly assigned but are distributed in a very unequal way. For argument’s sake, let’s say that we did have a UBI that could enable you to choose not to work and still have a decent quality of life at the same time (which is very unlikely). This could be a game-changer but it still assumes that those who are unemployed actually don’t want to work or would be happy not to work. And what if they do want to work? Why would it be fair that some won’t be able to work and others will? The idea that we should address the question of unemployment by reducing the demand for work rather than working for full employment doesn’t offer a solution to why people want to work. It presupposes that the despair the unemployed feel is just false consciousness that we could mitigate by promoting non-work. But I think it’s a weak explanation of what is at stake with the question of work. As Seth Ackerman argues, “so long as social reproduction requires alienated work, there will always be this social demand for the equal liability of all to work, and an uneasy consciousness of it among those who could work but who, for whatever reason, don’t.”

That is why I think full employment and reducing work-time are still, in my view, the most important objectives for any left politics. Collectively reducing work time is both politically and socially more preferable than creating a segment of citizens who are out of work with heavy consequences for the workers. You can immediately see how this idea would foster divisions within the working class (and how it has already done this over the last thirty years). [Emphasis added]

The question then becomes simple, why has this happened? The answer is simpler, because Social Democracy is not Communism. In the name of a bourgeois notion of electoral democracy, capital is allowed to ransack the society and bankers are able to get away with a good deal. Whatever the flaws of Communism, and there are many, it is an effort that criminalizes this behavior and places genuine emphasis on the well being of the people. If Lloyd Blankfein of Goldman Sachs were in a Communist country and committed the crimes he did to cause the 2008 crash, I am not saying he would have been shot for that (although he would have been), I am saying he would have never dared even thinking of that heist because of the likelihood of the death penalty he would face. When you read in the newspapers about a Chinese citizen being shot, if you look behind the headlines you understand the New York Times does not care about “human rights abuses”, they care about the financial firms that advertise with them! As Chris Hedges pointed about his former employer several years ago, the burden of guilt for the 2008 crash should be placed at the feet of the Times, they could have easily gone to the Bronx, Brooklyn, and Harlem to find black and brown people who were being targeted by predatory lenders that were gaming the system and causing the housing bubble. But that would have been quite inconvenient for their precious advertisers.

As a corollary of this thought experiment, let’s really interrogate the whole idea of how awesome the Scandinavians are about banking. This talking point is based around the fact that Iceland prosecuted their bankers for the 2008 crash and we should too.

In theory, that is a statement that is common sense. But the converse of this talking point, why did they need to do so in the first place, suggests a pretty dire diagnosis of their Social Democratic party. Now it is true that in 2000, when the financial sector in Iceland was deregulated, the country was under the leadership of Davíð Oddsson, a Prime Minister from the neoliberal Independence Party that was in charge from 1991 to 2004 and who later went on to chair the board of governors at the Central Bank of Iceland from 2005-2009, two positions that tilled the soil for the seeds of the crash. And from late 2004 until February 2009, just after the crash, the successive Prime Ministers, Halldór Ásgrímsson and Geir Haarde, were neoliberals. But the fact that Iceland’s political system was able to allow such a blatant and lunatic set of political positions is the problem that has always existed in Social Democratic societies, there is always wiggle room for this kind of greed. The only reason Iceland prosecuted their bankers was because of massive protests in the streets from the people calling for blood. These protests led to the election of Prime Minister Jóhanna Sigurðardóttir, who only came to power because of an alliance with feminist and communist groups called Social Democratic Alliance. And even then, after four years, the neoliberal Progressive Party returned to power under Sigmundur Davíð Gunnlaugsson. The Progressive Party in turn is part of a neoliberal international grouping, the Liberal International, whose membership includes the Colombian Social Party of National Unity, currently in leadership, which is being cited for US-backed human rights abuses that are causing conditions akin to a civil war. That Scandinavians would find any kind of unity with such agents of imperialism and racism is the ultimate and damning failure of their hallowed state system.

The recent financial pitfalls of Rhode Island, particularly the pension heist operated by Gina Raimondo and the Democrats, are shot-for-shot equivalents to the Social Democratic counterparts in Europe. Meanwhile, the socialist revolution everyone should be hot and bothered over is going on in the Global South. Venezuela, Cuba, Iran, Bolivia, Brazil, and South Africa, aligned with that boogeyman Vladimir Putin in Russia, are trying to build a real alternative to capitalism, a genuine social democracy that is able to stand up to imperialism. China is asserting itself while rebuilding its political culture around Marxism Leninism and sending funding to these countries. And what does Bernie the Great Helmsman say? Remember when he called Chavez a dictator and voted for sanctions on Cuba?

What Bernie Sanders does is not revolutionary, it is reactionary. Like Jesse Jackson, Dennis Kucinich, or Howard Dean, he gets the people who participate in direct action politics, protesters and rabble-rousers, to get hyped up behind a great-sounding candidate who the banking class would never allow near the levers of power. Then, after a year of the masses getting hyped up over the candidate, the convention comes and they gracefully endorse the real contender. Meanwhile, the ACTUAL socialist party in this country, the Green Party, has barely made the news cycle. When you understand that the banks rule the country no matter what, the different faces in the White House become meaningless. Bruce Dixon of Black Agenda Radio calls this the “sheep dog” candidacy because Sanders has diverted attention and corralled the rabble.

Want further proof? Jill Stein recently has been telling the press that her campaign has tried to build a coalition with Sanders to no avail. Meanwhile, Trump, who we know had an all-important telephone call with Bill Clinton prior to announcing his candidacy wherein Bubba told him that the Donald might have a genuine shot, is so awful he makes Hillary Clinton seem like the candidate we must now vote for to stave off the apocalypse.

The irony, of course, is that the Clintons are soaked in gallons of blood caused by racist incitement in the Global South. The idea that she is somehow “better” than Trump for any minority population is vomitous and laughable at the same time. Her actions as Secretary of State alone would have resulted in her being hung at the Nuremburg war crimes trials and have the entire Democratic Party, including Langevin, Cicilline, Whitehouse, and especially Reed, spending the rest of their lives in a prison cell they instead would prefer to put Edward Snowden into. When Bill Clinton was in office, she was a major collaborator with a series of war crimes so outrageous that Hitler would beg for moderation. Just read Diana Johnstone’s Queen of Chaos for more details.

I honestly do not have much hope for this “movement” after the Berning down of this candidacy. The logic of Marxism that informs both Social Democrats and Communists is one which sees capitalism as a series of deepening contradictions that leads to eventual collapse. This new President Clinton could very well get us into a war with Iran or even, after all these decades, Russia. The events in Ukraine and Syria are an augury of a wider conflict. Wars happen when the capitalist system needs a recovery and so it gets a boost from the weapons sector. Just look at World War II and Vietnam, both of them were able to save the American economy from decline. America needs a big old-fashioned war to pull us out of this mess.

At this point, the only hope I see for Sanders is to become Jill Stein’s Vice President. The current media narrative is one showing he will have a new burst of energy in these coming primaries, but this arc is an old and tired one that follows the sheep dog arc precisely. He will continue to lose the important black vote in the south, the most Left constituency of the wider party, and labor will endorse Clinton because Sanders failed to build a constituency in these key demographics prior to announcing his candidacy, which is pretty awful for someone who calls himself a socialist. If he fails to build a united front from below with the Greens, which I anticipate he will, then it is all over.

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Sanders Democrats: The future of our revolution


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2016-01-02 Bernie Sanders 334Now that we’re halfway through the electoral calendar for the Democratic primary, it’s a good time to take a breath and review what we’ve achieved so far. Up until this point, despite some tough losses, Bernie has done incredibly well, much better than all projections. Michigan was an inspiring win. Ohio was a bitter defeat. But the electoral map going forward looks much more favorable to Bernie.

Is it favorable enough to close Clinton’s 300-delegate lead? We’ll see. It will be difficult for the Bernie campaign to make up that deficit, but if he can gather a few key, big-margin wins, then it is entirely possible for him to win the nomination. If not? There’s still plenty to be excited about, and there are plenty of signs that the political revolution is strong going forward, even if that future doesn’t include Bernie Sanders as President of the United States.

One such sign is the emergence of “Sanders Democrats,” or progressive Democratic candidates for congressional and state legislature seats. Zephyr Teachout and Pramila Jayapal are congressional candidates (New York and Washington, respectively) that have endorsed Bernie Sanders and, in turn, have been endorsed by Democracy for America. Debbie Medina, a Brooklyn-based Democratic Socialist, is also running for state legislature in New York. And Shawn O’Connor, a candidate for congress in New Hampshire, recently stated in a TIME magazine article that he hopes “to be a member of a class of Sanders Democrats that gets elected in the fall.”

Sanders Democrats. That’s the name of an up-and-coming progressive coalition that aims to enact Sanders-style policies in all levels of government, and particularly in Congress. If that coalition gains the votes of Bernie’s biggest supporters–young voters, the most progressive voting bloc that is quickly growing–then we are likely to see a progressive shift in government, which is exactly what Bernie’s political revolution is aiming to achieve.

That is a sign that the revolution is alive and well, and that it continues to grow. But it isn’t a sign to stop phone banking! If we keep Bernin’ up the phones to get out the vote, we could very well see a Sanders Democrat coalition in Congress and a Bernie Sanders Presidency. To have both in place together would be the best possible outcome for this revolution.

Dear ProJo: Trump’s not the only presidential candidate


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Bernie SandersIn the latest Providence Journal good old Donald Trump was once again front and center. The March 11 editorial by Edward Fitzpatrick has a very one sided perspective of Rhode Island’s presidential campaign. If you follow the Journal you would think that Trump was the only candidate that was going to be on the ballot in this state. There is not the slightest attempt by the Journal to offer fair space to other candidates, including Bernie Sanders.

Bernie Sanders has incredible support in Rhode Island, but one wouldn’t know it from reading the Journal. Has the Journal ever attempted to cover any of the many packed Bernie events throughout the state? Have they covered Sander’s message of justice anywhere near as much as they have covered the billionaire’s message of hate?

The Providence Journal should be more than a soundboard for the company that owns them, Gatehouse Media, and the conservative movement that it supports. Rhode Island is a state whose citizens are fiercely independent and the great majority has had enough with establishment politics and the status quo…

But Trump is not the answer.

The Journal owes it to the people of this state to be cognizant of the fact that Bernie Sanders campaign also is reaching out to people who are tired of  politics as usual. The campaign has attracted not only the millennials, but the disenfranchised: feminists, minorities, moderate Republicans, progressive Democrats, Greens, unaffiliated and many more. Sanders represents all those who are sick and tired of being marginalized while corporate interests take over. It is time that the Journal does its due diligence to make that known to their readers.

Bernie Sanders and the politics of empathy


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2016-01-02 Bernie Sanders 364In some of Bernie Sanders’ most recent ads, especially those made by volunteers, you’ll see images of the candidate hugging people at his rallies. You’ll see clips of him striding out on stage in front of ten thousand supporters, his fist in the air, punching into the bright lights above as if to shower the audience in sparks. You’ll hear him rally those thousands until they break out in joyful chants and cheers; they stomp their feet and thrust their hands into the sky, reaching out of passion and graceful empowerment for the freedom and dignity we all deserve.

Though this almost feels like a dream, it isn’t, yet the campaign’s essence is made of dreams. This is a political and spiritual journey for a better future, built from the rising wave of populist righteousness that founded this country. Leading that journey today is Bernie Sanders; politically with his message for the restoration of American democracy from a wealthy and self-serving oligarchy; and spiritually through the unification of the diverse and empowered millions that seek a secure, fair, and bright future for all of us here and, most importantly, for our children and grandchildren, those yet to come.

We, the citizenry of this nation and this planet, cannot endure much longer under a broken and corrupt political process owned by the rich, nor can we stifle our own righteous anger and frustration with that process. Bernie Sanders knows this, knows us, and is one of us. He leads a fight for all of us, even for those who disagree with him. His ideas would benefit a vast majority of Americans that need a stronger social support system, and he plans to build that system from the need to care for each other during the difficult and anxious times that face us. He plans to build that system from our deepest sense of empathy.

I have been waiting for a leader like Bernie Sanders for my entire life. The politics of empathy that he personifies are those of an honest statesman who serves on principle and strength, rooted in a deep care for and understanding of poor and disenfranchised people, those who deserve someone who leads by virtue of an ethically and morally grounded heart and soul.

When I see those images, hear his speeches, and witness the thousands and thousands that flock to his rallies to hear his message of an honest and decent hope for the future, I am nearly driven to tears because I, for so long, did not believe that a candidacy like his was possible. After all of the corrupt and wretched politicians that I have seen and heard in my life, Bernie Sanders is an honest man who, against all odds, is determined to lead with an unbroken sense of what is right. He makes me believe that we can always do better and reach for more without losing our sense of communal empathy, our eternal sense of kindness.

Those politics of empathy are already deeply moving, and should he enact them from the most powerful position in the world, he will serve as an inspiration to all human beings.

 

Bernie Sanders powerfully resonates with new and young voters


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2016-03-09 Sanders CCRI 004
Sanders table

That Bernie Sanders‘ presidential campaign motivates young voters is a given. They gave him the surprise victory in Michigan, after all, but to see the power of Sander’s campaign up close, even at a micro-scale, is revelatory. Sanders says he is leading a political revolution. Sometimes I actually find myself believing that.

I originally went to the Community College of Rhode Island (CCRI) in Warwick to ask local Bernie Sanders supporters about the surprising results of the Michigan primary the night before. That primary demonstrated the strong ground game Sanders has in this campaign. His supporters are devoted: they show up and they work hard.

Lauren Niedel, RI District 40’s Democratic State Committewoman and the RI State Contact for Bernie Sanders, lead a small team of Sanders campaigners at a voter registration drive held as part of a mock election at CCRI. (In the mock election, Sanders won 78 percent of the vote. See here.)  A table next to theirs, reserved for Hillary Clinton supporters, was empty.

Clinton table
Clinton table

To attract attention to the mock election and generate a strong turnout for the voter registration drive, David Sears, president of student government at CCRI, invited representatives from the RI state Democratic and Republican Parties to attend. No Republican representatives could participate but RI State Democratic Party Chair Joseph McNamara (also a State Representative in the General Assembly) and Secretary of State Nellie Gorbea spoke to a crowd of around fifteen people for about twenty minutes.

Meanwhile, the Bernie Sanders table was nonstop action. Students were eager to register to vote, eager to take stickers and pins and actually were excited about this political campaign. The win in Michigan the night before had invigorated both the Sanders campaigners and the interested students. The video below shows the action at the Sanders table versus the action at the McNamara/Gorbea speeches.

Still, despite the Hillary campaign no-show and the general disinterest of students about anything but the Bernie Sanders table, Rep McNamara was a good sport, and stopped to take a picture with the cardboard Sanders stand-up for the Warwick Beacon, even though he plans to vote for Hillary.

By the way, when I got around to asking the Sanders campaigners about how they felt about the big upset in Michigan, I got the following responses.

Linda Ujifusa said, “When I saw 538 [Nate Silver‘s blog] I thought it was over. But it was awesome.”

“I was at the edge of my seat,” said Roland Gauvin, “I’m looking for a decisive win in Florida to show that Hillary doesn’t have the super-delegates wrapped up. We  the people determine the election.”

Sally Mendzela told me that she “couldn’t be more excited” and Lauren Niedel just smiled and said, “It was great.”

2016-03-09 Sanders CCRI 001

2016-03-09 Sanders CCRI 005

Patreon

When did we become a cautiously optimistic country?


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New York

This presidential election cycle has me a bit confused, especially on the Democratic side. It seems that many of our leaders have forgotten that we are a nation of revolutionary ideas.

I’m a millennial who enlisted in the Marine Corps in 2001, emboldened by the fervor of unity that swept our country after the 9/11 attacks. Mix the boundless ego of a Marine with an 18-year-old’s propensity for taking risks and it seemed all things were possible.

But you don’t need to be a Marine to believe that we’re capable of big things. Any entrepreneur worth their salt has pushed the envelope with an almost irrational belief in their capacity to make big things happen. Most of us know what it’s like to be a young child with limitless curiosity, a hunger to explore, and a fearlessness to peer into the unknown.

It is that fearlessness and vision that gave birth to a revolution, one that would shape the future of the world. It was our revolution and it happened not all that long ago in the grand scheme of things.

The story of America isn’t a fairy tale. The men who created it weren’t gods, they were human. When did we become so timid about big ideas?

We created a self-governing republic that was unlike any other that came before it. This is our history. And the people who led this revolution and the people who fought this revolution were not super human. They were finite, they were flawed, but they were courageous.

America desperately needs a John Adams, a Jefferson. It desperately needs a people so belligerently unaccepting of social injustice that they rise up with their vote, their voice, and their aspirations.

No matter the cause of our sleepy abdication of power, we are still a self-governing republic. No matter the influence of big money, our vote cannot be bought. And there are still big ideas worthy of our history.

Ideas like making healthcare a civil right, converting our energy system from fossil fuels to renewables, and ending a corrupt campaign financing system that reduces our politicians from statesmen to frenetic fundraisers.

We didn’t draft the Declaration of Independence thinking, “Nothing will ever change anyway, why even try.” Men and women didn’t sacrifice everything they had on earth saying to themselves, “Freedom would be really awesome, but it’s not pragmatic or realistic.”

Stop being so cautious America. If there’s anything about who we are as a people that we can agree on, it’s that we’re revolutionary. Start acting like it.

ProJo editor admits paper of record did Bernie wrong


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ProjoProvidence Journal Executive Editor David Butler said Rhode Island’s paper of record could have done a better job covering Bernie Sanders’ primary wins onSaturday.

“I would agree it deserved more and the paper was GOP heavy,” Butler said, responding to a Nicholas Delmenico post alleging the ProJo isn’t offering fair and ample coverage to Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders.

“Though you must admit the GOP race has been much newsier – for better or for worse,” he added.

“Please note that Bernie Sanders’ caucus wins were mentioned in the second paragraph of the A1 Sunday AP roundup on the primaries,” Butler wrote in an email to RI Future. “Note that the lead story in the Monday paper was on the Clinton-Sanders debate.”

Butler, whose full email you can read here, said, “There is no blackout of the Dems.” Delmenico’s post does not allege a blackout of Democrats, but rather of Bernie Sanders.

Sanders supporters have grown more vocal recently about what they see as unfair treatment of their candidate from the so-called “mainstream media” a colloquialism for the large, influential and in most cases for-profit corporations that Americans rely on to become educated about their government.

Delmenico insinuated the Providence Journal has not adequately covered Bernie Sanders because it is owned by a corporation with ties to Wall Street.

Others have said too many media organizations include superdelegate campaign promises when comparing Hillary Clinton and Sanders delegate totals. Superdelegates are party insiders that get a vote in who the presidential nominee is. They are known to change their mind. In fact, they are known to change their mind against Hillary Clinton, who eight years ago held a similar superdelegate advantage over Barack Obama before many switched to support the eventual nominee.

Clinton has won 671 delegates to Sanders’ 476. But, according to the New York Times, Clinton also has 458 superdelegates who have said they will vote for her compared to 22 for Sanders.

Bernie-mentum, and how to get it back on Monday night


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2016-02-29 Bernie Sanders 034Last night, after an organizing meeting for Bernie in South Kingstown, a close friend and I had a long discussion about Bernie Sanders and where he stands right now in the Democratic primary race. We agreed that despite the campaign’s energy and Bernie’s lead in the national polls, the voting public at large is not convinced that Sanders can win. Despite New Hampshire, turnout has remained low. Why? Well, we had a number of theories, and nearly all of them have to do with the corporate media’s portrayal of the Bernie campaign.

First, as soon as Bernie won in a landslide in New Hampshire, the media began spinning his win as a loss because Clinton had the superdelegates on her side, which is irrelevant this early in the race. Clinton had the superdelegates early in 2008, but as the nomination process dragged on, Obama gradually got their votes. Bernie can do the same, but the average voter, especially the undecided voter who relies on corporate media for information, doesn’t see it that way.

2016-02-29 Bernie Sanders 028Second, when Trump began his rise to power, which was fueled by his overexposure in the media, Democrats became even more scared of the possibility of a Trump presidency. In their minds, Hillary is the “electable” candidate. Those Democrats seem to rally to her out of fear of Trump despite the polls that prove that Bernie is the Democrats’ best chance to defeat Trump.

Third, when Bernie took a beating in South Carolina, the media began to dismiss his candidacy. After a Super Tuesday full of conservative states that voted for Clinton (states that will not be won by a Democrat in a general election), the New York Times declared that Democrats now turn to Hillary after “flirting” with Bernie. Headlines like that declared the race to be over when, frankly, it’s just getting started.

Fourth, when Clinton took the majority of states and delegates on Super Tuesday, media coverage of the Sanders campaign quickly diminished as Trump took the main stage. Networks like MSNBC that decry Trump’s rise to power only fan the flames by giving him so much airtime. Hillary isn’t even covered as much as the GOP circus with Trump as the self-appointed ringleader. Political theater, however depraved and insubstantial, is king to ratings and profit.

For a Bernie volunteer and supporter like me, I can see through the media’s window dressing and their rosy portrayal of Clinton, and I can see through the media’s overexposure of Trump, but to the average voter who relies on TV network news for information on the candidates, that window dressing and overexposure is reality.

So, where does Bernie go from here, and how can he get momentum back on his side?

Strangely enough, Fox News may have given Bernie the chance to do just that. On Monday night, in a national primetime slot, Bernie Sanders will appear alongside Hillary Clinton in the Democratic town hall debate in Detroit. If he uses this hour of network airtime to rebuild his narrative and rewrite his message to appeal to more voters, he may have a good shot at winning Michigan and many other states to follow. He needs to immediately distinguish himself from the name-brand of Clinton and fiercely argue why he, with his clean history and his advantage in national polls, is the true front-runner that can take down Trump.

If he can do that on Monday night on national television, he’ll reignite the Bernie-mentum.

The Bernie blackout is real, and it’s happening at the Providence Journal


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2016-02-29 Bernie Sanders 032The media blackout on U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders is real, and it’s happening with our home state newspaper. Please read further for the gruesome details.

On Saturday, March 5, 2016, Bernie Sanders defeated Hillary Clinton in Democratic caucuses by voting margins of 35% in Kansas and 14% in Nebraska. He also lost by a margin of 48% in the Louisiana primary.

In the Providence Sunday Journal, there is not ONE headline mentioning any of these facts nor one article dedicated to the Democratic presidential race. A review of today’s “A” section reveals the following articles related to the 2016 presidential race:

Page A1 (above the fold): “Cruz gains ground – Beats Trump handily in Kansas, Maine”

Page A1 (below the fold): “Trump taps into fears of changing America – A champion to the disgruntled white working class, a ‘monster’ to the GOP elite”

Page A7: “Trump primary win roils Mass. GOP – But Democrats have left their party, too, to back the maverick Republican”

Page A8: “Clinton backers pursue ‘gender gap'” – an article that discusses the gender gap in Trump’s supporters and how a Trump/Clinton general election could feature the largest gender gap ever in a presidential election, again pushing the narrative that Trump and Clinton will be the nominees.

Page A9: “GOP points to Obama tenure as cause of party’s schism” with the featured quote “There would be no Donald Trump without Barack Obama.” – Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C.

Page A9: “5 states will shape 2016 race on weekend” – it mentions that “both parties had contests in Kansas and Louisiana … and Democrats in Nebraska also vote” but made no mention of the results. In fact, the article also mentions that these states “possess the power to make Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump closer to unstoppable.” The bias here is frightening, and this is from an AP article. The article also gives the “delegate count” for the Democrats without noting that the count includes as of yet unofficial counts of superdelegates, another misleading tactic.

And in the “Commentary” section…

Page A13: “Clinton backers split on Trump strategy” – you guessed it, an op-ed on how Hillary should take on Trump in the general election.

Page A13: “Republican ‘takers’ take down the establishment” – a GOP-focused op-ed

Page A14: “Romney’s warning” – an editorial from the Providence Journal Editorial Board, again focused on the GOP and coming out against Trump.

Page A14: “Letters to the Editor” – even the ones included here are anti-abortion, about Ben Carson, and about John Kasich.

To top it all off, on the Providence Journal’s Facebook page, they posted, on March 6 at 9:10 am, an AP article whose headline insinuates that both Cruz and Sanders’ wins yesterday were meaningless.

What is going on here?

I will be calling the Providence Journal to complain about the lack of coverage of the Democratic nomination process. I will ask two questions:

  1. Why were the Democratic results not given any consideration?
  2. Will the Journal commit to giving equal consideration to the Democratic and Republican races, and give equal consideration to the only two Democrats in the race?

I will also email David J. Butler, the Executive Editor & Senior VP of News for The Providence Journal directly as his email is listed on page A2: dbutler@providencejournal.com.

As I do not expect to get satisfactory answers to my questions, I am left to do what you must always do when something doesn’t pass the sniff test: follow the money.

The Providence Journal is “a subsidiary of GateHouse Media, Inc.” according to page A2. According to Wikipedia, GateHouse Media (which went through a planned bankruptcy and is now part of the holding company New Media Investment Group Inc) is owned by Fortress Investment Group. Also according to Wikipedia, Fortress “was founded as a private equity firm in 1998 by Wesley R. Edens, a former partner at BlackRock Financial Management, Inc.; Rob Kauffman (businessman), a managing director of UBS; and Randal A. Nardone, also a managing director of UBS. Fortress quickly expanded into hedge funds, real estate-related investments and debt securities, run by Michael Novogratz and Pete Briger, both former partners at Goldman Sachs.”

Big surprise.

Please, contact the Journal and put pressure on them to do right by the people it serves and give equal consideration to the presidential races and publish articles and op-eds from all points of view, not just those that match their owners’ views.

Please call the Journal. Please email. Please share this post. Please do anything so that the corrupt influence of “big media” does not infiltrate the biggest paper in our little state.

(Editor’s note: This was originally a Facebook post)

Bernie’s peaceful revolution stays in the fight, but he needs to make it personal


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2016-02-29 Bernie Sanders 033There is a sense of entitlement that comes from the Clinton campaign. One such example is the “I’m Ready for Hillary” bumper sticker, as if she is waiting in the wings; another is the term “coronation,” which was bandied about early on in Clinton’s candidacy when no one else challenged her. Some of her supporters even believe that Clinton deserves the White House, that she’s been ready for it for years, and that, regardless of who challenges her, she will be the next president by virtue of being Hillary Clinton.

However, that assumption of the office, which is undemocratic and reeks of hubris, may very well be quashed by an impending FBI indictment. Trump could be dismantled through an arrest after IRS audits and after inciting violence against minorities at his rallies. Yet somewhere above all of that dirty campaigning, above all of that law-breaking, is Bernie Sanders and his peaceful revolution, a revolution that shows no signs of slowing or faltering.

$6 million in a day. $43 million in a month. Celebrity endorsements. Deep grassroots organizing from the bottom up. This revolution is here to stay. We are facing the dire consequences of late-stage climate change. We are facing the demoralizing effects of an unfair economic and political system. And we are facing two candidates that do not deserve to become President of the United States by virtue of their deceit and hate. Both Trump and Clinton have one thing in common: neither have the passion and power of a revolution to back them. Only Bernie does.

Meanwhile, Clinton does whatever she can to win, however illegal or unethical. Bill blocked the polls in New Bedford and campaigned within the 150 foot boundary, which could arguably have swung a tight race in Hillary’s favor. Clinton bashed Bernie’s goals as too “idealistic,” then she co-opted them because she can’t get elected without them. She even co-opted Trump’s slogan of “Make America Great Again” by saying “Make America Whole Again,” which should prompt another round of #WhichHillary? And the Hitler-esque Trump continues to use hate and racism to rally his ignorant and bigoted crowds.

There’s only one clear and clean winner here, and that is Bernie Sanders. He is the only candidate to rise above the rabble and fray, and he is the only candidate that has the power of revolution behind him. He is the sole candidate who fights for the restoration of our democracy while other candidates seek to divide up what is left of it to benefit their own camps and donors, and, unlike Trump and Clinton, he is the sole candidate across the board that has no political baggage.

And you won’t see his in the headlines: Bernie is the only Democrat who is winning multiple swing states while converting poor white moderates and libertarians–people who vote–to his side, and there are a lot of states like that left to go. That’s what it takes to win the general.

However, he must make overtures to minority communities and get their votes by making his campaign personal. He needs to talk about what it was like to be considered a “non-white” Jew in pre-1960 Brooklyn. He needs to tout his record of fighting for civil rights over five decades, both as an activist and as a legislator. He needs to contrast his record on race to Clinton’s, as his is spotless and hers is marred by her support of the “three strikes” mass incarceration law and her racist tone when calling young black kids “superpredators” who need to “heel” as if they were dogs. She is also the candidate who refused to relinquish the microphone when Black Lives Matter activists challenged her publicly, while Bernie simply stepped back, folded his hands, and allowed the young women to speak unobstructed. He even shook their hands, ready to be an ally to their cause.

I even spoke last weekend with a fellow canvasser, a middle-aged African-American woman from South Carolina, and she was the first to say that Bernie needs to make it personal. She believes that many of the black voters who went for Clinton would’ve gone for Bernie if they knew who he was and how he grew up as a minority, how he fought for civil rights since the 1960s, and how his record on race contrasts to Clinton’s.

It would not be negative campaigning for Sanders to make it personal. No, it would merely be calling out the facts and showing where his heart is in the race. Bernie needs to get personal because all of us deserve a Sanders presidency. He is the minority American underdog who fights for what is right in the face of big money and big hate, and his victory would ensure a better America, and a better planet, for all of us. In the face of such disturbing American politics with the deceit of Clinton and the hateful rise of Trump, what is more beautiful and timely than a peaceful revolution for the people?

Now that I know Bernie’s stance on the issues, I want to know his story. I want to hear what it was like to be an immigrant son from a family that escaped the Holocaust. I want to hear him speak of his history as a civil rights activist and as a legislator that consistently fought for equality. I want to hear him contrast his history with Clinton’s instead of letting the media do it, and I want to hear him speak the narrative of a good human being who fights to help others as much as he can.

I want to hear him say it because I know that when everyone with a heart hears his compelling and moving story, he’ll win in a landslide.

Clinton campaign accused of blocking poll access


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Massachusetts should be the pillar of fairness and truth in elections. It is a state with a long history of protecting voter’s rights and has great voter services. What Massachusetts Secretary of State William Galvin let former President Bill Clinton, husband of presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, get away with at the polls yesterday is inconceivable. Various accounts allege that Bill Clinton impeded people’s access to the polls and forced longer lines and unnecessary waiting times. The worst violations appear to have happened in New Bedford, an area where the RI contingent of the Sanders campaign had many volunteers canvassing.

The headlines say it all:

800px-Hillary_Clinton_official_Secretary_of_State_portrait_cropI was first alerted to this by a fellow RI Bernie Sanders campaign worker, Robert Malin. He shared a video by Angela Garcia (above) which clearly showed that people were irritated, annoyed and put out by Bill Clinton’s poll visit in New Bedford. I contacted Maria Tomassia, chairwoman of the Board of Canvassers of New Bedford, who confirmed that people had to walk longer to get to the polls and that lines were long because people might have wanted to meet Clinton but that there was no impact on voter access. She denied that people had to wait and denied that Bill Clinton was in violation of any election laws.

Afterward New Bedford Bill Clinton continued campaigning for his wife in three additional towns including Boston, Newton and West Roxbury, where he was inside Holy Name Parish School’s gymnasium, a polling location, with Boston Mayor Martin Walsh.

2016-02-29 Bernie Sanders 020This is election 101, and illegal. In Massachusetts no campaigning is allowed within 150 feet of a polling location. Bill Clinton was caught campaigning within that margin and actually inside a polling place. When you think of all the campaigns that Bill and Hillary Clinton have been in, their decision to circumvent election laws was either ignorant or intentional. I think most people would agree that the Clintons are not ignorant.

Hillary won in Massachusetts by less than 1.5 percent, a very small margin. If Sanders had received .75 percent more the state would have been a virtual tie. Could Bill Clinton’s possibly illegal actions have skewed the vote in Hillary Clinton’s favor?

It would be hard for Bernie Sanders to actually dispute the vote count. There is no way of knowing how many votes he might have lost or how many people were swayed by Bill Clinton’s last minute and frankly desperate antics. But this is not how a campaign should be run. Dirty politics can never be accepted. The Clinton’s are once again showing their true colors.

[Lauren Niedel is the RI State Contact for Bernie 2016. To volunteer please contact her at 401-710-7600 or lniedel@gmail.com]

 

Super Tuesday: Bernie Sanders’ activist campaign


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In one of Bernie Sanders’s most powerful and moving endorsements, Erica Garner explains how she became an activist after her father was murdered by the NYPD. She explains how she felt compelled to stand up for the rights of those who feel intimidated, persecuted, and oppressed by systemic racism in law enforcement. She explains how she came to believe in a leader like Bernie Sanders because he, like her and many of those she admires, was a protestor and an activist who fought for justice.

Today, that same justice is on the line in voting booths and caucuses across the nation. The sun has risen on Super Tuesday, a day which may historically become a referendum on the nature of American democracy. At sunrise, tireless volunteers of the Sanders campaign will distribute literature to doors across the country before commencing the final round of canvassing for the last Get Out The Vote effort. Bill Clinton will speak in New Bedford later in the day, but fortunately, we’ve already covered the whole city, which is feelin’ the Bern. I wouldn’t be surprised if the majority of those in attendance for his speech will vote for Sanders; even some of Hillary’s canvassers will.

2016-02-29 Bernie Sanders 025But the race is tight in Massachusetts, and in many of the other states that Sanders has focused on winning today. It would seem that the sinister rise of Trump is beginning to intimidate voters into supporting Clinton, an establishment candidate that is widely, and falsely, believed to be the best chance at defeating him in a general election, even though Sanders has the best numbers against him. And I believe that Sanders’s campaign is still nascent, still growing, and his declared commitment to not stop running until all 50 states have voted, a declaration made after raising $6 million in a day, will build permanent momentum in his base with a clear goal in mind: to win the Democratic nomination.

However, such a win is not necessary to validate Sanders’s revolution. It has already received its validation by those who support it. His campaign is one of activists, ranging from volunteer organizers and leaders to canvassers and phone bankers to the Bernie fanatics waving signs and marching in the streets across the nation. We have been spurred into action by his candidacy and we do not plan to stop. His staffers, even though they are paid, carry the same fire and dedication that the activists and volunteers do. They, and we, all of us, are dedicated to a cause, and that is to reclaim American democracy.

Much is at stake today and in the coming weeks. The media establishment is already touting Clinton as the front-runner, that she is simply moving beyond Sanders and seeking to pad her lead. And it is quite possible that Sanders will falter today, and though we have yet to see, his voters do have a chance to make history by choosing to vote for a government that is truly representative of the people. To vote for a candidate that seeks to restore our democracy is an act of courage in the face of the hate-mongering of Trump or the unfair and unethical corporate sponsorship of the Clinton campaign.

Today, let us stand together as activist voters who will fight for economic and social justice. Let us stand together as brothers and sisters across races and religions in the face of the hate that seeks to divide us. Let us be courageous today and cast that vote for Bernie Sanders, the sole candidate who will fight for our democracy. And in the words of that candidate, “When we stand together and demand that this country work for all of us, rather than the few, we will transform America.”

Win or loss, we have already begun that transformation.

Read more from Chris Dollard on Bernie Sanders’ campaign.

Bernie Sanders in Milton ahead of Super Tuesday


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2016-02-29 Bernie Sanders 002Waiting for Bernie Sanders in the press line outside Milton High School in Massachusetts ahead of Super Tuesday, I talked to Rita Colaco, a journalist from Portugal. She’s surprised that I know where Portugal is, because most Americans she talks to think her country is part of Spain, or Puerto Rico. She was at a rally for Hillary Clinton in Boston earlier in the day, and now she’s covering a rally for Sanders. She’s in the United States for four days to cover Super Tuesday.

“So what do they think about this election in Portugal?” I ask.

“They think what you’re thinking over here,” says Colaco, “They see the popularity of Trump as funny.” The way she says funny, she doesn’t mean “Ha-Ha” funny. People from around the world are worried about what a Trump presidency means.

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John May

“I wouldn’t be here from Portugal if it wasn’t for Trump,” says Colaco. She hasn’t been able to find a rally for Trump in Massachusetts yet, though.

Inside the rally I meet an older couple who support Sanders, but they are realists, and will happily switch to Clinton if they have to. “We can’t let Donald Trump or Ted Cruz win,” says the woman, “That would be terrible, and I’m too old.”

John May from Franklin holds home made signs in support of Medicare for All. He knows the sales pitch well. “You can’t tell me that we can’t afford to do, in America, what every civilized country on Earth already does,” says May.

2016-02-29 Bernie Sanders 028May lost two friends to pancreatic cancer years ago. They were diagnosed within weeks of each other and they died within weeks of each other. Their treatment was the same. The only difference between the two is that one friend lived in Denmark, the other in the United States.

The friend in Denmark, says May, spent his last six years of life with family and friends, unconcerned about the economic impact of his disease on himself and his loved ones.You can only begin to imagine the last years of the life of his American friend. That massive qualitative difference made May a supporter of single payer healthcare, and by extension, a supporter of Sanders.

My last conversation was with three girls, between 10 and 12 years old. They monkeyed around in front of my camera and were eager to be interviewed, but the adult with them asked that I not use the footage, since he wasn’t sure about their parent’s permission.

I asked the girls who they’re voting for.

2016-02-29 Bernie Sanders 001“We can’t vote,” said the oldest, “but my Dad’s voting for Trump.”

“Trump?” I asked.

The girl shrugged. “Whatever.”

“I can’t decide between Bernie Sanders and Marco Rubio,” said the second girl.

“Really?” I asked, “how does that work? They’re not much alike on the issues.”

“I don’t know,” she said, honestly. “I just like them.”

“I’m still deciding between Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders,” said the youngest girl, “That’s why I’m here, to listen to what Sanders has to say.”

“You know,” I replied, “that makes sense.”

Then Sanders took the stage.

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Bernie’s effort to GOTV is proven to work


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2016-01-02 Bernie Sanders 094If you were in New Bedford during GOTV week, you wouldn’t even think that Bernie got crushed in South Carolina. If you saw the number of canvassers, or the Bernie fanatics waving signs on street corners and telling passersby to vote on Tuesday, you’d think that the campaign is thriving and full of positive energy.

That’s because it is.

In New Bedford, as I write this, more than 30 people are out on the streets with clipboards and Bernie stickers and pamphlets, knocking on doors across the entire city. Fifteen of them are from Rhode Island. Other RI volunteers are up in Worcester, Framingham, and Boston talking to voters. Right now, we’re sweeping the state, asking every potential supporter to get out and vote for Bernie on Super Tuesday.

This is important. Primaries don’t draw near as many voters as the general election, and a couple hundred votes can make or break a campaign. Boots on the ground and voices through the phone statistically lead to high voter turnout, as it did in New Hampshire. And an important fact of the South Carolina drubbing is that voter turnout was very low. Like Bernie has said, when voter turnout is high, Democrats win because voters feel empowered and energized, but when voter turnout is low and people feel demoralized, Republicans win. In this particular case, Hillary won, but if you consider the ideological gap between Hillary and Bernie, she might as well have been that uninspiring conservative candidate.

When I think about why I decided to volunteer for Bernie, it is because he has inspired me. As someone who all but gave up on politics, Bernie has ushered me out of the darkness of political apathy into a psychological state where I feel compelled to work as hard as I can with other volunteers to get him in the White House. And when we work that hard together for something that we all believe in, for a positive change that we want to see in the world, that inspiration comes not just from Bernie, but from all of us. It’s synergistic, and our energy rubs off on one another. I’ve seen one-time volunteers suddenly decide to come back again and again to help our campaign win. The same thing happened to me after my first canvassing shift in New Hampshire.

The energy, the excitement, is addicting. And these campaign staffers hardly sleep—they are working every moment of their waking lives to get Bernie elected. No days off, 5 hours of sleep if they are lucky, but you can tell that they believe so firmly in their work that they wouldn’t be doing anything else. That is truly inspiring. When we work together to Get Out The Vote, people vote! They did in New Hampshire, they will in Massachusetts, and as long as we keep up the pressure and keep gaining momentum, we will win.

Health insurance industry lawyer makes the case for single payer


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Single Payer NowIn speaking out against a bill that would make sure no pregnant person could be denied medical coverage due to their pregnancy, a health insurance lawyer unintentionally made a great case for a national, single payer health program.

Shawn Donahue is an attorney at Blue Cross & Blue Shield of Rhode Island and last Tuesday he spoke at the House Corporations Committee meeting to oppose a bill that would ensure “no pregnant applicant for medical insurance coverage would be denied coverage due to her pregnancy.”

I want to stress at the outset that Donahue seems like a decent man, and I sensed that he was somewhat uncomfortable speaking out against this bill.

“No one believes in the importance of pre-natal care more than Blue Cross,” said Donohue, “We’ve invested in it.”

That’s true. “Getting early and regular prenatal care is one of the most important things you can do for the health of both you and your baby,” says Blue Cross on its website. The site contains a wealth of information and advice on healthy pregnancies. But we don’t have to assume that Blue Cross is promoting neonatal care out of any sense of public service. Healthy pregnancies are cheaper for insurance companies. An insured baby, with proper neonatal care, is less likely to have expensive health problems going forward.

The importance of prenatal care is underscored by the health risks associated with not having such care.

“Women in the United States who do not receive prenatal care have an increased risk of experiencing a neonatal death… Lack of prenatal care is associated with a 40 percent increase in the risk of neonatal death overall…” says the Guttmacher Institute, citing a study, “Black women are more than three times as likely as white women not to receive prenatal care, and regardless of their prenatal care status, their infants are significantly more likely to die within their first 27 days of life than are infants born to white women.”

Other risks from not receiving adequate prenatal care include low birth weight for the infant, and pre-eclampsia, a form of organ damage, that affects the mother. From a human perspective, this is terrible and unnecessary. From the perspective of an insurance company, such health problems are expensive.

Yet, said Donohue, speaking for Blue Cross at the Rhode Island State House, “The only way insurance works is if you purchase it when you don’t need it so it’s there for you when you do. If you allow people a special enrollment period, whether they’re diabetics, cancer patients or pregnant people, they won’t buy it until they need it.”

The Affordable Care Act (ACA or Obamacare) mandates that Rhode Islanders buy private insurance on the state run health insurance exchange, HealthSourceRI. “If you’ve missed the open enrollment period,” said Donohue, “ you’ve broken the law and now you are penalized for that, and the penalties start to grow.”

Donahue is talking about financial penalties of course, but the real penalties from a societal point of view are dead babies, or babies and mothers with terrible health outcomes. Suddenly the financial penalty for not complying with the ACA mandate seems rather small and meaningless, doesn’t it? But more to the point, it’s exactly these negative health outcomes that Obamacare was supposed to address.

2016-01-02 Bernie Sanders 282“We don’t let people buy insurance on their way to the hospital in an ambulance,” said Donahue. I would say that having to worry about financial issues during a medical emergency is a major system failure, and further, these gaps in care for vulnerable Americans expose the weaknesses in today’s for-profit health insurance industry, of which Blue Cross & Blue Shield of Rhode Island is a big part.

According to Physicians for a National Health Program (PNHP), “Single-payer national health insurance, also known as ‘Medicare for all,’ is a system in which a single public or quasi-public agency organizes health care financing, but the delivery of care remains largely in private hands. Under a single-payer system, all residents of the U.S. would be covered for all medically necessary services, including doctor, hospital, preventive, long-term care, mental health, reproductive health care, dental, vision, prescription drug and medical supply costs.

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“The program would be funded by the savings obtained from replacing today’s inefficient, profit-oriented, multiple insurance payers with a single streamlined, nonprofit, public payer, and by modest new taxes based on ability to pay. Premiums would disappear; 95 percent of all households would save money. Patients would no longer face financial barriers to care such as co-pays and deductibles, and would regain free choice of doctor and hospital. Doctors would regain autonomy over patient care.”

On the national scene Bernie Sanders has championed single payer, calling it Medicare for All. “Health care must be recognized as a right, not a privilege,” says Sanders, “Every man, woman and child in our country should be able to access the health care they need regardless of their income. The only long-term solution to America’s health care crisis is a single-payer national health care program.”

State Representative Aaron Regunberg has introduced, for the second time, a bill to bring the benefits of a single payer health insurance program to Rhode Island. His bill would “act would repeal the ‘Rhode Island Health Care Reform Act of 2004 – Health Insurance Oversight’ as well as the ‘Rhode Island Health Benefit Exchange,’ and would establish the Rhode Island comprehensive health insurance program.”

His bill deserves our support.

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Bernie Sanders tops RI primary signature count; supporters plan further events


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Bernie Sanders in Worcester

After successfully getting the most signatures of any presidential primary candidate, Bernie Sanders’ Rhode Island campaign will now focus on getting a  slate of delegates on the ballot for Bernie.

Sanders supporters gathered 3451 official signatures, Hillary Clinton supporters, backed by the RI Democratic Party, gathered only 1802. On the Republican side Trump supporters gathered 3110 signatures, followed by 2902 for Jeb Bush, who has already dropped out of the race.

There will be events throughout the state where people can go to sign nomination papers for those seeking to be delegates. Our Kickoff event will be from 7:00pm-9:00pm on Thursday, February 25th at the Wild Colonial in Providence on South Water Street.

For a listing of all the signature signing events or to volunteer for Bernie 2016 campaign go to www.Berniesanders.com or to this Facebook page.

Or contact
Lauren Niedel
RI State Contact
401-710-7600
lniedel@gmail.com

Bernie’s Nevada loss fires up his base


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2016-01-02 Bernie Sanders 246Bernie lost the Nevada caucuses.

So what?

Think of it this way: a baseball season is 162 games long. It is physically impossible to win every game. Sometimes you’ll sweep your rival in a resounding victory (New Hampshire) of 22 percentage points, and sometimes you’ll lose a close one that’s a bit of a heartbreaker (Nevada) by 5 percentage points. It’s those close losses that keep you hungry for the next win, and I’m convinced that Bernie still has momentum on his side because the polls indicate that he is still on the rise.

That’s the most important thing to take away from Bernie’s loss in Nevada; it was a close one, fought down to the wire, just like in Iowa, and considering Bernie’s deficit in the polls just months ago, it could’ve been a come-from-behind win. But the difference between baseball and presidential nominations is that the runs you score in baseball don’t matter if you lose. With the nomination process, those delegates still matter—and Bernie is now tied with Hillary Clinton in the pledged delegate count nationwide.

Yes, the superdelegates that Clinton took early in the race are still on her side. But for pledged delegates, Clinton and Sanders each have 51. The Sanders campaign must have faith that the superdelegates won’t broker the election in Clinton’s favor because they can’t afford to split the party if Sanders takes the popular vote. In fact, what we’re seeing is an eerie repeat of the 2008 Democratic nomination, in which President Obama took the popular vote despite Clinton’s position as the establishment favorite. And in that nomination process, Clinton did everything she could to disparage Obama’s message of hope and change, just like she is with Bernie right now.

Clinton claims that the United States is not a “single-issue country,” a jab at Bernie and his focus on income inequality and getting big money out of politics. But something that Clinton hasn’t mentioned is that income inequality is a seminal issue of many of the problems we face as a nation. When billionaires and their Super PACs influence politicians, the needs of the everyday Americans who voted for those politicians are not properly represented or addressed—instead, the needs of the party and its corporate donors are.

I have a friend who once told me that money is energy, and if that is true, then the billionaire class controls that energy. When that energy is controlled by a group of people who do not serve the best interests of everyday American people, then that “single issue” of income inequality becomes the bottleneck behind which all other important issues, even dire ones like climate change and our dependence on government-subsidized fossil fuels, are pent up and ignored. In that case, Bernie is right to be focusing on addressing income inequality and getting big money out of politics, and he is right to do so passionately, because creating more income equality and removing the influence big money in politics could allow our government to finally address the multitude of important issues that we face together as a nation. It is also our chance to end the Washington gridlock.

The trouble is that if Hillary Clinton knows this, then she doesn’t act like it is a problem. But Sanders’s message of addressing income inequality is his rallying cry to working class progressives, people that are pledging their votes to him, and he continues to gain in national polls. That is a direct threat to Clinton’s candidacy, yet her campaign and the established party leaders don’t act like it is. And an even bigger problem for the Democratic Party is that many Bernie supporters won’t vote for Clinton on principle. Her candidacy represents a continuance of a destructive and exclusive political culture, whereas Sanders represents a divergence toward an inclusive and empowering political culture.

That’s what Bernie supporters want to see, and that desire isn’t going to fade. It will only grow.

After the Nevada caucuses, it is clear that Bernie’s campaign isn’t going away anytime soon. In fact, in a Quinnipiac University poll released on February 18, Bernie Sanders was favored as the Democrat who can defeat any GOP candidate in November by up to 10 percentage points. Hillary either ties with or trails nearly all GOP candidates. Not only that, but Bernie was also favored as the candidate that has the most integrity, who is honest and trustworthy, and who cares the most about the issues that his constituents face. That kind of favorability cannot be ignored, and it tells me two things: Bernie best represents his voters and has the best chance to win in November. Isn’t that the best one can hope for in a Democratic candidate? Despite what headlines say about Bernie losing in Nevada and Hillary reclaiming the “front-runner” status, that poll sounds like a potential victory to me and many other supporters.

Like I said, it isn’t about one game. It’s about the whole season. And it’s important for Bernie supporters to gain momentum from this loss because like any good team, a close loss to our rival gives us the fire and grit to go back out there and win. Right now, Bernie field organizers across the country are mobilizing volunteers to Get Out The Vote on Super Tuesday next week, and several groups of Rhode Island volunteers are working hard to help Bernie get a win in Massachusetts. We plan to be there throughout the weekend up until Tuesday, making calls and knocking on doors.

I invite you to join us.


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