Gaming out a Community Strategy

There are a lot of folks talking about the next steps in a progressive political strategy going forward, beside the usual talk about who to vote for in the upcoming elections. Some folks who regularly inhabit the Evening Blues have put forward the idea that the time is ripe for a general community discussion about a community strategy for advancing the interests of the 99%. Outside of our community, there are lots of people and organizations thinking along the same lines.

Kshama Sawant recently made a compelling case for action:

We are entering what is possibly the most favorable moment in U.S. history to launch a new left party. Public trust is collapsing in both major parties, the establishment media, and all the key institutions propping up American capitalism. Eight years since the Great Recession, with most workers still suffering despite the recovery on Wall Street, all the built-up anger and discontent is expressing itself in a bitter revolt against establishment Democratic and Republican leaders. ...

Just a year ago, every self-respecting mainstream pundit was still peddling the myth that no candidate refusing corporate contributions could be electorally viable, much less a candidate calling themselves a socialist! That idea is now dead.

No one can deny the potential for building a nationally viable left political party, completely independent of corporate cash, putting forward unapologetically left, working class policies. The only remaining question is one of leadership: will Sanders take the initiative and, if not, will the forces behind him pull it together? ...

The stakes are simply too high to let this moment slip through our fingers. Capitalism is plunging humanity into a social and ecological catastrophe. Bernie’s campaign shows a viable fightback is possible. What’s missing is a strategy to sustain and grow our movement. Now is the time for bold action to build a fighting, working class political alternative – a party for the millions, not the millionaires.

Many folks on C99 currently seem to be a bit in limbo, waiting for a conclusive outcome of the Democratic primaries before really wanting to think about a strategy.

In this post, I'd like to offer folks an opportunity to think about all of the possible outcomes of the primaries and discuss strategies for dealing with all of the likely contingencies.

I'm not talking about how individuals will vote, but rather how we as a community that numbers in the thousands might work together to further the progressive agenda. It appears that progressives have some daunting organizational tasks ahead of them, replacing the Democratic party and finding means to supplant the mainstream media to get our message out. While we are not an enormous community, our numbers are not insubstantial and we are talented folks.

I've created this handy graphic to map the possible outcomes of the current cycle. If it is too small to read on your device, click on the graphic and you can look at it full-sized on flickr.

Likely outcomes of Sanders candidacy

It seems to me that no matter which of these predictable (see, I just predicted them) outcomes occurs, progressives need to organize and do so outside of any existing party structures:

We can’t kid ourselves and think that just because some presidential candidates promise to address an issue that it will come to pass. If Barack Obama’s election taught us anything, it is that placing our hopes and dreams in the hands of a charismatic leader is not enough to bring about significant social change; to do that, we need organized people in the streets. We need powerful social movements.

The main critique of Sanders, a constant drumbeat in the mainstream media, is that he won’t be able to accomplish what he proposes, that he’s all vision with no plan of how to get there. But this critique misses the point. People force change and get things done, not politicians acting alone.

Sanders won’t be able to push through any major policy initiatives without mass movements in the streets.

So what could a community like ours do to further that effort?

Start a party? Create a platform? Write a new constitution? Become a media platform? Mount a counter-convention? Something else?

The floor is yours...

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Comments

mimi's picture

of others. I get that.

How about Equality?

That would get me talking.

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Big Al's picture

we'll need like a Ten Commandment thing except instead of Moses we can get Gandhi and Mother Teresa. Thou shalt never wage war, thou shalt abolish rule by the rich, thou shalt have equality for all, except the rich fuckers that got us in this mess, they can sit in prison cells and stew for awhile.

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mimi's picture

are so "authoritarian" - what to do about that?

Just write the laws - off-the-grid of the legislative body in Congress - take the freedom to write your own laws, that hopefully reflect better what the C99p wants. Then you compete against the corporate lobbyists who have bought and written all the laws that don't give the 99% what they need. You know how everyone loves "competition". You run a campaign on the basis of your own written new laws and constitution and debate that one in public in a campaign of new party, whatever it will be called.

But write the damn laws first and then run with them with or without a party. A platform is not enough, almost meaningless. You need to write real strong laws, independently of any outside influence.

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Big Al's picture

what was I thinking?

The representative system of government is failing everywhere as the wealth inequality and the systems and entities that allow it continues to increase and consolidate power. It really does come down to freedom. Freedom and an equal voice. That's what we need to demand globally.

"The People of the Earth (except you bastards in the ruling class) demand freedom and an equal voice in all aspects of human life. No more rule by the rich, no more criminal enterprises by governments and corporations, an end to government controlled by money and power. If not, we will get pissed."

That should do it. We just get 2-3 billion signatures, take it to the United Nations and tell them their game is over and we're starting a new one.

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Bisbonian's picture

to ask some Native Americans how they managed, before we came and showed them the right way to do things.

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"I’m a human being, first and foremost, and as such I’m for whoever and whatever benefits humanity as a whole.” —Malcolm X

Haikukitty's picture

Freedom and Responsibility, though, is something.

Someone mentioned Native Americans in this comment thread, and taking a good long look at their Confederation and social organization would be a good idea.

Freedom should not trump everything. Otherwise, you have people dumping toxic waste and driving Hummers because FREEDOM.

There has to be a balance.

Which is why I like the Wiccan rede: If it harms none, do what you will.
Or the Native American idea that every decision/action must be considered for it's effects down to 7 generations.

Excessive freedom without responsibility just becomes Tea Party thuggishness.

Now, I have NO idea how to manage this. If we were a nation of adults, it wouldn't be necessary. But since we are largely a selfish, assholish society, I don't know how you manage to have freedom that doesn't get taken advantage of.

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joe shikspack's picture

it's not that i don't have a goal (i keep one in a velvet-lined box in a drawer upstairs) or that i am unwilling to share my goals with others, it's just that i'd like the community to coalesce around a goal or a set of them that are chosen collectively. the point of this exercise was to get people talking about goals and strategies and how we as a community might proceed.

in short, i was interested to see what would emerge as trends if i put a general call for ideas out there with a little bit of priming.

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Roger Fox's picture

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FDR 9-23-33, "If we cannot do this one way, we will do it another way. But do it we will.

hecate's picture

it has already failed.

No change in the structure of society can by itself effect a real improvement. Socialism used to be defined as "common ownership of the means of production," but it is now seen that if common ownership means no more than centralised control, it merely paves the way for a new form of oligarchy. Centralised control is a necessary pre-condition of Socialism, but it no more produces Socialism than my typewriter would have itself produce this article I am writing. Throughout history, one revolution after another—although usually producing a temporary relief, such as a sick man gets by turning over in bed—has simply led to a change of masters, because no serious effort has been made to eliminate the power instinct. In the minds of active revolutionaries, at any rate the ones who "got there," the longing for a just society has always been fatally mixed up with the intention to secure power for themselves.

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Big Al's picture

George Orwell.

"throughout history, one revolution after another—although usually producing a temporary relief, such as a sick man gets by turning over in bed—has simply led to a change of masters, because no serious effort has been made to eliminate the power instinct."

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janis b's picture

there is limited possibility of seriously 'eliminating the power instinct’. Relief is critical when in a terminal state, and possibility thrives in reinforcing the valiant over the fearful.

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Haikukitty's picture

There will always be a need for leadership, but there can be a more diffused system of power, a system that works in a community format vs. a competitive one.

Native American tribal councils are an example. Although they were the leadership of their tribe, they operated collectively. They also had to answer to the people and to each other.

I think it is possible, but it probably requires working smaller. Smaller regions with a leading council and each region has absolute say over its own area, and then representatives come together for regional or national issues. I know - sounds a lot like the idea for the American Experiment. It's a pretty good idea - it's just been warped beyond all recognition.

Partly because its grown too big, and we don't have the ability to choose the right representatives.

I think the representatives each level up should be chosen by the level below it. So, you have a community or neighborhood group chosen by the community. That group then chooses one person to go to the county council. That county council chooses one person to go to the state council, and the state council chooses someone to go to a regional council.

I also think we need a co-presidency or a group of three or something instead of a single president. Our entire system is built on competition, instead of community.

While ideally, at some magical date in the future, I'd love to see a completely decentralized system, I just don't think it's realistic in the world as it is today.

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janis b's picture

Building a community at the local level, that has representation politically, is the ideal. I know that it's not a realistic comparison, but the Green Party in New Zealand has always had co-leadership, and it serves the community well and has reasonable representation in Parliament.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Green_Party_of_Aotearoa_New_Zealand

Ultimately, I think it matters most how we relate to those who we are closest to. There, I think is the power to transform.

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Cant Stop the Macedonian Signal's picture

the Bernie movement has demonstrated to fund, and network, reliable independent media.

The worm in the apple is that word "reliable." Infiltration and lying are rife, and some people are even worried that Cenk Uygur is 2016's version of Markos.

I think knowing people IRL is very helpful in this regard, but obviously that can't always happen. Perhaps there should be rules one has to abide by in order to get funds. But I'm getting ahead of myself.

My main point is: if we can raise 20 to nearly 50 million bucks in a month for Bernie, why can't we raise 5 to 10 million bucks a month to support an organized, networked, indie media?

(protecting the net obviously is also a concern here)

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"More for Gore or the son of a drug lord--None of the above, fuck it, cut the cord."
--Zack de la Rocha

"I tell you I'll have nothing to do with the place...The roof of that hall is made of bones."
-- Fiver

joe shikspack's picture

i'd like to do that, too.

assuming that the net can be protected, one way to avoid corruption of a single media source is to have lots of media sources, rather than an all-eggs-in-one-basket kind of system. the corruption of public broadcast has been terribly disappointing.

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Cant Stop the Macedonian Signal's picture

people's many small (and not-so-small) projects rather than trying to replace them. What they need is to be networked, and infused with resources.

This, of course, has the caveats of protecting the Net and somehow vetting people or having a standard.
Access to the network and funds perhaps dependent on meeting certain standards? Which means there will need to be moderators or monitors. Otherwise, I suspect the various places will be infiltrated and rendered useless. TOP is a cautionary tale as well as a rotten experience.

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"More for Gore or the son of a drug lord--None of the above, fuck it, cut the cord."
--Zack de la Rocha

"I tell you I'll have nothing to do with the place...The roof of that hall is made of bones."
-- Fiver

joe shikspack's picture

on the theory that it would be harder to corrupt a largish group of people than a single media outlet, perhaps if we could create a rating system that tracks both how many people follow a given network affiliate and allow individuals to flag content that is questionable, that would help.

it would probably also be good to have some sort of regular process of review for each network affiliate.

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Bisbonian's picture

Seems that Ebay started that sort of thing...over the years it has gotten very inflated, and meaningless. Or prone to abuse, like Yelp.

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"I’m a human being, first and foremost, and as such I’m for whoever and whatever benefits humanity as a whole.” —Malcolm X

Cant Stop the Macedonian Signal's picture

to get both intentional community/sustainable community/permaculture folks AND the security state whistleblowers involved. We need people who understand how to form communities and how to find non-mainstream ways to acquire necessary resources for living--and we need Sec State whistleblowers because it's the Sec State that is protecting these horrendous sociopaths who apparently don't care if they get most of us killed in their pursuit of profit.

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"More for Gore or the son of a drug lord--None of the above, fuck it, cut the cord."
--Zack de la Rocha

"I tell you I'll have nothing to do with the place...The roof of that hall is made of bones."
-- Fiver

Cant Stop the Macedonian Signal's picture

Also, I think we should give transformative economics a whirl. Worker-owned co-ops, alternative finance, etc.

What I really want is an IRL convention/conference to address all these issues, w/a section on sustainability, one on communications/media, one on how to counter establishment attempts to destroy what we build, one on alternative econ & finance, one on community building and maintenance, one on the Net.

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"More for Gore or the son of a drug lord--None of the above, fuck it, cut the cord."
--Zack de la Rocha

"I tell you I'll have nothing to do with the place...The roof of that hall is made of bones."
-- Fiver

joe shikspack's picture

i'd like to see the development of lots of "off grid" initiatives. the more that we can make corrupt government and corporate structures irrelevant, the easier it is to rid ourselves of them.

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GreyWolf's picture

Nice diary Joe; and throughout this comment thread I see many great thoughts and ideas and signs of hope, but I decided to reply here because of Lookout's comment.

I can't even blurt out all that I want to say ...

Capitalism is exploitive, hierarchical, and alienates humans, and structurally takes the efforts of workers and monetizes it for their owners. (Owners coerce humans to be workers, as being a wage slave is the lesser of two evils than dying. Wages are what turns humans into labor. Labor and capital both contribute to a biz but all profit goes to capital (owners).

I recall an article about how all parts of law are based on the same concepts, yet they all try to act separate. There's different classes for Family Law, and Tort Law and Constitutional Law, etc, yet all contain fraud ... People talk about politics as if it's separate from economics or media (yet all contain fraud). I remember back in undergrad reading Robert McChesney's the Big Ten Eight Six about corporate media consolidation controlling our range of discussion.

I mentioned here, among comments, that, while it was a nice picture, I was not encouraged by the photo of a person clinging to a piece of flotsam. A user said it was a Rorschach test and strongly implied that only a worthless slimeball like me would see that as representing hopelessness. I said, maybe we could use something that reflected lively, free and open debate. gillray-thelwall.jpg

During the "Ides of March" I was most offended by the authoritarian "This is my site" attitude. I long for democracy; at work, in politics, in the media. I've seen many people comment that this is "our" site. I longed to blurt out that I would like to see it become a co-operative, but knew it would be meet with harsh criticism that I was trying to usurp the powers of the owners.

I have long supported worker ownership at my website Equitable Principles and want to grow it into a biz that helps workers start their own business or buy out the owner where they are now. I actually wanted to approach investors and start a chain of food establishments that would each be employee-owned and reflect local cuisine and customs. I approached Democracy at Work, and Project Equity and others, and explained my ultimate goal was to create a group to approach a benevolent billionaire like Todd Wagner but was always told "we're a research organization and we don't [want to] actually create co-ops.

So I started a BBQ biz, Carolina Smoked, with the goal of being a co-op if I can grow it large enough.

I am obsessed with helping people gain control of their lives, but seldom find support here in the "land of the free". Everybody has internalized the structure, economically, politically, culturally, of "get in line and do what you're told." And I am convinced that people can't look beyond the gruel they are served by the MSM.

So I went out and started another website, Indie Media Hub, wanting to create some sort of media co-op ...

I often get the feeling that people like the intimate setting here, as do I. But threading together all the independent voices, from TYT to Common Dreams to Down With Tyranny, still seems like a worthy goal. Man this comment is long and garbled and I'm feeling blue today and am confident this comment will not achieve what I want to achieve.

That sentence reminds me of: I remember as an Editor-in-Chief of a weekly newspaper advising advertising sales staff not to use the word "hope" because it is very negative. I would say: Never say "i hope we can do business" (because the parenthetical left in a person's mind is "... but we probably won't.") Aways say, "I am confident we can do business together."

Basically, I offer the domain www.indiemediahub.com as a possible media co-op project.

I think using this place as a base camp to create a media co-op to rival Kos Media, LLC, would be a long-term way to create a visible progressive voice.

That's it.

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Cant Stop the Macedonian Signal's picture

As I want to network all those indie media sites together too.
Some may be too protective of their turf to do it. You never can tell.

As for the person clinging to the board in the ocean--as I said, it would be fine with me if we switched images. Others feel attached to the lifeboat image because it's part of their history of this place, but there's no consensus on that issue, AFAIK.
You are welcome to do a diary and we can all discuss it.

Here's the one problem I can see with radical openness/hospitality/cooperative work: it's extraordinarily vulnerable to bad-faith actors infiltrating it, and we currently have no answer to that problem, even in the ways we're currently working, which are not nearly as open Trolling is more than a frivolous piece of mischief--its roots go back to the espionage tactics from the 2nd World War, and if it's hard to counter in real life, it's extraordinarily hard to counter in a digital environment, where anybody can be anything (nobody knows you're a dog on the Internet), sockpuppetry abides, people can re-establish themselves under other accounts, etc. Occupy had exactly this problem.

I don't have the answers to this, but I think we need to come together to look for them. Joe Shikspack had a book that he said was helpful on that subject, I'm now remembering from a long-ago night when we had them over to our house in Silver Spring.

Anyway, I very much like your ideas. If we're going to actually do anything with any of the ideas in these comments, we'll need to continue this discussion later w/an eye toward resources--what will it take to actually do what we want to do, and do we have the time, energy, etc., to do it? Who will do the work, etc.

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"More for Gore or the son of a drug lord--None of the above, fuck it, cut the cord."
--Zack de la Rocha

"I tell you I'll have nothing to do with the place...The roof of that hall is made of bones."
-- Fiver

Cant Stop the Macedonian Signal's picture

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"More for Gore or the son of a drug lord--None of the above, fuck it, cut the cord."
--Zack de la Rocha

"I tell you I'll have nothing to do with the place...The roof of that hall is made of bones."
-- Fiver

Lookout's picture

GreyWolf,
I think we may see the world a little differently than most c99ers. Life among the under educated here in the South crystallizes for us how uninformed people are.

For those of you from more enlightened areas let me remind you of the area where I live. A hundred mile north is Dayton TN, home of the scopes trail arguing against teaching evolution. Thirty miles north is Scotsboro Ala where six young men were hung for being black. Forty miles south is Anniston Al where a bus full of people was burned because whites and black dared to ride together. Hell, the whole scam of the confederacy involved poor working people going to fight for the 1% slave and plantation owners. And they are still conned with notions of "southern pride".

I'm not complaining. There are trade offs with everything. I made the decision to live here. Land was/is inexpensive, the climate mild, incredible biodiversity, but the people are poorly educated. That is why I focus on media...mass education. It is what cries to me when I talk with locals. Mayberry has many advantages, but being politically aware isn't one of them.

So GW, I hope we can do business and promote (if not create) media aimed at informing and educating. Thanks for your thoughts and domain offer! I will help.

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

GreyWolf's picture

OK

And just to clarify, when I said 'this place' I meant here, at C99, as base camp to build a co-op there, at indiemediahub

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Cant Stop the Macedonian Signal's picture

You might want to check it out.

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"More for Gore or the son of a drug lord--None of the above, fuck it, cut the cord."
--Zack de la Rocha

"I tell you I'll have nothing to do with the place...The roof of that hall is made of bones."
-- Fiver

GreyWolf's picture

"afternoon lookout..." in reply to Lookout's comment My thought is media and right above Big Al's Goal? What's the goal or goals?, or actually his follow-up comment i.e, do we want democracy or not. which I meant to reference, referencing, like fields of law being intertwined, that democracy at work is almost a prerequisite to democracy in society.

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Bisbonian's picture

Then their power just evaporates.

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"I’m a human being, first and foremost, and as such I’m for whoever and whatever benefits humanity as a whole.” —Malcolm X

mouselander's picture

I have no doubt whatever that a massive number of people will be inspired to continue agitating for the kind of policy positions and the kind of structural changes that Sanders has been promoting, regardless of the ultimate outcome of his presidential campaign. The genie is out of the bottle now, and the Democratic establishment, represented by people like HRC, Wasserman-Schultz, Boxer, Reid, Schumer, et al have vividly demonstrated the limitations of attempting to work within the confines of existing structures.

To my mind, the most promising efforts I've read about so far are the BrandNewCongress organization, along with the newly formed United Progressive Party. What's most important is perseverance and unity of purpose. The Left must organize, coordinate, and get on the same page to a far greater extent than has occurred within recent memory. To quote the old union poem, Step By Step:

Step by step the longest march
Can be won can be won
Many stones can form an arch
Singly none singly none
And by union what we will
Can be accomplished still
Drops of water turn a mill
Singly none singly none

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inactive account

joe shikspack's picture

it's clear that bernie's ideas are not going to fade away. it's also pretty likely that the corrupt dnc establishment will not fade away either, nor will their voter roll purges, rigged caucuses or rigged contests.

the people fighting for a progressive agenda will be fighting the dems one way or another, either from inside the party or outside - or maybe both.

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jamess's picture

the anti-corporate "forces" -- still untapped -- of

The Berners
The Occupiers
The Black-Lives-Matter
The run-o-mill Progressives
The like-minded, worker-oriented Independents

All these citizens are looking for Something to Vote For.

If we were smart, would give it to them -- and Issued-oriented platform that Puts People First.

I keep going back to this Progressive Change Institute survey -- the one the Media conveniently ignores:


larger

Whoever can tap that strong yearning for real change,
has just captured lightening in a bottle.

Maybe these millennials will get there first.
Maybe some data crunching polling outfit.

Maybe some bloggers and activists wanting real change.
From the ALEC-driven, SuperPAC-fueled PTB.

Maybe the corporate-sellout Dems will come to their senses,
and one day pick up the banner that Bernie has brung?

And return to the reason, they got involved in politics in the first place:

'To Actually Help Other People.'

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jamess's picture

I meant to include "The Greens" too

in that 'Essential Voices' list above.

Assuming they'd be interested.

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joe shikspack's picture

it's a measure of how corrupt the system is that the major parties will not run candidates that espouse the things that the people want and are able to place systemic barriers to those candidates that will.

so far lightning in a bottle has not been enough to get people elected.

one thing that ought to draw a lot of people into an outsider movement is a strong anti-corruption, pro-democracy platform.

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Haikukitty's picture

There are plenty of people who either support the Rs becaquse they believe it will help them economically (which it doesn't) or because of the misguided belief that they are the party of FREEDOM - they aren't.

I think we could pull people from the right too by focusing on Income inequality, tax code fairness, and communicating it as FAIRNESS - not taxing the rich - which implies we are punishing them, but simply being fair - in the biblical sense of II Conrinthians 8:13: "I do not mean that others should be eased and you burdened, but that as a matter of fairness your abundance at the present time should supply their need, so that their abundance may supply your need, that there may be fairness." (I had to go to some chruchy building dedication yesterday with my RWNJ mother - and this verse was used and struck me as interesting).

My point being, if we use our words wisely, and don't fall into the trap of repeating words that have been politicized as either of the left or the right, we will find much more common ground then we expect.

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IowanX's picture

Leadership from the bottom is the solution, IMO, but it is very hard to do. The R's did it starting under Reagan, by finding and running candidates--many motivated by religious beliefs that the R's pretended to agree with--for city councils, school boards, and statehouse races, and now look at their numbers. Those numbers created gerrymandered districts and voter suppression laws, and unlimited corporate funding. So cleaning up the D mess would require Sanders to lead for a bit in cleaning up the D's (if indeed it can be done). The will of the people, and indeed funding power is there. I don't give money to the party at all, anymore--I donate to candidates. I'd happily donate to a People's PAC if it was doing the right things.

The problems with third parties appear to me to be insurmountable--especially due to the Electoral College rules. In a 3 way race, where neither a D nor an R wins a majority of electoral votes, the election goes to the House--where each state gets one vote, and 26 votes wins. In that case, the Senate picks the VP (not necessarily the running mate)where each Senator gets one vote. This system is crazy, but it's the one we have, and for that reason, Bernie was wise to run as a Democrat. Now, if he loses the nomination, I'd be all for a Green Party run, and I honestly think he'd win it. As for who would eventually be President, no one can guess. But it would "start the conversation" about our political process and our election rules in a big way...which is what your are thinking about in your post. Thanks for writing it.

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joe shikspack's picture

your comment points out that the system cannot operate in the interests of the people until free and fair elections can be the norm.

even after that is the case however, there are constitutional obstacles remaining to the process. this is why it is imperative that whatever else we do, we create a movement that can pressure the government from the outside and find means other than electoral remedies to compel them to act in the interests of the 99%.

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Phoebe Loosinhouse's picture

within is just Sisyphus pushing to same rock uphill over and over.

I'm for a new party or a merger/influx with any existing simpatico groups in existence right now. Contrary to Occupy, I think leaders and leadership and structure is important, but I believe loyalty should be directed to the platform, agenda and goals as opposed to specific people.

My vision of a new kind of politics would be candidates who agree to term limit themselves to two terms to avoid the kind of entrenchment, entitlement and self-serving that becomes endemic with a power structure largely dependent on seniority. The candidates and Party would follow the Bernie model of funding from small donor independent voters ONLY and once in office the candidates would adhere as much as is humanly possible to eschewing any lobbyist and corporate influence that outweighs or is contrary to the common good of the unconnected and non-influential masses of the citizenry.

My next sentence is a joke but if I thought it was possible . . . . I would ask them to wear body cams and post the footage nightly and to live in a dorm with a communal kitchen. I guess I'm envisioning kind of a political kibbutz of do-gooder lefties who serve their time and then get the hell out. The agenda and platform mutates and changes according to the demands of the economy and the climate and national security as time goes on but the underlying premise would be protecting and enhancing FDR's Four Freedoms and to provide guarantees of healthcare, food, education and shelter to all Americans as well as to uphold, protect and strengthen civil liberties and voting rights. We would also have to all wear sensible shoes.

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" “Human kindness has never weakened the stamina or softened the fiber of a free people. A nation does not have to be cruel to be tough.” FDR "

Cant Stop the Macedonian Signal's picture

for the past 25 years. Older people tell me it's actually more like 45 years or more.

No matter how hard the challenge of going outside Dems is, no matter how "insurmountable" it seems, what's the point of continuing to do the same thing over and over and hoping for a different result?

I'm with Bernie b/c 1)he's being honest, and 2)a people's movement has coalesced around him.

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"More for Gore or the son of a drug lord--None of the above, fuck it, cut the cord."
--Zack de la Rocha

"I tell you I'll have nothing to do with the place...The roof of that hall is made of bones."
-- Fiver

Cant Stop the Macedonian Signal's picture

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"More for Gore or the son of a drug lord--None of the above, fuck it, cut the cord."
--Zack de la Rocha

"I tell you I'll have nothing to do with the place...The roof of that hall is made of bones."
-- Fiver

joe shikspack's picture

i've been done with the dems as an institution since bill clinton was elected. i am hoping that this time around, enough other people will be done with the party, too, that we can finally send the party off to join the whigs.

there is a lot of hunger for a whole different kind of politics and politicians, less the professional pols and more the citizen-politician type. i hope that we can make something of it when the system is in flux.

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Wink's picture

yeah, yeah, the asshat is as RW as it gets - and Then Some - but his Amway model would work Most Excellently in growing the progressive movement. His model was simple. Approach a 98.6 (friend, stranger, somebody), hit hime with the line (would you like to make more money?), or in our case, "are you sick'n'tired of the same ol' politics?" , drag them to a local Meetup. Rinse, Repeat. Hold Quarterly Meetups in the bigger cities for all the local Meetups within 50 miles. Hold two annual Meetup like Netroots Nation, one East of the Mississip, the other West of the Mississip. Rinse, repeat. Game over. In 4-5 years we've got more progressive candidates than seats for them.

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the little things you can do are more valuable than the giant things you can't! - @thanatokephaloides. On Twitter @wink1radio. (-2.1) All about building progressive media.

joe shikspack's picture

there might be ways to modify that plan to fit the internet generation. creating a twitter /facebook campaign or leafleting at colleges to send people to a progressive website with local nodes to facilitate meetups might work to get the ball rolling.

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Wink's picture

The hardest part is getting a local Meetup started. But, if only two show up (including me) that's two more than we had last month. Gotta start somewhere. The thing is to just get started and keep going. This is the best time to start. People (voters) are pissed and are looking for something different. No reason that we can't provide the alternative.
Local Meetups can be held in pubs and bars owned by progressives or Dems. Drinking Liberally probably has such a venue near you. If not, ask one of your favorite hangouts owners if they would host a Drinking Liberally event once a month. Also might be easier to build from the top down, holding monthly Meetups in bigger cities, where people can find other people where they live to start Meetups in their town. The thing is, to build a movement people need to meet face to face, not just online. Online is a great tool, but it does not build a movement by itself.

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the little things you can do are more valuable than the giant things you can't! - @thanatokephaloides. On Twitter @wink1radio. (-2.1) All about building progressive media.

jobu's picture

Let your local congress-critter who has helped rig the primary process for HRC know that you are going to stay home in the Presidential AND their Congressional race. Do it NOW.

If we do this calmly and coolly and collectively they will start to flip out.

For example, Elizabeth Esty runs in a purple district (CT-5). She has been a Centrist New Dem her entire career. Time to let her know that she's on her own in terms of progressives. Put the heat on her and those like her. Also, call safe-seat Dems like Rosa DeLauro (who leads the effort against TPP yet ardently supports HRC) and let her know the same.

Call it Reverse Triangulation, a game of Democratic Party Chicken or whatever. They have been doing it to us for 30 years now. Time for us to return the favor.

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joe shikspack's picture

a postcard campaign could make for some interesting fun. also, if you live in a state with closed primaries, contacting your state reps to ask them to file legislation to open the primaries would be a good move.

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I can't think of anything more key than money in politics and, relatedly, climate change. If we start with the most important message and keep it simple, we'll be able to rally people from all political backgrounds.

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Beware the bullshit factories.

Cant Stop the Macedonian Signal's picture

Depending on who "we" is.
If "we" is only on the left, then we need a different strategy than if we are trying to mobilize a general people's anti-corruption campaign.

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"More for Gore or the son of a drug lord--None of the above, fuck it, cut the cord."
--Zack de la Rocha

"I tell you I'll have nothing to do with the place...The roof of that hall is made of bones."
-- Fiver

Whether they're aware of it or not. I think most people here feel that there are important social issues like single-payer healthcare and reforming the criminal justice system, but we don't solve those problems until we solve the corruption problem. Same goes with climate change which creates a huge time pressure on us.

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Beware the bullshit factories.

Haikukitty's picture

Corruption in politics is probably the number 1 issue (even though the climate is the number 1 issue) because we can't realistically begin to address climate change while we have so much corruption.

Getting money and corporations out of politics could be a rallying point for Americans across the entire political spectrum.

If we stayed away from hot-button issues at the start, we could bring in a huge number of people. And honestly, if we were able to reduce corruption, start addressing income inequality, and fix our education system, we would probably fix those polarizing issues as well, as lack of critical thinking skills, lack of education and a lack of exposure to a diversity of beliefs tends to cause people to want to impose their own beliefs on others (i.e. abortion rights and LGBT issues).

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Beware the bullshit factories.

There is just no way that I see Sanders running as an independent. He's said as much repeatedly.

I think his reasoning, much like Warren's in remaining neutral, is that he can exert more influence from the inside the Democratic caucus than outside of it.

He is involved in party primaries and trying to assist Dems downballot who share his vision. As he's shown with the endorsement of Tim Canova, he's willing to do that, even if it antagonizes party leadership.

The outside pressure is going to have to come from people self-organizing. This is another element of what he's been saying: the resilience of a movement doesn't come from leaders telling people what to do, it comes from people getting engaged and involved and doing working with others to pursue a common goal. We've already seen this with efforts like the Brand New Congress.

Part of the goal with Brand New Congress isn't just to pressure the Democratic Party from the left, but to do the exact same thing to Republicans in safe seats. Additionally, the group doesn't rule out supporting third parties.

The Working Families Party may also offer a viable strategy, which is to make alliances selectively on a case by case basis.

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joe shikspack's picture

i don't expect sanders to run indie, either, but i presume that there is a set of circumstances under which that could occur, so i decided to include it.

the working families party is probably better on paper than in reality. they really pissed me off when they endorsed dem party hack andrew cuomo over progressive anti-corruption activist zephyr teachout in new york. it gave me the sense that they are really not the progressives that they make themselves out to be.

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riverlover's picture

and I believe the leadership knows this and will not be so trusting again. I do not know if they have rescinded their endorsement of Sanders for POTUS candidate or would keep his name on that line in Nov.

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Hey! my dear friends or soon-to-be's, JtC could use the donations to keep this site functioning for those of us who can still see the life preserver or flotsam in the water.

Gerrit's picture

2 bits. I wrote a post on it earlier this past week:
http://caucus99percent.com/content/progressive-way-ahead-edited-c99-link

The way ahead is two-fold.

1. Mass nonviolent resistance in the streets
First, Bernie needs your support, not only in the usual logistics, but with mass nonviolent resistance in the streets. As is clear, he's running against a corrupted, Nixonian opponent within the matrix of the fascist takeover of America. We must make them obey democratic rules by pressuring them in the streets.

You folks need to take out your red, white, and blues, put on your comfy shoes and a jaunty hat and pretend its the 60s again. You need to physically meet with the Bernie youth of your neighbourhood and together get out into the street.
And you need to learn how to do mass NVR in the streets. Think carnival, people. No reason the Brazilians should have all the fun. Show some wrinkly skin; live a little :=)
Practice now and create a helluva party outside the Dem and GOP conventions. Treat them equally. For they are the same, eh.
Take that learning and continue in the streets until Nov 4.
Then we see where we are.

2. Found a new left political party
Second, you need a new political home. That's the one c99 could help found.
Organize meet-ups like DMW and the Portland folks did recently.
Make sure that the Bernie youth in your local community attend.
Have a beer. Or two. Found a party. Well, a draft resolution calling for one.
Use joe's platform as a discussion starter.
Don't worry about the technical details. Later expertise can work on that. Nerds need work!

Post the resolution here on c99. Collate all the meet-ups and their resolutions.
Turn c99 into a cauldron of political creativity.
Connect with other progressive groups.
Connect with youth everywhere: we need a ratio of one wrinkly old hippie to 10 Bernie youth of whatever colour hair.

Next thing you know, you've done it :=)
The most difficult step is the first step. Unless you take that first step, nothing happens. When you take that first step, everything flows from it. The first step is towards connecting wrinkly wise hippies with energetic enthusiastic youth. Without the youth on board, nothing happens. Remember this: it's not about us, it's all about the youth.

Just do it. Best wishes,

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Resilience: practical action to improve things we can control.
3D+: developing language for postmodern spirituality.

joe shikspack's picture

thanks for your input! let me know when you're coming for that beer. Smile

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Gerrit's picture

time today to post this. I think it will jump start a whole lot of good things all over c99.

BTW, something I notice in the comments. My take is that if you start a new left party, do so with not a single current Dem pol. Not one of them. Clean slate, fresh start, young blood, every cliche in the book :=) Your platform says it well: a party for and by nobodies. Think of the new left parties in Europe: the Pirate Party, the Italian Beppo's party, etc. Nobodies are sweeping the European left.

Not a single current Dem.

TY and enjoy your evening, mate,

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Resilience: practical action to improve things we can control.
3D+: developing language for postmodern spirituality.

mimi's picture

movements into one big one, sit down, unite and write a new constitution. Make sure you throw out your electoral college and the Federal Reserve in its current set-up. At the same time build the platform as a basis of a new party. Publicly financed elections, publicly owned media platforms, public health care insurance and providers, public tuition free education up til PhD level. Public banking system.

Oh, well, I don't understand anything. Just do the right thing. Please. It would be such a relief for millions of people. Smile

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joe shikspack's picture

good ideas!

heh, on the other hand, if you got all of the left, independent, progressive, alternative, socialist movements into one place it would be a pretty amazing thing. they're a fractious bunch. Smile

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mimi's picture

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This may even deserve an essay of its own. But what we need to do first is cut off the 1%ers from the politicians. Doing that is actually quite simple and WE CAN DO IT.

Here's an excerpt from an article from 2014:

We know that money corrupting politics is a national problem, but we also know that real reform isn’t going anywhere in Washington any time soon. If we want to break through at the national level, we have to start by building momentum at the state and local level just like marijuana and marriage equality advocates have done: by redrawing the national political map with smart local wins. In the early 90s, barely 20% of the public supported legalizing marijuana. Now, legalization is favored by a majority of Americans.

The big difference between money in politics and pot legalization is that support for anti-corruption reform is starting out with much stronger public support. The laws we need to pass are already wildly popular: our polling for a hypothetical state ballot initiative in Montana showed an astronomical 85% of the public in favor, with support amongst Republican and Democratic voters nearly identical. Get these laws on the ballot, and they win.

And it doesn’t require amending the constitution. One of the biggest misconceptions out there that the only way to change anything is by overturning Supreme Court rulings like Citizens United and McCutcheon. But those rulings only affect certain aspects of a very complicated problem. There’s a whole slew of laws we could pass tomorrow that are 100% constitutional, even with the current supreme court. Everything from lobbying to disclosure to ethics, enforcement, and citizen funding.

There are over 23,000 municipalities in 44 states where we can we can bypass entrenched local legislatures and city councils, and put tough new anti-corruption laws on the ballot right now.

How do you run a marathon? One step at a time.

We start, city by city, getting initiatives passed to get money out of the political arena. Just like marijuana and same sex have succeeded, so will this. We should start in the strongly progressive states. Win our base back. Think of it as doing the opposite of the Democratic primaries and start with the west coast, then finish in the southeast. Get Washington state, Oregon and California major cities invested in anticorruption initiatives. Start where the wins should come easiest so that we quickly build up steam. Then it becomes a movement.

We need to organize. Self identify. Brand ourselves and have success. We need to pick our fights and choose our battlefields. This is a fight we can win and those are the battlefields we should open our campaign on.

Join https://represent.us/

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lhe286ky-9A]

It doesn't take much to imagine what a Congress full of Bernie Sanders could accomplish. You want to make that happen? Sign up and volunteer. Do more than just talk about change, MAKE CHANGE HAPPEN. I did. I hope you do too.

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LeChienHarry's picture

potential sub headings like the Resilience Project?

Call it, uh, The Way Forward. or, New Politics, or, Independence.....ideas?

Subs are starting to write themselves. Some would almost be gaming like Joe's graphic.

- Platform (s)
- Reform of the three branches...Executive, Legislative, Judicial
- Environment
- Monetary Policy
- International Relations (sub of the Executive, but should be included in legislative)
- Ideas?

There would be a stack or 30,000 foot level down to granular:

Goals--->Objectives--->Strategies--->Tactics...for each one

How does stuff get done? Or what are the rungs of the ladder (s)?

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You may choose to look the other way, but you can never say again you did not know. ~ William Wiberforce

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Gerrit's picture

If you're game to start the initial group (even if you don't want to run it), just ask JtC to create the group for you in the right-side column. Best wishes, mate, I hope to see a new group up soon. Cheers,

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Resilience: practical action to improve things we can control.
3D+: developing language for postmodern spirituality.

LeChienHarry's picture

There are only a few over there, so I assume it's pretty valuable or sacred space. I know, if a person comes up with an idea, be ready to own it, heh.

Let's see how this develops. I would add the reddit/kossacks_for_sanders and the other Sander's groups. Eventually all that energy will either dissipate or hopefully, like electrical magnetic energy, seek another route to run. We all need a place to coalesce and to put our energies. I notice when the cork is pulled, creativity abounds. It is marvelous.

All those handmade signs, are so much better than the pre-printed ones. And the themes and memes. Wow.

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You may choose to look the other way, but you can never say again you did not know. ~ William Wiberforce

If you can donate, please! POP Money is available for bank-to-bank transfers. Email JtC to make a monthly donation.

let me know. To PM me you need to go to your messages page and type my username into the "To" field, clicking on my username wont do it.

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Big Al's picture

flavor to whatever is done. I'd hate to see those issues treated like the Democratic party treats them. We are the verge of WWIII if not already in it, if the progressive communities are as progressive as they think they it can't be ignored any longer.

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joe shikspack's picture

there can be no progress made economically or environmentally for the 99% without ending imperialism and the war machine.

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Alex Ocana's picture

The Bolivia experience is that what is needed is constant, long-term massive protests around one or two big issues that unites the entire country behind a new agenda. In Bolivia it started when they privatized water (and everything else, but water was key) and later tried to sell natural gas to our "archenemy" neighboring Chile. We had a small party MAS led by Evo Morales with one seat in Congress. The neo-liberal parties voted to not allow him to take his seat. Meanwhile the country was essentially bankrupt and considered a "failed-state".

The demonstrations were fairly constant but not on a national scale until one day the neo-liberal government started shooting up a bunch of unarmed, rock-throwing protesters in an indigenous town. It was so sad, because they shot dead a little girl, 9 year old Marlene Rojas, bless her wherever she is, while she went to look out her window to tell her sick mother. They also shot a teenager as he was running away trying to get into his school, and three adults.

After Marlene was murdered, the entire country went on strike with massive road blockades and a siege of the capital, La Paz, which lasted a month or so. You have to understand that our protests are massive and supported by ALL members of many large unions, including the indigenous subsistence farmers. Nothing at all was allowed into the capital, and nothing moved on the roads except strikers and indigenous farmers. We defended each barricade with stones (like the people in the West Bank) and did things like taking old railroad cars and tossing them off bridges to block the roads. Everything was word organized by word of mouth and in indigenous and union meetings.

The US Embassy convinced the President, Gonzalo Sanchez de Lozada, to break the blockade of the city using armed military, and over a few days some 60 people, all on our side, were killed and hundreds injured. I should tell you La Paz is mostly very steep and we controlled the higher slopes ringing the city and our only weapons was stones, and rolling boulders down (in rural areas) on military troops along the roads below.

That was the end of the government. The Mining Union, a couple hundred thousand strong marched from their mines towards La Paz. In Bolivia you DO NOT fuck with the miners, they are ready to die. When the miners arrived the headed a march into the city with hundreds of thousands in unions and individuals of all sorts. The President and his neo-liberal rip-off artists, with help from the US Embassy, stripped the national treasury of cash, were helicoptered out to the airport and flew out to Miami.

The Vice President was this academic historian who was more or less cuddly and of no particular political persuasion agreed to demands to a referendum on nationalizing the hydrocarbon resources, to call a new Constitutional Convention and an election in one years time.

The process afterwards is a very long tale, but afterwards we won the election with Evo Morales, nationalized our resources, and passed a new Constitution with the support of about 65% of Bolivian people. Non-violent marches were, and still are, almost a constant, daily part of the democratic process. One thing though, we have a union for everybody and every type of social and economic aggregation.

My guess is that the next time a Katrina rolls into a place like Miami or South Carolina and destroys the mostly Black and Brown sections of town, that climate change, along with institutionalized racism and wealth redistribution could very well be flash points uniting a great majority in the USA.

Workers unions are only one type of union. Neighborhood Unions and rural "sindicates", and other groups like anti-war, women, anti-corruption, LGBT, environmental et al are all part of the umbrella.

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From the Light House.

Gerrit's picture

Bolivia and I am glad you bring us these valuable teachings from the Bolivian experience. Best wishes,

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Resilience: practical action to improve things we can control.
3D+: developing language for postmodern spirituality.

joe shikspack's picture

thanks for your ideas.

i am wondering if perhaps bolivia's working class has fewer divisions than the us does and that the general welfare of most citizens is pretty much the same. one of the challenges of organizing mass movements in the us is the way that the middle and working classes have been so extensively divided and conquered.

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Cant Stop the Macedonian Signal's picture

I'd be willing to be they're less isolated and dependent on mass media to tell them what's going on w/their fellow citizens than we are. A horrible assault on community has taken place in the last 40 years in this country.

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"More for Gore or the son of a drug lord--None of the above, fuck it, cut the cord."
--Zack de la Rocha

"I tell you I'll have nothing to do with the place...The roof of that hall is made of bones."
-- Fiver

Bisbonian's picture

I like the idea of manning the heights with rocks, too. Well, I live in a mountain town...

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"I’m a human being, first and foremost, and as such I’m for whoever and whatever benefits humanity as a whole.” —Malcolm X

Gerrit's picture

masada10.jpg

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Resilience: practical action to improve things we can control.
3D+: developing language for postmodern spirituality.

Bisbonian's picture

in that one. But they lasted a long time.

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"I’m a human being, first and foremost, and as such I’m for whoever and whatever benefits humanity as a whole.” —Malcolm X

Can you imagine what Amy Goodman could do with Democracy Now if people started to fund it with this kind of money. You can't find a smarter journalist with more integrity than Amy. We don't need to reinvent the wheel, when we have a great one already. We just need to fund her. Who can talk with her? That would be a great start.

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Lookout's picture

I think Amy is the best journalist out there. (Juan and the others are good too) I donate and encourage those who can afford it to do the same:
http://www.democracynow.org/

Democracy Now!
207 W 25th St. Floor 11
NY, NY 10001

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

Cant Stop the Macedonian Signal's picture

I love Amy, and she's done amazing work. But you don't want to localize all your strength into one spot. Otherwise that spot will take a hell of a shelling.

Democracy Now! is absolutely the flagship. But we need a fleet.

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"More for Gore or the son of a drug lord--None of the above, fuck it, cut the cord."
--Zack de la Rocha

"I tell you I'll have nothing to do with the place...The roof of that hall is made of bones."
-- Fiver

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Ajaradom's picture

Hi Joe. Thank you for fostering a collaborative community!

My honest opinion --- Bernie is the key! I hope Bernie will be bold, but I really do not know what to expect. I fear the worst. I am in a very pessimistic place right now. I know that so many very powerful forces are at work --- some very evil forces, as well. Bernie is at center court --- all eyes are on him. If he gives into the DNC, he has lost. Come on Bernie, be bold, take the ball, and all your players, and all your supporters and start a whole new game where EVERY HUMAN BEING WINS!

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Damnit Janet's picture

Can't change a thing if we can't even have our vote counted. And I mean really counted.

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"Love One Another" ~ George Harrison

Cant Stop the Macedonian Signal's picture

As a native Floridian, there's few who would hear you better. Except probably every POC in this country, of course.

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"More for Gore or the son of a drug lord--None of the above, fuck it, cut the cord."
--Zack de la Rocha

"I tell you I'll have nothing to do with the place...The roof of that hall is made of bones."
-- Fiver

mimi's picture

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