Summary: Bernie Sanders held a rally in Cathedral city today. Though our local Gannett newspaper has already given it fawning coverage, which supports an inference of less than honorable motivations given the near certainty of their endorsement of Donald Trump in the general election, the rally permits us to draw certain entrances about Senator Sanders’s campaign. Both insurgent campaigns, that of Donald Trump and that of Bernie Sanders, are much alike. Bernie Sanders supporters’ aggressive rudeness has become almost proverbial, while Donald Trump demonstrates that he is a major-league asshole every time he opens his mouth. The Cathedral City rally is too little, too late. Sanders doesn’t have the faculty his opponent does for retail politics, for working an intimate gathering and coming out with new supporters who will carry her message to every corner of the country. Indeed, Sanders’s whole campaign has been curiously tone deaf on issues of race, coming across as ham-fisted and condescending. His choice of surrogates of color is also remarkably poor. The Sanders campaign at this stage has started to resemble the Titanic. Sailing into the open ocean brilliantly illuminated, steaming toward inevitable doom.
Bernie Sanders came to Cathedral City today.
The Desert Sun’s somewhat fawning coverage of the Bernard Sanders rally at Cathedral City’s Big League Dreams sports facility claimed that the rally had drawn “thousands.” My own sources tell me the number was right around 1,000, certainly not the kind of vast number that the Sanders campaign or its eager propagandists might want to put out. Of course, The Desert Sun has not been known to traffic in truthful reporting. Given that the Desert Sun has not endorsed a Democrat for president in recent memory, one may be excused for a cynical view that the Desert Sun’s reportage of the event was designed to bolster Bernie Sanders’ primary campaign in the hopes of setting up a weaker candidate against Donald Trump in the general election. For we know that the Desert Sun will engage in all kinds of contortions of reasoning in order to justify endorsing Donald Trump, as Gannett corporate has no doubt instructed it to do.
It does not matter that, six months out, polling shows Sanders defeating Trump. Sanders has not yet been vetted, and we know that if Sanders is in fact the Democratic nominee he will be walking into a torrent of abuse, redbaiting, and personal invective from Donald Trump and his enablers.
Yet, the irony is how much alike Trump and Sanders really are. Indeed, one observer, writing from the safe vantage point of Ireland, referred to them as “Donald Sanders and Bernard Trump, the Tweedledum and Tweedledumber” of the 2016 presidential season. And indeed, both insurgent campaigns are virtually indistinguishable. Now the truth is, there are some distinct contrasts: Bernie Sanders is more of a gentleman, but to this Hillary Clinton supporter, he fails the character test because of the way in which he enables bad behavior by his supporters. Indeed, the bad behavior of Sanders supporters has become almost proverbial during this campaign. Indeed, in this blog, I commented on this political phenomenon as long ago as June of last year in a piece entitled “Bernie Sanders Woman Problem.” Indeed, the belligerence of the Sanders “True Believers” has been remarked upon in numerous print and digital media outlets since then. So, too, has been the penchant of the Sanders campaign for indulging/engaging in magical thinking.
The Trump campaign differs from that of Bernard Sanders in the most obvious way that Donald Trump is himself a major-league asshole. Indeed, he is so thin-skinned and vindictive an asshole that the inevitable Hillary Clinton attack ads almost begin to write themselves. He is truly a bull who brings his own china shop with them, as his classless performance when he attacked New Mexico Republican Gov. Susanna Martinez, who has not seen fit to endorse him, demonstrates. Indeed, a great many people, your blogger included, have resolved to quit the United States if he is elected. Though, the truth be told, I am sure, given the vindictively assholish nature of the man, his national security apparatus would aggressively hound every American who does not see fit to live in Donald Trump’s America.
Both insurgent campaigns have made themselves obnoxious to reasonable people. Thus, when Bernie came to Cathedral City, I did not see fit to attend his event. As a committed supporter of Sec. Clinton, I not only did not want to take away some Sanders supporters’ opportunity to hear the Vermont Senator rile the crowd, but I also had no desire to associate with a mob. Now certain Sanders supporters have tried to make much of the fact that Sanders routinely addresses large crowds. Hillary, by contrast, prefers smaller, more intimate gatherings where she can work the magic of one on one or small group outreach, as her husband has been able to do so brilliantly.
Though the Sanders campaign spins the Senator’s faculty for riling up a crowd as sign of his ineluctable greatness and of his divine right entitlement to the nomination, I tend to take issue with such interpretations. For what I divine from Senator Sanders’ preference for a large rallies is a kind of Marxist disdain for the people he’s talking to. It strikes me that Bernie Sanders has great love for “The Masses” in the abstract, but that he doesn’t much care for individuals. As the English writer Edna St. Vincent Millay put it: “I love humanity and hate people.” In short, the senator comes across as a man who tolerates large crowds, but where two or three are gathered together would find it difficult to control his urge to yell “you kids get off my lawn!”
And so the Sanders campaign, with its preference for large set pieces that, in another time, could have been filmed by Leni Riefenstahl, Hitler's favorite propaganda filmmaker, comes at last to Cathedral City. The Senator will get some fawning coverage from the Desert Sun, as well as from some of the mainstream media. Certain pro-Sanders websites will also fall all over themselves to present this rally as some kind of history-making, Earth-shattering, “how-could-you-not-have-been-there” event. No doubt Sanders True Believers will see it in that light.
But as the Sanders campaign approaches endgame, people should think twice about whether to get on board. Local elected officials should ask themselves whether, if polling data are correct in predicting a Hillary Clinton victory in California, being seen at a Sanders rally might not be political kryptonite. Certainly, councilmember Greg Pettis and Assembly hopeful Greg Rodriguez flirt with Bernard Sanders at their own risk. If they are thinking of supporting the Vermont Senator at this late hour, he should consider the possibility that they are boarding the Titanic at her last port of call before venturing out into the open Atlantic, and whether there are icebergs between Titanic and her destination.
For the Secretary’s lead is well-nigh insurmountable. For Bernard Sanders to stage a comeback and grab the nomination away from Hillary Clinton would involve a series of miraculous events whose likelihood is infinitesimally small. Their likelihood is infinitesimally small in part because Bernard Sanders cannot command the support of the communities of color who will drive the Democratic momentum in this election. Bernie Sanders does well in small, largely white, caucus states. The math shows he does not do nearly so well in a large, diverse, primary states where there are significant communities of color. In trying to discount the legitimacy of Sec. Clinton’s victories in those large, diverse, primary states with significant communities of color, Senator Sanders has displayed a kind of tone deafness that causes many of us to wonder whether he is not in fact dog whistling to that part of the Democratic electorate which doesn’t feel comfortable around people of color.
As I noted in March, in a post entitled “The Unbearable Whiteness of #FeelingtheBern,” the Sanders campaign has been largely a monochromatic, white phenomenon. His surrogates of color have themselves been a lightning rods of controversy, including former Ohio State Senator Nina Turner and perennial academic disturber of the peace Cornel West, who is amusing to listen to but about as congenial as the notorious Ward Churchill, whose airy dismissal of the victims of the 9/11 bombing as “little Eichmanns” earned him a place in infamy. Even when the Sanders campaign attempts to recruit surrogates of color, their efforts seem curiously tone deaf. Writing in the Washington Post on January 22 of this year, columnist Jonathan Capehart observed that “Cornel West hurts Bernie Sanders,” suggesting that the Sanders outreach to the African-American community has been ham-fisted at best and condescending at worst. Readers can follow the link here: (https://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/post-partisan/wp/2016/01/22/how-cornel-west-hurts-bernie-sanders/)
For the reality, uncomfortable as it may be to Senator Sanders’s unbearably white supporters, is that this election will be decided by the communities of color that now represent a plurality of the American electorate. It’s no longer possible to write off African-Americans, Latinos, Asian-Americans, first peoples, or queerfolk. Hillary Clinton seems to have got that memo rather better than Bernard Sanders. His visit to Cathedral city is too little, too late, and reflects only his thinly concealed disdain for The Masses on which he stakes the fading hopes of his insurgent campaign.
Observations by a 99 Percenter and an unapologetic Liberal in Cathedral City. The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice. -Theodore Parker, Massachusetts abolitionist
I am in earnest -- I will not equivocate -- I will not excuse -- I will not retreat a single inch -- AND I WILL BE HEARD.
-William Lloyd Garrison
First editorial in The Liberator
January 1, 1831
-William Lloyd Garrison
First editorial in The Liberator
January 1, 1831
Wednesday, May 25, 2016
Thursday, May 19, 2016
ENDGAME
Summary: The insurgent campaign of independent socialist Vermont senator Bernard Sanders is reaching endgame. Despite an unsurprising victory in the Oregon primary, the Sanders effort has come to resemble that of Imperial Japan in the spring and summer of 1945. Senator Sanders at this point has two choices. The first choice, and the one desired by some of his more unhinged supporters, is, in effect, to bern the country down and guarantee a Donald Trump presidency. The other, more statesmanlike choice, is to learn from the history of Japan’s Shōwa Emperor and find a way to bow out gracefully, on the best possible terms he can obtain. If a Clinton/Sanders ticket is obtainable, then the moral case for such a ticket is unanswerable.
The Democratic primary campaign is shuffling and shambling toward its untidy conclusion. Hillary Clinton, the uncharismatic but amazingly solid former Secretary of State, has methodically built a winning coalition and now stands within roughly 100 delegates of victory.
By contrast, the insurgent candidacy of Vermont Senator Bernard Sanders, the sometime socialist from Burlington, has not fulfilled much of its early promise. In those early days, it seemed like Bernie had tapped in to the frustrations of many Democrats. But as his campaign progressed, and he racked up the victories in small, largely white states that choose their delegates not in a primary election (like God intended) but through the amazingly undemocratic mechanism of a caucus, his supporters, in their enthusiasm and their messianic sense that Senator Sanders was some kind of Savior, transformed his campaign into an ugly cult of personality.
Their response to any expression of doubt or any expression of support for Sec. Clinton started to resemble that of Daesh, the Islamic terrorist organization most people know as ISIS or ISIL. Their response to any expression of doubt or of support for Sec. Clinton was to treat such expressions of doubt or support for Sec. Clinton as some kind of apostasy. It produced a phenomenon much commented upon in the press, a phenomenon whose sheer thuggishness has largely derailed the Senator’s campaign.
This thuggish behavior manifested itself the better part of a year ago, and this blog may have been prophetic when it warned, as early as last June, the Sanders was beginning to show signs of having a woman problem. The misogyny directed not only toward Sec. Clinton, but toward any woman showing the effrontery to support Sec. Clinton or express doubts about the Sanders campaign, opened up a serious rift within the Democratic Party.
That rift took several forms. One of the most common was the belligerent tendency of Sanders supporters to insistently and loudly discount the legitimacy of any Hillary Clinton victory, trying to tar any such victory with claims of voter suppression or voter fraud. By the same token, Sanders supporters were swift to treat any Sanders victory, even victories in small, nondiverse, mostly white caucus states as earth-shattering, world-changing, demonstrations of the Senator’s essentially divine entitlement to the nomination of a party of which he was not a member until last year. The rift, largely unknown outside of Democratic activists until last week, became visible in Nevada, where Clinton and Sanders supporters almost came to blows at the Nevada Democratic convention.
Death threats, misogynistic rants, the shouting down of Senator Barbara Boxer, and law enforcement responses characterized these events. The fiasco created by Sanders supporters at the Nevada Democratic Convention blew the rift within the party wide-open. It also has Republicans and Trump supporters salivating at the prospect of recruiting Bernie Sanders and his supporters as spoilers for the Republican campaign.
In short, the Democratic primary has begun to resemble the closing stages of the Pacific War, specifically in Tokyo in May and June 1945.
By May and June, 1945, the war had turned decisively against Japan. Saipan, the front gate of the Empire, had fallen almost a year prior. Okinawa Prefecture, in far southwestern Japan, was almost gone, and Iwo Jima, and island under the direct jurisdiction of the city of Tokyo, had also fallen. Overhead, the Imperial skies were now the happy hunting ground of American aviators, while on the ground, Tokyo, Nagoya, Osaka, Kumamoto, and other Japanese cities lay helpless under American bombardment as the B-29s roared overhead.
The Japanese public, fed a steady diet of victory propaganda during the war years, had no idea how badly things were going for Japan. They had no idea that “the general war situation had developed not necessarily to Japan’s advantage.” They had no idea that the allied armies were drawing closer to the homeland, and that the Empire could not hold out much longer.
The similarities between the Sanders campaign and the Japanese war effort are close. Both have fallen into a posture of desperation. The Japanese had fallen back on the kamikazes and the Sanders campaign appears to have fallen back on appeals to violence. Both the Japanese and the Sanders campaign have also fallen back up on magical thinking and desperate efforts to quell any speech that does not “support the war effort.” Moreover, both the Japanese and the Sanders campaign have begun to take a dangerously nihilistic view of the situation.
Among the Japanese high command, the mantra “100 million die together,” basically advocating national suicide, while among the Sanders campaign, the approach may not be that of “100 million die together,” but it certainly does seem to be one of “if we can’t have the nomination, we’ll go down and take you down with us.” Indeed, many Sanders diehards have indicated a willingness to vote for Donald Trump rather than support Sec. Clinton. Indeed, several recent articles have noted that, in West Virginia at least, an estimated 40% of Sanders primary voters will vote for Trump in the general.
These are serious figures, and they raise serious questions about the moral compass of some of Bernard Sanders’ more diehard supporters. When Sanders surrogate (and 2000 Ralph Nader surrogate) Susan Sarandon said that she would vote for Trump if Bernard Sanders were not the nominee, she justifiably came in for a great deal of criticism. After all, Sarandon is white, well-connected, and well-off. She’s a part of that privileged Hollywood elite that doesn’t really have to contemplate the consequences of its foolishness.
Many Sanders supporters, particularly millennials, are similarly situated. Either because they have not been well raised or because they lack the experience, many millennials feel themselves privileged to engage in the political self-destruction of supporting Donald Trump if Bernard Sanders is not the Democratic nominee. Like Sarandon, they have too much privilege to understand the importance of empathy. They can’t or won’t understand the ramifications of a Trump victory for Latinos and other communities of color, for women, for queerfolk, for Democrats and those who don’t like Donald Trump in general, for the poor, for Muslims and other religious minorities, and for those who otherwise don’t fit into Donald Trump’s fascist Weltanschauung.
But Bernie, we may hope, still has about him a few vestiges of statesmanship left. Bernie, we may hope, understands that facts are stubborn things. A few weeks ago I suggested that a Clinton Sanders ticket could make a lot of sense, producing an unstoppable political phenomenon. That window of opportunity to remake America is still open, but it is starting to close. Now is not the time for Bernie to impose purity tests that the Clinton campaign may be unwilling or unable to meet. Now is not the time for Sec. Clinton or her supporters to think in terms of retribution.
If The Democracy is to have any realistic prospect of victory this autumn now is the time to explore the possibilities for unity ticket. Both sides will need to climb down from their positions. For Sanders, this will mean abandoning his longshot presidential bid, following in the example of the Shōwa Emperor, and being willing to “endure the unendurable,” acknowledging Hillary Clinton’s primacy while nonetheless trying to engineer his yielding pride of place in a fashion that saves face and otherwise permits him to exit on the best terms he can obtain.
For Sec. Clinton, it will mean finding a place for Bernard Sanders on her team and in her campaign. For her supporters, who have put up with the thuggishness of the Sanders diehards for months, it will mean being willing to be magnanimous and forbearing, of searching within themselves for reserves of forgiveness that may be hard to locate but which will have to be found. It’s a formidable undertaking, and one that will place great demands upon their friendship for, and loyalty to, Sec. Clinton.
Yet, politics, particularly partisan politics, is about loyalty to party, loyalty to partisanship, and loyalty to persons. But more than that, it’s about loyalty to the vision of America that finds its truest expression in the Democratic Party. Ours is not a perfect party, but compared to the Republicans, we are light years ahead. We cannot afford to allow the unity of the Democratic Party to be sacrificed on the altar of foolish personal animosities.
The moral case for a Clinton/Sanders unity ticket becomes stronger as we move toward endgame. As I suggested last time, it may be the only way to heal the rift, seal the breach, and save America from Donald Trump. Indeed, the moral case for a Clinton/Sanders unity ticket is virtually unanswerable.
-xxx-
The Democratic primary campaign is shuffling and shambling toward its untidy conclusion. Hillary Clinton, the uncharismatic but amazingly solid former Secretary of State, has methodically built a winning coalition and now stands within roughly 100 delegates of victory.
By contrast, the insurgent candidacy of Vermont Senator Bernard Sanders, the sometime socialist from Burlington, has not fulfilled much of its early promise. In those early days, it seemed like Bernie had tapped in to the frustrations of many Democrats. But as his campaign progressed, and he racked up the victories in small, largely white states that choose their delegates not in a primary election (like God intended) but through the amazingly undemocratic mechanism of a caucus, his supporters, in their enthusiasm and their messianic sense that Senator Sanders was some kind of Savior, transformed his campaign into an ugly cult of personality.
Their response to any expression of doubt or any expression of support for Sec. Clinton started to resemble that of Daesh, the Islamic terrorist organization most people know as ISIS or ISIL. Their response to any expression of doubt or of support for Sec. Clinton was to treat such expressions of doubt or support for Sec. Clinton as some kind of apostasy. It produced a phenomenon much commented upon in the press, a phenomenon whose sheer thuggishness has largely derailed the Senator’s campaign.
This thuggish behavior manifested itself the better part of a year ago, and this blog may have been prophetic when it warned, as early as last June, the Sanders was beginning to show signs of having a woman problem. The misogyny directed not only toward Sec. Clinton, but toward any woman showing the effrontery to support Sec. Clinton or express doubts about the Sanders campaign, opened up a serious rift within the Democratic Party.
That rift took several forms. One of the most common was the belligerent tendency of Sanders supporters to insistently and loudly discount the legitimacy of any Hillary Clinton victory, trying to tar any such victory with claims of voter suppression or voter fraud. By the same token, Sanders supporters were swift to treat any Sanders victory, even victories in small, nondiverse, mostly white caucus states as earth-shattering, world-changing, demonstrations of the Senator’s essentially divine entitlement to the nomination of a party of which he was not a member until last year. The rift, largely unknown outside of Democratic activists until last week, became visible in Nevada, where Clinton and Sanders supporters almost came to blows at the Nevada Democratic convention.
Death threats, misogynistic rants, the shouting down of Senator Barbara Boxer, and law enforcement responses characterized these events. The fiasco created by Sanders supporters at the Nevada Democratic Convention blew the rift within the party wide-open. It also has Republicans and Trump supporters salivating at the prospect of recruiting Bernie Sanders and his supporters as spoilers for the Republican campaign.
In short, the Democratic primary has begun to resemble the closing stages of the Pacific War, specifically in Tokyo in May and June 1945.
By May and June, 1945, the war had turned decisively against Japan. Saipan, the front gate of the Empire, had fallen almost a year prior. Okinawa Prefecture, in far southwestern Japan, was almost gone, and Iwo Jima, and island under the direct jurisdiction of the city of Tokyo, had also fallen. Overhead, the Imperial skies were now the happy hunting ground of American aviators, while on the ground, Tokyo, Nagoya, Osaka, Kumamoto, and other Japanese cities lay helpless under American bombardment as the B-29s roared overhead.
The Japanese public, fed a steady diet of victory propaganda during the war years, had no idea how badly things were going for Japan. They had no idea that “the general war situation had developed not necessarily to Japan’s advantage.” They had no idea that the allied armies were drawing closer to the homeland, and that the Empire could not hold out much longer.
The similarities between the Sanders campaign and the Japanese war effort are close. Both have fallen into a posture of desperation. The Japanese had fallen back on the kamikazes and the Sanders campaign appears to have fallen back on appeals to violence. Both the Japanese and the Sanders campaign have also fallen back up on magical thinking and desperate efforts to quell any speech that does not “support the war effort.” Moreover, both the Japanese and the Sanders campaign have begun to take a dangerously nihilistic view of the situation.
Among the Japanese high command, the mantra “100 million die together,” basically advocating national suicide, while among the Sanders campaign, the approach may not be that of “100 million die together,” but it certainly does seem to be one of “if we can’t have the nomination, we’ll go down and take you down with us.” Indeed, many Sanders diehards have indicated a willingness to vote for Donald Trump rather than support Sec. Clinton. Indeed, several recent articles have noted that, in West Virginia at least, an estimated 40% of Sanders primary voters will vote for Trump in the general.
These are serious figures, and they raise serious questions about the moral compass of some of Bernard Sanders’ more diehard supporters. When Sanders surrogate (and 2000 Ralph Nader surrogate) Susan Sarandon said that she would vote for Trump if Bernard Sanders were not the nominee, she justifiably came in for a great deal of criticism. After all, Sarandon is white, well-connected, and well-off. She’s a part of that privileged Hollywood elite that doesn’t really have to contemplate the consequences of its foolishness.
Many Sanders supporters, particularly millennials, are similarly situated. Either because they have not been well raised or because they lack the experience, many millennials feel themselves privileged to engage in the political self-destruction of supporting Donald Trump if Bernard Sanders is not the Democratic nominee. Like Sarandon, they have too much privilege to understand the importance of empathy. They can’t or won’t understand the ramifications of a Trump victory for Latinos and other communities of color, for women, for queerfolk, for Democrats and those who don’t like Donald Trump in general, for the poor, for Muslims and other religious minorities, and for those who otherwise don’t fit into Donald Trump’s fascist Weltanschauung.
But Bernie, we may hope, still has about him a few vestiges of statesmanship left. Bernie, we may hope, understands that facts are stubborn things. A few weeks ago I suggested that a Clinton Sanders ticket could make a lot of sense, producing an unstoppable political phenomenon. That window of opportunity to remake America is still open, but it is starting to close. Now is not the time for Bernie to impose purity tests that the Clinton campaign may be unwilling or unable to meet. Now is not the time for Sec. Clinton or her supporters to think in terms of retribution.
If The Democracy is to have any realistic prospect of victory this autumn now is the time to explore the possibilities for unity ticket. Both sides will need to climb down from their positions. For Sanders, this will mean abandoning his longshot presidential bid, following in the example of the Shōwa Emperor, and being willing to “endure the unendurable,” acknowledging Hillary Clinton’s primacy while nonetheless trying to engineer his yielding pride of place in a fashion that saves face and otherwise permits him to exit on the best terms he can obtain.
For Sec. Clinton, it will mean finding a place for Bernard Sanders on her team and in her campaign. For her supporters, who have put up with the thuggishness of the Sanders diehards for months, it will mean being willing to be magnanimous and forbearing, of searching within themselves for reserves of forgiveness that may be hard to locate but which will have to be found. It’s a formidable undertaking, and one that will place great demands upon their friendship for, and loyalty to, Sec. Clinton.
Yet, politics, particularly partisan politics, is about loyalty to party, loyalty to partisanship, and loyalty to persons. But more than that, it’s about loyalty to the vision of America that finds its truest expression in the Democratic Party. Ours is not a perfect party, but compared to the Republicans, we are light years ahead. We cannot afford to allow the unity of the Democratic Party to be sacrificed on the altar of foolish personal animosities.
The moral case for a Clinton/Sanders unity ticket becomes stronger as we move toward endgame. As I suggested last time, it may be the only way to heal the rift, seal the breach, and save America from Donald Trump. Indeed, the moral case for a Clinton/Sanders unity ticket is virtually unanswerable.
-xxx-
Saturday, May 7, 2016
ALL HANDS ON DECK!
Summary: having left the door open to a possible Clinton-Sanders unity ticket, Bernie Sanders should not resist a Hillary Clinton embrace. A unity ticket of the two of them could potentially be unstoppable. This is an “all hands on deck” moment for the Democratic Party. The dangerous breach that is opening within our ranks could be sealed and healed with the unity ticket. We must have such a ticket. The risk of allowing Donald Trump to steal the election, or worse, allowing our own democratic incompetence to fumble the election away, is too great. We know what Donald Trump would do this country, and that’s not an acceptable outcome. We can’t let the country go to hell for four years, or bern it down on the off chance that something better might emerge from the wreckage. We have an opportunity to create a coalition that can win 538 electoral votes, sweep all 50 states, and lay the groundwork for permanent progressive majority.
A couple of days ago, Bernie Sanders gave an interview in which he supposedly “left open the door” to accepting a vice presidential slot on a Hillary Clinton ticket. Secretary Clinton should fling open that door, charge through it, and offer Bernie Sanders the vice presidential spot on the ticket.
Structurally, it bears resemblance to Lyndon Johnson’s acceptance of the vice presidential nomination on John F. Kennedy’s ticket in 1960. It’s not that long ago that Lyndon took a meeting with the man he called “Mr. Sam,” Sam Rayburn, the great House Speaker from Texas, and let Mr. Sam talk him into accepting the number two spot on the Kennedy ticket. LBJ’s acceptance of the vice presidential nomination gave the Democrats a measure of unity they had not enjoyed in a number of years. It also delivered the Democratic solid South.
Now, 56 years later, the opportunity presents itself again to forge a unity ticket that can unite North and South, moderates and progressives, young and old, and heal the incipient divisions in the Democratic Party before they assume the proportions of the divisions which currently threaten to break the Republican Party.
By uniting all the various constituencies that form the fractious Democratic Party, we can guarantee ourselves victory in November and possibly lay the foundation for a permanent progressive majority in Washington city. We must make common cause within the Party.
We know that Donald Trump will be the Republican nominee. We also know that we dare not assume that just because Donald Trump has the intellect of a five-year-old he will be so objectionable to the American public as to be unelectable. The American public has an unfortunate history of electing nincompoops, crooks, and egomaniacs. The American public is quite capable of electing Donald Trump, and we cannot discount the possibility that an election of Donald Trump could mean the end of our system of constitutional government as we have known it these last 220 years.
Nor can we assume that in the event of a close election, the Republican national committee would not do everything in his power to steal the election for Donald Trump. We live in a very dangerous Weimar time in our country’s history. Trump may or may not be equivalent to Adolf Hitler, Benito Mussolini, or Francisco Franco, but he certainly scares me, even if the fascist dictator he calls to mind isn’t Hitler, Mussolini, or Franco, so much as it is Argentina’s Juan Peron.
I compare Trump to Peron because like the Argentine dictator, Trump has no coherent or consistent ideology. Like Peron, Trump makes it up as he goes along. Like Peron, and unlike the other dictators, Trump possesses a trophy wife whose background is, candidly, somewhat checkered: Melania Trump, meet Eva Duarte de Peron.
Trump, while enjoying all the perquisites of power, will quickly allow it to slip from his hands. America under Trump will be an America in which lobbyists, oligarchs, and short fingered vulgarians will treat the country as a sheep ripe for the shearing, a nation full of easy marks waiting to be ripped off.
Because I think we are better than that and because we deserve better than that, I do not hesitate to express an absolute conviction that this is an “all hands on deck” moment for The Democracy. A Clinton-Sanders unity ticket would not only unite the party, but it would also create unstoppable electoral math momentum. And because we know what horrors await us under Trump presidency, we cannot afford the feckless undergraduate leftist foolishness of believing that a Trump presidency would be acceptable because it would accelerate the coming of some undefined revolution.
There is simply no moral case to make for berning the country down or blowing up our public institutions of self-government on the off chance that something better might arise from the ashes. That kind of nihilistic nonsense must have been okay last year, but it’s not okay today. The stakes are too high, the risks are too great, and the horrors of a Trump presidency too horrible to contemplate.
So yes, it’s. All. Hands. On. Deck.
As my good friend the late George Zander used to put it, “we are in the fight of our political lives.” Whether we are gay or straight, tall or small, pale or polychromatic, make or female, we cannot afford a Trump presidency. The most powerful weapon in our arsenal to avert such a possibility is a Clinton-Sanders unity ticket. Now I know that there will be aggrieved Hillary supporters who will find it difficult to forgive the Senator for some of the excesses of which his supporters are demonstrably guilty. I also know that there are some diehard supporters of the Senator who will scream "sellout!" if the Senator takes second position on a Clinton-Sanders unity ticket. But for those of us who have been activists in Democratic politics for a long time, and have watched Democrats lose elections we should have won because of ego, a breach-healing, balm-of-Gilead, let’s-chop-the Republicans’-nuts-off, winning unity ticket is really the only option that makes any sense.
Bernie having left the door open to a possible unity ticket, Hillary should rip that door off its hinges, charge through it, sweep Bernie Sanders onto the ticket, and charge home to a 538 electoral vote, 50-state, victory this November.
Clinton-Sanders 2016!
A couple of days ago, Bernie Sanders gave an interview in which he supposedly “left open the door” to accepting a vice presidential slot on a Hillary Clinton ticket. Secretary Clinton should fling open that door, charge through it, and offer Bernie Sanders the vice presidential spot on the ticket.
Structurally, it bears resemblance to Lyndon Johnson’s acceptance of the vice presidential nomination on John F. Kennedy’s ticket in 1960. It’s not that long ago that Lyndon took a meeting with the man he called “Mr. Sam,” Sam Rayburn, the great House Speaker from Texas, and let Mr. Sam talk him into accepting the number two spot on the Kennedy ticket. LBJ’s acceptance of the vice presidential nomination gave the Democrats a measure of unity they had not enjoyed in a number of years. It also delivered the Democratic solid South.
Now, 56 years later, the opportunity presents itself again to forge a unity ticket that can unite North and South, moderates and progressives, young and old, and heal the incipient divisions in the Democratic Party before they assume the proportions of the divisions which currently threaten to break the Republican Party.
By uniting all the various constituencies that form the fractious Democratic Party, we can guarantee ourselves victory in November and possibly lay the foundation for a permanent progressive majority in Washington city. We must make common cause within the Party.
We know that Donald Trump will be the Republican nominee. We also know that we dare not assume that just because Donald Trump has the intellect of a five-year-old he will be so objectionable to the American public as to be unelectable. The American public has an unfortunate history of electing nincompoops, crooks, and egomaniacs. The American public is quite capable of electing Donald Trump, and we cannot discount the possibility that an election of Donald Trump could mean the end of our system of constitutional government as we have known it these last 220 years.
Nor can we assume that in the event of a close election, the Republican national committee would not do everything in his power to steal the election for Donald Trump. We live in a very dangerous Weimar time in our country’s history. Trump may or may not be equivalent to Adolf Hitler, Benito Mussolini, or Francisco Franco, but he certainly scares me, even if the fascist dictator he calls to mind isn’t Hitler, Mussolini, or Franco, so much as it is Argentina’s Juan Peron.
I compare Trump to Peron because like the Argentine dictator, Trump has no coherent or consistent ideology. Like Peron, Trump makes it up as he goes along. Like Peron, and unlike the other dictators, Trump possesses a trophy wife whose background is, candidly, somewhat checkered: Melania Trump, meet Eva Duarte de Peron.
Trump, while enjoying all the perquisites of power, will quickly allow it to slip from his hands. America under Trump will be an America in which lobbyists, oligarchs, and short fingered vulgarians will treat the country as a sheep ripe for the shearing, a nation full of easy marks waiting to be ripped off.
Because I think we are better than that and because we deserve better than that, I do not hesitate to express an absolute conviction that this is an “all hands on deck” moment for The Democracy. A Clinton-Sanders unity ticket would not only unite the party, but it would also create unstoppable electoral math momentum. And because we know what horrors await us under Trump presidency, we cannot afford the feckless undergraduate leftist foolishness of believing that a Trump presidency would be acceptable because it would accelerate the coming of some undefined revolution.
There is simply no moral case to make for berning the country down or blowing up our public institutions of self-government on the off chance that something better might arise from the ashes. That kind of nihilistic nonsense must have been okay last year, but it’s not okay today. The stakes are too high, the risks are too great, and the horrors of a Trump presidency too horrible to contemplate.
So yes, it’s. All. Hands. On. Deck.
As my good friend the late George Zander used to put it, “we are in the fight of our political lives.” Whether we are gay or straight, tall or small, pale or polychromatic, make or female, we cannot afford a Trump presidency. The most powerful weapon in our arsenal to avert such a possibility is a Clinton-Sanders unity ticket. Now I know that there will be aggrieved Hillary supporters who will find it difficult to forgive the Senator for some of the excesses of which his supporters are demonstrably guilty. I also know that there are some diehard supporters of the Senator who will scream "sellout!" if the Senator takes second position on a Clinton-Sanders unity ticket. But for those of us who have been activists in Democratic politics for a long time, and have watched Democrats lose elections we should have won because of ego, a breach-healing, balm-of-Gilead, let’s-chop-the Republicans’-nuts-off, winning unity ticket is really the only option that makes any sense.
Bernie having left the door open to a possible unity ticket, Hillary should rip that door off its hinges, charge through it, sweep Bernie Sanders onto the ticket, and charge home to a 538 electoral vote, 50-state, victory this November.
Clinton-Sanders 2016!
Tuesday, May 3, 2016
BERNIE SANDERS AND THE FIVE STAGES OF GRIEF
Summary: Bernie Sanders’ supporters have been modeling the five Elisabeth Kübler-Ross stages of grief as their candidate’s momentum begins to fade. Those five grief stages are denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance. Sanders supporters have been confronting the first two grief stages, denial and anger. The Sanders camp will soon divide into two factions. One, composed of reasonable people, will make their peace with Hillary Clinton as the nominee of the Democratic Party, accepting her primacy and working to get her elected. Senator Sanders himself appears to be a member of this group. The other group, the irreconcilables and the intransigents, will never reconcile themselves to Sec. Clinton as the nominee of the party, and so they will pitch a fit and migrate into the camp of that other insurgent candidate, Donald Trump. The Democratic Party would be well rid of them.
In the wake of recent East Coast Democratic primaries in which Hillary Clinton scored a number of substantial victories in Maryland, Pennsylvania, Connecticut, and New York, one can sense a certain shifting of the tide.
The insurgent, once-imagined-to-be-unstoppable, campaign of Vermont Senator Bernard Sanders seems to have encountered a metaphorical roadblock or two. The so-called path to nomination has materially eased for Sec. Clinton but has narrowed significantly for Bernard Sanders. It now appears, if not inevitable, certainly strongly likely that Hillary Rodham Clinton will be the nominee for president of the Democratic Party.
And as the tide begins to run in Sec. Clinton's favor, supporters of Senator Sanders find themselves modeling Elisabeth Kübler-Ross’s well-recognized five stages of grief: denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and ultimately, acceptance.
But right now, what we're seeing from the Sanders campaign is an almost perfect recapitulation of the first two stages of the grieving process.
First, we’ve seen a great many Sanders supporters engaging in vociferous, vehement denial both of Sec. Clinton’s electoral momentum, and in some extreme cases, of her essential legitimacy as a candidate.
For example, every time Bernard Sanders has been victorious in a small state caucus ---with a largely white electorate participating in a fundamentally undemocratic process--- Senator Sanders’s victory in such a caucus has been spun by his campaign as a game changer, as an event of earth shattering magnitude demonstrating his manifest entitlement to the Democratic nomination.
By contrast, when Sec. Clinton has won fair and square, supporters of Senator Sanders have come out in droves to attack Sec. Clinton and to assail the legitimacy of her electoral victories. When Sec. Clinton was victorious in the Arizona primary, the Sanders team and his supporters pitched a fit, claiming that Hillary Clinton had been personally responsible for an unprecedented campaign of voter suppression, going so far as to post a petition on change.org demanding a “do over” of the Arizona Democratic primary.
The same howls of dismay were heard in New York State when Hillary Clinton trounced the Senator there by double digits. Moreover, many supporters of Senator Sanders fell back on the risible “rotten borough” argument that because more acres had supported Senator Sanders, acreage should outweigh people in the election, and that thus, Bernie had “won” New York State.
According to the Sanders supporters, Hillary’s decisive victories in New York, Bronx, Kings, Queens, Richmond, Nassau, Suffolk, Westchester, Orange, Rockland, Onondaga, Monroe, and Erie Counties should not count because Bernie Sanders carried more land area.
The fact that Hillary carried the Five Boroughs of New York City and that to carry the Five Boroughs would itself alone be enough to carry the state seems not to have dawned on the angry diehard supporters of Bernard Sanders. It reflects a political truth that we have always understood in this country, even if the United Kingdom continued to seat acres, not people, in Parliament until “Rotten Boroughs” were abolished in the great electoral reforms of 1832.
In short, the fact that Hillary has been winning bigger primaries and amassing greater numbers of delegates then Sanders has become unacceptable to his diehard, intransigent supporters, who have been engaged in the unproductive enterprise of denying the legitimacy of Sec. Clinton’s victories in the loudest and most earsplitting way imaginable.
Of course, if the Sanders supporters are in deep denial about the way in which their candidate is starting to lose, they are also angry. Vein-poppingly, friendship-sunderingly, lawsuit-inducingly, apoplectically, angry. In fact, they’re so angry that they are now engaging in organized libel and slander, as well as organized efforts to silence Hillary supporters on social media.
All one has to do is look at social media to see the almost stupefying degree of anger being displayed by certain of those more intransigent supporters of Bernard Sanders. Now I think it’s probably fair to suggest that a majority of Sanders supporters will pass through all of the five Kübler-Ross stages of grief and finally accept that an imperfect friend, as Bill Maher has said, is light years better than a deadly enemy.
And when that happens, that reasonable portion of Sen. Sanders's supporters should be accepted into the ranks of Hillary Clinton supporters without anger or recrimination. We should remember the counsel of sometime Texas Agriculture Commissioner and longtime Democrat Jim Hightower, who observed that on primary election night there comes a time when supporters of the loser need to take the so-called midnight train over to the headquarters of the winner. On arrival, Hightower suggested, they need to engage in some fence-mending, have a helping (or two) of humble pie, and then they need to put their name on the volunteer list and work their hearts out for the nominee of the Party.
Several months ago, I suggested that no matter who the nominee of the Democratic Party turned out to be, Hillary Clinton or Bernie Sanders, neither candidate would have the luxury of conducting extensive background investigations and loyalty tests. The Democratic Party, I suggested, would need to take a leaf from Spain’s book. When Francisco Franco died in 1975, and Spain began her long journey back to democracy, Spanish society developed a so-called Pacto de Olvido, or “pact of forgetting.”
It was agreed among Spaniards at the time — and up to the present day as well — but who one had supported during the Franquista years was simply no longer be a legitimate or admissible subject of discussion. Spain, the consensus ran, could not afford the recrimination and backbiting attendant upon some sort of purge of Franco supporters now that the apparatus of falangism had been dismantled.
The Democratic Party, having been almost as badly fractured this year as Spain was during the Franquista years, should avail herself of a similar Pact of Forgetting. We cannot afford, nor should we embrace, a policy of vetting fellow Democrats on the basis of their support during the primary season.
Now, I know that this will not sit well with certain hyper-partisans on both sides the primary divide. I have served on numerous Democratic boards and committees that got themselves altogether caught up in trying to enforce pre-existing loyalties, in trying to determine who has been the truest believer for the longest time.
Indeed, when we see Bernie Sanders supporters attacking Hillary Clinton for having supported Barry Goldwater more than half a century ago, before she saw the light and came over from the Dark Side and opted to spend the rest of her career fighting for causes which any Democrat should be proud to fight, we know that we are dealing with True Believers of the most reckless sort.
These True Believers are the people who are the most angry right now. These True Believers are the people who want to bully Sec. Clinton and her supporters. These True Believers are the people who will engage in all manner of libel and slander, who will engage in orchestrated efforts to silence Hillary Clinton supporters, uncaring of the enemies they make. These True Believers are the people who blow a gasket if someone has the effrontery to say “I am voting blue, no matter who.”
And these “Truly Believing” Sanders irreconcilables should perhaps constitute an exception to the amnesty which I have suggested would be the better course of action. For the irreconcilables, by engaging in nihilistic, “burn-the-country-down” behavior have rather sacrificed any claim to our consideration.
Because, in truth, the irreconcilable faction among Sanders supporters, what we may call the Green Tea Party, bears a disturbing resemblance to that other insurgent candidate in the presidential race, Donald Trump. And if the Republican Party can find the hardihood to cast out The Donald and The Donald’s supporters, we should not fear to take a leaf from their book and do the same in our Party with the irreconcilable supporters of Bernard Sanders.
Vladimir Ilyich Lenin was wrong to suggest that all differences of opinion are irreconcilable, but Ilyich was right to suggest that the unity of the Party is something worth defending. Even among Democrats, we should be able to require a basic consensus as to who is entitled to be called a Democrat. Right now, I don’t see that the irreconcilable Sanders supporters have earned the right to be called Democrats.
In the wake of recent East Coast Democratic primaries in which Hillary Clinton scored a number of substantial victories in Maryland, Pennsylvania, Connecticut, and New York, one can sense a certain shifting of the tide.
The insurgent, once-imagined-to-be-unstoppable, campaign of Vermont Senator Bernard Sanders seems to have encountered a metaphorical roadblock or two. The so-called path to nomination has materially eased for Sec. Clinton but has narrowed significantly for Bernard Sanders. It now appears, if not inevitable, certainly strongly likely that Hillary Rodham Clinton will be the nominee for president of the Democratic Party.
And as the tide begins to run in Sec. Clinton's favor, supporters of Senator Sanders find themselves modeling Elisabeth Kübler-Ross’s well-recognized five stages of grief: denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and ultimately, acceptance.
But right now, what we're seeing from the Sanders campaign is an almost perfect recapitulation of the first two stages of the grieving process.
First, we’ve seen a great many Sanders supporters engaging in vociferous, vehement denial both of Sec. Clinton’s electoral momentum, and in some extreme cases, of her essential legitimacy as a candidate.
For example, every time Bernard Sanders has been victorious in a small state caucus ---with a largely white electorate participating in a fundamentally undemocratic process--- Senator Sanders’s victory in such a caucus has been spun by his campaign as a game changer, as an event of earth shattering magnitude demonstrating his manifest entitlement to the Democratic nomination.
By contrast, when Sec. Clinton has won fair and square, supporters of Senator Sanders have come out in droves to attack Sec. Clinton and to assail the legitimacy of her electoral victories. When Sec. Clinton was victorious in the Arizona primary, the Sanders team and his supporters pitched a fit, claiming that Hillary Clinton had been personally responsible for an unprecedented campaign of voter suppression, going so far as to post a petition on change.org demanding a “do over” of the Arizona Democratic primary.
The same howls of dismay were heard in New York State when Hillary Clinton trounced the Senator there by double digits. Moreover, many supporters of Senator Sanders fell back on the risible “rotten borough” argument that because more acres had supported Senator Sanders, acreage should outweigh people in the election, and that thus, Bernie had “won” New York State.
According to the Sanders supporters, Hillary’s decisive victories in New York, Bronx, Kings, Queens, Richmond, Nassau, Suffolk, Westchester, Orange, Rockland, Onondaga, Monroe, and Erie Counties should not count because Bernie Sanders carried more land area.
The fact that Hillary carried the Five Boroughs of New York City and that to carry the Five Boroughs would itself alone be enough to carry the state seems not to have dawned on the angry diehard supporters of Bernard Sanders. It reflects a political truth that we have always understood in this country, even if the United Kingdom continued to seat acres, not people, in Parliament until “Rotten Boroughs” were abolished in the great electoral reforms of 1832.
In short, the fact that Hillary has been winning bigger primaries and amassing greater numbers of delegates then Sanders has become unacceptable to his diehard, intransigent supporters, who have been engaged in the unproductive enterprise of denying the legitimacy of Sec. Clinton’s victories in the loudest and most earsplitting way imaginable.
Of course, if the Sanders supporters are in deep denial about the way in which their candidate is starting to lose, they are also angry. Vein-poppingly, friendship-sunderingly, lawsuit-inducingly, apoplectically, angry. In fact, they’re so angry that they are now engaging in organized libel and slander, as well as organized efforts to silence Hillary supporters on social media.
All one has to do is look at social media to see the almost stupefying degree of anger being displayed by certain of those more intransigent supporters of Bernard Sanders. Now I think it’s probably fair to suggest that a majority of Sanders supporters will pass through all of the five Kübler-Ross stages of grief and finally accept that an imperfect friend, as Bill Maher has said, is light years better than a deadly enemy.
And when that happens, that reasonable portion of Sen. Sanders's supporters should be accepted into the ranks of Hillary Clinton supporters without anger or recrimination. We should remember the counsel of sometime Texas Agriculture Commissioner and longtime Democrat Jim Hightower, who observed that on primary election night there comes a time when supporters of the loser need to take the so-called midnight train over to the headquarters of the winner. On arrival, Hightower suggested, they need to engage in some fence-mending, have a helping (or two) of humble pie, and then they need to put their name on the volunteer list and work their hearts out for the nominee of the Party.
Several months ago, I suggested that no matter who the nominee of the Democratic Party turned out to be, Hillary Clinton or Bernie Sanders, neither candidate would have the luxury of conducting extensive background investigations and loyalty tests. The Democratic Party, I suggested, would need to take a leaf from Spain’s book. When Francisco Franco died in 1975, and Spain began her long journey back to democracy, Spanish society developed a so-called Pacto de Olvido, or “pact of forgetting.”
It was agreed among Spaniards at the time — and up to the present day as well — but who one had supported during the Franquista years was simply no longer be a legitimate or admissible subject of discussion. Spain, the consensus ran, could not afford the recrimination and backbiting attendant upon some sort of purge of Franco supporters now that the apparatus of falangism had been dismantled.
The Democratic Party, having been almost as badly fractured this year as Spain was during the Franquista years, should avail herself of a similar Pact of Forgetting. We cannot afford, nor should we embrace, a policy of vetting fellow Democrats on the basis of their support during the primary season.
Now, I know that this will not sit well with certain hyper-partisans on both sides the primary divide. I have served on numerous Democratic boards and committees that got themselves altogether caught up in trying to enforce pre-existing loyalties, in trying to determine who has been the truest believer for the longest time.
Indeed, when we see Bernie Sanders supporters attacking Hillary Clinton for having supported Barry Goldwater more than half a century ago, before she saw the light and came over from the Dark Side and opted to spend the rest of her career fighting for causes which any Democrat should be proud to fight, we know that we are dealing with True Believers of the most reckless sort.
These True Believers are the people who are the most angry right now. These True Believers are the people who want to bully Sec. Clinton and her supporters. These True Believers are the people who will engage in all manner of libel and slander, who will engage in orchestrated efforts to silence Hillary Clinton supporters, uncaring of the enemies they make. These True Believers are the people who blow a gasket if someone has the effrontery to say “I am voting blue, no matter who.”
And these “Truly Believing” Sanders irreconcilables should perhaps constitute an exception to the amnesty which I have suggested would be the better course of action. For the irreconcilables, by engaging in nihilistic, “burn-the-country-down” behavior have rather sacrificed any claim to our consideration.
Because, in truth, the irreconcilable faction among Sanders supporters, what we may call the Green Tea Party, bears a disturbing resemblance to that other insurgent candidate in the presidential race, Donald Trump. And if the Republican Party can find the hardihood to cast out The Donald and The Donald’s supporters, we should not fear to take a leaf from their book and do the same in our Party with the irreconcilable supporters of Bernard Sanders.
Vladimir Ilyich Lenin was wrong to suggest that all differences of opinion are irreconcilable, but Ilyich was right to suggest that the unity of the Party is something worth defending. Even among Democrats, we should be able to require a basic consensus as to who is entitled to be called a Democrat. Right now, I don’t see that the irreconcilable Sanders supporters have earned the right to be called Democrats.
Thursday, April 7, 2016
OVER THE EDGE INTO FASCISM: THE DESERT SUN'S EPIC SNIT OVER PALM SPRINGS' HIRING OF ROD PACHECO
Summary: The Desert Sun does it again. It opinion page this morning, Palm Springs’ Gannett newspaper editorialized at great length against the city’s decision to retain the services of former Riverside County DA Rod Pacheco to assist it in addressing so-called City Hall scandal with this Gannett publication was so instrumental in fabricating. In a tone of entitled anger, this Gannett publication throws an epic snit, complaining that its amour propre was offended because the City didn’t trust it with sensitive information it wasn’t entitled to at any rate. The Desert Sun’s arrogance in believing it has the right to police the City’s choice of counsel is breathtaking, and constitutes a misuse of the First Amendment guarantee of free speech.
This Gannett publication’s editorial this morning, attacking the City of Palm Springs’ decision to retain the services of former Riverside County District Attorney Rod Pacheco to assist it in addressing the so-called City Hall scandal which this Gannett publication was instrumental in fabricating, takes the Desert Sun out of the realms of being simply a Republican-leaning newspaper and send it squarely over the edge into the realms of fascism.
Because it is a fundamentally fascist tactic to seek to interfere with the relationship between counsel and the Council’s client, whether an individual or an entity. This Gannett publication cannot articulate a convincing reason for its lengthy editorial excoriating the city for having retained Rod Pacheco, and by implication, for having retained counsel at all.
Instead, this Gannett publication takes the position, in print, that Pacheco should not have been retained because the Desert Sun’s institutional feelings were hurt because it was supposedly lied to. Of course, this Gannett publication is not a federal or state investigator that possesses the right to demand responses under oath, nor can it bring charges against an entity or individual for making an “false or misleading statement.”
Moreover, this Gannett publications attempt to ride the coattails of the gay community is, quite frankly, risible, as is the theatrical indignation of certain members of the gay community who have rallied to the support of this Gannett publication because of Mr. Pacheco’s peripheral role in the Palm Springs Police Department’s breathtakingly ill-advised effort to conduct sex stings in the Warm Sands neighborhood approximately 6 years ago. One does not blame counsel for the misdoings of the Constable.
This Gannett publication’s institutional arrogance in regard to this matter is breathtaking to behold. Indeed, the entire editorial appears to be nothing more than this Gannett publication’s epic snit that the City of Palm Springs apparently didn’t consider this Gannett publication trustworthy, and certainly didn’t buy into this Gannett publication’s amazing sense of entitlement. Distilled to its essence, the editorial could be summed up as “how dare the City of Palm Springs not spill its guts to us on our demand?”
Indeed, it was that sense of entitlement, that sense that this Gannett publication, and presumably this Gannett publication alone, has the right to play kingmaker in the politics of Palm Springs that has led this publication to a series of enormities over the years that, had they been covering Donald Trump, would have gotten them sued many times over.
This Gannett publication swung its institutional weight behind then-Congresswoman Mary Bono in the 2010 congressional election. In a candidate debate, moderated by then Desert Sun editor Rick Green, Green acted as an unembarrassed and shameless cheerleader for Mary Bono. Bono’s opponent in that race was then-Palm Springs Mayor Steve Pougnet, whom the Desert Sun has been eager to frame as the corrupt “darling” of the local Democratic Party.
In short, this Gannett publication’s entire framing and narrative of the so-called City Hall scandal has been based upon 1) a presumption of guilt, 2)this Gannett publication’s entitled view of itself as lawmaker, judge, jury, and presumptive executioner, and 3) an ill-concealed desire to “punish” Mr. Pougnet for having had the effrontery to be Mary Bono’s Democratic challenger in the 2010 congressional election.
This Gannett publication has a long memory, and a well-established, well-recognized faculty of nursing grudges. So, when it appeared that Mr. Pougnet had made some potential ethical missteps, the knives were well and truly out over on North Gene Autry Trail.
What takes this Gannett publication’s editorial this morning of the realms of fascism is that it flies in the face of that guarantee of the right to counsel, and to counsel of one’s choice, that is the core of our system of ordered liberties. The choice of counsel is not this Gannett publication’s choice to make. Its attempt to arrogate to itself the right to decide whom the city will retain as counsel, and its attempt to police that choice in its editorial pages is a misuse of the First Amendment. Indeed, it may be an actionable tort.
For if the City allows itself to be buffaloed by this Gannett publication into un-retaining Mr. Pacheco, he, and the city, should file an immediate lawsuit against the Desert Sun for interference with prospective advantage, interference with existing contract, and any other theory of recovery that Mr. Pacheco and his colleagues consider appropriate under the circumstances. This Gannett publication should not be allowed to interfere, under color of the First Amendment, with the Sixth Amendment rights of the city and its employees.
It’s high time this Gannett publication was forcibly disabused of its entitled view of itself as political kingmaker in this Valley.
This Gannett publication’s editorial this morning, attacking the City of Palm Springs’ decision to retain the services of former Riverside County District Attorney Rod Pacheco to assist it in addressing the so-called City Hall scandal which this Gannett publication was instrumental in fabricating, takes the Desert Sun out of the realms of being simply a Republican-leaning newspaper and send it squarely over the edge into the realms of fascism.
Because it is a fundamentally fascist tactic to seek to interfere with the relationship between counsel and the Council’s client, whether an individual or an entity. This Gannett publication cannot articulate a convincing reason for its lengthy editorial excoriating the city for having retained Rod Pacheco, and by implication, for having retained counsel at all.
Instead, this Gannett publication takes the position, in print, that Pacheco should not have been retained because the Desert Sun’s institutional feelings were hurt because it was supposedly lied to. Of course, this Gannett publication is not a federal or state investigator that possesses the right to demand responses under oath, nor can it bring charges against an entity or individual for making an “false or misleading statement.”
Moreover, this Gannett publications attempt to ride the coattails of the gay community is, quite frankly, risible, as is the theatrical indignation of certain members of the gay community who have rallied to the support of this Gannett publication because of Mr. Pacheco’s peripheral role in the Palm Springs Police Department’s breathtakingly ill-advised effort to conduct sex stings in the Warm Sands neighborhood approximately 6 years ago. One does not blame counsel for the misdoings of the Constable.
This Gannett publication’s institutional arrogance in regard to this matter is breathtaking to behold. Indeed, the entire editorial appears to be nothing more than this Gannett publication’s epic snit that the City of Palm Springs apparently didn’t consider this Gannett publication trustworthy, and certainly didn’t buy into this Gannett publication’s amazing sense of entitlement. Distilled to its essence, the editorial could be summed up as “how dare the City of Palm Springs not spill its guts to us on our demand?”
Indeed, it was that sense of entitlement, that sense that this Gannett publication, and presumably this Gannett publication alone, has the right to play kingmaker in the politics of Palm Springs that has led this publication to a series of enormities over the years that, had they been covering Donald Trump, would have gotten them sued many times over.
This Gannett publication swung its institutional weight behind then-Congresswoman Mary Bono in the 2010 congressional election. In a candidate debate, moderated by then Desert Sun editor Rick Green, Green acted as an unembarrassed and shameless cheerleader for Mary Bono. Bono’s opponent in that race was then-Palm Springs Mayor Steve Pougnet, whom the Desert Sun has been eager to frame as the corrupt “darling” of the local Democratic Party.
In short, this Gannett publication’s entire framing and narrative of the so-called City Hall scandal has been based upon 1) a presumption of guilt, 2)this Gannett publication’s entitled view of itself as lawmaker, judge, jury, and presumptive executioner, and 3) an ill-concealed desire to “punish” Mr. Pougnet for having had the effrontery to be Mary Bono’s Democratic challenger in the 2010 congressional election.
This Gannett publication has a long memory, and a well-established, well-recognized faculty of nursing grudges. So, when it appeared that Mr. Pougnet had made some potential ethical missteps, the knives were well and truly out over on North Gene Autry Trail.
What takes this Gannett publication’s editorial this morning of the realms of fascism is that it flies in the face of that guarantee of the right to counsel, and to counsel of one’s choice, that is the core of our system of ordered liberties. The choice of counsel is not this Gannett publication’s choice to make. Its attempt to arrogate to itself the right to decide whom the city will retain as counsel, and its attempt to police that choice in its editorial pages is a misuse of the First Amendment. Indeed, it may be an actionable tort.
For if the City allows itself to be buffaloed by this Gannett publication into un-retaining Mr. Pacheco, he, and the city, should file an immediate lawsuit against the Desert Sun for interference with prospective advantage, interference with existing contract, and any other theory of recovery that Mr. Pacheco and his colleagues consider appropriate under the circumstances. This Gannett publication should not be allowed to interfere, under color of the First Amendment, with the Sixth Amendment rights of the city and its employees.
It’s high time this Gannett publication was forcibly disabused of its entitled view of itself as political kingmaker in this Valley.
Monday, March 28, 2016
BERNIE, I’M OUT OF LOVE WITH YOU
Summary: Bernard Sanders’s campaign for the presidency of the United States has become an abomination. It is not even overmatched by the profoundly ugly campaign of Donald Trump. The Senators supporters have demonstrated a combination of hatefulness, defensiveness, and wishful thinking that is offputting to an increasingly large number of American voters. There is an orchestrated effort among Sanders supporters to drive off of social media those who do not succumb to their blandishments or parrot their ridiculous views. I’m sorry, Bernie, but your supporters, and your failure to keep them under control, has caused me to disdain you, and to wish ill of your campaign.
Bernard Sanders’s campaign for the presidency of the United States has become an abomination, surrounded and supported as it is by a legion of assholes who make Donald Trump’s Legion of Assholes look tame.
It has become a commonplace in the United States that if you want to start a fight, say anything at all that any thin-skinned supporter of Bernard Sanders might find it even remotely offensive, and it will guarantee you a raft of nastiness, cyber bullying, and outrage from the unhinged legions of the Leninist loudmouth from Burlington. Indeed, it is becoming apparent that supporters of the Vermont Senator have been engaged in an orchestrated campaign to suppress the speech of anyone with whom they disagree. They have been assisted in this effort by such entities as Facebook, an organization for which I have little use, because its practices and its so-called community standards are nothing more than a vehicle for suppressing the speech of reasonable people, while facilitating treason, sedition, and all round nastiness among organizations and individuals whom Facebook deems worthy of not having their speech censored. I hate Facebook.
I’ve also, and more’s the pity, begun to entertain a real personal antipathy not only toward Sen. Sanders’s supporters, but also toward the senator himself. I had not wanted to be angry at Bernie. I had thought that he was a breath of fresh air in this election season. I had thought, and to some extent still think, that he was doing God’s work, as it were, to pull Hillary Clinton to the left, because, as some time Texas agriculture Commissioner Jim Hightower has put it “there ain’t nothin’ in the middle of the road but yellow lines and dead armadillos.”
But as the Vermont Senator’s road to nomination has become steeper and narrower, as Hillary Clinton continues to maintain a solid delegate lead and to hold on to her status as a prohibitive front-runner in the race for the Democratic nomination, both the senator and his supporters have become more strident, more prone to magical thinking, and more intolerant of any views or expressions that do not accord with their own, or which do not advance the cult of personality which is so evidently beginning to emerge from the Bernard Sanders campaign.
This phenomenon has been noted by numerous political commentators. It is been described, dissected, and held up to popular scrutiny. Is caused otherwise reasonable journalists like Rolling Stone’s Matt Taibbi to abandon even the pretense of critical thinking and enthusiastically to repeat discredited conspiracy theories and calumnies against Hillary Clinton that were dreamed up in the fever swamps of the Republican right. But God help you if you call Matt Taibbi on such things, or if you suggest that people like the Intercept’s Glenn Greenwald might have potentially impure motivations.
Because if you do, the Sanders people will be after you like a savage horde of cannibals going after a missionary. They will abuse you in highly personal terms on social media, but if you complain to Facebook, Facebook, which is totally in the tank for Sanders, will take the side of your abusers and cast you into the outer darkness, banning you without any means of protesting the ban. Facebook, in short, has availed itself of the same kind of opaque mechanisms as did the apartheid regime in South Africa 30 years back. I had not thought possible that Mark Zuckerberg and P.W. Botha could be brothers under the skin, but apparently they are.
Consequently, I have fallen so completely out of love with Bernie Sanders that, while I will vote blue no matter who, I won’t give him one ounce of support beyond voting for him in the general election if he is the nominee. I will hold my nose hard and mark the ballot for him, but that’s it. But I will certainly work very hard to make sure that he is not the nominee of the Democratic Party. Because Bernie Sanders’s supporters have managed to rouse in me a spirit of revenge and anger, and in a lot of ways, that’s the best possible motivator. I will run, not walk, into Hillary Clinton’s embrace, and I will say to the Sanders supporters: fuck you, you did this. You did it for me, and you did it for countless others, too. You have been some of the best recruiters for Hillary that anyone could imagine. If for no other reason than her nomination to the presidency will give us enormous pleasure as we watch all of Sanders’s Legion of Assholes get well and truly put down.
Because it won’t be enough for me to unfriend Sanders supporters on Facebook, if I ever return to that place. It won’t be enough for me to snub Sanders supporters in public, and it won’t be enough for me to contribute what I can to Hillary Clinton’s campaign. I want to see Sen. Sanders beaten and badly, because he can’t keep control of a group of thoroughly obnoxious people. They will know you by the company you keep and by the supporters you encourage, and Bernie has lost me because of his supporters. And my falling out with him is as poisonous as any falling out can be. You wouldn’t let me love you, Bernie. Because you wouldn’t let me love you, I can only disdain you.
-XXX-
Bernard Sanders’s campaign for the presidency of the United States has become an abomination, surrounded and supported as it is by a legion of assholes who make Donald Trump’s Legion of Assholes look tame.
It has become a commonplace in the United States that if you want to start a fight, say anything at all that any thin-skinned supporter of Bernard Sanders might find it even remotely offensive, and it will guarantee you a raft of nastiness, cyber bullying, and outrage from the unhinged legions of the Leninist loudmouth from Burlington. Indeed, it is becoming apparent that supporters of the Vermont Senator have been engaged in an orchestrated campaign to suppress the speech of anyone with whom they disagree. They have been assisted in this effort by such entities as Facebook, an organization for which I have little use, because its practices and its so-called community standards are nothing more than a vehicle for suppressing the speech of reasonable people, while facilitating treason, sedition, and all round nastiness among organizations and individuals whom Facebook deems worthy of not having their speech censored. I hate Facebook.
I’ve also, and more’s the pity, begun to entertain a real personal antipathy not only toward Sen. Sanders’s supporters, but also toward the senator himself. I had not wanted to be angry at Bernie. I had thought that he was a breath of fresh air in this election season. I had thought, and to some extent still think, that he was doing God’s work, as it were, to pull Hillary Clinton to the left, because, as some time Texas agriculture Commissioner Jim Hightower has put it “there ain’t nothin’ in the middle of the road but yellow lines and dead armadillos.”
But as the Vermont Senator’s road to nomination has become steeper and narrower, as Hillary Clinton continues to maintain a solid delegate lead and to hold on to her status as a prohibitive front-runner in the race for the Democratic nomination, both the senator and his supporters have become more strident, more prone to magical thinking, and more intolerant of any views or expressions that do not accord with their own, or which do not advance the cult of personality which is so evidently beginning to emerge from the Bernard Sanders campaign.
This phenomenon has been noted by numerous political commentators. It is been described, dissected, and held up to popular scrutiny. Is caused otherwise reasonable journalists like Rolling Stone’s Matt Taibbi to abandon even the pretense of critical thinking and enthusiastically to repeat discredited conspiracy theories and calumnies against Hillary Clinton that were dreamed up in the fever swamps of the Republican right. But God help you if you call Matt Taibbi on such things, or if you suggest that people like the Intercept’s Glenn Greenwald might have potentially impure motivations.
Because if you do, the Sanders people will be after you like a savage horde of cannibals going after a missionary. They will abuse you in highly personal terms on social media, but if you complain to Facebook, Facebook, which is totally in the tank for Sanders, will take the side of your abusers and cast you into the outer darkness, banning you without any means of protesting the ban. Facebook, in short, has availed itself of the same kind of opaque mechanisms as did the apartheid regime in South Africa 30 years back. I had not thought possible that Mark Zuckerberg and P.W. Botha could be brothers under the skin, but apparently they are.
Consequently, I have fallen so completely out of love with Bernie Sanders that, while I will vote blue no matter who, I won’t give him one ounce of support beyond voting for him in the general election if he is the nominee. I will hold my nose hard and mark the ballot for him, but that’s it. But I will certainly work very hard to make sure that he is not the nominee of the Democratic Party. Because Bernie Sanders’s supporters have managed to rouse in me a spirit of revenge and anger, and in a lot of ways, that’s the best possible motivator. I will run, not walk, into Hillary Clinton’s embrace, and I will say to the Sanders supporters: fuck you, you did this. You did it for me, and you did it for countless others, too. You have been some of the best recruiters for Hillary that anyone could imagine. If for no other reason than her nomination to the presidency will give us enormous pleasure as we watch all of Sanders’s Legion of Assholes get well and truly put down.
Because it won’t be enough for me to unfriend Sanders supporters on Facebook, if I ever return to that place. It won’t be enough for me to snub Sanders supporters in public, and it won’t be enough for me to contribute what I can to Hillary Clinton’s campaign. I want to see Sen. Sanders beaten and badly, because he can’t keep control of a group of thoroughly obnoxious people. They will know you by the company you keep and by the supporters you encourage, and Bernie has lost me because of his supporters. And my falling out with him is as poisonous as any falling out can be. You wouldn’t let me love you, Bernie. Because you wouldn’t let me love you, I can only disdain you.
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Tuesday, March 22, 2016
BERNIE SANDERS AND THE UNDEMOCRATIC CAUCUS PROCESS
Summary: Bernie Sanders loves the caucus states. Most of them have been favorable to his bid and have provided him with delegates in his increasingly longshot candidacy for the Democratic nomination. Yet caucus states themselves conduct their primaries not only in a fundamentally undemocratic way, but in an anti-democratic way as well. The caucuses are designed to place a premium on the participation of the white, the well-off, and the well-connected. They also disincentivize the working poor and minorities, who can’t afford to make the investment of time and personal attendance necessary in a caucus state. The Sanders has done so well on the caucus states raises disturbing questions about the legitimacy of his outreach to poor white and minority voters. Perhaps it’s time for the convention rules and credentials committees to strap on their cojones and refuse to seat delegates from states that do not conduct an honest-to God-primary election.
As the Democratic primary campaign slouches toward Philadelphia, the numbers begin to look better for Hillary Clinton and worse for Bernie Sanders. Of course, a series of primaries in the so-called caucus states may help delay the inevitable for a short time, but they raise a question which should perhaps be answered before we repeat this process four years hence: why do we permit caucus states to hold their primaries that way?
With a few exceptions, the caucus states have leaned heavily toward Sen. Sanders, while the primary states have tended to lean toward Sec. Clinton. Yet, on balance, the caucus states that lean toward Sen. Sanders tend, again with a few exceptions, to be heavily white, non-diverse constituencies.
But what makes caucus states objectionable is not that they usually represent heavily white constituencies, as much as they are, as Markos Moulitsas noted today in The Hill, fundamentally undemocratic. The caucus mechanism itself requires personal participation in a rather lengthy process. The Iowa caucuses, for example, do not permit absentee voting, and they require personal attendance for several hours on what are often cold, snowy, winter evenings. Other state caucuses are similar. What they all share in common is that the caucuses all favor the white, the well-off, and the well-connected. Because it is the white, the well-off, and the well-connected who can afford to make the investment of time necessary to participate personally in a caucus. Latinos, African-Americans, and the white working poor don’t have that option.
If you’re working two or even three jobs, you can't afford to take a couple of hours off on a Tuesday night to attend a caucus. If you are disabled, you may have no means of attending a caucus. If you don’t have transportation, you may also have no means of participating in a caucus. In short, the in-person process of a political caucus advantages the advantaged, awarding them a premium position in the delegate selection process for their state. By contrast, a primary election allows for far broader participation in the delegate selection process. In California, for example, a primary election is one in which every registered Californian has the right to vote. Indeed, one need not take time out of one’s day; one may cast one’s ballot at an early voting location or vote by mail. It’s worth recalling, in fact, that when the Stonewall Democrats in West Hollywood ran their so-called Vote Naked campaign, encouraging registered voters to cast their ballots by mail, voter turnout in West Hollywood increased perceptibly.
In short, a primary election, as opposed to caucuses, encourages a larger, more democratic, voter turnout. It also has the advantage of being a secret ballot, obviating the risk that devoting the “wrong” way will expose one to potential retaliation, either domestically, socially, or in the workplace. By contrast, caucuses place a premium on personal, vocal, participation, with all the risks of adverse consequence that participation entails. No American should have to worry about suffering an adverse consequence because of his or her vote.
Unfortunately, many of the Sanders campaign’s most dedicated activists don’t believe any of this. Sanders does well in caucus states for one very simple reason. Most of his voters are white and most of the caucus states have significant white majorities in them. In short, Sanders does well where white privilege does well. In the same way that Donald Trump makes overt racial appeals, the Sanders campaign appeals to white, well-off, well-connected caucus voters. Worse, it pitches fits when Sec. Clinton does unexpectedly well. For months now, we’ve been hearing Sanders supporters repeatedly engaging in conspiracy theorizing about the Iowa caucuses. We have heard them engaging in similar theorizing about the Massachusetts primary, as well is about the results in Illinois, and now they are complaining because of the asswhipping she administered in Arizona.
This probably is the reason why Sanders activists love the caucus states, advantaging and rewarding as they do privileged white voters with enough time on their hands to spend hours in a caucus. The Sanders campaign isn’t as overtly racist as the Trump campaign; it just seeks the same result using dog whistle methods.
Since the Sanders people have complained about just about every Hillary Clinton victory out there, and have repeatedly demanded that the rules be changed in the middle of the game to advantage them, let turnabout be fair play: the rules committee and the credentials committee at the Democratic national convention in Philadelphia should refuse to seat the delegates of caucus states, declaring that states which do not have a legitimate primary election cannot be heard.
That would make the Sanders people even crazier than many of them already are.
As the Democratic primary campaign slouches toward Philadelphia, the numbers begin to look better for Hillary Clinton and worse for Bernie Sanders. Of course, a series of primaries in the so-called caucus states may help delay the inevitable for a short time, but they raise a question which should perhaps be answered before we repeat this process four years hence: why do we permit caucus states to hold their primaries that way?
With a few exceptions, the caucus states have leaned heavily toward Sen. Sanders, while the primary states have tended to lean toward Sec. Clinton. Yet, on balance, the caucus states that lean toward Sen. Sanders tend, again with a few exceptions, to be heavily white, non-diverse constituencies.
But what makes caucus states objectionable is not that they usually represent heavily white constituencies, as much as they are, as Markos Moulitsas noted today in The Hill, fundamentally undemocratic. The caucus mechanism itself requires personal participation in a rather lengthy process. The Iowa caucuses, for example, do not permit absentee voting, and they require personal attendance for several hours on what are often cold, snowy, winter evenings. Other state caucuses are similar. What they all share in common is that the caucuses all favor the white, the well-off, and the well-connected. Because it is the white, the well-off, and the well-connected who can afford to make the investment of time necessary to participate personally in a caucus. Latinos, African-Americans, and the white working poor don’t have that option.
If you’re working two or even three jobs, you can't afford to take a couple of hours off on a Tuesday night to attend a caucus. If you are disabled, you may have no means of attending a caucus. If you don’t have transportation, you may also have no means of participating in a caucus. In short, the in-person process of a political caucus advantages the advantaged, awarding them a premium position in the delegate selection process for their state. By contrast, a primary election allows for far broader participation in the delegate selection process. In California, for example, a primary election is one in which every registered Californian has the right to vote. Indeed, one need not take time out of one’s day; one may cast one’s ballot at an early voting location or vote by mail. It’s worth recalling, in fact, that when the Stonewall Democrats in West Hollywood ran their so-called Vote Naked campaign, encouraging registered voters to cast their ballots by mail, voter turnout in West Hollywood increased perceptibly.
In short, a primary election, as opposed to caucuses, encourages a larger, more democratic, voter turnout. It also has the advantage of being a secret ballot, obviating the risk that devoting the “wrong” way will expose one to potential retaliation, either domestically, socially, or in the workplace. By contrast, caucuses place a premium on personal, vocal, participation, with all the risks of adverse consequence that participation entails. No American should have to worry about suffering an adverse consequence because of his or her vote.
Unfortunately, many of the Sanders campaign’s most dedicated activists don’t believe any of this. Sanders does well in caucus states for one very simple reason. Most of his voters are white and most of the caucus states have significant white majorities in them. In short, Sanders does well where white privilege does well. In the same way that Donald Trump makes overt racial appeals, the Sanders campaign appeals to white, well-off, well-connected caucus voters. Worse, it pitches fits when Sec. Clinton does unexpectedly well. For months now, we’ve been hearing Sanders supporters repeatedly engaging in conspiracy theorizing about the Iowa caucuses. We have heard them engaging in similar theorizing about the Massachusetts primary, as well is about the results in Illinois, and now they are complaining because of the asswhipping she administered in Arizona.
This probably is the reason why Sanders activists love the caucus states, advantaging and rewarding as they do privileged white voters with enough time on their hands to spend hours in a caucus. The Sanders campaign isn’t as overtly racist as the Trump campaign; it just seeks the same result using dog whistle methods.
Since the Sanders people have complained about just about every Hillary Clinton victory out there, and have repeatedly demanded that the rules be changed in the middle of the game to advantage them, let turnabout be fair play: the rules committee and the credentials committee at the Democratic national convention in Philadelphia should refuse to seat the delegates of caucus states, declaring that states which do not have a legitimate primary election cannot be heard.
That would make the Sanders people even crazier than many of them already are.
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