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firebrand80

(2,760 posts)
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 10:42 AM Feb 2016

Sharpton: Sanders Did Not Address How Race Affects Income Inequality

Civil rights activist Al Sharpton early Thursday said Bernie Sanders “did not address” during a discussion how the Democratic presidential hopeful's welfare plan would combat the effects of racism on income inequality.

“One of the things that I was saying to Senator Sanders is saying that you’ve got to deal with income inequality and wages is fine, but what about the race element of that?” Sharpton said on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe.”
“He did not address that directly,” the reverend added. “That’s what I was pressing him on.”


http://thehill.com/blogs/ballot-box/presidential-races/269070-sharpton-sanders-did-not-address-how-racism-affects
217 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Sharpton: Sanders Did Not Address How Race Affects Income Inequality (Original Post) firebrand80 Feb 2016 OP
I am not surprised by either man. nt msanthrope Feb 2016 #1
Sander's economic policies would lift all boats CoffeeCat Feb 2016 #2
But it doesn't. JRLeft Feb 2016 #5
Numerous economists disagree with you CoffeeCat Feb 2016 #13
Black people are usually left out, when the nation benefits. JRLeft Feb 2016 #18
I agree...funds do have to be targeted CoffeeCat Feb 2016 #24
He has to specify that. JRLeft Feb 2016 #25
He did. Beowulf Feb 2016 #47
The Clinton camp is so desperately trying to use the African American community as objects CoffeeCat Feb 2016 #53
+1 jham123 Feb 2016 #74
100% WRONG! Black voters think for themselves. If we're unconvinced by Sanders, that's HIS problem! Liberal_Stalwart71 Feb 2016 #92
You speak for all PoC? jham123 Feb 2016 #133
Yeah, I speak for ALL POCs! I'm the annointed one. I'm their GOD! Liberal_Stalwart71 Feb 2016 #175
There are tons of PoC who remember very well the following jham123 Feb 2016 #146
Thanks. We already know all this. And no. Of course I do not speak for POC. But neither does Liberal_Stalwart71 Feb 2016 #174
I'm confused jham123 Feb 2016 #180
the key word is that they are "trying" to do that. virtualobserver Feb 2016 #153
I agree with you!! CoffeeCat Feb 2016 #198
NOPE!! My disdain for Sanders is from my OWN mind! Please stop with the arrogance! Liberal_Stalwart71 Feb 2016 #91
Your rant is in the abstract earthshine Feb 2016 #117
I was a Bernie Sanders supporter, but his fanatics have turned me completely off. Liberal_Stalwart71 Feb 2016 #179
Sure, you were! LOL. BillZBubb Feb 2016 #203
I like a class of wine from time to time as well. ;) Liberal_Stalwart71 Feb 2016 #215
There's a generational gap within the black community. Bernie needs to target millennials. JRLeft Feb 2016 #125
CC, how can he target funds? kstewart33 Feb 2016 #143
There are plenty of ways that funds could be targeted CoffeeCat Feb 2016 #199
Like who? nt kstewart33 Feb 2016 #138
The article speaks of one economist who agrees with Sanders, but notes that others do not Justice Feb 2016 #147
You've posted no facts to prop up your claim either. notadmblnd Feb 2016 #152
Top Economist Says Bernie Sanders’ Plan Will Raise Median Income $22,000 and Create 26 Million Jobs AgingAmerican Feb 2016 #70
That may well be true but tell me how his plan will be passed by a Republican-controlled Congress? kstewart33 Feb 2016 #136
If Bernie Sanders wins the Democratic nomination... CoffeeCat Feb 2016 #201
Same One UMass Amherst economist who has worked with Sanders before/ is an acknowledged socialist Justice Feb 2016 #149
Black folks have heard this before uponit7771 Feb 2016 #10
Sander's economic policies would make meaningful, real changes to the economy CoffeeCat Feb 2016 #14
Your last comment was condescending at best and the first statement has not historical uponit7771 Feb 2016 #30
There is a concerted effort to position Sanders CoffeeCat Feb 2016 #48
No there's not, he cares prolly more than Hillary... that's not the point and never has been and... uponit7771 Feb 2016 #54
I completely agree with you that the African American community CoffeeCat Feb 2016 #60
Ignored by government and the Democratic Party. Even now we have white liberals trying to Liberal_Stalwart71 Feb 2016 #97
I totally get what you are saying CoffeeCat Feb 2016 #204
Well that makes no sense at all Kentonio Feb 2016 #62
It's race-baiting which Ole Hill and Bill are famous for ThePhilosopher04 Feb 2016 #55
I feel that she has such a powerful attack machine that is so willing to spread hate CoffeeCat Feb 2016 #67
CC again, how will it pass a Republican-controlled Congress? kstewart33 Feb 2016 #141
I think Sander's approach will be two-pronged CoffeeCat Feb 2016 #209
Stay with it CoffeeCat. I'm agreeing with you posts. nt ladjf Feb 2016 #158
You think Hillary is going to tell them something new? cherokeeprogressive Feb 2016 #17
She definitely won't do shit. JRLeft Feb 2016 #26
Yes 6chars Feb 2016 #29
No, of course not... HRC has a relationship with PoC and we know that devil.. uponit7771 Feb 2016 #32
Lesser of two evils. Helluva plan. cherokeeprogressive Feb 2016 #35
Yeap, wisdom is a good thing. I wish life was all about clear cut choices... it's mostly not uponit7771 Feb 2016 #43
The Clintons were at the pinnacle of power from 1992 to 2009. cherokeeprogressive Feb 2016 #50
Go ask people in the AA groups and they'll tell you, why are you just trying to figure out the answe uponit7771 Feb 2016 #52
Well I certainly didn't expect an answer from you. cherokeeprogressive Feb 2016 #59
All I'm saying is the attitude now is ... hey, why aren't you supporting Sanders when PoC have been uponit7771 Feb 2016 #61
not quite accurate jham123 Feb 2016 #82
I don't remember this comment in 2008, can you cite it... I looked on google with keywords uponit7771 Feb 2016 #89
Sure jham123 Feb 2016 #145
Can I get a quote, the video I saw she said NOTHING about black children... uponit7771 Feb 2016 #181
Huh? jham123 Feb 2016 #182
Do you need a video?? Google the phrase, there is no question about the context jham123 Feb 2016 #184
Again, no mention of black anything.. this is getting a little silly, sounds like a whispering ... uponit7771 Feb 2016 #185
oh, I get it jham123 Feb 2016 #186
If she didn't say it or even intimate it then it's disingenuous to proffer that she did uponit7771 Feb 2016 #187
Obtuse much? jham123 Feb 2016 #188
Ad homs are an indicator of a weak position, she said nothing about black people in her statement uponit7771 Feb 2016 #190
Your charge of Ad Hom is Ad Hom plus Strawman jham123 Feb 2016 #191
An attack in the form of a pejorative question, and now you're being condescending... uponit7771 Feb 2016 #193
This message was self-deleted by its author femmedem Feb 2016 #148
Many times. And it's nonsense! Liberal_Stalwart71 Feb 2016 #40
+1 uponit7771 Feb 2016 #44
Free college, $15/hr minimum, and universal single payer health care? kristopher Feb 2016 #63
According to the assertions... jham123 Feb 2016 #83
Whaaaa?! You think PoC are going to be excluded from these programs? JudyM Feb 2016 #102
If history is evidence, then yes. Systematically blacks have been excluded from programs Liberal_Stalwart71 Feb 2016 #108
Not me... jham123 Feb 2016 #130
Good! Issues are getting so distorted ... JudyM Feb 2016 #132
Sadly, today.... jham123 Feb 2016 #134
We haven't in the passed? tia uponit7771 Feb 2016 #196
I'm talking about the grandiose promises... the particulars don't matter uponit7771 Feb 2016 #195
You're talking trash with no intent except to smear. kristopher Feb 2016 #202
I don't need to smear Sanders, he's doing good job of that himself with promising a trillion dollars uponit7771 Feb 2016 #205
This message was self-deleted by its author 1000words Feb 2016 #194
BULLSHIT!! Wealthy blacks, blacks with advanced degrees, assets, etc.--STILL face racism! Liberal_Stalwart71 Feb 2016 #38
+1 uponit7771 Feb 2016 #197
As a Sanders supporter, it's not going to work because it's too abstract WhaTHellsgoingonhere Feb 2016 #46
Exactly what Rush Limbaugh and the right say eom treestar Feb 2016 #78
I totally agree except . . . Depaysement Feb 2016 #183
Yeah, black people have heard that before (nt) Recursion Feb 2016 #216
And where does Hillary stand on this, pray tell? Nedsdag Feb 2016 #3
She would be worse. JRLeft Feb 2016 #6
He's apparently meeting with her next week nt firebrand80 Feb 2016 #7
This is about Bernie Sanders. It is HE who must convince a good number of blacks to vote for him! Liberal_Stalwart71 Feb 2016 #41
I don't get who or where do you stand for. Nedsdag Feb 2016 #110
Actually now that you put it that way by insulting me, I'm reconsidering. I just might Liberal_Stalwart71 Feb 2016 #113
How easily your opinion is swayed. earthshine Feb 2016 #119
AUTOMATED MESSAGE: Results of your Jury Service LittleBlue Feb 2016 #126
Just what I thought! Nedsdag Feb 2016 #123
You'll get over it. Have a great day! Liberal_Stalwart71 Feb 2016 #178
We really don't want to bring people together...... Skwmom Feb 2016 #4
Exactly. If people were just honest. We really don't want to bring everybody together... Liberal_Stalwart71 Feb 2016 #105
He really feels as he has told everyone over the years boston bean Feb 2016 #8
If he really feels that dealing with the very pervasive issue as race is a wedge issue, Liberal_Stalwart71 Feb 2016 #76
When you hear people saying these issues divide us boston bean Feb 2016 #80
That's right. Absolutely right. Liberal_Stalwart71 Feb 2016 #88
This. Starry Messenger Feb 2016 #129
Sanders is classic New Left: he really believes that class is the ACTUAL problem, and race is alcibiades_mystery Feb 2016 #9
If blacks were all billionaires we'd still have the issue of racism. Having enough money to uponit7771 Feb 2016 #11
Sanders absolutely sees racism as a problem in this country CoffeeCat Feb 2016 #15
Sanders has a history of minimizing minorities problems for the sake of votes, I know he sees it as uponit7771 Feb 2016 #39
+1000. And it's not just about racist words. Racism creates a safety issue ecstatic Feb 2016 #23
are you saying it is better to be poor and black than rich and black? Hiraeth Feb 2016 #57
epiphenomenon? intersectional thought, cultural superstructures? 6chars Feb 2016 #33
Hilarious post... AOR Feb 2016 #45
Haha alcibiades_mystery Feb 2016 #66
Sanders is not leftist...of course it invalidates your point... AOR Feb 2016 #75
Technical Note: Unless I'm mistaken, "New Left" emerged as a linguistic KingCharlemagne Feb 2016 #98
Your time frame is correct on the "New Left" King... AOR Feb 2016 #124
I associate it with Sauvy (EDIT: Marcuse) Recursion Feb 2016 #217
If you think the shit Sanders is getting from the Hillary cohort is out of hand, you should KingCharlemagne Feb 2016 #154
Yes I know King... AOR Feb 2016 #161
where you going with this "whitey" bullshit? needlessly injecting anti-white racial invectives? bettyellen Feb 2016 #135
Yawn...offer something of substance besides "faux outrage" and vindictive emotion... AOR Feb 2016 #151
Putting the word "whitey" out there and now demanding answers @ "poor black poverty"... bettyellen Feb 2016 #156
Like I said offer something of substance... AOR Feb 2016 #165
TL:DR ..seemed like a lot of lurid adjectives about an imaginary "full agreement" w/your ideas. bettyellen Feb 2016 #170
Seek and you shall find the truth... AOR Feb 2016 #172
The truth is, not everyone supports your priorities. I know it sucks to hear, but bettyellen Feb 2016 #173
LOL..it's not hard to guess... AOR Feb 2016 #189
Yes, I am quite familiar with those "who could give a shit less about their brothers/sisters" bettyellen Feb 2016 #192
Class intersects with both of those issues... AOR Feb 2016 #208
"...if you solve the class problem, the" wedge issues "issues will clear themselves up" kristopher Feb 2016 #69
Agree with half your post... AOR Feb 2016 #85
I don't agree. The focus on production misses reproduction. kristopher Feb 2016 #95
You may disagree... AOR Feb 2016 #137
Eh, no. kristopher Feb 2016 #155
Let us cut through the chase... AOR Feb 2016 #169
I don't subscribe to Marx - like I said, his analysis is incomplete. kristopher Feb 2016 #177
You've avoided the questions... AOR Feb 2016 #210
And I answered you. kristopher Feb 2016 #211
You're avoiding a discussion of capitalist social relations... AOR Feb 2016 #212
He'll be better after his comprehensive exams alcibiades_mystery Feb 2016 #213
reminds me of a poster that explained, if I earn more, I can fly somewhere for an abortion.... bettyellen Feb 2016 #139
I'm sure it does make you think of those things. kristopher Feb 2016 #157
I adore Bernie Sanders- but am not so blind as to have no questions. Pretty much everyone bettyellen Feb 2016 #162
No you don't. kristopher Feb 2016 #164
This should be an OP on its own. nt msanthrope Feb 2016 #96
I second that... nt Blasphemer Feb 2016 #127
Absolutely BRILLIANT post! And that's one of the reasons why Sanders' is not capturing a large Liberal_Stalwart71 Feb 2016 #111
Honestly, I'd be willing to give Bernie a 5th look if Sharpton came out and ecstatic Feb 2016 #12
I'm pretty sure Sharpton's MSNBC contract prohibits endorsements Arazi Feb 2016 #22
Tell us Sharpton: How do YOU want it to be addressed? Hiraeth Feb 2016 #16
Yes. polly7 Feb 2016 #49
white people talk and are told by black people to shut up Hiraeth Feb 2016 #64
It's just purposeful crazy-making. nt. polly7 Feb 2016 #77
yep. and on ignore they are all going. done with the dumb. eom Hiraeth Feb 2016 #79
yes-- FFS, it's really not that complicated! Fast Walker 52 Feb 2016 #51
shit is fucked up on here. It really isn't that complicated in the real world. Hiraeth Feb 2016 #71
Race trumps class, every time!!! DemocratSinceBirth Feb 2016 #19
That anecdote don't prove what you claim kristopher Feb 2016 #72
When Hillary was lecturing the Black Lives Matter people... Hassin Bin Sober Feb 2016 #84
woman grab their purses anytime someone they don't know is close questionseverything Feb 2016 #159
This was a ruse. Sharpton summons Bernie Sanders on orders from on High... cherokeeprogressive Feb 2016 #20
+1 Punkingal Feb 2016 #28
yep. Hiraeth Feb 2016 #65
They sat in a Brooklyn restaurant for about a half an hour. how much can be discussed in that amount m-lekktor Feb 2016 #163
I feel for Bernie... Skid Rogue Feb 2016 #21
Vermont is 0.87% African-American...and 80% of the prison population! Hmmm... Liberal_Stalwart71 Feb 2016 #36
Educate yourself... AOR Feb 2016 #56
See, this bullshit right here is exactly why Sanders will lose the black vote. 100% wrong! Liberal_Stalwart71 Feb 2016 #114
LOL...I suspected you had nothing... AOR Feb 2016 #144
My obsession, eh? LOL!! Liberal_Stalwart71 Feb 2016 #176
I actually agree with you... for the most part. Skid Rogue Feb 2016 #90
I agree with this assessment. Thank you so much! Liberal_Stalwart71 Feb 2016 #118
He's lived in a bubble for 30 years mwrguy Feb 2016 #81
But here's the thing: Le Taz Hot Feb 2016 #27
You are correct firebrand80 Feb 2016 #34
This is a great post. nt. polly7 Feb 2016 #37
And caring about these issues is core to his worldview, not a pandering element. JudyM Feb 2016 #86
:D Skid Rogue Feb 2016 #94
YES, REVEREND AL, YES!! That is what we POC have been trying to get across to white liberals Liberal_Stalwart71 Feb 2016 #31
Ok. Are you saying ... JudyM Feb 2016 #93
That's it. The focus on class and economic equality is a DEFLECTION! Why? Liberal_Stalwart71 Feb 2016 #99
So are you looking for him to use the word "racism" outright JudyM Feb 2016 #106
Sick of deflecting from the issue by invoking Hillary Clinton. I'm not addressing your Liberal_Stalwart71 Feb 2016 #109
I'm sorry, I am genuinely trying to understand it, have spent many hours reading about the issue, JudyM Feb 2016 #116
Al is saying what I've been saying. nt LexVegas Feb 2016 #42
Al is saying what many of us POC have been screaming over and over and over and over and over... Liberal_Stalwart71 Feb 2016 #120
that is because mgmaggiemg Feb 2016 #58
So a separate minimum wage for black people and white people? GummyBearz Feb 2016 #68
WOW, Interesting take on things. bettyellen Feb 2016 #142
But Hillary is much better because she creates income inequality for both me and her! mhatrw Feb 2016 #73
So what's Al's solution? frylock Feb 2016 #87
What an odd thing to say. Vinca Feb 2016 #100
I like Al Sharpton and hope NowSam Feb 2016 #101
He never does bravenak Feb 2016 #103
fine, i'll be the one to say it. poc do not own economic injustice or class discrimination restorefreedom Feb 2016 #104
You are incredibly, incredibly wrong firebrand80 Feb 2016 #107
that is an issue also needing remedy restorefreedom Feb 2016 #115
You don't get it...or, at least you're pretending not to get it. Liberal_Stalwart71 Feb 2016 #121
what you originally said was firebrand80 Feb 2016 #122
i agree with you that racism is a major problem restorefreedom Feb 2016 #128
We're going to have to agree to disagree firebrand80 Feb 2016 #131
i actually agree on most of what you said restorefreedom Feb 2016 #140
That's all Bernie talks about - every single speech. I guess Al hasn't been listening. jillan Feb 2016 #112
Appointments berningman Feb 2016 #150
Welcome to DU! yuiyoshida Feb 2016 #166
Thank You berningman Feb 2016 #167
lots of interesting reading yuiyoshida Feb 2016 #168
just goes to show DustyJoe Feb 2016 #160
DU rec for all kinds of reasons...nt SidDithers Feb 2016 #171
The cynicism and defeatism, in these thread comments is depressing. Odin2005 Feb 2016 #200
Sharpton's agenda differs from Sanders' BillZBubb Feb 2016 #206
DIRECTLY FROM BERNIE'S WEBSITE: RACIAL JUSTICE | ECONOMIC VIOLENCE yodermon Feb 2016 #207
Watch out for the long knifes Al workinclasszero Feb 2016 #214

CoffeeCat

(24,411 posts)
2. Sander's economic policies would lift all boats
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 10:56 AM
Feb 2016

"Median income would soar by more than $22,000. Nearly 26 million jobs would be created. The unemployment rate would fall to 3.8%."

According to numerous economists--Sander's economic policies would help all people of all races and creeds in America.

This is why Sanders is running--to help all people.

His message, thus far, has been widely disseminated to those in the early primary states. And they love it. They've embraced Sanders. Additional states and their people, will do the same.

Very excited for Nevada and SC to be exposed to Sander's message and his amazing ideas--up close and personal through Sander's campaign.

http://money.cnn.com/2016/02/08/news/economy/sanders-income-jobs/

CoffeeCat

(24,411 posts)
13. Numerous economists disagree with you
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 11:44 AM
Feb 2016

but you keep on keeping on--with your robot talking points that have no basis in fact.

 

JRLeft

(7,010 posts)
18. Black people are usually left out, when the nation benefits.
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 11:53 AM
Feb 2016

Whether you want to believe or not unless funds are allocated in a way that targets POC, nothing will change.

CoffeeCat

(24,411 posts)
24. I agree...funds do have to be targeted
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 12:17 PM
Feb 2016

and there is no signal that Bernie is against targeting funds or African American communities.

Beowulf

(761 posts)
47. He did.
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 12:38 PM
Feb 2016

Last edited Thu Feb 11, 2016, 01:30 PM - Edit history (1)

He pledged $200 billion a year for five years targeted to AA communities. He did it quietly, of course and in response to a question.

http://www.democraticunderground.com/12511199001#top

Of course he was then accused of pandering.

CoffeeCat

(24,411 posts)
53. The Clinton camp is so desperately trying to use the African American community as objects
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 12:45 PM
Feb 2016

and build false narratives about Bernie and how he doesn't care about PoC.

Morally reprehensible.

Bernie's campaign, thus far, has been played out in states with very low minority populations. That doesn't mean that he doesn't care about minorities. It means, he's heading toward them and spreading his message.

Maybe they'll like it. Maybe they won't. We'll see. Maybe they'll kick Hillary to the curb for using minorities as a political football.

But to lie and distort and attempt to build false narratives is really twisted.

Shows how desperate the Clinton camp is.

They're constantly lying about Sanders, and they've got nothing positive to say themselves. Hollow, empty failure of a campaign they're running over there in the land of desperation.

 

Liberal_Stalwart71

(20,450 posts)
175. Yeah, I speak for ALL POCs! I'm the annointed one. I'm their GOD!
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 05:42 PM
Feb 2016


No one speaks for POC! No one! Not Hillary. Not Sanders. Not me. Not YOU. Not any of their supporters. NO ONE!!

jham123

(278 posts)
146. There are tons of PoC who remember very well the following
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 04:11 PM
Feb 2016

"In her support for the 1994 crime bill, for example, she used racially coded rhetoric to cast black children as animals. “They are not just gangs of kids anymore,” she said. “They are often the kinds of kids that are called ‘super-predators.’ No conscience, no empathy. We can talk about why they ended up that way, but first we have to bring them to heel.”

http://www.thenation.com/article/hillary-clinton-does-not-deserve-black-peoples-votes/

I'm sure many many many people think for themselves and non other than themselves.

 

Liberal_Stalwart71

(20,450 posts)
174. Thanks. We already know all this. And no. Of course I do not speak for POC. But neither does
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 05:40 PM
Feb 2016

anyone else, and that includes Bernie Sanders, Hillary Clinton or any of their black supporters.

Please don't be silly and stop with the insults.

jham123

(278 posts)
180. I'm confused
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 05:52 PM
Feb 2016

One moment you are stating what PoC think, then you say they think for themselves, then you claim not to speak for them.....

I wish you'd make up your mind

CoffeeCat

(24,411 posts)
198. I agree with you!!
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 06:48 PM
Feb 2016

I respect that you think for yourself. You decide! No one else.

However, the problem is that people are spending this horrendously inordinate amount of time telling the world that Bernie Sanders does not care about minorities or the issues facing them.

That is a lie. That is the problem I have--that Clinton builds false narratives. She's not playing fair.

No one is suggesting that you can't make up your own mind. Of course you can. And you will. And you should.

I respect that you may support Clinton or that you may not support Sanders.

My contention with all of this is that Sander's and his views are being misrepresented. That's all.

 

Liberal_Stalwart71

(20,450 posts)
91. NOPE!! My disdain for Sanders is from my OWN mind! Please stop with the arrogance!
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 02:12 PM
Feb 2016

Black voters think for themselves.

 

earthshine

(1,642 posts)
117. Your rant is in the abstract
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 03:05 PM
Feb 2016

Why do you have disdain for Bernie?

>> My disdain for Sanders is from my OWN mind!

Mmmm. I see.

When Bernie was asked "Black Lives Matter" or "All Lives Matter" he chose the former.

Ostensibly, the latter is more egalitarian.

But, Bernie chose the former, and the reason was something along the lines that BLM has very immediate needs. The way the police and the economic big wigs treat blacks is horrible!

I'm sorry I don't have a link. It was an interview I saw.

 

Liberal_Stalwart71

(20,450 posts)
179. I was a Bernie Sanders supporter, but his fanatics have turned me completely off.
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 05:45 PM
Feb 2016

I won't be supporting him. Period. Get over it. Grow up. Deal with it.

kstewart33

(6,551 posts)
143. CC, how can he target funds?
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 04:04 PM
Feb 2016

There won't be any money left because his platform if implemented, will cost trillions. Taxing the rich and corporations more won't pay for it all.

CoffeeCat

(24,411 posts)
199. There are plenty of ways that funds could be targeted
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 07:00 PM
Feb 2016

toward specific communities and to specific geographic areas that need help with their schools, infrastructures and programs that would target African American needs.

I also believe that talking about these issues helps a great deal--as Obama has done. Bernie has been a civil-rights advocate since his days of being arrested for fighting for civil rights, and also marching with MLK. I believe that he truly cares about these issues and that they are at his core. Just as they are for many liberal Democrats.

As far as paying for things...Do you know how long the mega-corporations have been getting a free ride? Companies like GE make billions every quarter and they pay little to NO taxes. What happens when those companies start paying? What happens when millionaires and billionaires start paying their fair share?

Bernie's healthcare plan would be paid by an increase in the payroll tax--an extra $175 per month per family. We pay $550 per month now for healthcare. We'd save so much money. But that payroll tax is how it would be done. Bernie's college tuition for all would be paid by taxing Wall-Street speculators. A fraction of a percent. They'd finally pay. His plans and ideas are well thought out. They may not be absolutely perfect, but the foundation is there for great things to happen.

I personally, do not trust Clinton to do anything for minorities. She engages in a lot of lip service and does nothing. I believe she will say and do anything to get elected. I think she uses minorities like a political football. The clear pivot to eviscerating Sanders--right when NH was over--shows that this is nothing more than soundbites and strategy to her. How can a person respect a minority population or truly have their best interests at heart--when they try to eviscerate their opponent by using minorities to do so?

Minorities are not objects. I don't trust anyone who objectifies any group for political gain. So, Hillary for me is someone who has no ideas and uses ghastly tactics to gain minority support.

Justice

(7,188 posts)
147. The article speaks of one economist who agrees with Sanders, but notes that others do not
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 04:12 PM
Feb 2016

Gerald Friedman, a University of Massachusetts Amherst economics professor agrees with Sanders.


"Other economists, however, feel that Friedman's analysis is overly optimistic, saying it would be difficult to achieve that level of economic prosperity. Last week, the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget said Sanders' plan to pay for health care would fall short by at least $3 trillion."
 

AgingAmerican

(12,958 posts)
70. Top Economist Says Bernie Sanders’ Plan Will Raise Median Income $22,000 and Create 26 Million Jobs
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 01:15 PM
Feb 2016

Under Clinton, nothing will change. Your choice is laid out before you. Do you want to take the red pill, or the blue pill?

http://usuncut.com/news/top-economist-believes-bernie-sanders-plan-will-raise-income-and-lower-unemployment/

kstewart33

(6,551 posts)
136. That may well be true but tell me how his plan will be passed by a Republican-controlled Congress?
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 04:00 PM
Feb 2016

Bernie has no plan for that except a political Revolution. A detailed plan would help.

CoffeeCat

(24,411 posts)
201. If Bernie Sanders wins the Democratic nomination...
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 07:20 PM
Feb 2016

...the revolution will be right behind him. The American people will be lined up behind him, demanding change.

We are so ready for this fight.

We were ready for it with Obama. Obama had all of us ready to fight. We were lined up...fired up, ready to go!

Obama decided on to compromise and take it from there. Obama has been a great president and I am thankful every day that he thwarted more Middle East war and that he brought this economy back from the dead. He did a great job.

However, he did not leverage the power of the people that were standing behind him after his win.

Sanders will do that. He plans to do that. He is hell bent on doing that.

Can you feel this movement growing behind Sanders? I do. It's people powered, it's young and old--men and women. And it's growing stronger by the day. We're read to elect real change with Sanders and we'll be right there when he uses WE THE PEOPLE as leverage to tell Congress to get their shit together. Obama never took the fight to the American people.

And overwhelming Sanders support and unprecedented Dem turnout will help down ticket races too. We could win some key Congressional seats with Sanders at the top of the ticket.

We can do this!!!

CoffeeCat

(24,411 posts)
14. Sander's economic policies would make meaningful, real changes to the economy
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 11:46 AM
Feb 2016

All people would benefit.

I'm sorry that doesn't fit with the memes that you so desperately want to stick.

uponit7771

(90,347 posts)
30. Your last comment was condescending at best and the first statement has not historical
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 12:25 PM
Feb 2016

... basis behind it just a claim which I'm not interested in anymore.

My comment though does have history behind, the all boats rises is predicated on all people being able to afford boats or being able to at least swim.

CoffeeCat

(24,411 posts)
48. There is a concerted effort to position Sanders
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 12:39 PM
Feb 2016

as a candidate who does not care about the African American community. In my estimation, this is nothing more than an attack and a smear. Most notably, this smear was kicked into overdrive--the second the campaigns left New Hampshire.

A smear perpetuated by so many of you--that is a political hit job. I find it repulsive. And I'll call it out when I see it.

No doubt, this deluge of unfair posts against Sanders--is a pathetic attempt to build a narrative and make it stick and harm him as we head into South Carolina.

Damn right my statement is condescending! It was meant to be condescending. Because the tidal wave of posts, since New Hampshire are a pathetic attempt to build a narrative by using classes and races as objects to smear Sanders.

Furthermore, Sander's economic policies--which would be an economic boon to all people in this country, are the centerpiece of his campaign. Of course, there is no "historical basis" because these are his plans going forward. Raising the minimum wage to $15, saving families hundreds of dollars per month on healthcare costs and directing taxes to repairing crumbling neighborhoods, schools and infrastructure--would directly help all people--the African American community.



uponit7771

(90,347 posts)
54. No there's not, he cares prolly more than Hillary... that's not the point and never has been and...
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 12:46 PM
Feb 2016

.... people of color on DU have been screaming this for months.

HILLARY HAS A RELATIONSHIP, IMPERFECT, BUT WE KNOW HER...

I don't know how many articles have been written about this, its like the left dismissed people of color just like they dismissed Obama and could've gave a damn about what we thought

until our votes were needed

CoffeeCat

(24,411 posts)
60. I completely agree with you that the African American community
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 01:00 PM
Feb 2016

has been largely ignored by government, and that there is a rampant dishonesty during elections.

Suddenly, everyone is pandering to you and promising you things that will never be delivered.

I get that. And I am just as appalled as you that it is happening.

In 2008, Hillary hired an PR firm that specialized in African American marketing and media relations. That is very telling. She attempts to craft messaging and use these tactics to help her win. I've seen no evidence, since 2008, of her working hard for the African American community. Yet, her entire campaign is attacking Bernie for being insensitive to African Americans.

That is so wrong!

Bernie is not the one using African Americans as an attack device! Please remember that!

 

Liberal_Stalwart71

(20,450 posts)
97. Ignored by government and the Democratic Party. Even now we have white liberals trying to
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 02:24 PM
Feb 2016

belittle and condescend black people, as always.

This is why many blacks do not trust white liberals. The paternalism, the arrogance, the condescension.

I'm kindly asking for it to stop.

CoffeeCat

(24,411 posts)
204. I totally get what you are saying
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 07:25 PM
Feb 2016

and I think time and time again, politicians have failed minorities.

One thing that "We The People" have in common is that our government is no longer listening to any of us. They are owned by the corporations. But wow, do they love us during campaign season. Suddenly, they care. Suddenly, they want to make our lives better.

I know how you feel, to some extent, because I have felt ignored and pandered to by all politicians during the last couple of election cycles.

I can never fully understand how you feel about this--because you have been dealing with this for a lot longer.

It's not right. It's not right for ANY of us to be used in this manner.

 

Kentonio

(4,377 posts)
62. Well that makes no sense at all
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 01:03 PM
Feb 2016

You think Sanders cares more, but you know Hillary better? So you know her and STILL think she cares less, but knowing that makes you support her?

 

ThePhilosopher04

(1,732 posts)
55. It's race-baiting which Ole Hill and Bill are famous for
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 12:47 PM
Feb 2016

Bernie's encompassing message directly addresses the African American community, and has for decades. Anyone who doesn't understand that, either doesn't wish to, has their heads stuck up their ass, or are simply dishonest.

CoffeeCat

(24,411 posts)
67. I feel that she has such a powerful attack machine that is so willing to spread hate
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 01:09 PM
Feb 2016

and lies--and it is hard to combat it.

It's like David vs. Goliath.

If the Clinton camp gave the directive to smear Bernie with 3rd-grade teachers from St. Louis--the next day--the Internet would be overrun with slams, mocking, horrible hate, howling and guffawing about how Bernie just can't connect and isn't interested in 3rd-grade teachers from St. Louis.

These types of acts are not the behavior or an authentic, grounded candidate with a decent campaign behind her. These are the acts of bullies and Pez Dispenser flacks who will dish out whatever she commands.

Even if it's hateful. Even if it's wrong. Even if it's untrue. The narrative of the day must be pushed. And it must be pushed hard.

kstewart33

(6,551 posts)
141. CC again, how will it pass a Republican-controlled Congress?
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 04:03 PM
Feb 2016

Obama used up all his political capital in getting Obamacare passed and that was when the Dems controlled both Houses.

CoffeeCat

(24,411 posts)
209. I think Sander's approach will be two-pronged
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 07:36 PM
Feb 2016

I explained this in a previous post but I think these two things are factors:

Obama did spend his political capital on Obamacare. However, he did not take the fight to the American people. And again, I think Obama was one of our best Presidents and the damage he prevented (from the neocons who he did not appease) and the paradigm shifts in our economy--were amazing accomplishments.

Bernie plans to leverage the support of the American people after the election and take it to DC with him. Sanders has said repeatedly, no one politician can do this alone! We're talking about busting up very powerful, entrenched interests. They will not go gentle into that good night! However, they are no match for "We The People."

We're like fricking Dororthy from the Wizard of Oz. We had the power all along. We just didn't realize it. We are all traumatized! We've been lied to! We've watched our government morph into some kind of perverse corporate kow towing machine. We watched Occupy Wall Street rise, get the crap kicked out of them on the NYC streets and then we saw it wither. I think many of us have given up hope--until Bernie.

Bernie will be the figurehead that will galvanize "We The People" into affecting change. He has our backs. He will lead the charge but we have to be there too. It's the only way we win.

Bernie can't do it without "We The People" and "We The People" can't do it without Bernie. But together--we can and will!

I also believe that if Bernie is Democratic nominee he will coalesce such a force behind him--it will be mind blowing. It will bring new people into the political process and the days of only 40 percent of Americans voting will die--as it should! I think this influx of new voters and people inspired by Bernie and his ideas will help down ticket races. We could pick up key Congressional wins to help with getting a Congress that will work with Bernie and not against him. That's my take.

uponit7771

(90,347 posts)
32. No, of course not... HRC has a relationship with PoC and we know that devil..
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 12:27 PM
Feb 2016

... the devil we don't know is coming promising the world and bashing the guy we do like as prsident ... calling him weak and hanging around people who've called him some of the most racially vile names I could ever hear for the sake of slighting one of them on SEATING ARRANGMENTS!!!

 

cherokeeprogressive

(24,853 posts)
50. The Clintons were at the pinnacle of power from 1992 to 2009.
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 12:41 PM
Feb 2016

Tell me again how black lives mattered to them during that 16 year stretch. Tell me again how black lives improved.

The devil you know indeed.

uponit7771

(90,347 posts)
52. Go ask people in the AA groups and they'll tell you, why are you just trying to figure out the answe
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 12:43 PM
Feb 2016

... answer to this question or do you already know it and don't want to say it?

uponit7771

(90,347 posts)
61. All I'm saying is the attitude now is ... hey, why aren't you supporting Sanders when PoC have been
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 01:03 PM
Feb 2016

... saying why for months.

I honestly think that Sanders et al thought "momentum" would actually change things...

it would NOT.. and has not... Sanders should've known coming out of IA with a loSS of 25% of the PoC vote that he had a problem.

Obama didn't have "mommentum" going into SC... Obama developed a dialogue with blacks WAAAAAAY before SC....


Like Tracy Morgan said "Barack Husssien Obama"... THAT'S TOO BLACK !!!

Only black politico knew who Obama was and knew he wife didn't want to be involved at first... hell, it was in all the BLACK magazines


Obama started a dialogue... Sanders didn't and now he has some catching up to do

jham123

(278 posts)
82. not quite accurate
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 01:42 PM
Feb 2016

The now famous "Bring them to heal" (Black intercity youths) comment is what turned the tide for Obama.

Prior to that comment Clinton was winning 60/40 of the black vote, after that it flip-flopped in favor or Obama.

uponit7771

(90,347 posts)
89. I don't remember this comment in 2008, can you cite it... I looked on google with keywords
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 02:10 PM
Feb 2016

... Clinton and "bring them to heal"

regards

jham123

(278 posts)
145. Sure
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 04:09 PM
Feb 2016
http://www.thenation.com/article/hillary-clinton-does-not-deserve-black-peoples-votes/

*Snip*

"In her support for the 1994 crime bill, for example, she used racially coded rhetoric to cast black children as animals. “They are not just gangs of kids anymore,” she said. “They are often the kinds of kids that are called ‘super-predators.’ No conscience, no empathy. We can talk about why they ended up that way, but first we have to bring them to heel.”

uponit7771

(90,347 posts)
181. Can I get a quote, the video I saw she said NOTHING about black children...
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 05:55 PM
Feb 2016

... again, there's people who keep ssaying she said something about black kids and I haven't read or heard one word of that in that speech.

Also, Sanders voted for the 94 bill ... Clinton did not

That is Sanders cross to bear and NOT Clintons

jham123

(278 posts)
182. Huh?
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 06:05 PM
Feb 2016

I posted a full link....there was no video, but you can read it for yourself by going to the link.

And the "Cross" We aren't debating the 1994 Bill itself...that's another topic altogether, what we are talking about are Hillaries comments about the inner city kids....the document speaks for itself

" she used racially coded rhetoric to cast black children as animals. “They are not just gangs of kids anymore,” she said. “They are often the kinds of kids that are called ‘super-predators.’ No conscience, no empathy. We can talk about why they ended up that way, but first we have to bring them to heel.”

Are you trying to dispute what she said?

uponit7771

(90,347 posts)
185. Again, no mention of black anything.. this is getting a little silly, sounds like a whispering ...
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 06:12 PM
Feb 2016

... campaign

jham123

(278 posts)
186. oh, I get it
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 06:17 PM
Feb 2016

I get it now....this is the "I never heard her say anything" argument.

Sorry, not playing that game

jham123

(278 posts)
188. Obtuse much?
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 06:20 PM
Feb 2016

if you aren't even going to acknowledge indisputable video evidence, we can banter all day and you'll still sit there with your Eyes and ears shut while singing Lalalalalalalala

I'm done, go vote for Clinton for all I care, it's your choice.

uponit7771

(90,347 posts)
193. An attack in the form of a pejorative question, and now you're being condescending...
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 06:32 PM
Feb 2016

.... whatever.

When people get like this it usually means their positions are weak

Response to uponit7771 (Reply #89)

kristopher

(29,798 posts)
63. Free college, $15/hr minimum, and universal single payer health care?
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 01:04 PM
Feb 2016

The hell Anyone has heard that before.

jham123

(278 posts)
83. According to the assertions...
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 01:44 PM
Feb 2016

...from Hillary supporters, all the things you mentioned aren't going to apply to PoC

Now...."No one" said that directly, so I am quoting no one....

 

Liberal_Stalwart71

(20,450 posts)
108. If history is evidence, then yes. Systematically blacks have been excluded from programs
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 02:51 PM
Feb 2016

that supposedly helps ***everyone***.

And as long as Sanders and his friends don't want to admit or accept this as the reality, he has lost my vote.

jham123

(278 posts)
130. Not me...
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 03:55 PM
Feb 2016

I'm a "Tide lifts all boats" type.

PoC will benefit just like everyone else. But to hear some Hillary types you'd think it wouldn't happen that way

jham123

(278 posts)
134. Sadly, today....
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 03:58 PM
Feb 2016

it seems the "most" distorted issue is the one about Race.

Bernie hasn't delved into a "protected class" type of discussion, rather, he has been talking about "All Americans"

no hyphen needed.

kristopher

(29,798 posts)
202. You're talking trash with no intent except to smear.
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 07:23 PM
Feb 2016

That's why "the particulars don't matter" to you.

uponit7771

(90,347 posts)
205. I don't need to smear Sanders, he's doing good job of that himself with promising a trillion dollars
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 07:28 PM
Feb 2016

... to PoC causes.

What the hell?!!?

lol... we've heard it all before...

Response to uponit7771 (Reply #10)

 

Liberal_Stalwart71

(20,450 posts)
38. BULLSHIT!! Wealthy blacks, blacks with advanced degrees, assets, etc.--STILL face racism!
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 12:31 PM
Feb 2016

Class over race bullshit will push more black folks away from Sanders.

He must start being HONEST about race. He and his fanatics!

 

WhaTHellsgoingonhere

(5,252 posts)
46. As a Sanders supporter, it's not going to work because it's too abstract
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 12:36 PM
Feb 2016

he has no tangible relationship with blacks like the Clintons, even though their policies were disastrous for blacks. Michelle Alexander noted that a better way to count unemployment among blacks is to count those incarcerated. When you do that, unemployment is 42%. Maybe that's the unemployment number Trump "heard."

Depaysement

(1,835 posts)
183. I totally agree except . . .
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 06:07 PM
Feb 2016

. . . it doesn't change the fact that African-Americans are disproportionately poorer and there is no justifiable reason for that. That is what Sharpton is saying.

 

Liberal_Stalwart71

(20,450 posts)
41. This is about Bernie Sanders. It is HE who must convince a good number of blacks to vote for him!
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 12:34 PM
Feb 2016

We know where Hillary Clinton stands.

Deflection does not let Sanders off the hook.

Nedsdag

(2,437 posts)
110. I don't get who or where do you stand for.
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 02:54 PM
Feb 2016

I'm leaning towards Sanders. However by the time my primary comes around he may be done. No one black or white has told me who or how to vote. Your condescending tone is tiresome.

I don't like or trust Hillary, but I don't think deriding Sanders is helping.

The way you are posting, you are either going to do the following:

Not vote at all making you a hypocrite.
Vote for the Green Party candidate.
Vote for Hillary after all.

You sound like a Hillary supporter. You both stick your fingers in the wind.

 

Liberal_Stalwart71

(20,450 posts)
113. Actually now that you put it that way by insulting me, I'm reconsidering. I just might
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 02:58 PM
Feb 2016

support Hillary Clinton.

Thanks for helping me make my mind up.

Have a great day!

 

earthshine

(1,642 posts)
119. How easily your opinion is swayed.
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 03:10 PM
Feb 2016

Think for yourself? Really? You seem very reactionary.

You are just ranting, and making a fool of yourself.

 

LittleBlue

(10,362 posts)
126. AUTOMATED MESSAGE: Results of your Jury Service
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 03:45 PM
Feb 2016
On Thu Feb 11, 2016, 02:14 PM an alert was sent on the following post:

How easily your opinion is swayed.
http://www.democraticunderground.com/?com=view_post&forum=1251&pid=1201713

REASON FOR ALERT

This post is disruptive, hurtful, rude, insensitive, over-the-top, or otherwise inappropriate.

ALERTER'S COMMENTS

Personal attack.

You served on a randomly-selected Jury of DU members which reviewed this post. The review was completed at Thu Feb 11, 2016, 02:26 PM, and the Jury voted 1-6 to LEAVE IT.

Juror #1 voted to LEAVE IT ALONE
Explanation: No explanation given
Juror #2 voted to LEAVE IT ALONE
Explanation: No explanation given
Juror #3 voted to LEAVE IT ALONE
Explanation: No explanation given
Juror #4 voted to HIDE IT
Explanation: No explanation given
Juror #5 voted to LEAVE IT ALONE
Explanation: The problem is, the whole subthread has devolved pathetically -- like DU in general -- and you can't really single out this one post....
Juror #6 voted to LEAVE IT ALONE
Explanation: No explanation given
Juror #7 voted to LEAVE IT ALONE
Explanation: No explanation given

Thank you very much for participating in our Jury system, and we hope you will be able to participate again in the future.
 

Liberal_Stalwart71

(20,450 posts)
105. Exactly. If people were just honest. We really don't want to bring everybody together...
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 02:46 PM
Feb 2016

We want black people to shut up about race and only concern themselves with class...this even though there are middle- and higher-income blacks who still face systemic racism and discrimination.

We Negroes just need to shut the fuck up and vote for Bernie Sanders...because...well because his fanatics say so.

boston bean

(36,221 posts)
8. He really feels as he has told everyone over the years
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 11:28 AM
Feb 2016

That he thinks these social issues are wedge issues preventing us from achieving an economic solution.

What he doesnt get is there are different reasons for these inequalities. Bernie believes he is right and people are focusing on the wrong thing.

This will not serve him well.

 

Liberal_Stalwart71

(20,450 posts)
76. If he really feels that dealing with the very pervasive issue as race is a wedge issue,
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 01:37 PM
Feb 2016

he has lost my vote forever.

Addressing women's issues is seldom viewed as a wedge issue.
Addressing issues that affect the Jewish population are seldom viewed as wedge issues.
Addressing issues that affect the LGBT **used** to be viewed as wedge issues, but...

When it comes to race, no one can talk about this.

This is the problem that Eric Holder identified when he rightfully referred to this nation as one of "cowards" on the race issue.

We simply refuse to accept that racism exists and permeates every aspect of American life.

boston bean

(36,221 posts)
80. When you hear people saying these issues divide us
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 01:41 PM
Feb 2016

and take our attention and action away from the "real" issue that will help everyone. Never mistake what it is they are really saying.

Cause that everyone as we know doesnt include everyone.

 

alcibiades_mystery

(36,437 posts)
9. Sanders is classic New Left: he really believes that class is the ACTUAL problem, and race is
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 11:30 AM
Feb 2016

an epiphenomenon designed to obscure class oppression.

I think Sanders people just have to eat that belief system (most believe it themselves - though I've seen exceptions). Sanders "Together" ad is a good example: if only we can see past all the ways "they" divide us, we can deal with the "real" oppression, which is class. Hey, it's fine as a belief system, but it's not particularly complex intersectional thought, and it's not surprising that minority communities that rejected that line of reasoning in the 60's and 70's continue to reject it. The notion that if you solve the class problem, the race (or gender, or LGBTQ, or etc.) issues will clear themselves up is silly. But it is a core New Left belief, largely unmodified in the Sanders' program.

Sanders basic belief system privileges class as the primary site of oppression / political action. It is the economic base, upon which the "cultural" superstructures of those other oppressions rests. Again, fine. If that's your belief system, fine. It's classic New Left. If that's what you believe, then vote that way.

uponit7771

(90,347 posts)
11. If blacks were all billionaires we'd still have the issue of racism. Having enough money to
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 11:37 AM
Feb 2016

... deal with it doesn't make that any better.

I don't how this is not a practical thing to see

CoffeeCat

(24,411 posts)
15. Sanders absolutely sees racism as a problem in this country
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 11:49 AM
Feb 2016

Economic policies that benefit everyone (which is what Sanders is fighting for), and racism--are two separate issues.

Sanders clearly is a fighter on both counts.

I'm sorry that this doesn't fit with the nasty, erroneous talking points that you're dishing out today.

You're simply wrong.

uponit7771

(90,347 posts)
39. Sanders has a history of minimizing minorities problems for the sake of votes, I know he sees it as
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 12:31 PM
Feb 2016

... problem any honest person would.

My point is if he doesn't have a practical way around it then don't bash other people who have...

Right now his campaign is trying to tie Clinton to a vote he made in the 90s...start a dialogue with people is a lot more ....

progressive....

than chiding them for not picking him as a candidate

ecstatic

(32,707 posts)
23. +1000. And it's not just about racist words. Racism creates a safety issue
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 12:08 PM
Feb 2016

in this gun / militarized cop culture that we live in. Ask Henry Louis Gates, Garrick and Carl Hopkins, Trayvon Martin, or others who were assaulted or killed at or near their homes by cops or neighbors. These victims weren't in "bad" neighborhoods.

Neither Bernie nor Hillary can singlehandedly eradicate racism, but as Hillary often states, you can create and/or change laws.

How can Bernie create or change laws in a meaningful way if he doesn't even acknowledge that there's a problem?

6chars

(3,967 posts)
33. epiphenomenon? intersectional thought, cultural superstructures?
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 12:27 PM
Feb 2016

I don't think Sanders uses those phrases. They sound kinda pointy headed. Does he seem like an activist professor?

 

AOR

(692 posts)
45. Hilarious post...
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 12:36 PM
Feb 2016

It's pretty obvious from your post that you have no clue what left means. Not old left, not new left, not any left. Your entire post is backwards on every point of contention. There is no line of actual leftist analysis that doesn't address capitalist social relations and class as part of any discussion of racial justice. That is not "a belief system" in the subjective. That is objective material and historical reality.

Even the radicals of the Black Nationalist and Black Power movements who didn't particularly care for working with radical whitey... firmly understood the role of class, capitalist social relations, the relationship between the ruling class capitalist power structure and institutionalized racism, and political economy.

Your post is the poster child for neoliberal identity politics drivel in defense of the capitalist power structure. That you imply that institutionalized racism can be addressed in the "changing of thoughts and attitudes" without addressing the power that the capitalist ruling class (steeped in white supremacy) wields is very amusing.


" If a white man wants to lynch me, that’s his problem. If he’s got the power to lynch me, that’s my problem. Racism is not a question of attitude; it’s a question of power."

--Stokely Carmichael


Now do tell where that power derives from alcibiades_mystery.

 

alcibiades_mystery

(36,437 posts)
66. Haha
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 01:07 PM
Feb 2016


The fact that you can rehearse the classic left analysis in its own terms doesn't invalidate my point at all. Like I said, some people actually believe it. That's you. Good on you.

Needless to say, the fact that people involved in anti-racism activism recognize class as a problem doesn't invalidate my point either. They function in complex ways together. The problem with Sandersesque New Left analysis is that it tends to ignore those complexities in favor of the class analysis.
 

AOR

(692 posts)
75. Sanders is not leftist...of course it invalidates your point...
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 01:37 PM
Feb 2016

neither is liberalism or the Democratic Party. That said...Sanders understands the role that economic class plays even if his vanilla solutions of capitalist reform can never be the answer in the long run. The connectedness between race and class under the capitalist power structure is not a New Left construct. Neoliberalism is a New Left construct. You're not kidding anyone who has even a cursory understanding of the terms you're using.

 

KingCharlemagne

(7,908 posts)
98. Technical Note: Unless I'm mistaken, "New Left" emerged as a linguistic
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 02:26 PM
Feb 2016

Last edited Thu Feb 11, 2016, 03:51 PM - Edit history (1)

construct in the 1960s, in order to distinguish it from the "Old Left" of the 30s and 40s. In that sense, I don't believe Neoliberalism is a "New Left construct," although many of neoliberalism's current adherents may be disillusioned New Leftists.

 

AOR

(692 posts)
124. Your time frame is correct on the "New Left" King...
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 03:36 PM
Feb 2016

I disagree that Neoliberalism is not a New Left construct. The New Left was always steeped in the identity politics of ignoring class analysis classical Marxism. All of the ideology of the New Left (mostly dominated by liberals ) movements was steeped in "Capitalism as the end of history" while working around that and an ignorance and denunciation of the class analysis of the Old Left. Equality FOR ALL was never the rallying cry. "Equality of opportunity" under capitalist social relations was the rallying cry for most of those movements. Neoliberalism was the natural procession of that New Left ideology. Maybe I'm missing something.

Recursion

(56,582 posts)
217. I associate it with Sauvy (EDIT: Marcuse)
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 11:21 PM
Feb 2016

But haven't read him since undergrad so that may be wrong (Marcuse? Sartre? Somebody French at any rate).

(EDIT: always Google first, not second! Marcuse, not Sauvy. My bad.)

 

KingCharlemagne

(7,908 posts)
154. If you think the shit Sanders is getting from the Hillary cohort is out of hand, you should
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 04:30 PM
Feb 2016

see the shit he gets from some of my Socialist and Communist comrades (those of the Marxist-Leninst-Maoist ilk, that is).

I had to leave a couple of their groups because I'm supporting a bourgeois Social Democrat!

 

AOR

(692 posts)
161. Yes I know King...
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 04:44 PM
Feb 2016

It's not personal. The divide between Bernie and Marxists and the anti-capitalist left is one that would be hard to reconcile. I post elsewhere. I've been mostly in the leftist camp. The Bernie supporters have been pretty rough on the leftists and Marxists also. The Democratic Party is a dead issue for most leftists. There are no possible redeeming qualities in support of the two-party circus for many. I've been torn for a little while now. On the one hand Bernie has opened up a narrative that has some potential to raise leftist demands. On the other... a lot of it flies in the face of leftist (anti-capitalist) analysis.

 

bettyellen

(47,209 posts)
135. where you going with this "whitey" bullshit? needlessly injecting anti-white racial invectives?
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 03:59 PM
Feb 2016

Interesting.

 

AOR

(692 posts)
151. Yawn...offer something of substance besides "faux outrage" and vindictive emotion...
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 04:23 PM
Feb 2016

lets here your proposed solutions for lifting poor Black communities out of poverty stricken conditions. Let's here how the policies of neoliberals like Obama and the Clintons have been such a smashing success

 

bettyellen

(47,209 posts)
156. Putting the word "whitey" out there and now demanding answers @ "poor black poverty"...
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 04:32 PM
Feb 2016

All said with nothing but good intentions, I am sure.

 

AOR

(692 posts)
165. Like I said offer something of substance...
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 04:57 PM
Feb 2016

the race-baiting of reactionaries of any stripe rolls off the shoulder of leftists like melting meaningless ice. You're gonna need more than that to make your case. You've injected yourself in my comments on more than one occasion now but you've offered nothing in response of any worth. As I told you yesterday. This is not an argument you can win. Black leftists and white leftists and leftists of all colors and creeds laugh at the memes you provide. There is full agreement that class and race can't be separated in the fight for Social and Economic justice. The only people who say they can are those who don't want to confront the capitalist power structure and capitalist social relations as a problem.

 

bettyellen

(47,209 posts)
170. TL:DR ..seemed like a lot of lurid adjectives about an imaginary "full agreement" w/your ideas.
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 05:17 PM
Feb 2016

HA. Good luck with that.

 

AOR

(692 posts)
172. Seek and you shall find the truth...
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 05:26 PM
Feb 2016

to the dead end that is the cognitive dissonance of your thinking... in ignoring class relations under the capitalist power structure while trying to fight institutionalized racism.

 

bettyellen

(47,209 posts)
173. The truth is, not everyone supports your priorities. I know it sucks to hear, but
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 05:29 PM
Feb 2016

lots of us are used to that. Can you guess why?

 

AOR

(692 posts)
189. LOL..it's not hard to guess...
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 06:27 PM
Feb 2016

reactionaries of all stripes don't like to hear the truth about their complicity in the continuation and defense of business as usual. There are many here who could give a shit less about their brothers/sisters living in abject poverty as long as they get to preserve their own economic self-interests and political comfort zone.

"1-2-3-4 we don't want your fucking class war. We got Hillary and Obama... GO team. LMFAO

 

bettyellen

(47,209 posts)
192. Yes, I am quite familiar with those "who could give a shit less about their brothers/sisters"
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 06:30 PM
Feb 2016

Many have described my need for full reproductive freedom and equal pay as a "distraction" or "wedge".

kristopher

(29,798 posts)
69. "...if you solve the class problem, the" wedge issues "issues will clear themselves up"
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 01:13 PM
Feb 2016

You say that's silly. Do you have a basis for that claim? Putting a phony label on it (New Left) is less than persuasive when it is consistent with virtually every theory of culture I know.

The fact is the Economic Class Issue and creating a strong economically-homogeneous middle class and social safety net for all is essential to defusing the misdirected anger behind these other issues.

 

AOR

(692 posts)
85. Agree with half your post...
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 02:03 PM
Feb 2016

the other half is a problem from a leftist perspective. "The Middle Class" is the bait and crumbs the capitalist ruling class throws the workers to keep us neutered and under the illusion that any gains and concessions won are our final destiny. The "Middle Class" is an illusion that can never be a permanent state of prosperity that the workers ( present and future) - AS A WHOLE - can depend on. It is an aberration under the capitalist modes of production that can never be attained or maintained for the whole of the workers going forward. Leftists view that as a problem.

Of course the leftist perspective is vastly outnumbered here and everywhere else, but clarity is needed. Clarity matters. When the leftist perspective is marginalized or co-opted everything moves further right. This is not knocking Sanders or his efforts for some relief for the working class. That said... the Democratic Party and Bernie Sanders should not be trying to redefine leftism for their own liking and mold it into the capitalist power structure that guarantees the continued existence of a ruling class. That is the greatest of insults to genuine leftists of the anti-capitalist variety.

kristopher

(29,798 posts)
95. I don't agree. The focus on production misses reproduction.
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 02:20 PM
Feb 2016

Any accurate vision of the actual nature of conflict must include the internal tug of war over resources between the political economy and the domestic economy. That is what is at play here. We have energy resources and technology that make obsolete the nature of production as it was when Marxist theory emerged.

Democracy makes obsolete the Guilded Age model of "ownership" by enabling regulatory control that unbundles the rights of ownership and allows effective sharing of "ownership".

A blurb from Facebook that I agree with:

You can't have socialism without capitalism or it becomes communism, nor can you have capitalism without socialism, for it becomes fascism.

 

AOR

(692 posts)
137. You may disagree...
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 04:00 PM
Feb 2016

but it then becomes subjective word-salad. Classical Marxism does not deal in the subjective. Classical Marxism is the study of scientific Socialism based on analysis of historical material reality.

The blurb you provide has zero to do with historical material reality. Is is nothing more than a twisted caricature to defend capitalism that exists only in the mind of the person who provided it. A form of red-baiting. Your correspondent does not understand what capitalism, socialism, or communism is in regards to Marx. Your correspondent is a reactionary who can not let go of the idea of "private property" sans capitalist social relations. The idea of social ownership of the means of production and the commons going forward is something your correspondent wants to avoid. Hence the word-salad to defend capitalism.

kristopher

(29,798 posts)
155. Eh, no.
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 04:32 PM
Feb 2016

"Classical Marxism" is a theoretical construct to explain observed reality. It has a couple of gaping holes in it that cultural materialism does an excellent job of plugging.

Word salad would be an excellent description of your verbose style of expression attempting to deny the progress of knowledge. There is no attempt to deny capitalism. There is not attempt to "red bait". There is just a simple statement of observed reality.

 

AOR

(692 posts)
169. Let us cut through the chase...
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 05:17 PM
Feb 2016

what are your views on the question of private property in regards to (who controls the means of production and resources) and the existence of a ruling class of private capital under the capitalist power structure. What are your views on class struggle.


"The history of all hitherto existing society is the history of class struggles. Freeman and slave, patrician and plebeian, lord and serf, guild-master and journeyman, in a word, oppressor and oppressed, stood in constant opposition to one another, carried on an uninterrupted, now hidden, now open fight, a fight that each time ended, either in a revolutionary reconstitution of society at large, or in the common ruin of the contending classes."

-- Karl Marx



Further...there is no statement of observed reality in this utter nonsense. "You can't have socialism without capitalism or it becomes communism, nor can you have capitalism without socialism, for it becomes fascism."


Do you even know what the end game of Marxism is ?


"The society that will organize production on the basis of a free and equal association of the producers will put the whole machinery of the state where it will then belong: into the museum of antiquities, by the side of the spinning wheel and the bronze axe."

-- Friedrich Engels

That is the end game of Marxism and the "scary communism" that your correspondent envisions.

Do you or your correspondent understand what the "withering away of the state" means ? Do you or your correspondent understand what "super abundance" means ?

Now why don't you address these questions instead of finding ways to defend capitalist social relations as a must, and "mixed systems" with a ruling class of private capital, running the show.






kristopher

(29,798 posts)
177. I don't subscribe to Marx - like I said, his analysis is incomplete.
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 05:43 PM
Feb 2016

A more comprehensive and far more workable theory of culture is Cultural Materialism, the work of Marvin Harris.

BTW, it is 'cut to the chase' not, "cut through the chase".

 

AOR

(692 posts)
210. You've avoided the questions...
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 07:59 PM
Feb 2016

I didn't ask you if you subscribed to Marx. I asked you about private property, class struggle, and your thoughts on capitalist social relations. You don't have to subscribe to Marx to discuss that. You've also devolved into playing the part of elitist grammar police...a glowing example of why well educated liberals and liberal academics gain no traction with the blue-collar working class. A long topic for another day. You really should read the writings of the late Joe Bageant.


kristopher

(29,798 posts)
211. And I answered you.
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 08:22 PM
Feb 2016

You just don't like the answer that I have no use for Marxist theories. Let me play the role of mirror. You insist I discuss a the elements of a theory that I told you I do not accept. That leads to charges that I'm "avoiding questions" that you are extracting as meaningful solely on the basis of that theory. Even though you have no idea of what my belief structure consists of, your certitude related to Marx apparently enables you to categorize me as someone outside of and unfamiliar with "the blue-collar working class".

You are an incredibly brilliant analyst and astute observer of human nature. So much so that you can discern over the internet things that would be impossible for mere mortals.

I'm humbled to be in your presence.

 

AOR

(692 posts)
212. You're avoiding a discussion of capitalist social relations...
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 10:18 PM
Feb 2016

when you're ready to go there let me know.

 

bettyellen

(47,209 posts)
139. reminds me of a poster that explained, if I earn more, I can fly somewhere for an abortion....
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 04:02 PM
Feb 2016

and black people, faced with injustice- well now they can afford great lawyers!! And that actually represented some sort of bent equality. Because civil rights ain't as important as what's in his wallet.

kristopher

(29,798 posts)
157. I'm sure it does make you think of those things.
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 04:39 PM
Feb 2016

Of course, that's because you start with the proposition that you want to besmirch Sanders in any and all things. You could therefore come to no other logical conclusion.

However, those of us who like to start with the template that modern day culture in the US provides are able to see that most of the anger is being inculcated by people who strive to divide those who would otherwise be economically aligned and operating in political solidarity.

 

bettyellen

(47,209 posts)
162. I adore Bernie Sanders- but am not so blind as to have no questions. Pretty much everyone
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 04:45 PM
Feb 2016

here has heard about the "divide and conquer" thing that reduces our lives to inconvenient (for you) wedge issues. We know a lot more than you are capable of giving us credit for. We do not know how he plans to raise taxes with the current congress. His entire campaign depends on it.

There wasn't much solidarity when I needed it, so your self interest does not move me the way you imagine it might. How is that for a wedge?

 

Liberal_Stalwart71

(20,450 posts)
111. Absolutely BRILLIANT post! And that's one of the reasons why Sanders' is not capturing a large
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 02:56 PM
Feb 2016

proportion of the black vote.

He lost mine on this issue.

ecstatic

(32,707 posts)
12. Honestly, I'd be willing to give Bernie a 5th look if Sharpton came out and
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 11:42 AM
Feb 2016

endorsed him. There's a trust barrier for me when it comes to Bernie. Where was this version of him 4 years ago? I guess he was too busy trying to primary President Obama, but I digress...

Say what you want about Sharpton, but he is a realist who can sift through all the bullshit. He's fair and practical. I trust his judgment.

It'll be interesting to see how his meeting with Clinton goes next week.

polly7

(20,582 posts)
49. Yes.
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 12:40 PM
Feb 2016

If he'd have asked for specifics Sanders didn't address, I'm sure he'd have gotten answers to them, or at least an acknowledgment by Sanders that they were important and needed to be addressed. I really don't understand why people just don't come out and ASK the questions they have.

Hiraeth

(4,805 posts)
64. white people talk and are told by black people to shut up
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 01:06 PM
Feb 2016

and listen to black people and then black people ask white people a question .... and white people answer and black people say I told you to shut up and listen.

it is fucked up bullshit on here.

DemocratSinceBirth

(99,710 posts)
19. Race trumps class, every time!!!
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 11:55 AM
Feb 2016

I told this story here before.

I am white...My friend who is black and I were building a door and a door case. He built his own home. I couldn't even assemble a vacuum cleaner with a manual. I digress...We went to the Loews store is Sanford, Florida to buy the materials. He is a millionaire. He made a small investment in a black owned community banks whose assets spiraled. He also was retired career military and civilian. While we were shopping we saw this woman and her husband shopping. She had her bag in the cart which couldn't have been more than a couple of feet away. When she saw us she instinctively grabbed her bag, not even trying to be discreet, as to not offend us. My friend said "I guess she doesn't trust us." His wealth still didn't prevent him from petty indignities.

He had two homes, one in NC and one in FL. When my gf and I went to visit him in his NC home which was a couple of miles from Fort Bragg where he was stationed he was telling us he wanted to buy land on the other side of the road but the owners wouldn't sell it to him because he was black.

But he believed In America's promise. He joined the military when he was seventeen. I asked him how he could serve a country that discriminated against him. He said he believed in America's promise.

kristopher

(29,798 posts)
72. That anecdote don't prove what you claim
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 01:27 PM
Feb 2016

It is a snapshot in time that reflects the existing push to divide us with false memes that resist any direct solution by government.

You can't legislate the racial issues away by making racism illegal. You can, over time, defuse the mistrust by bringing the entire population of the country into the realm of economic security and ensuring real access to the benefits that society offers.

A true living wage.
Educational opportunity at all levels unfettered by lack of funding.
Universal and fair access to health care.

These form a foundation for a degree of opportunity for EveryOne that no amount of legislation targeted at race could ever possibly achieve.

Hassin Bin Sober

(26,330 posts)
84. When Hillary was lecturing the Black Lives Matter people...
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 01:52 PM
Feb 2016

.... during her "Maybe I should only talk to white people" argument, didn't she acknowledge you don't change hearts but you can change laws and policies?

Among my African American friends, I have two friends that are textbook examples of families who, and this is based on their own telling of the story, made it in to the middle class via affirmative action and pressure to integrate unions.

One friend is a son of a cop and the other is the daughter of an Anhueser Bush union member. These friends don't know eachother that well but both tell similar stories of their fathers being among the first African American workers in their respective jobs. Both families led middle class lifestyles and sent all their kids to college. Both families have successful children with kids (at least the kids I know) earning six figure incomes. The son of the cop is a republican, btw. So there's that.

There are always going to be old white people who grab their purse or cross the street when they see a black person. I don't know what we will ever do about that but watch them die off. In the mean while, lifting all boats, while being mindful of racial issues, is a hell of a lot better than nothing.

questionseverything

(9,656 posts)
159. woman grab their purses anytime someone they don't know is close
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 04:40 PM
Feb 2016

just makes sense, after all men don't leave their wallets 10 ft away in a shopping cart , do they?

 

cherokeeprogressive

(24,853 posts)
20. This was a ruse. Sharpton summons Bernie Sanders on orders from on High...
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 11:58 AM
Feb 2016

So before he endorses Clinton (publicly) it can be seen that Sharpton gave both equal opportunity to make their case.

My prediction is that moments after he meets with Clinton he'll come out and endorse her. They might even go before the cameras together.

Meeting with Bernie Sanders yesterday was just a dog and pony show so that when he does endorse Hillary Clinton it will be lauded by the ma$$es as Hillary's breakthrough moment.

m-lekktor

(3,675 posts)
163. They sat in a Brooklyn restaurant for about a half an hour. how much can be discussed in that amount
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 04:48 PM
Feb 2016

time? Sharpton is full of shit. I saw the video and accompanying article and there was a timeline, they were in and out . it seemed like just a long photo op and then it was over.

Skid Rogue

(711 posts)
21. I feel for Bernie...
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 12:00 PM
Feb 2016

He's a good man that's never had to win African American votes. Vermont is 0.87% African-American, after all. Maybe in Vermont it's impolite to place civil/economic issues within a racial framework. He's probably trying to be nice and inclusive of all people, but he's going to have to learn quickly to address issues of race head on.

 

Liberal_Stalwart71

(20,450 posts)
36. Vermont is 0.87% African-American...and 80% of the prison population! Hmmm...
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 12:28 PM
Feb 2016

It's not CLASS! It's RACE!!!!!!

Bernie does not understand this. He keeps arguing this class bullshit. Wealthy blacks get falsely accused of shit and thrown in jail! It's not class, Bernie!! It's RACE!!

 

AOR

(692 posts)
56. Educate yourself...
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 12:53 PM
Feb 2016

Sanders is no leftist but at least he understands the connection between class and race. You don't seem to have a clue. The education begins with an understanding that the foundations of institutionalized racism are completely connected to capitalism. It begins with the understanding that institutionalized racism and murderous police brutality can not be addressed without addressing capitalist social relations and issues of class simultaneously. It begins with the understanding that the identity politics of fighting for "Social Justice" while ignoring Economic Justice and class distinctions is a meaningless dead end. It requires an understanding that the Black bourgeois political class of the Democratic Party and their tools are complicit in the destruction of Black communities.

Here is a link that might help you on your journey. No.. I don't give a shit who you vote for and no I don't give a shit if you ever get it. That is your responsibility to recognize that class and race are inseparable in regards to challenging the capitalist power structure that thrives on institutionalized and structural racism.


http://socialistworker.org/2011/01/04/race-class-and-marxism

 

AOR

(692 posts)
144. LOL...I suspected you had nothing...
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 04:08 PM
Feb 2016

and Sanders is far from a Marxist so you have even less. You've just proven you have no interest in discussing anything but your obsession with painting Sanders as "racially insensitive" to score points for your preferred status quo candidate. Who do you think you're kidding ?

Skid Rogue

(711 posts)
90. I actually agree with you... for the most part.
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 02:10 PM
Feb 2016

I believe that class matters, however, African Americans face issues that many other disenfranchised peoples have not had to face, especially over such an extended period time. Would a level economic playing field matter to African American voters? Hell, yes! However, many other civil justice issues have to be addressed, too. Perhaps, they can be addressed within a discussion about "class only," but I sure don't see how.

It's a very painful subject to talk about, but if we search our collective memory we see that a lack of attention to "race" has resulted in horrific consequences, think police brutality, Flint MI, and the response to Katrina. I imagine we can all see how these issues are related to class, but to deign that they are also deeply entrenched in race would be insane. Granted, an economic shift is perhaps one of the largest keys to solving this problem, but that takes a long time, there has to be something done right away to begin to assure people's safety and civil rights.

Le Taz Hot

(22,271 posts)
27. But here's the thing:
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 12:20 PM
Feb 2016

Bernie is willing to return to these issues again and again until he gets it right. After the BLM protests, he met several times with BLM representatives who helped him hone his message and bring BLM issues to the forefront. I've no doubt he will continue to try and get it right. This man is tenacious and he's proven that time and again.

Skid Rogue

(711 posts)
94. :D
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 02:18 PM
Feb 2016

Although, I'm a giant Hillary supporter, I think Bernie is a very good man. He's super smart and he cares, so I'm sure he'll eventually get it right.

 

Liberal_Stalwart71

(20,450 posts)
31. YES, REVEREND AL, YES!! That is what we POC have been trying to get across to white liberals
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 12:26 PM
Feb 2016

here at DU but many refuse to understand or accept!

YES!! BRILLIANT!

JudyM

(29,251 posts)
93. Ok. Are you saying ...
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 02:14 PM
Feb 2016

1) Sanders needs to more specifically describe how his framework will help Black folks, in particular

Or

2) you don't believe that his framework will help Black folks, in particular.

 

Liberal_Stalwart71

(20,450 posts)
99. That's it. The focus on class and economic equality is a DEFLECTION! Why?
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 02:27 PM
Feb 2016

Again, because middle class blacks still face systematic racism and discrimination.

Because I could be dressed in my suit and still be denied a job, even with 3 advanced degrees.

Race and class intersect at some level, sure. But RACE came first!

Bernie Sanders and many of his supporters do not seem to understand this. Or, in my view, they are deliberately denying race as a central factor that overlays class--not the other way around.

Even if we got rid of class altogether by redistributing income, RACISM PERSISTS!!

JudyM

(29,251 posts)
106. So are you looking for him to use the word "racism" outright
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 02:49 PM
Feb 2016

to show that he gets it?

Or is Clinton actually offering some concrete solution in her proposals that you like better?

 

Liberal_Stalwart71

(20,450 posts)
109. Sick of deflecting from the issue by invoking Hillary Clinton. I'm not addressing your
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 02:53 PM
Feb 2016

question, as I've addressed this issue seemingly hundreds of times.

Go to the AA discussion board and see what we POC have to say on this issue.

I'm tired of typing the same explanation over and over again.

JudyM

(29,251 posts)
116. I'm sorry, I am genuinely trying to understand it, have spent many hours reading about the issue,
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 03:03 PM
Feb 2016

including on the AA board. The reason I raised Clinton is that she is the only alternative and I want to understand what she is doing that strikes you as more tuned in to PoC.

I so understand that you'd get sick of typing.

 

Liberal_Stalwart71

(20,450 posts)
120. Al is saying what many of us POC have been screaming over and over and over and over and over...
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 03:11 PM
Feb 2016

and over again!

People just refuse to listen. And so I am done.

mgmaggiemg

(869 posts)
58. that is because
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 12:58 PM
Feb 2016

bernie tends to see wage as the great equalizer...he is from the studs terkle generation...I am the child of that gernation...my mothers generation was barb eirenreich....but this is the thing money helps but does not really heal the race class divide unless there is true equality in housing education and health care and truely where everyone is of equal value and egalitarian...that is sort of utopia...so how to get from wage equality closer to utopia...(which can never be reached.) one thing happening on the gender front is men getting paternity leave...again...some men ..the privileged....the theory in america is it should come from the top down when really it should be from the bottom up....for a solid middle class foundation....

 

GummyBearz

(2,931 posts)
68. So a separate minimum wage for black people and white people?
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 01:12 PM
Feb 2016

“One of the things that I was saying to Senator Sanders is saying that you’ve got to deal with income inequality and wages is fine, but what about the race element of that?”

I thought we were done with separate but equal...

Vinca

(50,278 posts)
100. What an odd thing to say.
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 02:32 PM
Feb 2016

Does Al think the proposed $15 an hour minimum wage only applies to whites? What exactly would Al suggest?

NowSam

(1,252 posts)
101. I like Al Sharpton and hope
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 02:36 PM
Feb 2016

he wI'll get behind Bernie. When Al ran in 04 he was the sharpest at the debates and said a lot of what Bernie is saying now.

restorefreedom

(12,655 posts)
104. fine, i'll be the one to say it. poc do not own economic injustice or class discrimination
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 02:45 PM
Feb 2016

and while i respect sharpton immensely, the issues of economic injustice affect all of us 99% ers. any of you been to the rural white south? the poverty and class discrimination is just as damaging, just as soul crushing as discrimination against any group. sure, a poor white appalachian can "pass" because of their skin color. until they open their mouth. their accent and clear lack of decent education puts them into the "white trash" category as fast as any discrimination based on appearance.

of course there are issues of institutional racism that have to be addressed. and bernie is the one to address them best imo.

but lets not kid ourselves that the 1% are only trampling on poc. they are trampling on all of us.

firebrand80

(2,760 posts)
107. You are incredibly, incredibly wrong
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 02:50 PM
Feb 2016

I could have a billion dollars in the back and another billion stashed in the Cayman Islands, I'm still going to worry about one of my boys becoming the next Tamir Rice or Trayvon Martin.

When the Cleveland PD rolled up on Tamir Rice they only saw one thing, and it's not the same thing they would have seen had Tamir Rice's parents been poor white Appalachians.

restorefreedom

(12,655 posts)
115. that is an issue also needing remedy
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 03:02 PM
Feb 2016

criminal justice reform is a major problem, clearly. and bernie wants to address it by diversifying police departments, better training, decriminalizing pot, having jobs and education available for all people, including poc, getting rid of the dp, eliminating the scourge of profit prisons, rebuilding communities, and keeping jobs here, for starters.

i am not suggesting a poor white person is as likely to be shot as a poc. but the issues of economic disadvantage and all its effects play a role in the lives of poverty stricken of every color.

firebrand80

(2,760 posts)
122. what you originally said was
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 03:15 PM
Feb 2016
"the poverty and class discrimination is just as damaging, just as soul crushing as discrimination against any group"


^ That is simply not true. POC in this country face discrimination in this country that has nothing to do with their economic standing, and everything to do with the fact that their skin isn't white.

restorefreedom

(12,655 posts)
128. i agree with you that racism is a major problem
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 03:51 PM
Feb 2016

but the people who suffer discrimination based on factors other than their skin color can be just as crushed, just as demoralized, just as painstricken as poc, the difference is what prompted the discrimination.

its not a contest. discrimination in all forms sucks and is a scourge on society.

firebrand80

(2,760 posts)
131. We're going to have to agree to disagree
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 03:57 PM
Feb 2016

My opinion is that discrimination based on race is distinct and far worse because race is an immutable characteristic, the discrimination transcends class lines, and very often is literally a matter of life and death.

restorefreedom

(12,655 posts)
140. i actually agree on most of what you said
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 04:02 PM
Feb 2016

i just think that wherever it comes from or why, it destroys equally, like a virulent cancer.

peace,

rf

 

berningman

(144 posts)
150. Appointments
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 04:20 PM
Feb 2016

Why doesn't anyone ever talk about the real way Bernie can make a difference in people's lives?
Appointments.
Treasury, DOJ, SEC, FCC etc etc.
This is the real area of power for any President. Its THE reason money is in politics.
If you don't think this is why the Establishment is scared of a Bernie Administration you haven't been paying attention to whats happened over the last 40 years.
Congress has become kabuki theater to provide cover for where the real damage is being done to Americans. Appointed positions.
I wish the Bernie people would open up this line of reasoning in response to the "But he cant get his free stuff through congress" nonsense.

DustyJoe

(849 posts)
160. just goes to show
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 04:43 PM
Feb 2016

for some , the concept of free just isn't free enough

can't please everyone, no matter how many promises

Odin2005

(53,521 posts)
200. The cynicism and defeatism, in these thread comments is depressing.
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 07:15 PM
Feb 2016

I'm getting the feeling that a lot of people, here, have written off economic populism because they assume that because Blacks were often deliberately excluded in the past that they always will be. That is a rather sad attitude to have.

BillZBubb

(10,650 posts)
206. Sharpton's agenda differs from Sanders'
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 07:34 PM
Feb 2016

Sanders wants to address income inequality and low wages across the board. Sharpton wanted some sort of statement about how racism keeps us in the situation of income inequality and low wages.

Had Sharpton's attempt been an honest one with open dialogue, he would have offered Sanders some legislative ideas to correct what he felt allowed racism to effect wages. They could have discussed those remedies. Instead, Sharpton wanted a way to paint Sanders as unconcerned about racism.

yodermon

(6,143 posts)
207. DIRECTLY FROM BERNIE'S WEBSITE: RACIAL JUSTICE | ECONOMIC VIOLENCE
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 07:34 PM
Feb 2016


In addition to the physical violence faced by too many in our country we need to look at the lives of black children and address some difficult facts. Black children, who make up just 18 percent of preschoolers, account for 48 percent of all out-of-school suspensions before kindergarten. We are failing our black children before kindergarten. Black students are expelled at three times the rate of white students. Black girls are suspended at higher rates than all other girls and most boys. According to the Department of Education, African-American students are more likely to suffer harsh punishments — suspensions and arrests — at school. Black students attend schools with higher concentrations of first-year teachers when compared with white students. Black students are more than three times as likely to attend schools where fewer than 60 percent of teachers meet all state certification and licensure requirements.

Communities of color also face the violence of economic deprivation. Let’s be frank: neighborhoods like those in west Baltimore, where Freddie Gray resided, suffer the most. However, the problem of economic immobility isn’t just a problem for young men like Freddie Gray. Despite hard-work and the will to get ahead, millions of Americans spend their entire lives struggling to survive on the economic treadmill.

We live at a time when most Americans have less than $10,000 in savings and millions of working adults have no idea how they will ever retire in dignity. An unforeseen car accident, a medical emergency, or the loss of a job could send their lives into an economic tailspin. And the problems are even more serious when we consider race.

Let us not forget: It was the greed, recklessness and illegal behavior on Wall Street that nearly drove the economy off of a cliff seven years ago. While millions of Americans lost their jobs, homes, life savings and ability to send their kids to college, African-Americans who were steered into expensive subprime mortgages were the hardest hit.

Most black and Latino households have less than $350 in savings. The black unemployment rate has remained roughly twice as high as the white rate over the last 40 years, regardless of education. Real African-American youth unemployment is over 50 percent. African-American women earn 64 cents for every dollar white men make. This is unacceptable. The American people in general want change — they want a better deal. A fairer deal. A new deal. They want an America with laws and policies that truly reward hard work with economic mobility. They want an America that affords all of its citizens with the economic security to take risks and the opportunity to realize their full potential.

ADDRESSING ECONOMIC VIOLENCE
We need to give our children, regardless of their race or income, a fair shot at attending college. That’s why all public universities should be made tuition free. We should pay for that with a tax on Wall Street speculators.

We must invest $5.5 billion to create 1 million jobs for disadvantaged young Americans who face high unemployment rates and job-training opportunities for hundreds of thousands of young adults. We should pay for that by ending the loophole allowing Wall Street hedge fund managers to pay a lower tax rate than nurses or truck drivers.

We must increase the minimum wage to a livable wage of $15 an hour by 2020 —which will increase the wages of about half of African-Americans and nearly 60 percent of Latinos.

We must invest $1 trillion to put 13 million Americans to work rebuilding our crumbling cities, roads, bridges, public transportation systems, airports, drinking water systems and other infrastructure needs. We should pay for that by closing offshore tax loopholes.

We must pass federal legislation to ensure pay equity for women.

We must prevent employers from discriminating against applicants based on criminal history by “banning the box.”

We must promote policies to give the formerly incarcerated an opportunity for education, including expanding the Second Chance Pell Pilot Program and reentry programs.

We need to ensure access to quality affordable childcare for working families, especially for parents who work non-traditional hours.

We must fundamentally re-write our trade policies and rebuild factories that were closed as a result of bad trade deals.
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