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Glenn Youngkin “Inspired” by Liberty “University” – Yep, the Far-Right School, Founded by Trump-Loving Jerry Falwell (of “Pool Boy” Infamy), Which “threatened to punish students who reported being raped”

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Glenn Youngkin is “inspired” by Liberty “University?” Seriously?!?  So…see below for some examples of what Liberty “University” stands for – and what Youngkin’s apparently “inspired” by. And yes, anyone who ever though Youngkin was some sort of “moderate” or “normie Republican” or whatever is a friggin’ moron.

Saturday News: “The Trumpification of the Supreme Court”; President Joe Biden’s Interview with Howard Stern; Kristi Noem – The Psychopath Who Youngkin Campaigned For! – “Defends Killing Her Dog”; After Leaving Governor’s Race, “Stoney calls Spanberger ‘very formidable candidate'”

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by Lowell

Here are a few international, national and Virginia news headlines, political and otherwise, for Saturday, April 27.

NY Times Article by Former Editor of Nuclear Intelligence Weekly Argues We Should Be Focusing on Solar and Wind, Not Super-Expensive Nuclear Power (Let Alone “Small Modular Reactors” – SMRs – Which Are Speculative Technologically and Extremely Expensive)

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Glenn Youngkin isn’t a stupid person, presumably – although sometimes one has to wonder, given all the inexplicably stupid things he says and does! And yet the number of things Youngkin apparently doesn’t understand is large – on a wide variety of topics.

Why is this the case? Part of it is presumably ignorance of specific topics, given his lack of prior experience in any form of government, public policy, etc., as well an apparently serious case of Dunning-Kruger (or maybe just arrogance? laziness? other?). But part of it, presumably, is “motivated reasoning,” in which “Individuals tend to favor evidence that coincides with their current beliefs and reject new information that contradicts them, despite contrary evidence.” Of course, Youngkin could also be biased due to his own personal interests – political, financial/economic, whatever. Perhaps that helps explain how someone who, at the Carlyle Group, sounded like a relatively pragmatic “moderate” even praising diversity, ESG, “lowering carbon footprint,” etc. – suddenly morphed into a Trump-loving, MAGA-cultist, right-wing ideologue?

Oh, and in addition to lurching hard right, Youngkin’s also appears to have become unenthusiastic about, or even hostile towards, clean energy and climate action. We’ve seen it since the earliest days of Youngkin’s administration, in his appointment of Trump’s coal-industry-lobbyist EPA administrator, Andrew Wheeler (and in Youngkin’s/Wheeler’s godawful “Virginia Energy Plan”), as one of his top energy advisors; in his blather about an “all-of-the-above” energy policy approach, including fossil fuels like natural gas; in his opposition to the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative, etc.

Then we’ve got Youngkin’s enthusiasm for super-expensive “small modular nuclear reactors” (SMRs), while showing far less enthusiasm for FAR-less-expensive and already proven clean energy technologies like solar, wind, and of course energy efficiency. Regarding SMRs, an analysis last July in RenewEconomy explained that: “Very few of the proposed SMRs have been demonstrated and none are commercially available”; “cost estimates for the reactor have risen from US$55/megawatt electric (MWe) in 2016 to $89/MWe in 2023”; “two French-design evolutionary power reactor (EPR) builds have been far over budget and schedule”; “commercial-scale SMRs are likely decades away, if they are at all viable”; etc.

Unfortunately, Virginia legislators appear not to have fully absorbed that analysis, as they went ahead and passed legislation “that would allow the state’s two biggest electric utility companies to request ratepayer funds to cover costs of early development for small modular nuclear reactors.” That was a big mistake, for all the reasons noted in the RenewEconomy piece. Now, a new NY Times article, entitled “The Fantasy of Reviving Nuclear Energy,”  yet again demolishes the delusion that SMRs (or really any new nuclear power plants) will ever be as inexpensive, easy to build, or even FEASIBLE to build, as existing clean energy sources – solar, wind, etc. And no, this piece was not written by someone who’s reflexively anti-nuclear-power (I’m not either, by the way), but by Stephanie Cooke, a former editor of Nuclear Intelligence Weekly – also a former reporter for ” Nucleonics WeekNuclearFuel and Inside N.R.C.” In short, Cooke knows what she’s talking about (unlike Glenn Youngkin and many others pushing for SMRs) and isn’t coming at this from some sort of reflexive or left-wing anti-nuclear position. A few key points by Cooke in her NY Times article include:

  • Solar and wind power together began outperforming nuclear power globally in 2021, and that trend continues as nuclear staggers along. Solar alone added more than 400 gigawatts of capacity worldwide last year, two-thirds more than the previous year. That’s more than the roughly 375 gigawatts of combined capacity of the world’s 415 nuclear reactors, which remained relatively unchanged last year.”
  • “…pledging to triple nuclear capacity by 2050 is a little like promising to win the lottery…the cost of building 200 gigawatts of new [nuclear power] capacity [in the US] would be…at least $4 trillion, or $6 trillion if you count the additional cost of replacing existing reactors as they age out.”
  • For much less money and in less time, the world could reduce greenhouse gas emissions through the use of renewables like solar, wind, hydropower and geothermal power and by transmitting, storing and using electricity more efficiently.”
  • “The U.S. government is already poised to spend billions of dollars building small modular and advanced reactors and keeping aging large ones running. But two such small reactor projects based on conventional technologies have already failed.”
  • There is already enough potential generation capacity in the United States seeking access to the grid to come close to achieving President Biden’s 2035 goal of a zero-carbon electricity sector, and 95 percent of it is solar, battery storage and wind. But these projects face a hugely constrained transmission system, regulatory and financial roadblocks and entrenched utility interests” (which need to be overcome).

The bottom line is that SMRs are highly expensive and unproven/technologically speculative, while existing clean energy sources – solar, wind, energy efficiency, etc. – are cheap, abundant, and growing by leaps and bounds. Which one would YOU rather invest in, let alone have Virginia ratepayers’ money invested in? Seems like a no-brainer, right? Well, yeah…except not, apparently, to Glenn Youngkin and other SMR fans. Ugh.

 

Biden Campaign: “Another tortured week for the smallest man who ever lived, Donald Trump.”

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From President Joe Biden’s reelection campaign:

Donald Trump, the Smallest Man Who Ever Lived

Hello,

Another tortured week for the smallest man who ever lived, Donald Trump.

While President Biden spent the week taking his message to Florida!!! (the Taylor Swift references stop here folks) voters on the six-week abortion ban unleashed by Trump, receiving a key endorsement from building trades unions, and putting out more ads in battleground states.

On the other hand, a tired and “diminished” Trump created a chaotic mess for himself and his campaign:

Let’s recap:

This week, Trump…

  1. Read that his own advisors believed he is “appearing diminished
  2. Did not campaign, but did go golfing
  3. Saw men and women of the building trades endorse President Biden and call him out as “one of the worst clients we ever had
  4. Continued to lag behind Joe Biden with small donors
  5. Had the Proud Boys attend his canceled rally in North Carolina
  6. Is tied at the hip with toxic Project 2025 project
  7. Claimed overturning Roe is ‘working out well for people
  8. Lost over 157,000 votes in Pennsylvania to Nikki Haley, 48 days after Haley dropped out – underscoring his continued weakness with suburban voters across the country
  9. His campaign openly admitted “We haven’t run anything. We haven’t done anything” in Pennsylvania, and they still have little battleground state infrastructure
  10. Voters were reminded he hates the NFL during the NFL draft
  11. His campaign put out a ridiculous quadruple spaced memo
  12. Complained about being chilly
  13. One of his most senior campaign advisors wasted time quote tweeting Biden staffers instead of actually running a campaign – while his other focused on having herself billed as a “mastermind” of Trump’s campaign. Hmmmm….
  14. Minimized Charlottesville riots where a woman died and neo-Nazi’s chanted “Jews will not replace us”

The following is a statement from Biden-Harris 2024 Spokesperson James Singer:

“It is an indictment on Trump that he won’t campaign, can’t message, and is driving voters away. His campaign advisors are distracted, his campaign is losing time, and it is burning money on everything but actually reaching voters. Keep it up, Donald.”

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State Sen. Ghazala Hashmi, Del. Cia Price: Youngkin Playing Games With Virginia’s Right to Contraception Act

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From State Senator Ghazala Hashmi and Delegate Cia Price:

General Assembly’s Reproductive Justice Leaders Call Out Youngkin for Playing Games With Virginia’s Right to Contraception Act

Senator Ghazala Hashmi and Delegate Marcia “Cia” Price Send Clear Message to Youngkin: Stop Playing With Our Rights

RICHMOND, Va. – Senator Ghazala Hashmi (D-Chesterfield) and Delegate Marcia “Cia” Price today sent a united message in response to Governor Youngkin’s evasive statement to reporters this week that there are “other things I can do” aside from vetoing or signing Virginia’s Right to Contraception Act: stop playing with our rights.

Democrats in the General Assembly refused to entertain the governor’s proposed substitute to the bill during their April 17 reconvene session and sent it back to his desk in its original form. Youngkin’s proposal would have gutted the legislation by deleting the definition of contraception – including explicit protections for IUDs and emergency contraceptives – and removing its enforcement mechanism.

The Richmond Times-Dispatch previously reported that a legal historian at the Georgia State University School of Law “added that [Youngkin’s proposed substitute] … may also be a nod to people who see some forms of contraception as akin to abortion.”

The General Assembly sent the original bill back to the governor, who has until May 17 to sign the bill, veto the bill, or do nothing in which case it will become law. He can no longer amend the bill.

Bill patrons Senator Hashmi and Delegate Price issued the following joint statement in response to the governor’s comments:

“Governor Youngkin continues to live under the delusion that he can play both sides of this issue because he doesn’t want to anger the loud extremists in his party who equate contraception to abortion or anger the 81% of voters who support this simple and essential bill. He is not only playing games with voters but also with our health care. Contraception is not only used for family planning, but to also manage a wide variety of health conditions. Bans on contraception would hurt everyone, including people of color, people with low incomes, and LGBTQ people. Contraception cannot be played with: this bill is a matter of reproductive justice. It is time for Governor Youngkin to stop playing games and just sign the bill.”

Friday News: “US preparing to announce $6B in weapons contracts for Ukraine”; All Illusions Shattered – “Shameful Performance” by Far-Right-Extremist SCOTUS Justices; “The Constitution Won’t Save Us From Trump”; “No more ‘Mason’ or ‘GMU’: George Mason University reveals new logo, branding”

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by Lowell

Here are a few international, national and Virginia news headlines, political and otherwise, for Friday, April 26.

Video: Donald Trump, Disgusting and Warped as Always, Calls August 2017 Neo-Nazi March in Charlottesville “a little peanut,” “nothing”

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Donald Trump is a sick, warped individual – and he keeps hitting new lows of depravity, racism, you name it. And yet, despite how evil Trump is, he’s actually been *endorsed* for president (!!!) by Gov. Glenn Youngkin, AG Jason Miyares, Rep. Jen Kiggans (R-VA02), VA House GOP Leader Todd Gilbert, the Republican Party of Virginia, etc. Do they all stand by these latest, outrageous comments by Trump, in this case about the white supremacist/neo-Nazi rally in Charlottesville in August 2017? The one that led to the death of Heather Heyer, as well as Lieutenant H. Jay Cullen and Trooper-Pilot Berke M.M. Bates?

Virginia Board of Education Announces 2023-2024 Exemplar Performance School Awards

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Keep in mind that Youngkin’s appointees dominate this Board of Education, so…take this with a grain of salt?  With that in mind, congratulations to all these schols on their awards!

Virginia Board of Education
Announces 2023-2024 Exemplar
Performance School Awards

RICHMOND – The Virginia Board of Education today recognized 64 schools for their high achievement and continued improvement as part of its Exemplar Performance School Recognition Program.

The Exemplar School Recognition Program and its Exemplar Performance Awards recognizes schools that exceed board-established performance requirements or show continuous improvement on academic and school quality indicators. Thirty-seven schools earned the Board of Education Highest Achievement Award, and 27 schools earned the Board of Education Continuous Improvement Award. The awards are based on performance and practices during the 2022-2023 and prior school years.

“On behalf of the Virginia Board of Education, I am thrilled to celebrate and honor the 64 schools who are being recognized for their accomplishments,” said Board of Education President Grace Turner Creasey. “Recognition in this program is one of the highest achievements a school can receive in the Commonwealth. Congratulations to the staff, students, and communities who support these remarkable schools for their success.”

“I am pleased to recognize and congratulate the 37 schools that earned the Highest Achievement Award and the 27 schools that have earned the Continuous Improvement Award,” said Superintendent of Public Instruction Lisa Coons. “When high expectations are set and our schools achieve them, they deserve to be celebrated. This recognition is a testament to the hard work and tireless efforts the educators and staff, students, families, and communities are making every single day. They should be very proud of all that they have achieved.”

2023-2024 Board of Education Highest Achievement Award

The 37 schools earning the 2023-2024 Board of Education Highest Achievement Award are:

Division Name

School Name

Albemarle County

Community Lab School

Albemarle County

Ivy Elementary

Albemarle County

Virginia L. Murray Elementary

Arlington County

Arlington Traditional

Bedford County

Forest Elementary

Botetourt County

Breckinridge Elementary

Botetourt County

Buchanan Elementary

Botetourt County

Eagle Rock Elementary

Carroll County

Gladesboro Elementary

Danville City

Galileo Magnet High

Fairfax County

Sangster Elementary

Fairfax County

Thomas Jefferson High for Science and Technology

Fauquier County

Kettle Run High

Fauquier County

P.B. Smith Elementary

Grayson County

Fairview Elementary

Lee County

St. Charles Elementary

Loudoun County

Aldie Elementary

Loudoun County

Emerick Elementary

Loudoun County

Hamilton Elementary

Loudoun County

Hillsboro Charter Academy

Loudoun County

Waterford Elementary

Montgomery County

Harding Avenue Elementary

Patrick County

Woolwine Elementary

Pittsylvania County

Stony Mill Elementary

Richmond City

Mary Munford Elementary

Roanoke City

Crystal Spring Elementary

Roanoke County

Mason’s Cove Elementary

Southampton County

Nottoway Elementary

Virginia Beach City

Green Run Collegiate

Virginia Beach City

Kingston Elementary

Virginia Beach City

North Landing Elementary

Virginia Beach City

Old Donation School

Virginia Beach City

Rosemont Forest Elementary

Wise County

J.W. Adams Combined

Wise County

St. Paul Elementary

Wythe County

Rural Retreat Elementary

York County

Seaford Elementary

Schools recognized for Highest Achievement demonstrated high levels of success across all school quality indicators, including success in narrowing achievement gaps. In order to earn this recognition, schools are required to:

  • Achieve Performance Level One for reading, mathematics, and science based on the student pass rate (which does not include growth measures) for the “all students” group in the school, as well as for each student group in the school.
    • In addition, schools with two student groups could have no more than a five-percentage point difference between the performance of each student group and the “all students” group; schools with three or more student groups could have no more than a ten-percentage point difference between the performance of each student group and the “all students” group.
  • Achieve at Level One in the Chronic Absenteeism, Graduation and Completion Index, and Dropout Rate school quality indicators.

2023-2024 Board of Education Continuous Improvement Award

The 27 schools earning the 2023-2024 Board of Education Continuous Improvement Award are:                          

Division Name

School Name

Amherst County

Amherst County High

Arlington County

Wakefield High

Bath County

Bath County High

Brunswick County

Brunswick High

Buchanan County

Twin Valley High

Campbell County

Rustburg High

Carroll County

Carroll County High

Chesapeake City

Norfolk Highlands Primary

Essex County

Essex High

Fairfax County

Lewis High

Fairfax County

South Lakes High

Fairfax County

West Potomac High

Hampton City

Phoebus High

Loudoun County

Hutchison Farm Elementary

Manassas City

Osbourn High

Mathews County

Mathews High

Norfolk City

St. Helena Elementary

Norton City

J.I. Burton High

Prince William County

Neabsco Elementary

Richmond City

Richmond Career Education and Employment Charter School

Rockingham County

Ottobine Elementary

Rockingham County

Turner Ashby High

Spotsylvania County

Cedar Forest Elementary

Staunton City

Bessie Weller Elementary

Virginia Beach City

Green Run High

Virginia Beach City

Tallwood High

York County

York River Academy

Schools recognized for continuous improvement met at least one of the following criteria based on performance from the 2022-2023 school year data:

  • The school demonstrates an increase in the combined rate for math, reading and science for each of the past three years with a total increase across the three years of ten points or more;
  • The school demonstrates an increase in the combined rate for two or more student groups in reading and math for each of the past three years with a total increase across the three years of ten points or more;
  • The school demonstrates an increase in the Graduation and Completion Index (GCI) for each of the past three years with a total increase across the three years of four percent or more; and school demonstrates a decrease in the dropout rate for each of the past three years with the total reduction across three years of 15 percent or more of the first year’s dropout rate.

For more information about the Board of Education Exemplar Performance Awards, visit the Virginia Department of Education website.

“Trump Owns This”: On the Airwaves, Women Slam Trump’s Attacks on Reproductive Health Care

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From President Joe Biden’s reelection campaign:

“Trump Owns This”: On the Airwaves, Women Slam Trump’s Attacks on Reproductive Health Care

Since Donald Trump overturned Roe v. Wade, we’ve seen countless horrifying stories of women being forced to wait until they are at the brink of death or faced with terrifying health complications before receiving the care they need. Because of Trump, one in three women of reproductive age are living under extreme abortion bans – a fact that he is “proud” of.

This week, as the Supreme Court weighs a case concerning whether doctors and nurses across the country will have the ability to provide life-saving reproductive health care, patients who have been denied access to critical reproductive health care, elected officials, and activists are speaking out against Donald Trump’s attacks on reproductive freedom and mobilizing to reelect President Biden and Vice President Harris this November.

Here are a few examples of what they had to say:

On CNN, Kaitlyn Kash, a woman denied health care because of Trump’s abortion ban in Texas:

KAITLYN KASH: “When I started trying for a second baby, I just never in my wildest dreams imagined that I’d end up here talking with you and really begging the American people to hear what’s happening in Texas and to make sure that we reelect President Biden this fall. … Between my first and second child I lost three very wanted pregnancies, and I almost died after the birth of my daughter. I would not be here today without abortion, and the other reproductive health care that they gave me. Over the last two years, I’ve had to flee my home state to receive a surgical abortion. I’ve needed a medical abortion. I’ve used IVF and I needed a D&C procedure after the birth of my daughter to save my life from postpartum hemorrhage. And all of these are basic health care that women deserve that are currently under attack at things like the Supreme Court, state legislatures, you know, and it’s just… it’s a continued state of defeat to hear things like what’s happening in the Supreme Court today, knowing that my life doesn’t matter.”

On CNN, Biden-Harris 2024 National Advisory Board Member Governor Maura Healey:

GOV. HEALEY: “One in three women in America today live with an abortion ban. Why do 20 states and counting ban abortion or nearly ban abortion? It’s because of Donald Trump. Donald Trump created that court, he brags about overturning Roe, and since that Dobbs decision, we’ve seen state after state legislature enact draconian, extremist bans. Donald Trump created this. He did this. He owns this. And what we know from today is that Donald Trump is also responsible for women having to be airlifted out of the state of Idaho because they have been forced to the brink of death and life-altering medical conditions because of a draconian ban. This is Donald Trump and as we face November, the stakes could not be more clear. … Anyone who cares about this needs to go out and work hard and vote and work to elect Joe Biden.”

On ABC, Kaitlyn Joshua, a woman was denied necessary medical care because of Trump’s abortion ban in Louisiana:

KAITLYN JOSHUA: “Another hospital basically just told me they would send me home with prayers, but were not able to medically diagnose a miscarriage… Abortion is absolutely on the ballot this year. If this is not a topic that you think is going to touch you or doesn’t touch you currently, it absolutely will.”

On NBC, Jennifer Adkins, a woman whose health was put at risk because of Idaho’s abortion laws:

JENNIFER ADKINS: “[Doctors] said we’re surprised that you’re still pregnant. Given the severity of what we’re seeing on the ultrasound, most people would have miscarried by now. I was just in total, total shock. … They said because we’re in Idaho, there really aren’t any [options] for you. … It’s scary and it continues to get scarier just knowing what the state of maternal care is in our state right now. It’s like walking on eggshells.”


On MSNBC, Dr. Dara Kass, an emergency medicine physician:

DR. KASS: “It is gut wrenching to watch someone continue to bleed in front of you when you know what to do but you can’t do it because you are afraid that you A) will get arrested but B,) you will do it and it won’t work because it is too late. At the end of the day, it is time to stop interfering, stop letting politicians get in the middle of the emergency department and patient care and just say we want to do our jobs and save people’s lives.”


On MSNBC, President of Planned Parenthood Alexis McGill Johnson:

ALEXIS MCGILL JOHNSON: We need to reelect President Biden and Vice President Harris. We need to ensure that they get a Senate majority… and House majority that will allow them to pass federal legislation and to let everyone know that if we do not do that, we are going to go even further backwards with a national abortion ban that… former President Trump has tried to walk back from, but we know where he stands on these issues.”

On MSNBC, Arizona State Senator Eva Burch:

SEN. BURCH: “I thought it was so important to cut through some of the stigma that exists about who seeks abortion services and about who the abortion patient is. I felt like the wrong people were controlling the conversation. I wanted to cut through that and to really expand the conversation and have a more honest look at what abortion care means to people in Arizona and across this country. … We also have to be very mindful we are electing pro-choice candidates in November because we have to have a legislature that is pro-choice or else we are not going to have rights available to us in this state. It’s going to continue to erode the same way it has been for decades under Republican leadership in Arizona.”

On MSNBC, President of Reproductive Freedom for All Mini Timmaraju:

MINI TIMMARAJU: “Ultimately, I think it’s really important – two things to take away from the moment we’ve had today. One: 86% of Americans support emergency access to abortion. Recent polling by Kaiser. 86% of Americans, a wide range of Americans to make up that number. And that this is a national case. This has national implications. And, you know, our Republican friends are really fond of pointing out exceptions. The Idaho council kept pointing to the Idaho exceptions. EMTALA could really be viewed as the ultimate national exception to an abortion ban. And yet here we have Idaho in court arguing and fighting back against a very simple, clear-cut emergency case of abortion care. And that’s frightening and chilling.”

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Video and a Few Thoughts on Last Night’s VA07 Democratic Forum

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See below for a few thoughts from last night’s VA07 Democratic forum/debate (see video, below), with seven Democratic candidates vying to be the party’s nominee (the primary is on June 18, with early voting starting next Friday) to replace Rep. Abigail Spanberger (D-VA07), who is vacating the seat in order to run for governor of Virginia in 2025.

  1.  Very nice job by the organizers (the Fredericksburg, Spotsylvania and Stafford Dems; the UMW Young Dems; the Fredericksburg Free Press), in live streaming the debate, in addition to having a large in-person crowd there. These debates are very useful – a chance to see the candidates in action, side by side, making it easy to compare/contrast – and they should be available for voters to watch – whether they can physically make it to the debate or not.
  2. Good selection of questions, covering a wide variety of topics. The only quibble I have is that there were too many candidates to have everyone respond to every question, making it harder to do what I mentioned in point #1 – compare/contrast the candidates’ responses to all the questions. Still, if you watch the debate, I think you’ll get a good feel for who these candidate are and where they’re coming from.
  3. For the most part, there didn’t seem to be any major disagreements or stark ideological differences among the candidates – all are Democrats, after all, so the stark differences will be with whoever the MAGA/far-right Republicans end nominating. However, there were definitely differences between the candidates in terms of how they *talked* about the issues. For instance, some candidates – and if you’ve followed my Twitter feed or this blog for any length of time, you know this REALLY drives me nuts – described failures of “Congress” generically, when in fact, *overwhelmingly* the problem for years now has been *Republican*/*right-wing* obstruction and dysfunction. For instance, in the aftermath of the Newtown mass shooting, it wasn’t “Congress” generically which failed to pass gun violence prevention measures, it was overwhelmingly *REPUBLICANS IN CONGRESS*, and they should be called out specifically, by name, and not lumped into a blanket condemnation of “Congress” generically.  So, no, it’s not “both sides of the aisle” or “Washington” or “Congress” or “politicians” generically that’s the problem – and I personally am NOT going to support any candidate who falsely frames things that way.
  4.  It continues to disappoint me that the climate crisis doesn’t get a lot higher billing at these Democratic debates/forums. Because IMHO at least, there are two clearly existential, overiding issues – whether we have a democracy (from the “internal” polling I’ve seen, that’s a huge issue for likely Democratic voters) and whether we have a habitable planet (that’s also a major issue for likely Democratic voters, although not as high as democracy, abortion/reproductive rights, guns and healthcare) – that override everything else, no matter how important all those other issues are (note: my view on this goes back at least to 2003, when then-presidential-candidate, Gen. Wesley Clark, talked about the two things that would really matter in 100 years – namely, “a hundred years out you have to think of the environment and your legal, constitutional institutions.”).
  5.  For some information on how these candidates are doing in terms of fundraising, see here (Vindman $1.8M cash on hand, Bailey $188k cash on hand, Guzman $148k cash on hand, Franklin $141k cash on hand, Sewell $55k cash on hand, Bedell $30k cash on hand, Heinzer $24k cash on hand). Now, money certainly isn’t everything, but most political analysts do look at how much cash-on-hand a candidate has to determine whether or not they have a good shot at winning the nomination. 

Anyway, here’s the video – check it out and share your thoughts in the comments section, if you’re so inclined. 🙂