Finally, an article which does Warren justice

Since Elizabeth Warren announced her withdrawal from the race, her significant following has been waiting patiently  for an article which does her candidacy justice.  Well,  here it is from Salon by Amanda Marcotte. She extolls Warren’s virtues and discusses why Warren qualifies, in her opinion, as a once in a generation candidate. Warren surpassed every bench mark the party, the  pundits and even the public demanded and it still was not good enough. 

Marcotte believes that Warren stood head and shoulders above the rest of the field.  She sparkled in the debates, had developed the most detailed plans, explained herself in easy to understand terms, destroyed Bloomberg, and was peerless when it came to the power of her intellect. Yet the author laments, with anger, that weaker, less capable male candidates bested her on the road to the White House. Marcotte calls this another example of the power of misogyny so rampant in our nation.

Her political gifts were not lost on the formidable opposition she faced beyond her fellow candidates. Actually, the prospect of her winning the nomination prompted a tsunami of trepidation in the hearts of the Wall Street  financiers, the bankers. corporate boards, the CEO’s with mind boggling incomes and lobbyists.  They all understood that  if Warren became the President she would use her bully pulpit and financial talents to wreck some of the many ways that these manipulators were accumulating wealth on the backs of average Americans.

And  the wealthy class was  simply not going to let Warren ruin the good thing they had going. Beginning last summer the business channels began having financial experts on their shows explaining why Warren would be bad for business and how her wealth tax policy would be unfair to the rich.
And then when Bloomberg threw his hat in the ring. pundits said it was because Bloomberg thought that  Biden was too weak to beat Trump. That is no doubt true….but it is not the entire story. He also entered the race because he, along with and the rest of the monied interests,. believed that Warren was becoming too strong.

The fears she raised in the  corporate world, and Wall Street speaks to her impressive administrative skills and unmatched competence.Even in the U.S. Congress, she had politicians worried that she might upend the cozy relationships thay had come to enjoy with their donors.

After reading the article below, plenty of Warren skeptics will say that the writer was merely overwrought about Warren’s departure from the race and resorted to hyperbole to make her case. And Warren fans could easily come back and say that Elizabeth Warren was  profoundly the best candidate. So much so that even the smug wealthy class, who thought they controlled the levers of government power with their money, were shaken by what Warren promised to deliver.

So her withdrawal is a loss for all Americans, but especially the millions  she would have helped. Sadly, as the headline reads. “We didn’t deserve Elizabeth Warren”.


https://www.salon.com/2020/03/06/lets-face-it-america-we-didnt-deserve-elizabeth-warren-though-she-tried-to-help-us-anyway/

Black voters, in southern primary states, lead the way

The annual Remembrance event at  the Edmund Pettus Bridge, the site marking the brutal assault in 1965 against  non-violent civil rights protesters by the police, took place last Sunday. The special occasion serves  as a reminder of what the Civil rights movement entailed on that long arduous, bloody  road toward the passage of the Civil Rights Act.

This year, the marking also served to help explain the overwhelming voter support that black Americans  gave to Joe Biden in South Carolina and on SuperTuesday. Black Americans view the re-election of Trump as a  significant step backwards toward those terrifying years of civil unrest and outright discrimination which the Edmund Pettus Bridge so vividly represents.  

And their fears rise out of a real basis in fact. They view Trump’s his authoritarian leanings and hatred toward people .of color as a huge red flag that discrimination likely would become worse if he got another four years.. 

For Trump’s record in this area is unnerving.  In the last three years, Trump has fueled the rise of racial bigotry. And violence against minorities has risen as a result. He has enacted unconscionable and repugnant policies on our southwest border against refugee families and children. He supports voter suppression which inordinately wrests the right to vote from largely minority populations. He and Attorney General Bill Barr are distorting the rule of law at the Justice Department. These actions drain minorities’ already justifiably weak confidence that justice will be fair in courtrooms and jails throughout the country. 

Granted life for white Americans under the Trump reign has been hair raising as well, creating a deep existential crisis about the damage Trump is doing to the country and hurting Americans in the process.. But whites are not worrying about police brutality or the degradation of their our civil rights. But for people of color, their concerns with Trump are more immediate and more critical.

And so just prior to the South Carolina primary,  Rep. Jim Clyburn made a fateful decision. He surely had assessed all of these factors before deciding to endorse Joe Biden  In his endorsement, he reminded black voters that Biden was a trusted politician and friend to African Americans who Obama obviously trusted as well and he could win.. And secondly, he stated that even in the worst of the upheaval in the fight for civil rights, he was never as worried as he is today. 

And black Americans heard these words in South Carolina and ultimately  in many states all over the South. They smartly and astutely  decided to go with the candidate who they believed had the greatest chance of being elected.

Because it was people of color who had the greatest to lose if Trump prevailed in November, it was extremely fitting to have black Americans in the South,o take charge of this Biden coalescing. And they came through with an avalanche of votes for Biden which clarified the way forward..
An now we just need Bernie to acquiesce for party unity.