Blind spot

From Robert Kuttner, former editor of the American Prospect and progressive/left commentator:

“The headline on page one of today’s New York Times is the stuff that progressive dreams are made of: “Trucker Ousts Power Broker in New Jersey.” Edward Durr, a political novice and a truck driver for a furniture chain, defeated the longtime New Jersey Senate president, Stephen Sweeney, by 2,298 votes, in his South Jersey state Senate seat.

The only problem is that Durr is a Republican and Sweeney is a Democrat. And there in a nutshell is the Democrats’ dilemma—the loss of the working class.” The last phrase – the loss of the working class – I find maddening, but not surprising. It only makes sense if you assume that the working class is only white. But it isn’t. And never has been. Yet this blind spot persists.

Veterans Day

On this Veterans Day we should honor (and assist) the veterans, but not celebrate the wars in which they fought. None of them over the past century – save WW2 – had anything to do with defending freedom or expanding democracy. Nevertheless, much of the commentary today becomes, through the vessel of honoring war veterans, an occasion to sanitize these wars of imperial aggression in which soldiers fought and died.

Into a coffin

It is hard not to worry that the report on inflation will become the nail of Manchin and Sinema to put the Build Back Better (human infrastructure) bill into a coffin never to be seen again.

Meanwhile, the Republicans and the whole right wing, racist authoritarian network in no surprise will pound away on the Biden administration for the inflationary pressures, most of which are connected to the economic disruption caused by the pandemic.

Uncle Leo

Hats off to my favorite uncle and WW II vet, Leo Woodside. Uncle Leo was a Navy man and served in the Pacific for most of the war. He was my mother’s older brother who along with my grandmother jumped into the breech when my mother suddenly died for which I will be forever grateful.

I remember him proudly marching with other vets on Memorial Day and receiving applause from people lining the sidewalk in our small town in Maine. For young and old, and especially the vets, it was a festive and solemn occasion, complete with the playing of taps and a gun salute. For me and my friends, not yet teenagers, it was also an opportunity for us to weave our bikes in and out of the parade and enjoy ice cream and candy.

Changing perceptions

A big challenge in the coming two years is to convince people that the future of democracy, as we know it, will likely hang on the outcome of next year’s midterm elections and the presidential elections two years later. The existential threat to democracy posed by Republican rule may seem evident to you, but it isn’t in my experience evident to lots of other voters – tens of millions I’m afraid. They don’t necessarily see the existential threat to democratic governance and democratic rights were Trump and gang back in the driver’s seat.

How to change their perception isn’t so simple however. But I know one thing for sure. It won’t happen if Congressional Republicans, along with the help of Manchin, Sinema, and a few other Democrats, are able to block the main legislative initiatives of the Biden administration.

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