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Asgaya Dihi Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Apr-07-06 06:03 PM
Original message
2006 Elections
I'm sick of being offered a choice between two evils, and I'm pretty tired of the constant refrain that we need to pick the fights we can win and ignore the rest. The Republicans of today are wrong, dangerous, and any number of other things, but they got where they are today by building and supporting a base. By convincing people that they stood for something. I've heard it again and again in debates elsewhere, something along the lines of "I'd rather support someone I don't totally agree with, at least I know they aren't just floating from one position to another with the polls." We don't need anymore Clinton's, no more Lieberman's. If much of the public doesn't know how bad things are in some ways, maybe it's because nobody ever bothered to tell them. No more triangulating, tell them the damned TRUTH, even if it will be unpopular at first. Have the courage to stand for what's right, or don't waste our time.

I wrote the following to the DSCC, I'd hope like hell others are telling them something similar. If not, we'll get a few more years of the same, and you can bank on it.

Dear DSCC,

I've been watching the developments of the last several years with growing dismay, and I can't help wondering when you guys are going to consider the good of the nation rather than the good of a party or a person. In the upcoming elections you will probably pick up some seats, but you'll fail to capture the majority. I think I can explain why, if you'll listen.

I am a swing voter, used to tend toward Republican but have nearly as often voted Democrat, though not for President. Last election I did vote for Kerry though, not because I liked him all that much but just because Bush needed to be stopped. But, given the performance of the Democratic party recently, I don't think I'll be doing that again.

You (as a party) seem to not only lack the courage of your convictions, but you lack the convictions to start with. When Murtha came out against the war a number of Democrats acted as if he was toxic, and the few who finally did support him waited a few days to check the polls first, see what way the wind was blowing. When Lieberman decided to act as Bush's lap dog their was little condemnation from your party, when the move for Censure recently developed most of the party ran and hid.

We're the single most imprisoned nation in the world, both in raw numbers and per capita, over 2,2 million currently in custody with some 4.7 million deprived of their right to vote. We're the only democratic nation in the world that deprives citizens of their right to vote for life in many cases. 1 in 8 young black men between the ages of 25 and 29 are currently in prison, and we wonder why there are so many single mother households and such a low level of education and accomplishment in those communities. Racism was never defeated, it just moved behind bars and you know it. You should.

PrisonSucks.com: Research on the prison industrial complex
http://www.prisonsucks.com/

While health care collapses health care companies profits seem to be doing just fine, so you write laws to further tighten their stranglehold on the nation. While jobs are outsourced and wages drop you allow and many of you vote for tax cuts for the rich and for corporations, the sheltering of offshore profits, and so on. While our news coverage degrades to the point of pure propaganda nobody in the official world talks about the growing obviousness of the root of the problem, media consolidation. As long as news, business, profits and politics are so firmly entwined there's no way out and you know it.

No, I won't be voting Democratic this next time, not unless you offer me a candidate who can find the courage of his or her convictions. At the moment the only one I see for 2008 is Feingold, and for my local races in 2006 I see nobody. If you don't put someone worthwhile up, think I'll vote Green or Independent instead. I doubt I'll be alone.
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beyurslf Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Apr-07-06 06:25 PM
Response to Original message
1. When I work with candidates, I tell them to ignore those people who want
them to agree 100% on every issue. It isn't possible. If we want representatives with whom agree on every issue, we should run ourselves. What state are you in? I may have contacts who could help youget started on your campiagn.
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Asgaya Dihi Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Apr-07-06 06:36 PM
Response to Reply #1
2. Every issue?
I'd be satisfied with a candidate who stood for any one of them, let alone all. I live in Texas at the moment, I've over the last few years been talking with the local party and with individual candidates already trying to get them to speak up about things. Worked or am currently working with Law Enforcement Against Prohibition, with the ACLU, with Freepress.net and with Common Cause. It's not like I'm sitting on the sidelines as it is, thanks.

As far as me running, I'm not electable. Too much time locked up as a kid, and a poor public presentation since I sound like I grew up on the streets. In print I can argue with the best of them, face to face they can't get past the way I look or sound.

One in eight young black men between 25 and 29 CURRENTLY in prison or jail, and most have never heard a thing about it. Check this site out real quick... www.prisonsucks.com Think those stats might have something to do with the poverty, homelessness, low education, single mother households, and other problems in those communities? No, there's nobody out there right now talking about some real major issues, ones that if we solved them it would also solve many of our other problems in the process.
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beyurslf Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Apr-07-06 07:05 PM
Response to Reply #2
3. I agree with you on the jail issue. I work with teenagers and I work with
a lot of african american young men. I tell them as they get to be 16, 17, 18 and my time is running out in working with them:
"You have a choice to make and it isn't going to be an easy one. Looking at numbers, you have a better chance being in prison than graduating college. It isn't right and isn't fair, and I won't pretend to know what it is like. I can't. You have to make a concious choice every day to live your life right. And you have to make better choices than most other guys your age who aren't black. If you get in trouble, the system will throw the book at and lock you away for as long as possible. So stay away from the trouble at all costs."
I don't need to say it normally. They know it is true. They have seen their friends or cousins or brothers or dads go to prison. I have a 17yo kid now is a great kid--ever been in any trouble, graduating, looking at area colleges, helps with his nephews--a great kid. He was a passenger in a car that got pulled over. Police searched the car. Found pot (a large amount) and scales to weigh it. The driver was going to get arrested for it and my kid spoke up and said it was his. He did it because the driver was over 18 and his cousin who had been in some trouble already. He figures he will get off easy and the pot actually belonged to someone who was no longer in the car. He faces some pretty serious charges and he won't change his story. He probably won't go to jail--but he probably will have a drug charge and be barred from college funds. Now, he says he can go to college anytime--he just doesn't want another family memeber locked up.
What do I do? I don't know how to change that system. All I can do is work to keep my kids out of it.
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Asgaya Dihi Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Apr-07-06 07:23 PM
Response to Reply #3
5. What to do?
What to do would be to get involved, yell, shout, write letters and tell people what's going on.

Right now policy makers are paralyzed, they are afraid of looking soft on crime so reform isn't even discussed. They need to be told that we know what's going on, and they need to be told that it matters. We also need to educate the public, if those statistics applied to whites we'd riot in the street, but since it applies to minorities neither the public or the press seem to know or care a bit about it.

Add your name to the membership of groups such as Law Enforcement Against Prohibition, get involved with groups such as the Prison Policy Initiative. They won't reform the system till it's "safe" for them to do so, no matter how obviously wrong the system is, so we have to let them know it's safe.

LEAP: Law Enforcement Against Prohibition - Homepage
http://www.leap.cc/

Prison Policy Initiative
http://www.prisonpolicy.org/index.shtml

The Sentencing Project
http://www.sentencingproject.org/

truth: the Anti-drugwar Homepage
http://www.briancbennett.com/

If there's anything more I can do or offer to help, let me know.
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beyurslf Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Apr-07-06 07:13 PM
Response to Reply #2
4. I was looking for this stat: 1 in 3 black men from 18-29 are at some
point in the criminal justice process: in jail, sentencing, parole, or probation.
<http://www.aclu.org/drugpolicy/racialjustice/10856res20011217.html>

Read on below that and we can see why. The racist war on drugs accounts for much of it.
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Asgaya Dihi Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Apr-07-06 11:02 PM
Response to Reply #4
6. Yeah, I've seen that one :(
In some places such as Washington DC it's even worse.

Another site I should have mentioned earlier is the following, didn't think about it at the time since I haven't visited in a while.

Home Page of The November Coalition: Working to End Drug War Injustice
http://www.november.org/

It's a great place to find links to other resources and to network with people, as well as a good place for quotes to help explain the problem to people. Also try the Drug Policy Alliance at http://www.dpf.org/homepage.cfm for a lot of material I've found useful.
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