Joe Biden, Senator from Citibank (oops, DELAWARE), to Run for President

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IS it?

Patriotic Goiter (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 30 October 2020 14:32 (three years ago) link

One thread

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v= Yp6NZO6jI-Q

Anaïs Ninja (Ye Mad Puffin), Friday, 30 October 2020 14:46 (three years ago) link

Um

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yp6NZO6jI-Q

Anaïs Ninja (Ye Mad Puffin), Friday, 30 October 2020 14:47 (three years ago) link

^you'll want to click through on that one

Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Friday, 30 October 2020 18:25 (three years ago) link

man, a tub of sabra but then there's two 2.5 pound bags of shredded cheddar cheese.

The Beige of Dadz (Sufjan Grafton), Friday, 30 October 2020 18:28 (three years ago) link

I've just got White Claws and salami.

Anaïs Ninja (Ye Mad Puffin), Friday, 30 October 2020 18:33 (three years ago) link

White Claws and Salami -- now that's what I call a part-ay

sarahell, Friday, 30 October 2020 19:38 (three years ago) link

As much I am for police abolition, I’m not going to expect it to happen over the next five years at the very least. Most of the people were introduced to the idea a few months ago, including me, it is still a radical idea that goes against the fabrics and history of our nations and I would not expect a politician wanting to win an election to present a whole new paradigm on security that might alienate a huge chunk of the electorate; I am starting to wonder what are the expectations some people have of the american electorate: Biden is trying to win over the very same people who have fed the systemic racism that police abolition is trying to solve.

Van Horn Street, Friday, 30 October 2020 21:57 (three years ago) link

Are you actually talking about the issues when we clearly have refrigerators to parse?

The little engine that choogled (hardcore dilettante), Friday, 30 October 2020 22:06 (three years ago) link

Hummus and multiple bags of shredded cheese in the fridge, a Subaru in the driveway, and a Biden sign on the front lawn is like every single family within five miles of me (my own included)

Guayaquil (eephus!), Friday, 30 October 2020 22:08 (three years ago) link

got a trumper with almond milk, must be shy

Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Friday, 30 October 2020 22:17 (three years ago) link

you can always spot a lib fridge by the fresh arugala. the fresher the arugala, the further to the left they are

the burrito that defined a generation, Friday, 30 October 2020 22:33 (three years ago) link

VHS, I'm not expecting it in my lifetime. Doesn't mean it isn't worth fighting for and repeating the observable facts about the police at every possible point.

Because the police murdered a man, the main street running through my neighborhood has at least 5 cops on every single corner for more than a mile. They murdered someone, yet we're the ones who need to be policed, according to their logic. We live in a police state. Fuck em.

healthy cocaine off perfect butts (the table is the table), Saturday, 31 October 2020 00:25 (three years ago) link

I think it's one thing to be an activist whose goal is to abolish the police force, it's absolutely worth fighting for, but I think it's another thing to expect large parts of the electorate to agree with you. Asking a politician, whose job is to find a compromise between millions of dissenting voices to adopt a viewpoint that is still clearly seen as radical is a bit childish.

Van Horn Street, Saturday, 31 October 2020 01:08 (three years ago) link

a lot of people will die needlessly if a lot more people than we're currently seeing don't start to demand the seemingly impossible, whether it strikes one as "childish" or not. (I'm thinking mainly of climate action, but police abolition is relevant as well.)

it bangs for thee (Simon H.), Saturday, 31 October 2020 01:11 (three years ago) link

I dunno about childish. naive and ineffective maybe

focus your outrage on the specific individuals who murder, and the specific police departments who cover for them if and when they do

the burrito that defined a generation, Saturday, 31 October 2020 01:14 (three years ago) link

there's an ongoing police brutality in the U.S. thread btw, unless this is some sort of referendum on the Biden/Harris ticket

the burrito that defined a generation, Saturday, 31 October 2020 01:15 (three years ago) link

I agree Simon, I just don't see how in this case, Biden positioning himself for police abolition and not pandering to the people afraid of looting helps him win an election anyway. I don't think it's up to Biden to make demands of the people. It has to come from the electorate.

Van Horn Street, Saturday, 31 October 2020 01:20 (three years ago) link

the specific police departments who cover for them if and when they do

"if" lol

it bangs for thee (Simon H.), Saturday, 31 October 2020 01:27 (three years ago) link

Asking a politician...

It's fine to ask for what you want, but expecting the answer to be something the general population does not accept or agree with is highly unrealistic. The main thing is to keep pushing the idea out there, honing the message and sharpening it so that lightly-engaged people can grasp what you're asking for and why.

The cultural changes necessary for effective climate action are staggeringly huge, but activists having been laying the groundwork for decades now and a lot of progress has been made since 1990. Making policing over into something that would be nearly unrecognizable next to today's policing isn't as big a shift as climate action, and BLM just jumped the issue ahead in a big way, but the work of educating people has a long way to advance, yet.

the unappreciated charisma of cows (Aimless), Saturday, 31 October 2020 01:34 (three years ago) link

No one expects Joe Biden to become a police abolitionist overnight.

Some people do think Presidents and politicians should be leaders and point "large parts of the electorate" toward the necessary reforms to avoid societal breakdown/for human life to continue in a recognizable form.

Donald Trump Also Sucks, Of Course (milo z), Saturday, 31 October 2020 01:35 (three years ago) link

I think presidents and politicians can do that, but that it's foolish to take it for granted that they will.

Aimless is saying what I'm trying to say but much better.

Van Horn Street, Saturday, 31 October 2020 01:56 (three years ago) link

Who takes it for granted? That Joe Biden obviously isn't on 'our' side here doesn't make him immune to criticism or negate the idea that proactive leadership is required.

Having zero expectations of elected leaders is how you get... here.

Donald Trump Also Sucks, Of Course (milo z), Saturday, 31 October 2020 02:10 (three years ago) link

Afaic, anyone calling people who are speaking the truth 'naive' and 'childish' are simply engaging in maintenance of a social order that's murdering people.

healthy cocaine off perfect butts (the table is the table), Saturday, 31 October 2020 02:27 (three years ago) link

And the way this started, btw, was that someone posted the absolute bullshit letter the Biden campaign put out about the murder of Walter Wallace Jr.

healthy cocaine off perfect butts (the table is the table), Saturday, 31 October 2020 02:28 (three years ago) link

the burrito that defended a generation

error prone wolf syndicate (Hadrian VIII), Saturday, 31 October 2020 02:39 (three years ago) link

here we go

the burrito that defined a generation, Saturday, 31 October 2020 02:40 (three years ago) link

simply engaging in maintenance of a social order that's murdering people.

I think it is useful to differentiate between those who accept that the reality is that the current social order which is murdering people is deeply entrenched and will not yield easily, those who are simply afraid of change and have been taught that police are their bulwark against their fears, so that murdering people is a regrettable but necessary byproduct of a fundamentally correct social order, and those whose interests are most directly benefited by the active and vigorous enforcement of this social order that's murdering people.

the unappreciated charisma of cows (Aimless), Saturday, 31 October 2020 03:37 (three years ago) link

yeah that, plus it's not ok for police to push an old guy to the ground and crack his skull open during a peaceful protest

the burrito that defined a generation, Saturday, 31 October 2020 03:39 (three years ago) link

And the way this started, btw, was that someone posted the absolute bullshit letter the Biden campaign put out about the murder of Walter Wallace Jr.

good morning!

Asking a politician, whose job is to find a compromise

His compromise was to blame the protestors, and to not say anything about the cops. Hours later, the same cops attacked a random woman, smashed every window in her car, kicked her violently in the street and then kidnapped her son to lie in a photo op that they had rescued him. I strongly hope that Biden's ticket wins election on Tuesday, but he's still six feet of white dogshit in a cellophane bag, and this is the behaviour that he pre-endorsed while denouncing protest against it:

The young mother tried to make a three-point turn when a swarm of Philadelphia officers surrounded the SUV, shattered its windows and pulled Young and her 16-year-old nephew from the car, the video shows.

A now-viral video of the confrontation shows officers throw Young and the teenager to the ground and then grab the toddler from the back seat. The scene was captured by Aapril Rice, who watched it unfold from her rooftop and told the Philadelphia Inquirer that watching a police officer take the baby was “surreal” and “traumatic.”

Mincey said police temporarily detained Young, who had to be taken to the hospital for medical treatment before she could be processed at the police station because her head was bleeding and most of her left side had been badly bruised when police threw her to the ground. She and her son were separated for hours, he said.

“Her face was bloodied and she looked like she had been beaten by a bunch of people on the street,” he told The Post. “She is still in pain.”

Her nephew also suffered injuries in the confrontation, Mincey said, and Young’s son was hit in the head leaving a large bump on the toddler’s forehead.

Mincey said Young phoned her mother while in police custody and asked her to find the boy. The toddler’s grandmother managed to find him after several hours, the lawyer said, sitting in his car seat in the back of a police cruiser with two officers in the front seats. Glass from the SUV’s broken windows still lay in the child’s car seat, he said.

“We are not your enemy,” the union said in the posts showing Young’s son. “We are the Thin Blue Line. And WE ARE the only thing standing between Order and Anarchy.”

The sun had risen Tuesday morning before Young was finally reunited with her 2-year-old son, Mincey said. Police held Young for several hours, but eventually released her without charges, her lawyers said. The boy’s family then took him to the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, where doctors treated him for the head injury and then released him.

The family’s lawyers said police have not yet told Young where to find the damaged SUV or the family’s belongings that were inside it, including her son’s hearing aids.

edited for dog profanity (sic), Saturday, 31 October 2020 03:48 (three years ago) link

And as noted earlier, the union that published the false propaganda generated by stealing a child was engaged in an emphatic campaign against Biden's election, to which his immediate reaction is to absolutely and totally capitulate.

People can speculate that his plan is to switch rhetoric sharply after the election and carefully explain to an unthinking populace that murder and kidnapping are bad, but his constant public reaching out to oligarchs and Republican mega-assholes for cabinet roles doesn't inspire confidence that capitulation-via-compromise will not be his ongoing strategy.

edited for dog profanity (sic), Saturday, 31 October 2020 04:06 (three years ago) link

Asking a politician, whose job is to find a compromise

Here’s the problem right here. A politician’s job is to govern or legislate. Compromise is sometimes necessary, but it’s not the directive ffs

error prone wolf syndicate (Hadrian VIII), Saturday, 31 October 2020 04:11 (three years ago) link

absolutely disgusting that Joe Biden condones the stealing of children by specifically denouncing protests against that specifically

the burrito that defined a generation, Saturday, 31 October 2020 04:13 (three years ago) link

:)

look maybe he can find a compromise between denouncing absolutely all protest against police brutality, and denouncing specifically playing football with an infant in barricaded streets, just in case the latter happens

edited for dog profanity (sic), Saturday, 31 October 2020 04:25 (three years ago) link

Here’s the problem right here. A politician’s job is to govern or legislate. Compromise is sometimes necessary, but it’s not the directive ffs

― error prone wolf syndicate (Hadrian VIII), Saturday, October 31, 2020 12:11 AM (one minute ago) bookmarkflaglink

And that governing is given by a mandate of many millions and all the differences that come along with it. Is it still so difficult to imagine that in a country built on systemic racism and that have built this insane prison system and as allowed countless murdering by the police the people is going to be more receptive to fear of looting than racial justice? Who do you even think are your neighboors? Do you realise it’s the same country that has elected Trump? Why would Biden crash his chance of winning an election by saying stuff the majority of americans didn’t want to hear for decades? Dude just wants to get elected. It’s not like most major positive changes in the US didn’t come from incredible work the activists have done and politicians were either forced to accept the new realities or were inspired by.

Van Horn Street, Saturday, 31 October 2020 04:31 (three years ago) link

Why would Biden crash his chance of winning an election by saying stuff the majority of americans didn’t want to hear for decades?

I guess I just wonder...what is this stuff? The stances we're talking about w/r/t race, health care, climate are popular with the general electorate. But we're habituated to this posture, this conditioned fear on the part of the historically abused, that to speak up against your abuser—to actually craft a message around it—is just too dangerous. Better to avoid the message, and when you can't, better to apologize.

Meanwhile the klepto-racist axis is totally at liberty to be up front with their message, they do it freely, proudly, and to their great advantage. Whaddayaknow, it turns out people really want to believe in something! So much so that even THIS fucking disaster happened.

error prone wolf syndicate (Hadrian VIII), Saturday, 31 October 2020 05:06 (three years ago) link

Dude just wants to get elected.

A message we can believe in!

Piven After Midnight (The Yellow Kid), Saturday, 31 October 2020 05:13 (three years ago) link

When the Pyrannas left school they were called up, but were found by an Army board to be too mentally unstable, even for national service. Denied the opportunity to use their talents in the service of their county, they began to operate what they called The Operation. They would select a victim, and then threaten to beat him up if he paid them the so called protection money. Four months later they started another operation, which they called The Other Operation. In this racket they selected another victim, and threaten *not* to beat him up if he *didn't* pay them. One month later they hit upon The Other Other Operation. In this the victim was threatened if he didn't pay them they would beat him up. This, for the Pyrannas Brothers, was the turning point.

Lover of Nixon (or LON for short) (Neanderthal), Saturday, 31 October 2020 05:21 (three years ago) link

Whut

the burrito that defined a generation, Saturday, 31 October 2020 05:23 (three years ago) link

Joe Biden's response to daily televised footage of police brutality: pledge to increase the cops' funding for training, repeatedly saying they should shoot citizens exercising their civil rights, instead of beating and gassing them.

HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS IN LOUSVILLE, KY: do some investigative journalism into local cop training, finding "A training slideshow used by the KSP — the second largest police force in the state — urges cadets to be 'ruthless killers' and quotes Adolf Hitler advocating violence."

One slide, titled “Violence of Action,” in addition to imploring officers to be “a ruthless killer,” instructs troopers to have “a mindset void of emotion” and to “meet violence with greater violence.”

A line from Adolf Hitler’s fascist and anti-Semitic manifesto, Mein Kampf, is featured in the slide: “the very first essential for success is a perpetually constant and regular employment of violence.”

The presentation also links to a Hitler page on Goodreads, a database of quotes and books.

Two other slides quoting Hitler bring his total to three, making him the most quoted person in the presentation.

edited for dog profanity (sic), Saturday, 31 October 2020 05:28 (three years ago) link

It’s not like most major positive changes in the US didn’t come from incredible work the activists have done and politicians were either forced to accept the new realities or were inspired by.

This is something of a party line here to excuse the low expectations ("he just wants to get elected"), but positive change has required a combination of activism and political leadership - you've just never seen the latter in your lifetime.

Elite support for issues makes them real. Single-payer healthcare was a real possibility from Truman through the mid '70s and then became a distant fantasy when no powerful Democrats were left to champion it - and only became a (faint) possibility again because its most famous proponent made two serious runs at the Democratic nomination from the outside.

As long as Joe Biden's sole emphasis is on the evils of protesting or on "coverage" rather than healthcare quality or access or the laughable impossibility of a Green New Deal or abandoning fossil fuel subsidies, that's license for lesser lights to maintain the status quo. It's similar to the Lieberman/Manchin gambit ("sorry, we just can't pack the court - I really really want to but Joe won't let us!) in restraining the possibility of anything better than this pile of shit we've got now.

Donald Trump Also Sucks, Of Course (milo z), Saturday, 31 October 2020 05:40 (three years ago) link

ugh, I hate how I always learn about how Joe Biden thinks cops should shoot citizens exercising their civil rights after I vote for Joe Biden!!

the burrito that defined a generation, Saturday, 31 October 2020 05:42 (three years ago) link

I would love if, at least for the next five days, we all collectively stopped with the sarcastic and ironic language. It's an upsetting time and it's hard enough to tell who is being sincere without this constant scrim of irony in everyone's posts. I would deeply appreciate it if the language on this board was sincere for a few days so that we don't tear each other to shreds about points that we don't even believe in.

Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Saturday, 31 October 2020 07:27 (three years ago) link

Van Horn Street, perhaps you missed this part of my posts, but Walter Wallace Jr. was my neighbor. The people who were beaten and whose son was stolen for an FOP propaganda photo-op? Also my neighbors. The neighborhood we share is overrun with cops right now, fulfilling the usual cop duty of intimidating the citizens protesting their right to survive in their own neighborhood.

Remember also that of the Philadelphia cops implicated in the racist meme Facebook scandal of last year, 96% are still on the force, and the others have sued the department for wrongful termination.

I keep repeating myself here and elsewhere and offline, too, because all of this bears repeating until policing in the US is drastically altered or abolished altogether.

healthy cocaine off perfect butts (the table is the table), Saturday, 31 October 2020 12:12 (three years ago) link

I would love if, at least for the next five days, we all collectively stopped with the sarcastic and ironic language. It's an upsetting time and it's hard enough to tell who is being sincere without this constant scrim of irony in everyone's posts. I would deeply appreciate it if the language on this board was sincere for a few days so that we don't tear each other to shreds about points that we don't even believe in.

― Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Saturday, October 31, 2020 2:27 AM

OTM. Weaponized sarcasm gets an FP every time I see it.

scampo-phenique (WmC), Saturday, 31 October 2020 15:00 (three years ago) link

This is something of a party line here to excuse the low expectations ("he just wants to get elected"), but positive change has required a combination of activism and political leadership - you've just never seen the latter in your lifetime.

Elite support for issues makes them real. Single-payer healthcare was a real possibility from Truman through the mid '70s and then became a distant fantasy when no powerful Democrats were left to champion it - and only became a (faint) possibility again because its most famous proponent made two serious runs at the Democratic nomination from the outside.

― Donald Trump Also Sucks, Of Course (milo z), Saturday, October 31, 2020 1:40 AM (nine hours ago) bookmarkflaglink

I think political leadership is essential but comes after.

Post-70s, was there a massive movement for single payer health care? I’ve seen more energy spent on other issues, for which there have been significant wins; and I’ve also seen a massive pushback against the general idea of paying more taxes. I think Sanders doesn’t become hyper popular without post-2008 activism, the general realisation that inequality is growing at a fast pace and growing need for climate change action. It seems to me that he was always the same old Sanders, but that a (large enough) group of people found a champion in him.

Van Horn Street, Saturday, 31 October 2020 15:55 (three years ago) link

The leadership of politicians in general, but especially the president, is not a matter of creating a constituency for a policy where none existed, but rather picking up on a policy that has already gathered significant support and transporting those policy ideas 'the last mile', by finding an expression of the idea that can be sold to the broad public who aren't yet up to speed, then put into a bill, passed into law, and ultimately accepted by the governed.

the unappreciated charisma of cows (Aimless), Saturday, 31 October 2020 16:11 (three years ago) link

Post-70s, was there a massive movement for single payer health care?

No... but that's what I said up there? From Truman until the mid-70s, it was a possibility because powerful people pursued it. It's how we got Medicare and Medicaid to start with. This push for single-payer (and Medicare) did not come from "activism," it was a product of the pursuit of a political goal.

You specifically noted "progressive change" - but reactionary change (like, say, the post-9/11 natsec apparatus) are just as firmly entrenched and certainly did not come from people marching in the streets. You cannot dismiss the impact of elites (politicians and media) setting the terms of what's realistic and what's "childish and naive."

It seems to me that he was always the same old Sanders

Aside from the serious difference between "Representative Sanders" and "Senator Sanders."

Donald Trump Also Sucks, Of Course (milo z), Saturday, 31 October 2020 16:43 (three years ago) link


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