Sunday, July 31, 2016

Quote of the Day

The [proposed] strategy advances both Democratic Socialists of America's short-term goal of defeating Trump and its long-term goal of building a base that can sustain a grassroots mass movement for socialism and a left-wing party, both of which rely on empowering the same constituencies. "Whether we want to elect people inside or, depending on local conditions, outside the Democratic Party, we need to focus on organizing in black, Latinx, and poor and working-class white communities," says Maria Svart, National Director of DSA. "To build a viable party nationally, we can't skip the step of building a base, and that's not going to take just a year."

– Jesse A. Myerson
Excerpted from "An Anti-Trump Electoral Strategy
That Isn’t Pro-Clinton
"
Dissent
July 28, 2016


Related Off-site Links:
Socialism After Bernie Sanders: "Being a Radical Isn't About Being Too Pure for the World" – Dylan Matthews (Vox, July 15, 2016).
Bernie’s Big Lesson: Socialists Should Occupy the Democratic Party, Not Abandon It – Daniel Denvir (Salon, August 1, 2016).
What the Bernie Sanders Candidacy Meant, According to a Historian of the Left – Andrew Prokop (Vox, July 12, 2016).
War and Wall Street: Clinton's Bleak Record – Timothy Scott (TruthOut, August 1, 2016).
Hillary: Ordinarily Awful or Uncommonly Awful? – Andrew Levine (Counterpunch, August 1, 2016).
American Socialists Confront Their Hillary Clinton Problem – Ryan Cooper (The Week, August 4, 2016).
"I Support Hillary Clinton. So Should Everyone Who Voted for Me" – Bernie Sanders (Los Angeles Times, August 5, 2016).

See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
Carrying It On
Hope, History, and Bernie Sanders
Super Tuesday Thoughts on Bernie Sanders
Martin Luther King, Jr. and Democratic Socialism
Progressive Perspectives on the Rise of Donald Trump
Progressive Perspectives on Presumptive Democratic Presidential Nominee Hillary Clinton
Something to Think About – December 14, 2011
Quote of the Day – August 17, 2011
Something to Think About – October 29, 2011
Obama a Socialist? Hardly
Obama, Ayers, the “S” Word, and the “Most Politically Backward Layers in America”
A Socialist Response to the Financial Crisis
R.I.P. Neoclassical Economics
Capitalism on Trial
John le Carré’s Dark Suspicions


Saturday, July 30, 2016

Australian Sojourn – May 2016

Part 3: Melbourne


This evening I continue my series documenting my recent visit to Australia.

Tonight's installment features photos and commentary from my time spent in Melbourne (May 10-14), where my older brother and his family live. (To start at the beginning of this series, click here.)

As Part 2 of this series documents, just prior to my visit to Melbourne I spent time with my younger brother and his family in the little New South Wales town of Morpeth. I view both visits as wonderful gifts of "family time" – gifts I will always treasure.

Left: With my brother Chris and sister-in-law Cathie (who's holding Poppy the dog) – Friday, May 13, 2016.

I've been very fortunate to have visited my family in Melbourne three times in the last three years. Last year, my good friend Joan from Minnesota accompanied me, with the highlight of that particular visit being my eldest nephew's wedding.



Right: With my eldest nephew Ryan and his lovely wife Farah – May 11, 2016.

Ryan and Farah's wedding last year in Melbourne's beautiful Fitzroy Gardens was a real highlight of my March 2015 Australian sojourn.



Left: With my nephews Brendan and Mitchell.

Of my four nephews, only Liam was not in Melbourne at the time of my visit. He was, of course, greatly missed. The good news is that he continues following his dream of being a pilot . . . in far-off Coral Bay, Western Australia.




When I was visiting my younger brother and his family in Morpeth, just prior to my time in Melbourne, I was reintroduced to the artwork of Ainslie Roberts. (For some stunning examples of his work, see Part 1 of this series.)

During my time in Melbourne, it was the artwork of Janet and Anne Grahame Johnstone that I found myself reacquainted with – in particular, the illustrations in the book Dean's Gift Book of Nursery Rhymes (Dean & Son, Ltd, 1965).

My sister-in-law Cathie still has her copy of this book from her childhood, and I think that either it or another book that had some of the same illustrations was at some point at my paternal grandmother's house in Gunnedah. I say this as I've definitely seen some of the illustrations before . . .



. . . including the one at right for "Baa, Baa, Black Sheep," and the evocative one above illustrating the nursery rhyme, "The Beggars" (more popularly known as "Hark, Hark, the Dogs Do Bark").

Here's the text of the nursery rhyme as it appears in Dean's Gift Book of Nursery Rhymes:

Hark! hark! the dogs do bark,
The beggars are coming to town;
Some in rags and some in tags,
And one in a velvet gown.


And here's that part of the rhyme not included . . .

Some gave them white bread,
And some gave them brown,
And some gave them a good horse-whip,
And sent them out of the town.


According to the website Dog Nursery Rhymes and Their Secret Messages, "Hark, Hark, the Dogs Do Bark" dates back to the 13th century England and is seeped in history.

Wandering minstrels or troubadours and beggars went from city to town singing their songs ("some in rags and some in tags and one in a velvet gown"). Messages of dissent to the common people were often found in secret meanings to the words of their ballads and rhymes. The famous Peasant's Revolt of 1377 against the state was encouraged and inflamed by the rhyme that went "When Adam delved and Eve span - who was then the gentleman?" In this way the propaganda of the day was safely passed from one community to another. These secret messages could lead to plots and uprisings against the royalty, clergy and politicians of the day. Strangers were never trusted in communities. Dogs barking alerted the townspeople to strangers in their area, hence the words "Hark, hark the dogs do bark."


I should say that, as a child, I received for Christmas 1973 from my Aunty Fay and her family, a collection of fairy tales by Hans Christian Andersen illustrated by Janet and Anne Grahame Johnstone. I treasure this book to this day. Indeed, it's now with me in my life here in Minnesota. One of my favorite illustrations from it is the one below. It is, of course, from Anderson's famous story, "The Little Mermaid."





Above, left and below: The beautiful (and uniquely Australian) terrain of Bushy Park Wetlands, a 30-hectare (74-acre) conservation park in the Melbourne suburb of Glen Waverley – May 11, 2016.








See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
Australian Sojourn, March 2015: Part 6 – Family Time in Melbourne
Australian Sojourn, March 2015: Part 7 – The Great Ocean Road
Australian Sojourn, March 2015: Part 8 – A Wedding in Melbourne
A Visit to Melbourne (2014)
Melbourne: Where the Poseurs Are

Photography: Michael J. Bayly.
Artwork: Janet and Anne Grahame Johnstone.


Thursday, July 28, 2016

Quote of the Day

I want to thank Bernie Sanders. Bernie, your campaign inspired millions of Americans, particularly the young people who threw their hearts and souls into our primary. You've put economic and social justice issues front and center, where they belong.

And to all of your supporters here and around the country: I want you to know, I've heard you. Your cause is our cause. Our country needs your ideas, energy, and passion. That's the only way we can turn our progressive platform into real change for America. We wrote it together – now let's go out there and make it happen together.

– Hillary Clinton
Excerpted from her presidential nomination
acceptance speech at the Democratic National Convention
July 28, 2016


Related Off-site Links and Updates:
Hillary Clinton Becomes First Woman to Accept Major-Party Presidential Nomination in U.S. HistoryDemocracy Now! (July 29, 2016).
Hillary Clinton Accepts Nomination with "Boundless Confidence in America's Promise" – Dan Roberts, Sabrina Siddiqui and Lauren Gambino (The Guardian, July 29, 2016).
Fact Checking Clinton’s Big Speech – Robert Farley (FactCheck.org, July 29, 2016).
Hillary Clinton’s DNC Speech Had Bernie Sanders’s Fingerprints on It – Eric Levitz (The New Yorker, July 29, 2016).
The Reviews Are In: Conservatives Say the DNC Was "Disaster" for the GOP – Katherine Krueger (Talking Points Memo, July 28, 2016).
The Role of Love in the 2016 Election – Paul Brandeis Raushenbush (The Huffington Post, July 28, 2016).
From Populism to Nationalism: The Highs and Lows of Democrats' Big Finale – Nika Knight and Deirdre Fulton (Common Dreams, July 29, 2016).
Hillary Thought Police and the Bernie Kids – John Kass (Chicago Tribune, July 26, 2016).
To Stop Donald Trump, I’ll be Voting for Hillary Clinton – Shaun King (New York Daily News, July 26, 2016).
90% of Sanders Supporters Back Clinton: Pew ResearchDaily Kos (July 25, 2016).
Hillary Clinton Wasn’t the Only One to Break Barriers at the Democratic National Convention – Angilee Shah (PRI via Towleroad, July 29, 2016).
Father of Fallen Muslim U.S. Soldier Emotionally Rebukes Donald Trump – Kia Makarechi (Vanity Fair, July 28, 2016).
Khizr Khan and the Triumph of Democratic Militarism – Ted Rall (Counterpunch, August 2, 2016).
After Lying Low, Deep-Pocketed Clinton Donors Return to the Fore – Nicholas Confessore and Amy Chozick (The New York Times, July 28, 2016).
Clinton's Inspiring and Troubling Liberal Feminism – Peter Bloom (Common Dreams, August 2, 2016).
Ex Counselor to Bill Clinton: Hillary's Economic Justice Incompatible with Her Corporate RelationshipsThe Real News (July 29, 2016).
 A Voter’s Guide to Hillary Clinton’s Policies in Latin America – Greg Grandin (The Nation, April 15, 2016).
Hillary Clinton and Her Hawks – Gareth Porter (Consortium News via Common Dreams, July 29, 2016).
War and Wall Street: Clinton's Bleak Record – Timothy Scott (TruthOut, August 1, 2016).
Hillary: Ordinarily Awful or Uncommonly Awful? – Andrew Levine (Counterpunch, August 1, 2016).
"I Support Hillary Clinton. So Should Everyone Who Voted for Me" – Bernie Sanders (Los Angeles Times, August 5, 2016).

See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
Progressive Perspectives on Presumptive Democratic Presidential Nominee Hillary Clinton
Quote of the Day – July 26, 2016
Carrying It On
Quote of the Day – June 9, 2016
Quote of the Day – April 20, 2016
Hope, History, and Bernie Sanders
Quote of the Day – March 16, 2016
Quote of the Day – March 9, 2016
For U.S. Presidential Candidate Bernie Sanders, a Resurgency
Super Tuesday Thoughts on Bernie Sanders
Something to Think About – February 23, 2016
Quote of the Day – February 17, 2016
Something to Think About – February 4, 2016
Progressive Perspectives on the Rise of Donald Trump
Trump's Playbook
Something to Think About – July 18, 2016

Image: Alex Wong/Getty Images.


Wednesday, July 27, 2016

Photo of the Day



See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
Summer Blooms
In Summer Light
A Song of Summer
Summer Boy

Image: Michael Bayly.


Tuesday, July 26, 2016

Quote of the Day

Our job is to do two things. It is to defeat Trump, it is to elect Clinton. But [our revolution] is not to end on Election Day.

– Bernie Sanders
Quoted in Caitlin MacNeal's article,
"Sanders to Delegates: 'Easy to Boo'
But Harder to Have Prez Trump
"
Talking Points Memo
July 26, 2016



UPDATES:
The Moment Hillary Clinton Became
the First Female Presidential Nominee in History.
And Bernie Sanders Did the Honors

– James West (Mother Jones, July 26, 2016).

Bernie Sanders Just Showed Us
What a Mensch Looks Like

– D.D. Guttenplan (The Nation, July 26, 2016).

Bernie Sanders to Return to Senate
as an Independent

– Daniel Rivero (Fusion, July 26, 2016).

What’s Next for the Bernie Sanders Revolution?
The Populist Insurgency is Ratcheting Up

– Jim Hightower (The Hightower Lowdown, July 26, 2016).

If Hillary Clinton Loses in November,
It Won't be Bernie Sanders' Fault

– Steven W. Thrasher (The Guardian, July 27, 2016).

Jane Sanders: Why Bernie Voters
Shouldn't Get Over It

– Tessa Stuart (Rolling Stone, July 28, 2016).


Related Off-site Links:
At Democratic National Convention, Bernie Sanders Urges Support for Hillary Clinton – Dalia Hatuqa (Aljazeera, July 26, 2016).
The Revolution at a Crossroads: Sanders Delegates Weigh Their Options – Lauren Fox and Tierney Sneed (Talking Points Memo, July 25, 2016).
Who Should Bernie Voters Support Now? Robert Reich vs. Chris Hedges on Tackling the Neoliberal OrderDemocracy Now! (July 26, 2016).
To Stop Donald Trump, I’ll be Voting for Hillary Clinton – Shaun King (New York Daily News, July 26, 2016).
90% of Sanders Supporters Back Clinton: Pew ResearchDaily Kos (July 25, 2016).
Sanders to "Bernie or Bust" Movement: I'm Not With You – Alex Seitz-Wald (NBC News, July 24, 2016).
Sanders to Supporters: Don't Go Green – Ben Kamisar (The Hill, July 26, 2016).
Will Bernie's Supporters Stay Home on Election Day? We Asked Them – Mattathias Schwartz (The Intercept, July 26, 2016).
Bernie Sanders: DNC E-mails "Outrageous" But "Not a Shock" – Amita Kelly and Eyder Peralta (NPR News, July 24, 2016).
Democratic National Committee Apologizes to Sanders Over E-mails – Eric Beech (Reuters, July 25, 2016).
DNC Betrayed Bernie Sanders and the Rest of America – Dahleen Glanton (Common Dreams, July 26, 2016).
She's With Them – But We've Got Us: A Movement Bigger Than Sanders – Jon Queally (Common Dreams, July 26, 2016).
Donald Trump is a Threat to Free Democracy – Robert Christian (Millennial, July 21, 2016).
Here’s What Bernie Sanders Had to Say About Donald Trump’s RNC Speech – Paige Lavender (The Huffington Post, July 21, 2016).

For more of Bernie Sanders at The Wild Reed, see:
Carrying It On
Quote of the Day – June 9, 2016
Quote of the Day – April 20, 2016
Hope, History, and Bernie Sanders
Quote of the Day – March 16, 2016
Quote of the Day – March 9, 2016
For U.S. Presidential Candidate Bernie Sanders, a Resurgency
Super Tuesday Thoughts on Bernie Sanders
Something to Think About – February 23, 2016
Quote of the Day – February 17, 2016
Something to Think About – February 4, 2016

See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
Progressive Perspectives on the Rise of Donald Trump
Trump's Playbook
Something to Think About – July 18, 2016
Progressive Perspectives on Presumptive Democratic Presidential Nominee Hillary Clinton

Image: Craig Ruttle/AP Photo.


Sunday, July 24, 2016

Carrying It On


Sometimes you have to be content
to plant good seeds whenever you can
and be patient as you watch them
grow and ripen.



Perhaps, like me, you felt somewhat dispirited by the news last month that Hillary Clinton had been declared the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee over Bernie Sanders.

Much to the chagrin of a number of my friends, I simply cannot celebrate the prospect of Hillary Clinton being the Democratic presidential nominee – even as I acknowledge that I may well vote for her in November so as to ensure Donald Trump comes nowhere near the White House.

Yet the ugly reality remains: Both Clinton and Trump champion neoliberalism, an economic ideology that has proven to be terribly destructive and dehumanizing. Author George Monbiot contends that neoliberalism is at the root of many of our social problems; he describes it as a "self-serving racket" that sees competition as the defining characteristic of human relations and which redefines citizens as consumers whose democratic choices are best exercised by buying and selling. Neoliberalism, Anis Shivani reminds us, dictates that "persons have no status compared to corporations, nation-states are on their way out, and everything in turn dissolves before the abstraction called the market."

I lament that the one presidential candidate who opposed this ideology is now effectively out of the race. For as Shivani writes at Salon:

The reason why Bernie Sanders, self-declared democratic socialist, is so threatening to neoliberalism is that he has articulated a conception of the state, civil society, and the self that is not founded in the efficacy and rationality of the market. He does not believe – unlike Hillary Clinton – that the market can tackle climate change or income inequality or unfair health and education outcomes or racial injustice, all of which Clinton’s impending ‘victory’ (whatever machinations were involved in engineering it) will only strengthen neoliberalism, as the force that couldn’t be defeated even when the movement was as large and transcendent as Sanders’s. Although Sanders doesn’t specify ‘neoliberalism’ as the antagonist, his entire discourse presumes it.


So you can see why I'm not enamored by the idea of "market worshipers" like Clinton and Trump being presidential candidates, and why I'm disappointed that someone like Sanders is out of the race.



Beyond a "status quo corporatist candidate"

And now there's the recent news of Clinton's selection of her vice-presidential running mate, Tim Kaine. I find this choice also to be disappointing, and the following three quotes sum up well my reasons for this.

Underwhelmed, disappointed, actually – betrayed. I'm sure Tim Kaine is a good person. But as this article relates, he is decidedly to the right of progressive values on the vast majority of issues that Bernie backers were energized around. His selection does NOTHING to bring us excitement. NOTHING to earn our vote. From reproductive rights to climate change to financial regulation to trade agreements, Kaine adds NOTHING to the ticket. A good man, to be sure, but his selection reveals that Clinton – in the aftermath of a fierce battle for the nomination (and one that it is now PROFOUNDLY evident the DNC colluded on her behalf to such an extent that it is far from clear she could have won without a very tilted field) – is so arrogantly certain of her ascension to the White House that she can turn her back on the most energized members of her own party. After everything UGLY at the RNC [last] week, Clinton played it woefully safe ... and may have played right into the hands of that ugliness.

– David Weiss
via Facebook
July 23, 2016


[Tim Kaine is] pretty much a centrist candidate much like Hillary. And therein lies the problem.

. . . It’s always been apparent that Trump was playing to the primitive lizard brain, and with his fear mongering acceptance speech on Thursday it showed he’s intending to double down on this tactic. It’s classic demagoguery. First, neutralize the press; second, make people afraid. Third, declare “I alone, can fix it.”

Most Americans won’t swallow this swill. But if turnouts are as low as 2014 when only 36.3% of eligible voters showed up, then Trump could win by getting only 20% of eligible voters. And while Trump’s campaign is a study in chaos, the man has proven good at one thing: generating passion; not to mention irrational frenzy. These people may be crazy, and they may constitute a minority, but they will turn out.

Contrast that with Hillary. At a time when people are desperately looking for something other than a status quo corporatist candidate, she's the quintessential party politician, complete with PACs, and dragging her past support for Wall Street, the Big Banks, perennial Wars, and trade policy behind her like a giant buzz kill. The only thing that saved her in the primary was strong backing by the press, the elite party members, and – inexplicably – African Americans. That and her “evolution” to the left.

The only folks who feel passion for Hillary are women over 40 and the elite economic and political establishment. A powerful group, but not big in terms of numbers. After significant concessions in the platform debate, she had some hope of winning over at least some real progressives. Tim Kaine’s appointment will cut that number significantly.

Nominating a political clone is exactly the wrong thing to do if you want a higher turnout. And Kaine is a clone.

But Kaine’s appointment tells us something else – Clinton’s brief feint to the left wasn’t for real. Kaine is obviously a dog whistle to show Big Banks and Wall Street that her tough talk during the campaign wasn’t to be taken seriously.

Now it’s likely that turnouts for a Presidential race will be higher, but by how much, and the real question is how will it be enough for her to win, after this appointment?

– John Atcheson
Excerpted from "Clinton's F-You to Progressives:
This is How Trump Could Become President
"
Common Dreams
July 23, 2016


The fire alarm that should be going off is that while the average Bernie backer will drag him/herself to the polls that day to somewhat reluctantly vote for Hillary, it will be what’s called a “depressed vote” – meaning the voter doesn’t bring five people to vote with her. He doesn’t volunteer 10 hours in the month leading up to the election. She never talks in an excited voice when asked why she’s voting for Hillary. A depressed voter. Because, when you’re young, you have zero tolerance for phonies and BS. Returning to the Clinton/Bush era for them is like suddenly having to pay for music, or using MySpace or carrying around one of those big-ass portable phones. They’re not going to vote for Trump; some will vote third party, but many will just stay home. Hillary Clinton is going to have to do something to give them a reason to support her — and picking a moderate, bland-o, middle of the road old white guy as her running mate is not the kind of edgy move that tells millenials that their vote is important to Hillary. Having two women on the ticket – that was an exciting idea. But then Hillary got scared and has decided to play it safe. This is just one example of how she is killing the youth vote.

– Michael Moore
Excerpted from "Five Reasons Why Trump Will Win"
Vox Populi
July 25, 2016


The very real threat of Trump

Yes, there are political commentators such as Michael Moore and Alan Minsky who are predicting that Donald Trump may well be the next U.S. president. From my perspective, this is a truly horrendous thought.

Yet at the same time I'm tired of hearing some Democrats shaming people for considering or pledging to vote for the Green Party's Jill Stein. I've come to the conclusion that if Hillary Clinton loses to Donald Trump, it won't be because of people voting their conscience but, first and foremost, because the DNC rigged, or at the very least tilted the playing field of the primary system to undermine and defeat Bernie Sanders, the one Democratic candidate that polls consistently and overwhelmingly showed could beat Trump in a general election.

If Trump wins the presidency, it will because the DNC dishonestly selected and ran the wrong candidate in the face of the many challenges before us, including the threats posed by both neoliberalism and the neo-fascism of Donald Trump.

When I recently shared this sentiment on Facebook, along with expressions of my disappointment at the corruption within the Democratic Party and my informed criticism of Hillary Clinton's past record and current platform, one friend responded by declaring:

Yes, but Trump is terrifying. It scares me that anti-Clinton stuff is still being put on Facebook. We need to spend all our energy at this time on defeating Trump.


To be clear, the prospect of a Trump presidency deeply concerns me too. But what's also of concern is the idea of allowing our fears to become so powerful that we censor ourselves when it comes to critiquing and holding accountable any of our leaders and potential leaders. In the realm of politics, no one should be given a free pass.

Therefore, I think it's not only possible but critically important to both critique Clinton in an informed manner and work on exposing and defeating the neo-fascist Trump. I'm committed to doing both these things here at The Wild Reed (see for example here, here and here).

Another friend responded to my critique of Clinton's choice of Tim Kaine as her running mate by saying, "Michael, I have a great deal of respect for your advocacy and activism, but frankly, you come off as a whiny, self-righteous purist if Tim Kaine isn't progressive enough for you."

My response to this charge brings us back to the issue of neoliberalism:

On the crucial and foundational issue/problem of our times, the economic doctrine of neoliberalism, neither Clinton nor Kane can be considered progressive. If being aware of this reality and speaking out about it makes me a "whiny, self-righteous purist" in your eyes, then so be it. As a progressive, I am passionate about identifying neoliberalism is an ideology that must be resisted if environmental sustainability is to be achieved and humanity is to have a future marked by justice, peace and compassion. I don't see either Clinton or Kaine offering the level of resistance that's required. Nor do I see them offering or championing alternatives. I find this to be both profoundly disappointing and troubling.



"Here to improve or damn it?"

Now, don't think for a minute that my informed critique of people like Hillary Clinton or Tim Kaine is, as one acquaintance suggested, an example of "burning it all down." I'm not a slasher and burner; nor am I a cynical naysayer who only ever criticizes and denounces. In fact, I strive to be hopeful and proactive in all areas of my life, including when it comes to talking about the political and social problems and challenges we face.

I also believe we can acknowledge disappointing developments within the political realm without losing either a sense of perspective or hope. Rep. Keith Ellison recently demonstrated this well when he responded to the failure of the Democratic Party to include in its platform genuinely progressive "planks" such an universal healthcare and opposition to the neoliberal-inspired Trans Pacific Pact trade deal.

Speaking on July 12 to Amy Goodman of Democracy Now!, Ellison said the following.

[The] proposal [to oppose the TPP], which is very meritorious, and which I support, was not embraced. That’s too bad. But, let me tell you . . . I’m an optimistic person. Right? Whenever we don’t get every single thing that we want, it’s not my way to say, pooh-pooh on the whole process. I say we have made important demands and debated this issue. We have made them pay attention to what we’re talking about, and the struggle continues. We’re not gonna stop fighting for Medicare for all just because it didn’t get adopted into the Democratic Platform. We’re gonna keep the fight alive, because people across the country need it that way, because it is a more human, more effective way to deliver health care to the American people. So, I just say take heart in the success that we had. Keep the battle going. Keep the fight up for a fairer, more equal America. That’s what we do.



Planting good seeds

I find I need inspiring people in my life to help me stay positive and proactive. Perhaps you do too.

One such person is Buffy Sainte-Marie, a woman who through her music, activism and life is a constant source of inspiration for me. I've seen her twice in concert, met her once, and am very much looking forward to once again seeing her perform next month at the Dakota Jazz Club in Minneapolis.

Prior to last month's announcement that Hillary Clinton had secured the Democratic presidential nomination, Buffy shared the following about her support for Bernie Sanders.

My head for a very long time . . . has been very much in the way of thinking of Bernie Sanders. I have supported him, not because of him but because I support the same issues and we happen to agree on just about everything. And even though I have worked with Hillary Clinton and was on one of her committees [when she was First Lady], I'm very much still in favor of the issues that Bernie Sanders is supporting and I'm glad that he has influenced American politics, at least to some extent, and I intend to stay in that camp.


Buffy's embodiment of hope in the face of seemingly intractable obstacles to social evolution is truly inspirational. She has never grown cynical or jaded, and at age 75 still feels that her mission is far from done. In the Blair Stonechild-penned biography, Buffy Sainte-Marie: It's My Way, Buffy is quoted as saying the following.

We all make our little contributions when we can and things change a little bit at at time. I think that's what ripens life. Bit it always seems so slow when you're carrying this Medicine and you know it can make things better, but there are gatekeepers profiting on the problems, and you'll have to wait awhile until the world is ready to receive it; so you go bit by bit: give when you have the chance.

It's futile to try to rush the river, and pretty hard to hurry the moon, and sometimes you have to be content to plant good seeds whenever you can and be patient as you watch them grow and ripen. Thinking about my early attempts to be effective, I can say that in my lifetime things have not changed nearly enough; but when I look back on the last forty years, things have changed incredibly and I have great faith that the world will continue to ripen.


And then there is this from Buffy . . .

Everybody's always waking up. . . . We're all ripening every minute, all of us – even the guys that we think are the "bad guys." They too are evolving. So for me the whole idea is being willing to mutate, in a good way, and recognizing in other people that each of us is evolving, ripening, growing in our own way. That is very good news.


How beautiful! How hopeful! . . . And how challenging! The "bad guys" are evolving too! And, yes, like each one of us, someone like Donald Trump is capable of evolving. Now, that being said, I'm still going to do my utmost to ensure he doesn't become president. But if I could once pray for George W. Bush and his transformation, perhaps it's time to start doing the same for Donald Trump . . . and indeed all people in positions of power.

Of course one way that I have (hopefully) been facilitating positive transformation – within my own life and in the church and wider world – is through my writing. My hope has always been that the things I write – and the commentaries of others that I share – aren't the equivalent of bombs thrown out to destroy and discourage. Rather, I hope my endeavors here at The Wild Reed and elsewhere are seen for what I intend them to be: efforts to plant, in the words of Buffy Sainte-Marie, "good seeds" – seeds that contain the potential to encourage, give hope, and, yes, at times challenge and critique . . . though always in an informed, respectful and loving way.

I'm going to carry these seeds on; I'm going to keep planting them. And in the words of Buffy, I'm going to keep "saying, playing and praying" as I "carry it on."

And what exactly is this "it"?

I see it as my passionate embodiment of hope, awareness and love in a world dominated by political and economic systems that far too often heap contempt on such qualities and their embodiment by individuals and communities.

So . . . yes, despite the many disappointments, uncertainties, and challenges, I remain inspired by Buffy and so many others, past and present, to keep doing that human-being magic of "carrying it on" . . .






Hold your head up
Lift the top of your mind
Put your eyes on the Earth
Lift your heart to your own home planet

What do you see?
What is your attitude –
Are you here to improve or damn it?

Look right now
and you will see we’re only here
by the skin of our teeth as it is
so take heart and take care
of your link with life and . . .

Oh, carry it on – we’re saying
Oh, carry it on – keep playing
Oh, carry it on – and praying
Oh, carry it on

It ain’t money that makes the world go round
That’s only temporary confusion
It ain’t governments that make the people strong
It’s the opposite illusion

Look right now
and you will see they’re only here
by the skin of our teeth as it is
so take heart and take care
of your link with life

Oh, carry it on – keep saying
Oh, carry it on – and playing
Oh, carry it on – and praying
Oh, carry it on

Look right now
and you will see we’re only here
by the skin of our teeth as it is
so take heart and take care
of your link with life
. . . it's beautiful!

If you got the sense to take care
of your source of perfection
Mother Nature, she’s the daughter of God
and the source of all protection

Look right now
and you will see she’s only here
by the skin of her teeth as it is
so take heart and take care
of your link with life

Oh, carry it on – keep saying
Oh, carry it on – and playing
Oh, carry it on – keep on praying
Oh, carry it on




About her song "Carry It On" Buffy said the following in a July 2015 interview:

I’m just pointing out that we live in this incredible world and yet, because of human boneheadedness, we are under threat of shooting ourselves in the foot. It’s not something to be afraid of. It’s something just to step up to. You know, it’s like doing the dishes; you’ve got to do it all the time or it piles up on you. I know that it's down home and folksy, but that’s kind of my attitude to the world. I’m not a combatant, at all. I’m really into alternative ways of looking at things. It comes naturally to me to do so and then to try to pass that on to people who are being advertised to death and conned in every which way. Buy this, buy that. Life is simpler than that. . . . It isn’t money that makes the world go around. I really believe that. That is the corporate hallucination by which we are controlled. It’s not as if we have to get up in arms and go and fight the world. No. You don’t. No, no. Stay calm and decolonize.





Related Off-site Links:

Buffy Sainte-Marie
A Video Profile of Buffy Sainte-MarieFirst Talk with Tamara Bull (Season 3, 2009).
Interview with Buffy Sainte-Marie (Part 1)Bust TV (October 2009).
Interview with Buffy Sainte-Marie (Part 2)Bust TV (October 2009).

Neoliberalism
A Lethal Parasite Has Infected the Brains of Politicians and Economists: Finding a Cure for Neoliberalism – Robert Kadar (Evonomics, November 2015).
Economist Debunks Huge Free-Market Fallacy About Government – Mariana Mazzucato (Evonomics, March 5, 2016).
Neoliberalism – the Ideology at the Root of All Our Problems – George Monbiot (The Guardian, April 15, 2016).
Wrong All Along: Neoliberal IMF Admits Neoliberalism Fuels Inequality and Hurts Growth – Ben Norton (Salon, May 31, 2016).
This is Our Neoliberal Nightmare: Hillary Clinton, Donald Trump, and Why the Market and the Wealthy Win Every Time – Anis Shivani (Salon, June 6, 2016).
Donald Trump and the Plague of Atomization in a Neoliberal Age – Henry A. Giroux (TruthOut, August 8, 2016).
Ecuador's Rafael Correa: It's Neoliberalism, Not Socialism That Has Failed – Andrea Germanos (Common Dreams, August 8, 2016).
Nobel Prize-winning Economist Joseph Stiglitz Tells Us Why "Neoliberalism is Dead" – Will Martin (Business Insider, August 19, 2016).
The Death of Neoliberalism and the Crisis in Western Politics – Martin Jacques (The Guardian, August 21, 2016).

Hillary Clinton
Please Recognize Your Privilege If You Can Afford 8 Years of Hillary Clinton and the Status Quo – Tony Brasunas (HuffPost Politics, April 4, 2016).
Poll: Voters Want an Independent Candidate to Take on Clinton and Trump – Jessie Hellmann (The Hill, May 18, 2016).
A Contested Convention is Exactly What the Democratic Party Needs – John Nichols (The Nation, May 23, 2016).
Clinton Positions Herself to the Right of Trump in National Security Speech – Phyllis Bennis (The Real News, June 2, 2016).
Media Trumpwash Clinton’s Reckless Foreign Record – Adam Johnson (FAIR, June 3, 2016).
Hillary Clinton Brings Disgraced DNC Chair Debbie Wasserman Schultz Onto Her Campaign – Nathan Wellman (US Uncut, July 24, 2016).
Does Hillary Get It? – Robert Reich (Common Dreams, July 24, 2016).
War and Wall Street: Clinton's Bleak Record – Timothy Scott (TruthOut, August 1, 2016).
Hillary: Ordinarily Awful or Uncommonly Awful? – Andrew Levine (Counterpunch, August 1, 2016).
Leftists Against Clintonism: It's Not Just About the Lies, It's About the Record – Jake Johnson (Common Dreams, August 11, 2016).
Progressives Urge Clinton Not to Appoint a Wall Street Cabinet – Nadia Prupis (TruthDig, August 11, 2016).
Hate Trump? You Should Still Hold Clinton's Feet to the Fire – Steven W. Thrasher (The Guardian, August 11, 2016).
With Trump Certain to Lose, You Can Forget About a Progressive Clinton – Thomas Frank (The Guardian, August 13, 2016).
How Hillary Clinton and “American Power” Paved the Way for Shocking Violence in Honduras – Jim Naureckas (In These Times, August 17, 2016).
Is the Clinton Foundation Really a Charity? – Dan Wright (Shadow Proof, August 22, 2016).
Arms Industry Donating to Hawkish Clinton Over Incoherent Trump – Deirdre Fulton (Common Dreams, August 24, 2016).
Hillary Clinton Had the Chance to Make Gay Rights History. She Refused – Robert Samuels (The Washington Post, August 29, 2016).
The Courtiers and the Tyrants – Chris Hedges (TruthDig, September 18, 2016).
The Fight Isn’t Going Clinton’s Way – Niall Ferguson (The Boston Globe, September 19, 2016).

Bernie Sanders
Democrats Will Learn All the Wrong Lessons From Brush With Bernie – Matt Taibbi (Rolling Stone, June 9, 2016).
Why Sanders Must Continue His Campaign – Robert C. Hockett (The Hill, June 9, 2016).
Sanders' Success: Democratic Socialism Goes Mainstream – Roger Bybee (The Progressive, June 10, 2016).
Dear Global Progressives Who Wanted Bernie Sanders to Drop Out and Support Clinton – Christian Christensen (Common Dreams, June 10, 2016).
Sanders: "I’ll Do Everything in My Power to Stop Trump" – Jonathan Fuentes (The Progressive Brief, June 10, 2016).
"The Campaign Will Go On": Sanders Backers Vow to Keep Fighting to Change Nation and Democratic PartyDemocracy Now! (June 10, 2016).
I’m Sticking With Sanders – And Voting for Clinton – David Korten (Yes!, June 15, 2016).By Endorsing Hillary Clinton, Bernie Sanders May Have Positioned Himself to Win The Presidency – Edison Starkweather (Medium, July 12, 2016).
The Sanders Endorsement and the Political Revolution – Robert Borosage (Common Dreams, July 13, 2016).
As Sanders Endorses Clinton, How Far Left Has He Pushed the Democratic Party Platform?Democracy Now! (July 12, 2016).
What the Bernie Sanders Candidacy Meant, According to a Historian of the Left – Andrew Prokop (Vox, July 12, 2016).
Bernie Sanders Campaign Chief Says Someone Must Be "Accountable" for What DNC E-mails Show – Mary Alice Parks (ABC News, July 22, 2016).
Wikileaks Revelation: DNC Had Hillary Moles Inside Bernie Campaign – Jim Hoft (The Gateway Pundit, July 23, 2016).
DNC Influenced Reporters to Sandbag Sanders, Leak Shows – Mary Kay Linge (New York Post, July 24, 2016).
Bernie Sanders to Address Convention Amid Drama Over Leaked E-mails – Nicole Gaudiano (USA Today, July 25, 2016).
Will Bernie Sanders’ Political Movement Have Life Beyond the DNC? – John Light (BillMoyers.com via Common Dreams, July 25, 2016).
Bernie’s Big Lesson: Socialists Should Occupy the Democratic Party, Not Abandon It – Daniel Denvir (Salon, August 1, 2016).
"I Support Hillary Clinton. So Should Everyone Who Voted for Me" – Bernie Sanders (Los Angeles Times, August 5, 2016).
The Moment the Revolution Broke Down in Tears – Ahmed Elsayed (Open Democracy, August 9, 2016).
Sanders Campaign Declares Creation of "Our Revolution" – Jon Queally (Common Dreams, August 8, 2016).
The Populist Uprising Isn’t Over – It’s Only Just Begun – Robert Borosage (Common Dreams, August 22, 2016).

Donald Trump
Can a Catholic in Good Conscience Vote for Trump? – Catholic News Agency (March 16, 2016).
The Republicans Waged a Three-Decade War on Government. They Got Trump – Norman J. Ornstein and Thomas E. Mann (Vox, July 18, 2016).
"We're Screwed": GOP Pollster Laments Losing Millennial Voters to Socialism and Sanders – Lauren McCauley (Common Dreams, July 19, 2016).
Here’s What Bernie Sanders Had to Say About Donald Trump’s RNC Speech – Paige Lavender (The Huffington Post, July 21, 2016).
Nine Lies in Donald Trump’s Big Speech to the Republican Convention – Aaron Rupar, Aviva Shen, Judd Legum and Ryan Koronowski (Think Progress, July 21, 2016).
Clinton Inflames Progressive Base with Choice of Tim Kaine as Vice President – Jon Queally (Common Dreams, July 22, 2016).
Trump's Appetite for Destruction: How Disastrous Convention Doomed GOP – Matt Taibbi (Rolling Stone, July 22, 2016).
Clinton's F-You to Progressives: This is How Trump Could Become President – John Atcheson (Common Dreams, July 23, 2016).
Why Donald Trump Could Be the Next President of the United States – Alan Minsky (TruthDig, July 22, 2016).
Trump and Putin. Yes, It's Really a Thing – Josh Marshall (Talking Points Memo, July 23, 2016).
Can't Win? Post-Convention Bump Sends Trump Surging in Polls – Nadia Prupis (Common Dreams, July 25, 2016).
Five Reasons Why Trump Will Win – Michael Moore (Vox Populi, July 25, 2016).
Trump Support is Collapsing Nationwide – Kevin Drum (Mother Jones, August 5, 2016).
Trump's Assassination Dog Whistle Was Even Scarier Than You Think – David S. Cohen (Rolling Stone, August 9, 2016).
The GOP Must Dump Trump – Joe Scarborough (The Washington Post, August 9, 2016).
No, Obama Did Not Found ISIL, Mr. Trump: That Was the GOP – Juan Cole (AlterNet, August 12, 2016).
Donald Trump: "We're Having a Problem" – Josh Lederman (Cosmopolitan, August 12, 2016).
Frustration Abundant, GOP Could Be Near Trump Breaking Point – Steve Peoples, Jill Colvin and Josh Lederman (Associated Press, August 13, 2016).
Donald Trump is Making America Meaner – Nicholas Kristof (The New York Times, August 13, 2016).
Inside the Failing Mission to Tame Donald Trump’s Tongue – Alexander Burns and Maggie Haberman (The New York Times, August 13, 2016).
Trumpism: Made in the United States by Republican Hate and Democratic Hypocrisy – Paul Street (TruthDig, August 16, 2016).
Trump: Never Wrong, Never Sorry, Never Responsible – Karen Tumulty (The Washington Post, September 16, 2016).
Donald Trump is a Liar. The Press Needs to Use That Word: "Liar" – Kevin Drum (Mother Jones, September 16, 2016).

The DNC E-mail Leak Scandal
Wikileaks Proves Primary Was Rigged: DNC Undermined Democracy – Michael Sainato (Observer, July 22, 2016).
Bernie Sanders Campaign Chief Says Someone Must Be "Accountable" for What DNC E-mails Show – Mary Alice Parks (ABC News, July 22, 2016).
Wikileaks Revelation: DNC Had Hillary Moles Inside Bernie Campaign – Jim Hoft (The Gateway Pundit, July 23, 2016).
DNC Influenced Reporters to Sandbag Sanders, Leak Shows – Mary Kay Linge (New York Post, July 24, 2016).
Debbie Wasserman Schultz to Resign as DNC Chair as E-mail Scandal Rocks Democrats – Dan Roberts, Ben Jacobs and Alan Yuhas (The Guardian, July 24, 2016).
Bernie Sanders: DNC E-mails "Outrageous" But "Not a Shock" – Amita Kelly and Eyder Peralta (NPR News, July 24, 2016).
DNC E-mail Leak: Sanders Calls for New Leader as Clinton Camp Blames Russia – Alan Yuhas (The Guardian, July 24, 2016).
With DNC Leaks, Former "Conspiracy Theory" is Now True – and No Big Deal – Adam Johnson (FAIR, July 24, 2016).
Hillary Clinton Brings Disgraced DNC Chair Debbie Wasserman Schultz Onto Her Campaign – Nathan Wellman (US Uncut, July 24, 2016).
DNC Leak Reveals Party Insiders Promised Obama Access in Exchange for Cash – Nika Knight (Common Dreams, July 25, 2016).
In the Face of Trump, the Democratic Party is Revealing Its Own Ideological Bankruptcy – Jake Johnson (Common Dreams, July 25, 2016).
WikiLeaks' Julian Assange on Releasing DNC E-mails That Ousted Debbie Wasserman SchultzDemocracy Now! (July 25, 2016).
Democratic National Committee Apologizes to Sanders Over E-mails – Eric Beech (Reuters, July 25, 2016).
DNC Betrayed Bernie Sanders and the Rest of America – Dahleen Glanton (Common Dreams, July 26, 2016).
Who Leaked the Damning DNC Emails? What Difference Does It Make? – Gary Leupp (Counterpunch, August 2, 2016).

Tim Kaine
Hillary-Kaine: Back to the Center – William K. Black (Common Dreams, July 24, 2016).
Tim Kaine, and Other Faith-Based Politics – Corey Robin (Jacobin, July 24, 2016).
Donald Trump’s Strategy for Victory is Clear, But Are Democrats Able to See It? – Sonali Kolhatkar (Common Dreams, July 24, 2016).
Clinton Running Mate Tim Kaine Supported TPP, Offshore Drilling & Anti-Union Right-to-Work MeasuresDemocracy Now! (July 25, 2016).
Eat, Pray, Starve: What Tim Kaine Didn’t Learn During His Time in Honduras – Greg Grandin (The Nation, July 28, 2016).

Other Recommended Links
A Shift Will Happen in 2016 and It Will Change Everything – Jesse Chen (LinkedIn, January 6, 2016).
Democrats Against Democracy, Self-Styled Progressives Against Progress – Jake Johnson (Common Dreams, June 13, 2016).
Ethicists Say Voting With Your Heart, Without a Care About the Consequences, is Actually Immoral – Olivia Goldhill (Quartz, June 23, 2016).
The Election from Hell – Tom Engelhardt (Common Dreams, August 9, 2016).

See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
Actually, There's No Question About It
Buffy Sainte-Marie: Singing It and Praying It; Living It and Saying It
Buffy Sainte-Marie: Still Singing with Spirit, Joy, and Passion
Buffy Sainte-Marie: "The Big Ones Get Away"
“The Next Step Is a Green Step”: Cornel West Endorses Jill Stein
Hope, History and Bernie Sanders
Quote of the Day – April 20, 2016
Super Tuesday Thoughts on Bernie Sanders
Something to Think About – February 22, 2016
Quote of the Day – February 17, 2016
Rocking the Cradle of Power
Capitalism on Trial
In a Blow to Democracy, U.S. Supreme Court Affirms Corporate Personhood
R.I.P. Neoclassical Economics
Threshold Musings
Progressive Perspectives on the Rise of Donald Trump
Something to Think About – July 18, 2016
Hope, History, and Bernie Sanders
Progressive Perspectives on Presumptive Democratic Presidential Nominee Hillary Clinton

For The Wild Reed's special series of posts leading-up to the May 12, 2015 release of Buffy's most recent album, Power in the Blood, see:
Buffy Sainte-Marie and That "Human-Being Magic"
Buffy Sainte-Marie's Lesson from the Cutting Edge: "Go Where You Must to Grow"
Buffy Sainte-Marie: "Sometimes You Have to Be Content to Plant Good Seeds and Be Patient"
Buffy Sainte-Marie's Power in the Blood

Opening image: "The Sower" by Johne Richardson.