Friday, November 22, 2024

Andor: “A Staggering, Unyielding Masterpiece”


It’s the ’70s storytelling. It’s the slow burn, the backstory, and then the payoff. All that time building the foundation is exponentially repaid because everything mattered along the way.
Source


I continue this evening with my series of posts celebrating what many people consider one of the best TV shows ever made – Andor.

As I’ve noted previously, Andor is a prequel to the 2016 film Rogue One: A Star Wars Story, which in turn serves as an immediate prequel to Star Wars: A New Hope (1977).

Andor stars Diego Luna (left), reprising his role as Cassian Andor in Rogue One. Like Rogue One, Andor has a much grittier look and feel, and far more complex characters than any other movie or TV series in the Star Wars franchise. This definitely goes a long way in accounting for my interest in, and appreciation for, both Rogue One and Andor.

The first season of Andor was released on the Disney+ streaming platform in 2022. The second (and final) season is scheduled for release early next year.

In the lead-up to season two I’m sharing a series of posts celebrating Andor. Tonight’s installment features two Andor-related pieces. First, an excerpt from a January 4, 2023 Wired article that asserts that Andor is “a masterclass in good writing.” The piece goes on to say the following.

The Star Wars series Andor, a prequel to the 2016 film Rogue One, is a dramatic examination of the early days of the Rebel Alliance. Science fiction author Matt London was impressed by the show’s sophisticated characterization and dialog.

“There’s so much subtext in the dialog of Andor, and there’s so much communicated in the silences,” London says in Episode 533 of the Geek’s Guide to the Galaxy podcast. “It’s not passive viewing. I think it takes an active mind to engage. It’s not a kid’s show.”

TV writer Andrea Kail agrees that Andor is a mature, complex piece of storytelling. “In every other Star Wars, there’s black and there’s white,” she says. “There’s no crossover. Everything in this show is about moral ambiguity. It’s about the gray tones in every single situation. And that, for me, is why this is an adult show. Nothing is black and white in the world. Everybody makes choices, and some of those choices hurt other people. That’s the way life is, and that’s the way war is.”

Andor largely eschews many Star Wars staples, such as wacky creatures and funny droids, focusing instead on the realities of power and violence. Fantasy author Erin Lindsey, who worked for many years as a U.N. aid worker, found the show’s depiction of politics to be completely believable. “I think there are clearly people on the writing team who are students of spy novels like [those by] John le Carré and who are students of politics and students of history, who are really looking at how revolution has happened here on Earth and what that looks like,” she says.


The second thing I share this evening is a 16-minute video review of Andor by “Spaceman.”

This review, entitled “Andor is a Star Wars Masterpiece from 1978,” received the Dilectio Sapientiae Award at the 2023 Miami International Science-Fiction and Film Festival. Its title reflects the late-1970s look and feel of Andor, which of course was the time period when the film it serves as a sequel to (1977’s Star Wars: A New Hope) was made.





For more about Andor at The Wild Reed, see:
The Revolution Will Be Televised
Andor: The Star Wars Franchise’s “First Piece of Universally Excellent Television”
The Brilliance of Andor


Related Off-site Links:
Andor Season 2: Everything We Know – Josh Rosenberg (Esquire, August 12, 2024).
Diego Luna Says Andor Season 2 Turns Rogue One Into a “Different Film” – Dalton Ross (Entertainment Weekly, August 15, 2024). Everything We Know About Andor Season 2: Release Window, Plot, Cast, and More – Fran Ruiz (Space, October 16, 2024).
Rumor: Andor Season 2 to Bring Back Andy Serkis as Kino Loy – Ishita Verma (Super Hero Hype, October 28, 2024).


What the Republican Party Now Stands For

What matters to Donald Trump is total loyalty. If you want to create a dictatorship in the United States, there are two things Donald has to do to fulfill his statement that he’s going to be dictator, though he claims for one day. You have to control the enforcement of the laws. And there are more than 100,000 people at the Justice Department. The FBI is under the attorney general, for example. And then, secondly, you have to fire those general officers, admirals and generals, who will not do your bidding and ignore their oath of office, and replace them with craven junior officers who will do your bidding, politicizing the American military. Those are the two key levers to creating a Trump dictatorship.

The Republican Party used this say that it stood for freedom, for individual freedom. It’s very clear that it now stands for authoritarian control. And the [Department of Justice] is part of that. You will behave the way we want you to do in the Trump administration, or we will find ways to punish you; we will find ways to take away money, to shut down your non-profit organization on a whim, a mere accusation with no proof. And remember that under the U.S. Supreme Court’s immunity decision, anything Donald Trump does in his official capacity is beyond review by anyone anywhere. The Supreme Court majority has effectively set up a dictatorship for Trump. The question is: Does he have the competence to execute it? No. Does he have people around him who are competent to execute it? Absolutely.

David Cay Johnston
Excerpted from “Trump Loyalist Pam Bondi
Tapped for Attorney General

Democracy Now!
November 22, 2024


See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
Venice Williams on How We Get Through the Next Four Years
Phil Wilson Remembers “American Fascism’s First Casualty” and Warns That Donald Trump’s “MAGA Death Cult Is Coming for Us All”
Marianne Williamson: “We’re Living in Very Serious Times and We Need to Be Very Serious People”
Will We Let Fascism Come to America?
Bernie Sanders: Quote of the Day – July 1, 2024
The Ongoing Danger of the Trump Cult and the Wider Specter of American Fascism
Dan Rather on America’s “Moment of Reckoning”
The Republican Party in a Nutshell
Donald Trump’s Open and Shameless Criminality
Insurrection at the United States Capitol
Trump’s Legacy
Republicans Don’t Care About American Democracy
“The Republican Party Has Now Made It Official: They Are a Cult”
“We Have an Emergency On Our Hands”: Marianne Williamson On the “Freefall” of American Democracy
“Fascism Is Upon Us”
Adam Serwer: Quote of the Day – May 23, 2018
On International Human Rights Day, Saying “No” to Donald Trump and His Fascist Agenda (2016)
Progressive Perspectives on the Election of Donald Trump as President of the United States (2016)
Progressive Perspectives on the Rise of Donald Trump (2016)

Image: Kristen Solberg.


Wednesday, November 20, 2024

The Green Party’s Jill Stein and Butch Ware Give Their First Post-Election Interview

The Green Party’s 2024 presidential and vice presidential candidates Jill Stein and Butch Ware have given their first interview after the November 5 U.S. presidential election. The Stein/Ware ticket secured 730,939 votes in the 2024 presidential election, which translates as 0.5% of the national vote.

Speaking yesterday on The Katie Halper Show, Stein and Ware talked about a number of things, including how they see the Biden/Harris administration’s unconditional support of Israel’s genocide in Gaza as a key factor in the Democratic Party’s defeat. They also responded to recent derogatory remarks about “third parties” made by Lawrence O’Donnell, and to Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s earlier accusation that the Green Party is “predatory.” Finally, Stein and Ware reflected on things that, in retrospect, they would have done differently in their campaign.

NOTE: The segment of the following Katie Halper Show featuring Jill Stein and Butch Ware begins at the 52:45 mark.





See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
Progressive Perspectives on Where Democrats Went Wrong in the 2024 Presidential Election
Jill Stein: “We Give Reasons for People to Come Out and Vote”
The “Green Smoothie” Option
We’re Witnessing a Liberal Meltdown Over Jill Stein
Jill Stein in the Twin Cities
Anti-Genocide Presidential Candidate Jill Stein Reflects on the First Anniversary of Israel’s Genocide in Gaza
Green Party Vice Presidential Candidate Butch Ware in Minneapolis
Butch Ware: “You Can Actually Vote Your Conscience”
“This Is a Tragic, Heartbreaking Moment in the History of Humanity”: Butch Ware on the Gaza Genocide
Miles Kampf-Lassin on the “Flashing Red Warning Signs” for the Harris Campaign
Peter Bloom on the Unmasking of the “Democratic Charade”
When Democrats Undermine Democracy
“Americans Deserve Choices”: Jill Stein on Breaking Points – 4/30/24
Progressive Perspectives on the Presidential Nomination of Kamala Harris
Progressive Perspectives On an American Coronation
Demolishing the False Narrative About Jill Stein and the 2016 Election


Wednesday, November 13, 2024

Progressive Perspectives on Where Democrats Went Wrong in the 2024 Presidential Election

Source


It’s been just over a week since last Tuesday’s U.S. presidential election and the stunning defeat of the Democratic Party by the Donald Trump-led Republican Party which now controls the presidency, the senate and the house. It was an unprecedented “red wave” that swept all in its path.

Significantly, the Democratic Party and its selected candidate Kamala Harris were defeated in all seven swing states and, nationally, lost by a margin greater than all third party votes combined. This latter reality means that the so-called “spoiler effect” of Green Party presidential candidate Jill Stein can’t be used as an excuse for the Democrats’ monumental loss.

In the time since Team Blue’s electoral trouncing, a lot of folks have expressed dismay at what they perceive as a “blame game” taking place within the Democratic Party as party officials, pundits, and voters try to figure out where and how it all went so terribly wrong. I don’t see what’s going on as a “blame game” but rather as a much needed and long overdue process of holding those in positions of power and influence accountable.

Longtime Democratic National Committee (DNC) member James Zogby agrees, noting that members of the Democratic Party establishment/elite, their consultancy groups, and their corporate media sycophants “will find fault with the voters and their choices [but] not with the poor decisions they themselves made.”

It is in this spirit of holding those in positions of power and influence accountable that I share the following perspectives on what went wrong for the Democrats in last Tuesday’s national elections, including the presidential election.

_____________________

Every election since 2008 has been a referendum on the system and the change candidate has won. Obama was able to hold onto the presidency in 2012 due to sheer charisma and his ability to still wear the cloak of change agent.

2016 Trump was the change agent, 2020 it was Biden, 2024 Kamala’s unwillingness to break with Biden or even name a single thing she would do differently cemented Trump as the agent of change.

So many of our political problems today stem from Obama and the Democrats inability or unwillingness to provide meaningful change after the 2008 mandate. No accountability for the Wall Street criminals, no accountability for Bush and Cheney war mongering and lies, no systemic change to the political system which is incapable of solving problems and no change to the economic system that ensures the majority of Americans live in perpetual insecurity.

As time goes on and the average worker’s lot in life gets worse – worse standard of living, less job security, more financial anxiety, increased costs to basic necessities – the more polarized and radical people’s politics become. The Democrats effectively crushed any populist energy from their left flank in 2016 and again in 2020. This has left people no where to go but right, and that’s where they’ve gone.

I don’t think people are stuck in this position, but as long as the power structure and political system make it impossible for a true populist left movement to emerge, people will continue to get sucked into this right wing trap. And let me be perfectly clear, this outcome is preferable to the Democratic Party establishment and the capitalist power structure. A Trump is much preferred to a Bernie to the DNC and business elite.

There is a lot of anger in the country, much justified, nearly all of it wrongly placed. It’s not immigrants or China that’s destroying this country, it’s the wealthiest among us who want to keep us poor, stupid, and bitterly divided. It’s easier for them to rip us off this way.

American Reformers
via social media
November 7, 2024


From the outside, Harris’s entire campaign seemed to be about saving an economic system (neoliberalism) that she described falsely as “democracy,” which isn’t working for large segments of both the political left and right; at the same time she and Biden were flouting an international system of laws in order to arm and finance a genocide in Gaza. The hypocrisies were too transparent to sustain.

. . . Harris’s flip-flop on fracking is emblematic of her entire campaign, a relatively minor issue that gave devastating insight into her vacuous political character. She could never explain it because the only explanation was pure political calculation (and a bad one). She was willing to invalidate her climate policy to court a few thousand votes in Pennsylvania. It was the equivalent of Hillary telling Goldman Sachs she had one policy in public and another in private. But even more inept. How could you make the campaign about honesty and trust, once you’d shown yourself to be dishonest and untrustworthy on an issue you’d described as being an existential threat to human life on earth? Harris sold out the climate movement (and the climate) and still lost Pennsylvania.

. . . In the end, Harris didn’t outperform Biden in a single county in the country.

Maybe they should’ve had a primary?

– Jeffrey St. Clair
Excerpted from “Chronicle of a Defeat Foretold
CounterPunch
November 6, 2024



Following is a November 7 interview with author, activist, and former Democratic presidential candidate Marianne Williamson. As my friend Mark notes about this particular ABC News Live interview:

I sense much grace and soberness in Marianne Williamson’s voice as she diffuses the “vindication” slur/giddiness pitched at her in this interview. I’m curious as to what my peers are feeling they’re being guided toward over the next four years so as to find a path towards environmental and humanitarian hopes of leadership within the Democratic Party.






The Democratic Party abandoned the working class. Kamala Harris ran on a ticket of moving toward the right, you know, shifting, pivoting toward the right, bragging that Liz Cheney is endorsing her. And so, there was really no program to focus on the actual suffering of working people across the board.

. . . We have a class that’s suffering, but we don’t have a class that thinks of itself as a class. If we had a class that thought of itself as a class, then working people would say, “We refuse deportation. We refuse racism. We refuse transphobia,” because that’s what the class does. Solidarity is what’s missing — the sense that we, as a class, you know, have to protect each other. Trump is seen as the person who can fix things, the person who represents the CEO who could step in and solve problems in a culture in which the only solidarity we’re seeing, the primary solidarity, is coming from the capitalist class, you know? So, I’m not sure that there’s such a radical shift from 2016 to 2020 to 2024. It’s a failure of the Democratic Party. And even under Biden, the Democratic Party actually pivoted a little bit toward labor, in a way that the Harris campaign did not.

. . . The absence of cohesion has to do with the general – two things, I think. One, the general absence of solidarity in a long-standing kind of neoliberal culture where people are taught to solve their own problems, a kind of deep individualism, and that corporate interests are the only ones — in other words, private interests are the ones that can solve your problem. Government is a problem. Government gets in the way. This is the kind of discourse that we’ve been seeing for at least three, four decades. And so, even though we see amazing developments in the labor movement with the UAW, we see discussions and talk of solidarity – the Boeing strike, for example – but in terms of those who are either unorganized or at the sort of edges of a concierge economy that is no longer based in high-wage manufacturing, what ends up happening, it’s almost impossible to organize people and to think as a class. You know, the Amazon strike in Bessemer is a really good example of what could have been, but how the combination of fear, insecurity and the failure to really think of solidarity – in other words, the care for our neighbor, the care for those who are not us but maybe we share the same class, that sense of solidarity, that Audre Lorde talks about at the beginning of my piece, that’s missing. And we haven’t done the work, the political education work, to build that sense of cohesion.

. . . [S]omehow the right, for many people, is attractive. And we have to figure out why it’s attractive. And if we don’t think of ourselves as a class, a class with power, a class in which the state could be the lever of equality rather than deep inequality, then we’re going to be stuck supporting Trump[-like figures] for generations.

– Robin D.G. Kelley
Excerpted from Democrats Abandoned
the Working Class: Trump’s Win and
the Need for Class Solidarity

Democracy Now!
November 7, 2024



Let this be a reckoning. In 2016, I warned that Bernie Sanders, and Bernie Sanders alone, could defeat Donald Trump. The country was ready – desperate – for transformational change. The air was thick with a demand for something real, something that spoke to the soul of working people. Yet, the Democratic establishment fought this truth tooth and nail. They threw their weight behind Hillary Clinton – the so-called “safe choice” – dismissing those of us who saw the storm coming. They believed the path to victory lay in moderation, in reaching to the middle, as the books and scholars of traditional politics have always taught.

And here we are again. In 2024, they turn to Kamala Harris, who walks beside Liz Cheney, while Sanders is cast to the shadows. The outcome? Trump has won the popular vote. Once again, the establishment was wrong. Wrong in 2016, wrong in 2024 – will you be wrong again in 2028?

. . . And let me say this, to those who’ve been ignored, belittled, and alienated for nearly a decade: to the supporters of Sanders, to those who stayed home [last] Tuesday because they could no longer recognize the party that once claimed to fight for them – we owe you an apology. A true one, unflinching. And we must give you a reason to believe in us again.

– John Riley
Excerpted from “Can We Finally
Admit Bernie Was Right?

Daily Kos
November 6, 2024



Following is a 10-minute segment from the Politics Done Right podcast’s November 9 show. This segment highlights Dr. Eddie Glaude’s recent on-air exchange with MSNBC host Stephanie Ruhle on why Kamala Harris did not win. According to Politics Done Right host Egberto Willies, how Glaude speaks about the reasons Harris lost is how we all “should be tackling racism, sexism, and misogyny.” (NOTE: Other progressive voices disagree that Harris's loss essentially boils down to sexism and racism rather than her policies – or lack thereof. See, for example, Sabrina Salvati’s video commentary here.)






[Alan Minsky’s November 7, 2024 Common Dreams op-ed, “Progressives Must Challenge for the Leadership of the Democratic Party – and Win” is] another feckless call for nominal progressives to reform the Democratic Party from within. Pathetic.

The last eight years have demonstrated that reforming neo-conservative, Wall Street Democrats is a fool’s errand. Post-1970s Dems have proven to be the greatest threat to the American left, and the Democratic Party has become the graveyard of progressive movements.

You want to make a difference, House and Senate “progressives?” Easy peasy: Dem-EXIT en masse and declare yourselves Green Party representatives and senators. Your first order of business: agitate like angry hornets for sweeping election and campaign finance reform, complete with instant-runoff voting, so progressives don’t get attacked every 2-4 years by malignant, genocidal, right-wing “centrists” with delusions of liberalism.

On issues of importance to progressives, duopoly-liberated Green Party representatives and senators can caucus with whichever party holds positions we agree with. We can caucus with the Republicans pushing to end the Ukraine War, and we can caucus with Democrats if they ever push for Medicare-for-All or anything else of value.

But only a mass-defection from the neo-fascist Democratic Party by principled liberals and progressives has a chance of putting this country on the right track.

The rest of the “leftists” who sheepdog for Team Blue without making a single demand – and the precipitously-endorsing “progressive” activists who beg and beg Democrats to do the right thing – are pissing in the wind.

Until you advocate for a complete abandonment of the Democratic Party that abandoned us decades ago, you are part of the problem.

You’re why Trump – and worse demagogues to come – have such an easy path to victory. You stand for nothing and fight for less.

– x1jodonn
via Common Dreams website
October 29, 2024



Speaking of the Green Party, here’s a 16-minute segment taken from Breakthrough News’ Election Night coverage featuring Green Party presidential candidate Jill Stein sharing her thoughts on the election results.






On the day after the election, renowned consumer advocate, corporate critic, and four-time presidential candidate Ralph Nader was a guest on Democracy Now!. Here he talked about the “collapse of the Democratic Party” and the roots of Donald Trump’s win over Kamala Harris.

It all started when the Democrats . . . started getting corporate cash in 1979, dialing for the same commercial values [as the Republicans]. That blurred their difference from the New Deal-type Democrats to the corporate Democrats. Then they contracted out the election to these corporate-conflicted profiteering consulting firms, which the mass media never seemed to want to investigate in this campaign. And then they abandoned public media. Basically, they abandoned radio to the Rush Limbaughs and created the Reagan Democrats. And then they never learn from their mistakes. They didn’t learn from the mistakes of Hillary Clinton in 2016. Then, they never fire anybody after they lose, in one state after another, to the worst Republican Party in history.

And so, what is the message that they gave to the American people? The message is Trump is terrible, and you can’t believe how bad the Republican Party is. It’s too general a message, too simple. A vast majority of people think corporations have too much control over their lives. They didn’t fill the blanks, denial of healthcare benefits. And they didn’t fill the blanks on a living wage. They didn’t fill the blanks on cracking down on corporate crooks. They didn’t fill the blanks on reversing a tax system which undertaxes the very wealthy and the big corporations. They didn’t reverse themselves really on trade. They didn’t know how to rebut Trump on immigration. He called the people coming in rapists, criminals, drug traffickers, etc. Instead of saying, “Well, they’re fleeing oppressive countries that are backed by the U.S., dictators and oligarchs in Central and South America,” they didn’t say that millions of Americans trust immigrants to harvest their food, to care for their children, to care for elderly, to provide critical services that nobody wants to work in in the U.S.

So, you know, there’s such a bill of particulars against this Democratic Party. And what’s happened, of course, is that millions of people are basically saying, “We’re sick of throwaway lines. We’re sick of not having the government return the benefits of massive taxation to us. We’re sick of – all we hear about is empire abroad. All we hear about is more military budgets by the Democrats and the Republicans in Congress, giving the generals more than they ask for, eating the public budgets that should be providing public services and public infrastructure in communities all over the country, creating key jobs.”

– Ralph Nader
Excerpted from “The Roots of Trump’s Win Over Harris
Democracy Now!
November 6, 2024



The following is a 25-minute segment from Marc Lamont Hill’s Upfront show on the Al Jazeera network. In this segment. Lamont Hill speaks with Christina Greer, associate professor of political science at Fordham University; Katie Halper, co-host of the Useful Idiots podcast; Ryan Grim, reporter and co-founder of Drop Site News; and Emma Doyle, former Deputy Chief of Staff under the Trump administration.






I close with Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, author, commentator and Presbyterian minister Chris Hedges’s insights on the 2024 U.S. presidential election.

In the end, the election was about despair. Despair over futures that evaporated with deindustrialization. Despair over the loss of 30 million jobs in mass layoffs. Despair over austerity programs and the funneling of wealth upwards into the hands of rapacious oligarchs. Despair over a liberal class that refuses to acknowledge the suffering it orchestrated under neoliberalism or embrace New Deal type programs that will ameliorate this suffering. Despair over the futile, endless wars, as well as the genocide in Gaza, where generals and politicians are never held accountable. Despair over a democratic system that has been seized by corporate and oligarchic power.

This despair has been played out on the bodies of the disenfranchised through opioid and alcoholism addictions, gambling, mass shootings, suicides – especially among middle-aged white males – morbid obesity and the investment of our emotional and intellectual life in tawdry spectacles and the allure of magical thinking, from the absurd promises of the Christian right to the Oprah-like belief that reality is never an impediment to our desires. These are the pathologies of a deeply diseased culture, what Friedrich Nietzsche calls an aggressive despiritualized nihilism.

Donald Trump is a symptom of our diseased society. He is not its cause. He is what is vomited up out of decay. He expresses a childish yearning to be an omnipotent god. This yearning resonates with Americans who feel they have been treated like human refuse. But the impossibility of being a god, as Ernest Becker writes, leads to its dark alternative – destroying like a god. This self-immolation is what comes next.

Kamala Harris and the Democratic Party, along with the establishment wing of the Republican Party, which allied itself with Harris, live in their own non-reality-based belief system. Harris, who was anointed by party elites and never received a single primary vote, proudly trumpeted her endorsement by Dick Cheney, a politician who left office with a 13 percent approval rating. The smug, self-righteous “moral” crusade against Trump stokes the national reality television show that has replaced journalism and politics. It reduces a social, economic and political crisis to the personality of Trump. It refuses to confront and name the corporate forces responsible for our failed democracy. It allows Democratic politicians to blithely ignore their base – 77 percent of Democrats and 62 percent of independents support an arms embargo against Israel. The open collusion with corporate oppression and refusal to heed the desires and needs of the electorate neuters the press and Trump critics. These corporate puppets stand for nothing, other than their own advancement. The lies they tell to working men and women, especially with programs such as the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), do far more damage than any of the lies uttered by Trump.

Oswald Spengler in The Decline of the West predicted that, as Western democracies calcified and died, a class of “monied thugs,” people such as Trump, would replace the traditional political elites. Democracy would become a sham. Hatred would be fostered and fed to the masses to encourage them to tear themselves apart.

The American dream has become an American nightmare.

. . . We must invest our energy into organizing mass movements to overthrow the corporate state through sustained acts of mass civil disobedience. This includes the most powerful weapon we possess – the strike. By turning our ire on the corporate state, we name the true sources of power and abuse. We expose the absurdity of blaming our demise on demonized groups such as undocumented workers, Muslims or Blacks. We give people an alternative to a corporate-indentured Democratic Party that cannot be rehabilitated. We make possible the restoration of an open society, one that serves the common good rather than corporate profit. We must demand nothing less than full employment, guaranteed minimum incomes, universal health insurance, free education at all levels, robust protection of the natural world and an end to militarism and imperialism. We must create the possibility for a life of dignity, purpose and self-esteem. If we do not, it will ensure a Christianized fascism and ultimately, with the accelerating ecocide, our obliteration.

– Chris Hedges
Excerpted from “The Politics of Cultural Despair
ScheerPost
November 7, 2024


Related Off-site Links:
Here We Are, America, But How Did We Get Here? – Lynn Parramore (Common Dreams, November 5, 2024).
Will Trump Try to End Democracy? Yes – But These Scholars Claim He Can’t Pull It Off – Émile P. Torres (Salon, September 29, 2024).
Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor: Democrats Demobilized Their Base. A Movement Is Now Needed to Oppose TrumpDemocracy Now! (November 6, 2024).
Forging a Coalition of Conscience: This Isn’t the End. It’s the Beginning – Marianne Williamson (Transform, November 6, 2024).
Statement from Abandon Harris National Spokesperson, Hudhayfah Ahmad, Regarding the 2024 ElectionAbandon Harris ’24 via YouTube (November 6, 2024).
How Much of the Vote Did Jill Stein Receive? – Jeff Arnold (NewsNation, November 6, 2024).
10 Reasons Why Kamala Lost – Sabrina Salvati (Sabby Sabs, November 8, 2024).
Marianne Williamson: If the Democratic Electorate Was Exposed to Their Options, We Would Have WonJessie Watters Primetime (November 8, 2024).
Corporate Media Meltdown Post Election – Sabrina Salvati (Sabby Sabs, November 9, 2024).
How Will the Pentagon Deal with Trump?: An Interview with Col. Lawrence Wilkerson – Chris Hedges (The Chris Hedges Report, November 11, 2024).
Bernie Sanders Decides to Fight the DNC Eight Years Too Late – Kit Cabello (Hard Lens Media, November 11, 2024).
Jon Stewart on What Went Wrong for DemocratsThe Daily Show (November 11, 2024).
Dems Blame Everyone But Themselves for Kamala’s Loss – Glenn Greenwald (System Update, November 12, 2024).
Republicans Win Control of the U.S. House of Representatives, Solidifying Their Total Control of CongressNewsNation (November 12, 2024).
How the Democrats Can Rise – Marianne Williamson (Transform, November 12, 2024).
“The Elites Had It Coming”: Thomas Frank Skewers Democrats in Post-Election New York Times Op-EdDue Dissidence (November 13, 2024).
Anya Parampil on Why Kamala LostThe Grayzone (November 13, 2024).
A Conversation with Marianne Williamson – Annalise Grueter (The Sopris Sun, November 13, 2024).
The Divide Between Democrats and the Working Class: A Conversation with Sarah Smarsh – Jon Stewart (The Weekly Show, November 14, 2024).
2024 Election Was the Oligarchic Elite vs. Corporate Elite: An Interview with Chris HedgesBad Faith (November 14, 2024).
Marianne Williamson on the Future of America, the 2024 Election and Her New Book, The Mystic Jesus – Laura Rose Max (I Just Have to Say, November 15, 2024).
Democrats’ Abandonment of Working Class Led to Trump Victory: A Conversation with Zana Day – Jordan Chariton (Due Dissidence, November 15, 2024).
Why Harris Lost: New Post-Election Poll Shows Issues and Endorsements Won Voters: An Interview with Mark Penn – Julia Manchester (The Hill, November 15, 2024).
Results Are In, Complete Democratic Failure Against Trump – Kit Cabello (Hard Lens Media, November 16, 2024).
Abby Martin: “Democrats Would Rather Have Fascism Than Bernie Sanders’ Populism”The Real News Network (November 16, 2024).
Jill Stein and Butch Ware’s First Post-Election InterviewThe Katie Halper Show (November 19. 2024).

See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
“A New Chapter of the Democratic Party Needs to Begin”
Venice Williams on How We Get Through the Next Four Years
Marianne Williamson on the 2024 Presidential Election Results
Something to Think About This Election Day
Prayer of the Week – November 4, 2024
Progressive Perspectives on Kamala Harris’ Faltering Presidential Campaign
Jeffrey C. Isaac: Quote of the Day – October 28, 2024
“We Give Reasons for People to Come Out and Vote”: An Interview with Jill Stein
We’re Witnessing a Liberal Meltdown Over Jill Stein
Miles Kampf-Lassin on the “Flashing Red Warning Signs” for the Harris Campaign
Peter Bloom on the Unmasking of the “Democratic Charade”
Progressive Perspectives on the Harris–Trump Presidential Debate
“People Are Sick of the Bullshit”
Yousef Munayyer: Quote of the Day – August 30, 2024
Breaking Down Kamala Harris’ DNC Speech on Gaza
Peter Savodnik: Quote of the Day – August 22. 2024
Voices on the Issues That Really Matter
Progressive Perspectives on the Presidential Nomination of Kamala Harris
Progressive Perspectives On an American Coronation
Chris Hedges on the End of the American Empire
Marianne Williamson: “‘Vote Blue No Matter Who’ Is Not Enough to Win”
“Let the People Decide”: Marianne Williamson on the DNC’s Efforts to Deny and Suppress the Democratic Process
Marianne Williamson on How Centrist Democrats Abuse Voters with False Promises
Cornel West: Quote of the Day – December 3, 2020
Jeff Cohen on How Obama’s “Corporate Liberalism” Led to the Rise of Trump
Progressive Perspectives on the Rise of Donald Trump (2016)
Progressive Perspectives on the Election of Donald Trump (2016)


Tuesday, November 12, 2024

Weekend in the Twin Ports of Duluth and Superior


This past weekend my friend Kate and I spent time in the Twin Ports of Duluth and Superior, visiting our mutual friend Georgette.

Notes Wikipedia:

The Duluth MN–WI Metropolitan Area, commonly called the Twin Ports, is a small metropolitan area centered around the cities of Duluth, Minnesota and Superior, Wisconsin. The Twin Ports are located at the western part of Lake Superior (the westernmost part of North America’s Great Lakes) and together are considered one of the larger cargo ports in the United States. The Twin Ports are close to many natural attractions such as the North Shore, the Apostle Islands, and the Superior National Forest.


Following are some images of my time in Duluth and Superior. Enjoy!


Above: Duluth’s Aerial Lift Bridge – Saturday, November 9, 2024.



See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
Northwoods (2008)
Sunday in Duluth (2010)
Out and About – Summer 2012
Days of Summer on the Bayfield Peninsula (2013)
A Visit to Grand Marais (2017) – Part I | Part II

Images: Michael J. Bayly.


Monday, November 11, 2024

A Spike in Misogynist Content Online

Nick Fuentes is a white nationalist and far-right political pundit whose “your body, my choice” misogynistic remark has recently gone viral, resulting in women across the country reporting a rise in online harassment and abuse in the aftermath of last Tuesday’s presidential election.

Source


Write Isabelle Frances-Wright and Moustafa Ayad of the Institute of Strategic Dialogue (ISD).

While Trump’s victory has been a focal point for communities which support restricting women’s reproductive rights, there was a spike in misogynist content in late October. ISD found a significant rise in posts focused on repealing the 19th Amendment (which gave women the right to vote). This appears to reflect the Harris campaign’s acute focus on securing a sizable majority of women voters. Many of these posts – which targeted women and supporters of their rights – faced quick rebuke. Their spread nevertheless demonstrated the influence of an increasingly vindicative set of online actors, who appear to be using the election results as a permission structure to more overtly and aggressively espouse narratives about curbing women’s rights.




If you’ve experienced or are experiencing online sexual harassment, visit the Online Harassment Resources page of the National Sexual Violence Resource Center (NSVRC).




Related Off-site Links:
“Your Body, My Choice”: Attacks on Women Surge on Social Media Following Election – Clare Duffy (CNN, November 11, 2024).
Nick Fuentes Doxxed Following “Your Body, My Choice” Comments, Report Says – Brian Niemietz (New York Daily News via Yahoo! News, November 11, 2024).

UPDATE: Video of Nick Fuentes Attacking Woman at His Home Goes Viral – Jordan King (Newsweek, November 13, 2024).

See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
Venice Williams on How We Get Through the Next Four Years
Marianne Williamson on the 2024 Presidential Election Results
Something to Think About This Election Day
“The Movement of Love and Inclusion Has Just Been Unleashed” (2017)
Photo of the Day – January 21, 2017
Tiffany Wright: Quote of the Day – January 17, 2018
R Thorpe: Quote of the Day – November 17, 2017


Saturday, November 09, 2024

“A New Chapter of the Democratic Party Needs to Begin”

Marianne Williamson on NewsNation – 11/9/24





I feel that everything that went wrong [for the Democrats in this election] is what I’ve been saying would go wrong for the last year and a half.

I ran for president because I knew that the traditional Democratic playbook – the corporate Democrats are in charge of that playbook now – would not be enough to defeat Trump this time. I’ve said repeatedly that this election would be more like 2016 than like 2020, and it’s very clear to me that the elites of the Democratic Party and media don’t know how to read the room. The Democratic elite should resign their positions tonight. Many of those people have not sauntered out of their gated communities long enough to have made sense of what is going on out there.

Over the last year and a half, we could have been having a robust conversation about the following facts:

• 46 percent of Americans are regularly skipping meals in order to pay their rent.

• 70 to 90 million people are underinsured or uninsured.

• Over half of our bankruptcies are medical bankruptcies.

• One in four Americans live with medical debt.

• 1.3 million Americans are rationing their insulin.

Over 70 percent of Americans say that they are living with chronic economic anxiety.

People are feeling hopeless out in America now. In my opinion, Donald Trump offers false hope. He’ll name a pain, but he will not name a policy that’s going to fix it. But people will take false hope over no hope.

And the Democratic Party offered no hope. Instead of talking about these things, what the Democratic elite did was this: They just decided on an agenda. We weren’t even supposed to discuss what an agenda might be. They suppressed a presidential primary. They felt, in their smug arrogance, such a sense of entitlement: They would choose Joe, then they would choose Kamala, and they would suppress any candidate or any conversation about the wider issues that could have provided a compelling alternative – a compelling vision – for the American people.

~ Marianne Williamsom
The Democratic Elite Should Resign
The Free Press
November 6, 2024



Related Off-site Links:
Forging a Coalition of Conscience: This Isn’t the End. It’s the Beginning – Marianne Williamson (Transform, November 6, 2024).
Marianne Williamson: If the Democratic Electorate Was Exposed to Their Options, We Would Have WonJessie Watters Primetime (November 8, 2024).
Democrats Deserted Working Poor: Bishop William Barber on Healthcare, Living Wages, and Voting RightsDemocracy Now! (November 8, 2024).
U.S. Election Result: Where Did Harris and Her Campaign Go Wrong? – Dwayne Oxford (Al Jazeera, November 8, 2024).
Robin D. G. Kelley on Trump’s Election Win: “We Can’t Keep Relying on the Democratic Party”Democracy Now! (November 7, 2024).
Bernie Sanders Shreds Democratic Party for Abandoning Working ClassBreaking Points (November 7, 2024).
Why Democrats Lose Even When Republicans Are So Endlessly Terrible – Chuck Idelson (Common Dreams, November 7, 2024).
Chronicle of a Defeat Foretold – Jeffrey St. Clair (CounterPunch, November 6, 2024).
“This Is a Collapse of the Democratic Party”: Ralph Nader on the Roots of Trump’s Win Over HarrisDemocracy Now! (November 6, 2024).
Why Did the Democrats Lose? Because They Gave Up on the Working Class 40 Years Ago – Les Leopold (Common Dreams, November 6, 2024).
Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor: Democrats Demobilized Their Base. A Movement Is Now Needed to Oppose TrumpDemocracy Now! (November 6, 2024).
Cenk Uygur: Democrats Have Failed UsThe Young Turks (November 5, 2024).

UPDATES: Democratic Senator Chris Murphy Says the Quiet Part Out Loud: “We Are Out of Touch”The Secular Report (November 11, 2024).
The Male Vote: The Democrats’ “Fatal Miscalculation” and What Trump Got Right: An Interview with Richard Reeves, President of the American Institute for Boys and MenAmanpour and Company (November 11, 2024).
Musa Al-Gharbi: Democrats Must Stop Shaming VotersUndercurrents (November 12, 2024).
Jon Stewart Destroys “Woke” Dem Autopsy Takes – Krystal Ball (Breaking Points, November 12, 2024).
A Conversation with Marianne Williamson – Annalise Grueter (The Sopris Sun, November 13, 2024).

See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
Marianne Williamson on the 2024 Presidential Election Results
Venice Williams on How We Get Through the Next Four Years
Something to Think About This Election Day
Prayer of the Week
Progressive Perspectives on Kamala Harris’ Faltering Presidential Campaign
Jeffrey C. Isaac: Quote of the Day – October 28, 2024
Progressive Perspectives on the Presidential Nomination of Kamala Harris
Progressive Perspectives on an American Coronation
Marianne Williamson: “‘Vote Blue No Matter Who’ Is Not Enough to Win”
“Let the People Decide”: Marianne Williamson on the DNC’s Efforts to Deny and Suppress the Democratic Process
Marianne Williamson on How Centrist Democrats Abuse Voters with False Promises
Cornel West: Quote of the Day – December 3, 2020
Jeff Cohen on How Obama’s “Corporate Liberalism” Led to the Rise of Trump

Friday, November 08, 2024

Holding the Moment


Autumn, that universal symbol of change, gently suggests to us that winter is on the way as the leaves turn red, and somehow, equally gently and gradually, reminds us that nothing is permanent. . . . If the seasons change this way, then everything else probably does too, so holding the moment becomes important. Each event must be savoured for what it is, and nothing can bring it back. On the personal level, as Pico Iyer notes, we should “cherish the seasons inside us,” and “seek out changelessness in change.” Or, as the 19th-century French novelist and critic Jean-Baptiste Karr famously put it, “Plus ça change, plus c’est la même chose” [“The more it changes, the more it’s the same”]. Autumn somehow reminds us of this, too; it’s the season, Iyer says, “when everything falls away,” but at the same time it will be preparing to come back.

– John Butler
Excerpted from “A Review of Autumn Light:
Season of Fire and Farewells
by Pico Iyer

Asian Review of Books
June 8, 2019


See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
Season of the Soul
Autumn: Season of Transformation and Surrender
Time to Go Inwards
Autumnal Thoughts and Visions (2022)
Autumn . . . Within and Beyond (2021)
Autumn . . . Within and Beyond (2018)
Autumn . . . Within and Beyond (2016)
O Sacred Season of Autumn
“Thou Hast Thy Music Too”
Autumn Psalm
“This Autumn Land Is Dreaming”
Autumn’s “Wordless Message”
Autumnal (and Rather Pagan) Thoughts on the Making of “All Things New”
Brigit Anna McNeill on Hearing the Wild and Natural Call to Go Inwards

Image: Michael J. Bayly.


Thursday, November 07, 2024

Venice Williams on How We Get Through the Next Four Years

You are awakening to the
same country you fell asleep to.
The very same country.
Pull yourself together.

And,
when you see me,
do not ask me
“What do we do now?
How do we get through
the next four years?”

Some of my Ancestors dealt with
at least 400 years of this
under worse conditions.

Continue to do the good work.
Continue to build bridges not walls.
Continue to lead with compassion.
Continue the demanding work
of liberation for all.
Continue to dismantle broken systems,
large and small.
Continue to set the best example
for the children.
Continue to be a vessel of nourishing joy.

Continue right where you are.
Right where you live into your days.

Do so in the name of
The Creator who expects
nothing less from each of us.

And if you are not “continuing”
ALL of the above,
in community, partnership, collaboration?
What is it you have been doing?
What is it you are waiting for?

~ Venice Williams
Here’s How We Get Through the Next Four Years
Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service
November 6, 2024



Related Off-site Links:
10 Ways to Be Prepared and Grounded Now That Trump Has Won – Daniel Hunter (Waging Nonviolence, November 6, 2024).
Forging a Coalition of Conscience: This Isn’t the End. It’s the Beginning – Marianne Williamson (Transform, November 6, 2024).
This Is Not the End of America – McKay Coppins (The Atlantic, November 1, 2024).
After the Election: A Call to Unity, Justice and Bold Action – Sisters of St. Joseph of Carondelet (November 8, 2024).
Here’s What We Do Now: A Personal Note – Greg Palast (GregPalast.com, November 6, 2024).

See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
Active Hope
Why “Revolutionary Love” Gives Michelle Alexander Hope
Something We Dare Call Hope
“I Came Alive With Hope”
Resilience and Hope
Clarity and Hope
In the Eye of the Storm . . . A Tree of Living Flame
Cultivating Stillness
Aligning With the Living Light
In the Garden of Spirituality – Judy Cannato
Carrying It On . . . Into the New Year
Hope and Beauty in the Midst of the Global Coronavirus Pandemic

Image: Venice Williams, director of Alice’s Garden and The Table. She is also a lay minister, teacher, healer and facilitator. (Photo: Adam Carr)


Wednesday, November 06, 2024

Marianne Williamson on the 2024 Presidential Election Results

As always, I appreciate the incisive analysis of author and former Democratic presidential candidate Marianne Williamson, the "Cassandra of American politics."






UPDATE: This afternoon Marianne discussed the results of the 2024 election with Sky News UK presenter Mark Austin.





Related Off-site Links:
Forging a Coalition of Conscience: This Isn’t the End. It’s the Beginning – Marianne Williamson (Transform, November 6, 2024).
Chronicle of a Defeat Foretold – Jeffrey St. Clair (CounterPunch, November 6, 2024).
Trump Smashes Blue Wall, Eclipses His 2020 Record in Michigan, and Wins All Swing StatesRising (November 6, 2024).
“This Is a Collapse of the Democratic Party”: Ralph Nader on the Roots of Trump’s Win Over HarrisDemocracy Now! (November 6, 2024).
Why Did the Democrats Lose? Because They Gave Up on the Working Class 40 Years Ago – Les Leopold (Common Dreams, November 6, 2024).
Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor: Democrats Demobilized Their Base. A Movement Is Now Needed to Oppose TrumpDemocracy Now! (November 6, 2024).
Cenk Uygur: Democrats Have Failed UsThe Young Turks (November 5, 2024).

UPDATES: Robin D. G. Kelley on Trump’s Election Win: “We Can’t Keep Relying on the Democratic Party”Democracy Now! (November 7, 2024).
Why Democrats Lose Even When Republicans Are So Endlessly Terrible – Chuck Idelson (Common Dreams, November 7, 2024).
Bernie Sanders Shreds Democratic Party for Abandoning Working ClassBreaking Points (November 7, 2024).
Democrats Deserted Working Poor: Bishop William Barber on Healthcare, Living Wages, and Voting RightsDemocracy Now! (November 8, 2024).
U.S. Election Result: Where Did Harris and Her Campaign Go Wrong? – Dwayne Oxford (Al Jazeera, November 8, 2024).
A Conversation with Marianne Williamson – Annalise Grueter (The Sopris Sun, November 13, 2024).

See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
Something to Think About This Election Day
Prayer of the Week
Progressive Perspectives on Kamala Harris’ Faltering Presidential Campaign
Jeffrey C. Isaac: Quote of the Day – October 28, 2024
Progressive Perspectives on the Presidential Nomination of Kamala Harris
Progressive Perspectives on an American Coronation
Marianne Williamson: “‘Vote Blue No Matter Who’ Is Not Enough to Win”
“Let the People Decide”: Marianne Williamson on the DNC’s Efforts to Deny and Suppress the Democratic Process
Marianne Williamson on How Centrist Democrats Abuse Voters with False Promises
Cornel West: Quote of the Day – December 3, 2020
Jeff Cohen on How Obama’s “Corporate Liberalism” Led to the Rise of Trump