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Monthly Archives: November 2016

Still counting – losing the popular vote by 2,126,705 isn’t even close to a “mandate”

25 Friday Nov 2016

Posted by Michael Bersin in Resist

≈ 16 Comments

Tags

Donald Trump, Hillary Clinton, popular vote, president

The margin continues to grow.

Compiled by David Wasserman, Cook Political Report:

mbersin112516

Michael Bersin ‏@MBersin
National Popular Vote (to date) – Hillary Clinton (D) 64,495,054 – Donald Trump (r) 62,368,349 – margin for Hillary + 2,126,705
10:50 AM – 25 Nov 2016

Well, Kellyanne?

Previously:

Still counting (November 21, 2016)

Still counting – losing the popular vote by 2,017,563 ain’t a “mandate” (November 23, 2016)

Still counting – losing the popular vote by 2,103,941 is still not a “mandate” (November 24, 2016)

The more things change, the more they remain the same – part 4

25 Friday Nov 2016

Posted by Michael Bersin in Resist

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

protest, Resist, signs

A protest sign from thirteen or so years ago:

"The Constitution is not optional" - protest sign, circa 2003- 2004.

“The Constitution is not optional” – protest sign, circa 2003- 2004.

There’s some talk that Article I, Section 9 might be considered passé.

Resist.

Previously:

The more things change, the more they remain the same (November 23, 2016)

The more things change, the more they remain the same – part 2 (November 23, 2016)

The more things change, the more they remain the same – part 3 (November 24, 2016)

Aftermath 2016

24 Thursday Nov 2016

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Donald Trump, election, Hillary Clinton, president, Tess Rafferty

From Tess Rafferty, Steve Cohen, and Aaron Barrocas. With the permission of Tess Rafferty:

Aftermath November 2016 from Steve Cohen on Vimeo.

Tess Rafferty: In my youth I saw politics as very black and white. I wanted nothing to do with you if you were Christian or Republican. Don’t get personal, people, usually Christians and Republicans, always said to me. But for me, it was personal. The things I was passionate about were the things that these two factions seemed intent on taking away from me and that affected me personally. I think it’s hypocritical of someone to tell you to not take something personally when what they’re trying to do is take away your personal freedoms.

Over the years I’ve tried harder to find common ground. I’ve tried to see what I like about people as individuals and remember that we’re friends and that we all have to be friends when all of this is over. And I’ve seen polite discussions change some perspectives and I know they’ve changed mine. After last Tuesday I think my younger self had it right.

I am so damn tired of trying to see it from the other side. I’m trying to discuss nuance while they paint us and our candidates with the broadest of hateful brushes. I’m tired of pretending like it’s somehow reasonable to teach creationism in public schools with my tax dollars while you tell me that two same sex people who love each other getting married somehow threatens your marriage.

You voted for Trump. I am tired of trying to see things your way while you sit in your holier than thou churches slash white power meetups refusing to see things mine. Did I just lump you in with white supremacists? No, you did that to yourselves. You voted for the same candidate as the KKK. You voted for a candidate endorsed by the KKK. For the rest of your life you have to know that you voted the same way as the KKK. Does that feel good to you? Here’s a hint: it really shouldn’t, especially if you call yourself a Christian.

I’m tired of pussy footing around what offends your morals while couching what offends mine – because racism, and homophobia, and misogyny, and xenophobia offend mine.

Let me say it right here: if you voted for Trump I do think you are racist. I do think you’re homophobic. I do think you’re a misogynist. Racism, and homophobia, and misogyny are all a spectrum and you’re on it. You might not be a cheering while a black man gets lynched racist, but boy, did you just sell them the rope and look the other way.

Don’t like getting painted with the broad brush of racism? Now you know what it feels like when you get told that you want to rip a baby out of a mother’s womb at nine months when that’s not what happens. That’s never what happens. You want to call yourself a Christian? Then look inside yourself and try to find some compassion for these women who get told in their third trimester that their baby’s not going to live. They’ve already had the shower. They’ve already decorated the nursery. They already know the sex and probably have a name picked out. But look at all that and keep screaming baby killers at them, and not voting for the candidates who are defending their biological necessity to have to do the unthinkable, and I think I’m still cool calling you a racist.

I tried to be polite, but now I just don’t give a damn, because let’s be honest, we don’t live in polite America anymore. We live in grab ’em by the pussy America now. So thank you for that. Being polite was exhausting.

And don’t come at me with how you just didn’t like Hillary. This was bigger than Hillary. This wasn’t your standard I just want lower taxes and smaller government Republican. We had Germans warning us that this guy was scary. And still you cried: emails or Benghazi or that voice. And still there’s been mountains of evidence proving that nothing that you think Hillary did was that big of a deal or even true. Some of the finest minds in the world have drawn you graphs and charts proving that no crimes were actually committed, and you were either too dumb or too willfully ignorant to care.

And if you really cared about crimes you’d care about any of the three pending against your candidate. Take your pick. I’d start with the rape of a thirteen year old girl, but if you voted for Trump, you probably don’t care much what happens to women. Doesn’t matter anyway, she received so many death threats from your political peers that she dropped the charges. But ask me again why more women don’t come forward.

And speaking of smaller government and lower taxes enjoy not getting mine. If Trump actually does what he says he’s going to do then your petty backwards state and your small angry towns can pay for your own schools to not educate your children.

I live in California, the largest economy in the United States, and the sixth largest in the world. We’ll be fine. But have fun affording all those children your health insurance won’t pay for your birth control to prevent. I’m just kidding. You’re not going to have insurance. Won’t that be just great again.

And while I’m done being polite, if you voted third party, unfriend me. I don’t care how much we enjoy each other on every other level. I don’t care how badly you wanted to make your third party a viable option. Fuck you. You basically told me, and the LGBTQ community, and people of color that our needs take a back seat to your need to have another option. Well done. Now we’re not just riding in the back seat, we’re actually being dragged behind the car.

And how’s that third party coming? Tell me, what are you doing about it today? Are you volunteering for your third party so that you can get more candidates into state and local elections? Are you working hard so you can figure out how to make them a viable option for the midterms? I look forward to seeing who you present to us to save us from all of this in twenty-twenty, if there’s anything actually left to save. Also, while I’m at it, if you’re one of these people this week telling me how Bernie would have defeated Trump, unfriend me. But kudos to you for living in a world where you think being Jewish wouldn’t have mattered to a Trump supporter. I’d like to buy property there. Tell me, what are the schools like that far up your own ass?

The truth is that for those of us on this side, there is no when all this is over. Things are just getting started. We think last Wednesday was bad? We don’t know what bad is yet. This isn’t something you get over, this is something you endure. We are going to face attacks on every right we fought the last sixty years to gain. The deck is so stacked against us we may not win. The best we can hope for is gridlock. And that’s just nationally. Internationally, who the fuck knows what this lunatic is going to do? And the scarier thought is that the only thing worse than this guy is the guy who’s one angry tweet away from the Presidency, Mike Pence, advocate for gay conversion therapy and mandatory funerals for fetuses.

So now’s the time you might want to see things from my side. Because if we’re all going to have to be friends after this imagine me having to be polite and respect your vote to take away my rights and freedoms and those of my friends while we fight desperately to try to hang onto them, because that is what you did.

To say nothing about what you just said about us as women. I haven’t gotten to that yet, because if I do, I may start screaming, and if I start I might not stop. So let me just say that you’ve told every woman out there that being sexually harassed does not matter. Being sexually assaulted does not matter. Working hard does not matter. You took the most qualified candidate we’ve had in decades, a woman, and belittled her every mistake and misstep, while taking the least qualified candidate we have ever had, a man, and ignoring every mistake he ever made. But no, you’re not sexist.

And if you’re a woman, girl, you got issues. And I say that as someone who crawled out of the bitter self-hating womb of one of these women. I mean, I know these women are damaged and that I should feel some compassion for them. But I’m not there yet because I am so sick of damaged people damaging the rest of us.

And isn’t this somewhat an abusive relationship at this point? If you have friends and family like this cut them off. They didn’t give two shits about your freedoms and happiness last Tuesday. You don’t have to pretend like it’s all cool and pass them a plate of Turkey two weeks from now. It’s like we’re all abused partners saying to each other, but you don’t know what he’s like when he’s not racist.

Being racist isn’t the same as liking Dire Straits. This isn’t about just disagreeing about musical tastes. Being racist is always racist, and if you voted for Trump, you’re racist.

So, protect yourself friends. God knows those assholes always do.

Why we voted for Jason Kander (D)….

24 Thursday Nov 2016

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Jason Kander, missouri, Thanksgiving

Jason Kander (D) [2016 file photo]

Jason Kander (D) [2016 file photo]

From Jason Kander, via social media:

Before we all sit down to Thanksgiving dinner, I want to share a little bit about what I’m thankful for this year and tell you an important family story.

I’m thankful to be married to an absolutely unsinkable human being like Diana. Anytime I begin to get discouraged, she’s there with a pep talk that is so much more than platitudes. I’m thankful to have a three-year-old son whose biggest care in the world is making sure we read Dinosaur Train (again).

I’m thankful that I’ll see my grandfather at dinner tonight. I’m thankful that my mother, who went through surgery and chemotherapy during this campaign, and my father, who was diagnosed with ALS during my campaign for Secretary of State, will both be there too. I’m thankful for the vigorous argument my brothers and I will have tonight about the Royals’ off-season plans.

Everyone around my Thanksgiving table shares the same politics, so we don’t have those uncomfortable dinner table debates that sometimes bring down the mood or start fights. I recognize that may not be the same for you and I imagine that might take some of the fun out of this holiday. I thought I might offer a little advice about that.

Focus on how much you love your family and, also, focus on the fact that no matter what they say or do, it’s not going to stop you from working to get the country going back in the right direction. Basically, try not to let it get to you, because no one ever accomplished a goal if they let themselves lose focus and get distracted.

In that vein, and speaking of my grandfather, I want to share with you one of my favorite Kander family stories. It’s a good lesson in staying focused on what really matters.

My grandfather, Ed Kander (we all call him “Pop”) is the protagonist of this story. Here’s a fun fact about Pop: He served in northern Africa during WWII and this past Veterans Day was his 93rd birthday.

A few years after the war, Pop’s father died, and he came home to Kansas City to run the family chicken business and start a family. A short time later, when Pop and my grandmother purchased a house in Kansas City, Pop got sort of drafted into being President of the neighborhood association. Now, as Pop tells it, the job of neighborhood association President was pretty easy because, as far as he could tell, the only responsibility he had was to coach the neighborhood baseball team. My dad and my uncle played on the team and the team was decent. The only thing missing was a good shortstop, so Pop would go around asking people in the neighborhood if they knew of a kid that could play shortstop.

Later that summer, one of the families in the neighborhood moved out of the area and turned their home into an unlicensed hotel. This was against the rules of the neighborhood and had a lot of people pretty upset. It was the kind of neighborhood where kids played outside all the time and everyone was pretty uneasy about strangers coming and going at all hours.

The neighbors came to Pop and told him he needed to go to court and get the unlicensed hotel shut down. Pop was not a lawyer, and he probably didn’t want to take time away from work to fight this fight, but he took on this challenge for the good of the community.

Soon came the day of a big hearing in the case and the lawyer for the people who owned the unlicensed hotel pulled Pop aside outside the courtroom to talk.

The lawyer threatened Pop. “If you go forward with this lawsuit, you’ll probably win,” he said, “but you should know that my client has already identified a black family to sell the house to should they lose. If you move forward with this case, you’ll be responsible for letting a black family move into your neighborhood.”

I guess the lawyer was trying to threaten Pop with the one thing he thought would be more unpopular among Pop’s neighbors than the unlicensed hotel. But Pop didn’t skip a beat. He looked right at the lawyer, smiled, and asked him, “Do you happen to know if that family has a kid that can play shortstop?”

I get a chuckle every time I imagine the look on that lawyer’s face. And I get inspired every time I think about my grandfather’s resolve.

So whether it’s your family at Thanksgiving or Fox News on the TV in the waiting room at your doctor’s office, stay focused and don’t get distracted.

Have a great Thanksgiving. Today, and every other day, with warmth and love in your heart, just keep doing what you know is right and don’t let anyone or anything distract you from the path of making the world a better place.

The more things change, the more they remain the same – part 3

24 Thursday Nov 2016

Posted by Michael Bersin in Resist

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

Protests, Resist, signs

A protest sign from thirteen or so years ago:

"Blind faith in bad leadership is not patriotic" - protest sign, circa 2003- 2004.

“Blind faith in bad leadership is not patriotic” – protest sign, circa 2003- 2004.

Resist.

Previously:

The more things change, the more they remain the same (November 23, 2016)

The more things change, the more they remain the same – part 2 (November 23, 2016)

Rep. Vicky Hartzler (r): not wor…er, not getting paid to work overtime

24 Thursday Nov 2016

Posted by Michael Bersin in social media

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

4th Congressional District, faux populism, missouri, overtime, social media, Twitter, Vicky Hartzler, working people

Looking out for working people. Not.

Representative Vicky Hartzler (r) sticks it to working people, yesterday via Twitter:

vickyhartzler112316

Rep. Vicky Hartzler ‏@RepHartzler
The overtime rule hurts everyday Americans, raises the cost of living, & reduces wages/incomes. [….]
3:10 PM – 23 Nov 2016

The responses are uniformly derisive:

jolene112316a

Jolene Sugarbaker ‏@JolenesTrailer
@RepHartzler It hurts to get paid for every hour you work? What planet do you live on? You are not for the people! #Fail
4:29 PM – 23 Nov 2016

jolene112316b

Jolene Sugarbaker ‏@JolenesTrailer
@RepHartzler Do you get paid for every hour you work? What’s next? Take away health care? Happy Holidays from Vicky!
4:30 PM – 23 Nov 2016

Yep, that’s on the agenda, too.

dunne112316a

Katie Dunne ‏@kdunne42
@RepHartzler I disagree. It sounds as though you support protecting employers *at the expense of* their employees.
4:48 PM – 23 Nov 2016

Well, yes, that’s always been the republican point.

Katie Dunne ‏@kdunne42
Even those who work at nonprofits (as I have done) deserve a fair and commensurate remuneration for the work they do.
4:51 PM – 23 Nov 2016

tothepitchforks112316

tothepitchforks ‏@tothepitchfork
@RepHartzler So working overtime but not getting paid for it is ok? How about employers find ways to not have their staff work overtime.
3:23 PM – 23 Nov 2016

Like, maybe hire more people to do the work required? Or, if they have to work overtime, maybe, you know, actually pay employees for doing so?

It’s gonna be a long (at least) two years.

Still counting – losing the popular vote by 2,103,941 is still not a “mandate”

24 Thursday Nov 2016

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 17 Comments

Tags

Donald Trump, Hillary Clinton, popular vote, president

And the margin continues to grow.

Compiled by David Wasserman, Cook Political Report:

mbersin112416

Michael Bersin ‏@MBersin
National Popular Vote (to date) – Hillary Clinton (D) 64,418,125 – Donald Trump (r) 62,314,184 – margin for Hillary + 2,103,941
5:08 AM – 24 Nov 2016

Let’s keep asking Kellyanne Conway (r) about that.

Previously:

Still counting (November 21, 2016)

Still counting – losing the popular vote by 2,017,563 ain’t a “mandate” (November 23, 2016)

Campaign Finance: and so it ends or begins before it begins – part 3

23 Wednesday Nov 2016

Posted by Michael Bersin in campaign finance

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

campaign finance, Eric Greitens., missouri, Missouri Ethics Commission

Eric Greitens (r) [2016 file photo].

Eric Greitens (r) [2016 file photo].

Today at the Missouri Ethics Commission for Eric Greitens’ (r) 2016 or 2020 [?] gubernatorial or whatever campaign:

C151053 11/23/2016 GREITENS FOR MISSOURI Cerner Corporation 2800 Rockcreek Parkway Kansas City MO 64117 11/23/2016 $10,000.00

C151053 11/23/2016 GREITENS FOR MISSOURI Rockwood Management Corporation 190 Carondelet Plaza Suite 1250 St Louis MO 63105 11/23/2016 $7,500.00

[emphasis added]

Interestingly, we haven’t seen those really large out-of-state contributions which were so common during the campaign. They better hurry.

Previously:

Campaign Finance: and so it ends or begins before it begins (November 20, 2016)

Campaign Finance: and so it ends or begins before it begins – part 2 (November 21, 2016)

The more things change, the more they remain the same – part 2

23 Wednesday Nov 2016

Posted by Michael Bersin in media criticism, Resist

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

media criticism, protest, Resist, signs

A protest sign from thirteen or so years ago, possibly the second or third iteration – they do wear out from use:

"Faux News channel, fascist groupies" - protest sign, circa 2003- 2004.

“Faux News channel, fascist groupies” – protest sign, circa 2003- 2004.

Nothing has changed.

On some occasions the weekly protests near the fountain on the Plaza in Kansas City would garner media coverage. As I recall, on one such day a reporter for one of the local non-Fox affiliates was getting ready for a stand-up report. Right before she went on the air I called out and showed her the sign. She smiled.

Resist.

Previously:

The more things change, the more they remain the same (November 23, 2016)

The more things change, the more they remain the same

23 Wednesday Nov 2016

Posted by Michael Bersin in Resist

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

critical thinking, protest, Resist, signs

It was time to dig through storage.

This was the third iteration, probably from early 2004:

“Propaganda is not designed to fool the critical thinker, but only to give moral cowards an excuse not to think at all” – protest sign, circa 2003- 2004.

We saved our protest signs, some from fifteen years ago. It’s telling that so many of them now apply again. It’s the same suspects and the same old shit.

Some advice for making a readable protest sign:

1) At least four to six inch high fat block letters on poster board.

2) Outline/trace in pencil.

3) Use permanent markers, colors optional. Outline, then fill in the letters. Outline again in a contrasting color.

4) Sarcasm and snark for content, applied liberally.

Nothing has changed.

Resist.

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