If only I could sit as comfortably doing nothing as you — Xtrix
There are other provisions in the bill, as well — $550 billion for various climate initiatives, none of which would be a reality if it weren’t for activism, and certainly not if Trump got a second term. Is this “worse”? — Xtrix
Until that’s given, I’ll continue pushing for better policies in the world we have, which unfortunately is a two-party system largely owned by corporate interests in a state capitalist system, with the ultimate goal of destroying capitalism AND the state (which is way, way off and will almost certainly not happen in our lifetimes).
If you have better suggestions in the meantime, I’m all ears. — Xtrix
The only cynics are those who look at the existing state of affairs and think: there can be no other possible way. — StreetlightX
What’s hard is organizing with others, taking collective action, protesting in the streets (which I hate), using the courts, registering voters, educating people, raising money, corresponding with state and local leaders, getting involved in local government, sitting on boards, crafting proposals, creating petitions and referenda, etc. — Xtrix
Strangely enough, the response from the Dems have been pretty calm... Otherwise I can't imagine them caving so easily and so quickly but that is what it looks like from the outside. — Mr Bee
Who could have seen this coming? — StreetlightX
Otherwise I can't imagine them caving so easily and so quickly but that is what it looks like from the outside. — Mr Bee
One that actively seeks to make things worse, on behalf of their corporate sponsors. — StreetlightX
This from a guy who sees everything so clearly that he actively helped Trump great re-elected. — Xtrix
If they cave and vote on the “bipartisan” bill, that’ll be disappointing. I don’t see indications of that happening yet. — Xtrix
I think this is misreading what Jayapal is saying. She's willing to vote on both, and is leaving the convincing of Manchin to Biden. She says she's not in direct contact with Manchin. — Xtrix
we need MoRe AcTiViSsmmmm — StreetlightX
Maybe my time is best spent elsewhere because politics seems pretty messed up. — John McMannis
The standard rejoinder, of course, is that the Democrats would happily legislate a transformative program were it not for opposition from two intransigent blue dog senators. While arguably true at the margins, the current dynamic is ultimately a structural one born of the very basic contradiction at the heart of the Democratic Party as an enterprise — and, if Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema weren’t the villains of the week, we can safely guarantee other Democratic senators would emerge from the woodwork to take their place.
There’s no way to govern coherently with a legislative program that represents a one-sided compromise between the preferences of liberal voters and those of major corporations. This model of so-called compromise was hardly invented by the likes of Manchin or Sinema. It’s also the one embraced by Nancy Pelosi, Chuck Schumer, Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, and virtually every other major figure or grandee in the Democratic Party’s upper ranks.
In a big way, the Left’s critique in 2016 and 2020 wasn’t just that a new, more ambitious, and more ideologically coherent program was urgently needed. It was also that the Democratic Party is structurally unable to deliver even many of the softly progressive measures its leaders periodically claim to want — and that, by extension, an administration headed by a figure like Joe Biden was almost certain to yield a very predictable result.
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