Stacey Abrams launches multi-million dollar voter protection initiative in 20 states – ABC News
hmmm
What goes through my my mind when I read the news with my morning coffee. …Or for the Simon's Rockers in the group, this is my response journal.
A new investigation reveals that UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s Conservative Party has received a surge in cash from Russian donors over the past year, news that comes as his government continues to block publication of a report into Russian influence over recent elections.
Boris Johnson’s Conservatives receive surge in cash from Russians – Business Insider
Google will now have information on not only the temperature of my house, to the extent I’ve got four Nest thermostats or whether or not I have a smoke alarm going off or things like that, they’ll know, in fact, how much I move on a given day, how many steps I take, things of that nature,” D.A. Davidson analyst Tom Forte told Yahoo Finance. “This is very interesting data for Google. And if you think about Google’s efforts, again, Amazon with Alexa and Apple with its various devices, they’re all just collecting data for consumers. But this helps round out the data set for Google, given that it gives you, again, health care-related data.
Google’s acquisition of Fitbit is clearly a data play
hmmm
When you hear stories about the Lone Ranger, you are often told about a masked Caucasian cowboy who hung out with a Native American named Tonto. In reality, the real Lone Ranger was a formerly enslaved man, Bass Reeves, who became the first Black deputy U.S. Marshal west of the Mississippi River.
Watch The Trailer To ‘Hell On The Border,’ About Bass Reeves, The First Black US Marshal
very cool
NRCC sent Democrats in battleground states ‘moving boxes’
Beyond classless, in this day and age of security threats this asinine and irresponsible. Who is running the show over there? Preteens??
“Every year, as the fire’s rage & California burns, it is the same thing-and then he comes to the Federal Government for $$$ help,” Trump said. “No more. Get your act together Governor. You don’t see close to the level of burn in other states.”
Newsom responded on Twitter that, since Trump does not believe in climate change, he is “excused from this conversation.”
California wildfires: Trump threatens to cut funding to fight fires
hmmmm
Well, at least they’re not being petty or anything.
Her bid for the 2020 Democratic nomination, which began with so much promise, has been marked by a long and painful pattern of self-inflicted lapses and growing disorder among her inexperienced staff.
…Harris undermined her national introduction with costly flubs on health care, feeding a critique that she lacks a strong ideological core and plays to opinion polls and the desires of rich donors. She was vague or noncommittal on question after question from voters at campaign stops. She leaned on verbal crutches instead of hammering her main points in high-profile TV moments. [When presented against this backdrop] The deliberate, evidence-intensive way she arrives at decisions—one of her potential strengths in a matchup with Trump—made her look wobbly and unprepared.
…[Fair or not, it’s a real thing that] her attempts to level with Americans over their concerns about her pioneering [gender/racial] status …[make it] look like Harris is making excuses when she’s given Democrats many other reasons by now to doubt her viability.
…Most of Harris’ advisers are sophisticated enough to know that the kvetching won’t win them broad sympathy. …It will backfire.
…A searing opinion piece by the law professor Lara Bazelon in the New York Times—published days before Harris formally entered the race and headlined “Kamala Harris Was Not a ‘Progressive Prosecutor’ ”—created a simple, effective template for critical assessments of her record.
…[Harris] assembled a cadre of top advisers without instituting a clear chain of command.
…Her aversion to risk on some major [criminal justice reform] issues as attorney general, which earned her a reputation as “Cautious Kamala” in California, cropped up throughout the early stages of the race.
…The red phone-evoking message may have tested well in polls, it wasn’t sharp enough to resonate in the real world.
…She pivoted to themes that she’d later come to see as having little connection to her personally or professionally.
…Early-state voters have consistently told me they were intrigued and even inspired by Harris’ historic candidacy—as some remain—but many also say they are underwhelmed by her uneven performances, issue walk-backs and failure to succinctly condense a clear rationale for why she should be president of the United States. They like her fine. But they like someone else more. A big part of Harris’ base—well-educated white women—has drifted to Elizabeth Warren, while Joe Biden remains dominant with older voters and African Americans.
…Some Harris staffers [and potential supporters] felt blindsided by a decision to lay off field organizers in New Hampshire when they previously were led to believe that they could be redeployed to Iowa. [After all, what does “for the people” mean if she doesn’t even look out for her own people?]
…After Biden said he wanted to keep busing a local decision, Harris told him schools where she grew up in Berkeley weren’t fully integrated until “almost two decades after Brown v. Board of Education,” adding, “and that’s where the federal government must step in.”
…[Biden’s] team hounded news reporters to press Harris over where she stood on busing. Some Harris advisers wanted her to keep her answers high level, suggesting that she say she would enforce the Civil Rights Act. The courts have tied her hands, she was counseled to argue, but she’d do everything she could, including using mandatory busing today, to address a situation where schools are more segregated now than they were then.
Instead, Harris cast busing as not the responsibility of the federal government, but a choice of local districts. “I believe that any tool that is in the toolbox should be considered by a school district,” she said. Harris shortly after clarified that she supported federally mandated busing in the kind of situations that occurred in the 1970s—when local and state integration efforts were rebuffed or proved ineffective. The situation in 2019, Harris argued, is different than it was then. In the end, her stance on busing became conflated with Biden’s past position, helping his campaign cement the impression that her attack was born of opportunism rather than conviction.
…When Harris’ staff was approached about CNN’s climate town hall in September—and told that the leading contenders already agreed to participate—higher-ups [with an apparent lack of understanding about optics and how to run a national campaign] instructed her communications aides to sit it out in favor of fundraisers in Los Angeles [which is a horrible look for a Democratic candidate running on her desire to fight “for the people.”]
…Harris has long been seen as a politician who tries to avoid taking positions on difficult issues, including those in her wheelhouse. Twice, in 2012 and 2016, she refused to weigh in on narrowly defeated ballot initiatives in California that would have repealed the death penalty. In 2014, she sat out the debate over an important criminal justice reform measure that downgraded several felony crimes to misdemeanors. She was mum on former Gov. Jerry Brown’s sentencing reform effort, which voters also passed. She wanted little to do with the successful ballot initiative that legalized recreational marijuana.
…Her reliance on big-dollar events …took her off the road in early states and ate into her time talking with voters and media.
How Kamala Harris Went From ‘Female Obama’ to Fifth Place – POLITICO Magazine
Put it all together and you have a recipe for an underwhelming campaign.
O’Rourke lacked the infrastructure necessary to organize his own supporters. Lawmakers and major Democratic donors could not get calls returned. When the campaign’s skeletal staff promised to reach out, it sometimes forgot.
…O’Rourke’s alienated reporters by refusing to provide basic information about his schedule — including, for many outlets, the location of his campaign’s first public event.
Inside Beto O’Rourke’s collapse – POLITICO
Having infrastructure in place before jumping in is a handy thing
Oklahoma voters approved a state question in 2016 that changed simple drug possession and low-level property crimes from felonies to misdemeanors. Stitt signed a bill this year that retroactively adjusted those sentences, approving a fast-track commutation docket for those who met the criteria.
…The state is also making sure that the released inmates receive a state-issued driver’s license or state-issued identification card — items that are key as those inmates begin to reenter society, apply for jobs and seek housing.
Hundreds of Oklahoma inmates being released Monday in largest commutation in U.S. history
hmmm
O’Rourke was using “distributed organizing” — a method pioneered by Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders’ 2016 presidential campaign of empowering volunteers in far-flung regions of Texas, often working out of pop-up offices in people’s garages or basements — to drastically expand his campaign’s reach.
…O’Rourke, while still deciding whether to run for president, agreed to be interviewed by Vanity Fair. It led to a March cover story with a pull quote featuring O’Rourke saying, “Man, I’m just born to be in it,” on the eve of his official entrance into the 2020 race.
O’Rourke would also err during his first swing through Iowa, joking at one point that his wife Amy was at home in El Paso raising their three children, “sometimes with my help.”
…Yhe Vanity Fair cover, which he would also later admit was a mistake, and the joke about his wife fueled the perception that O’Rourke was entitled [ and a bit petulant.]
…[Beto had] barely begun to build the sort of organization it would take to sustain a serious presidential campaign.
He also didn’t appear to be receiving detailed briefings ahead of his campaign stops.
…In June, O’Rourke — who never liked debates and, aides said, felt he came off too wooden and practiced after detailed prep sessions — appeared stunned when he was pummeled by former Housing and Urban Development Secretary Julián Castro over immigration.
…He advocated mandatory buy-backs of assault-style rifles, drawing headlines — and also condemnation from some Washington Democrats, including Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer of New York, who said he was making more modest gun control measures more difficult to get Republicans on board with.
Beto O’Rourke’s star turn in Texas didn’t translate to the national stage – CNNPolitics
It seems like no one wants to admit the obvious. Rank and file progressives might have like his “coming for your guns” shtick, which probably gave him a fundraising bump but in that moment he became a toxic substance that no longtime Democratic activist or booster would touch with a ten foot poll. Ergo, no more money and no more endorsements.
Plus, his comments to Warren in his final debate were not only a bad look but seemed to confirm and reinforce the underlying themes to the criticisms of his born to runa nd Amy raises my kids foibles that his supporters had, up to that point, been willing to ignore,
School district bars students with lunch debts from field trips, prom | WKRN News 2
So no overt shaming of kids in the lunchline but still punishing them for at best their parents irresponsibility and at worst their family’s financial insecurity. Not much of an improvement….