Quote of the Day
"I can't remember the last time I read a book in one sitting."
Angry Black Lady, in the most unsurprising tweet ever.
Labels: angry black lady
"I can't remember the last time I read a book in one sitting."
Labels: angry black lady
"(And then he called me a crazy person with not that many followers. I have almost 1000 more than you, fucker.) HAHA #childishtweet #p2"
Labels: angry black lady, john aravosis, twitter
"Here's the thing about #EmoProgs who think 8 years of Romney rule will make the public hungry for a hot cuppa liberalism."
Labels: angry black lady, president barack obama
It is interesting to see the tweets of Angry Black Lady, Joy-Ann Reid and Shoq attacking progressives for disagreeing with with President Barack Obama's policy. Shoq is anonymous. (Though I suspect Shoq is African-American.) Angry Black Lady and Reid feel an understandable racial connection to the first black president. To place it in proper perspective: in 1961, talking smack about JFK in a Boston Irish pub would probably result in an ass-kicking. Considering the racism directed towards Obama, it is understandable Angry Black Lady and Reid would feel the need to defend the President. Where I get lost is when Angry Black Lady accuses Salon.com blogger Joan Walsh of racism in a tweet war.
Joan Walsh and I had words. Rather than retract her statement about resenting black folks who call themselves "THE BASE" (which I originally took to mean "exclusively" and then asked her who was making such claims), she proceeded to race-bait while accusing the black folks who called her out of race-baiting. Then, much later, she claimed that the Twitter character limit prevented her from using a word other than "RESENT."
Barring something horrific, I will support President Obama in 2012. (And I read Glenn Greenwald daily, so I know there's a digest of fairly horrific things taking place in the realm of civil liberties, on top of the regular cave-ins to corporate America.) I have explained before: I think a primary race would be distracting and destructive to progressive politics. It would tear the Democratic Party apart in ways that would make that unpleasant 2008 bickering look like a love-in. As the great Michael Harrington used to say, when it comes to electoral politics, I stand on "the left wing of the possible," and that's about where I believe Obama is. So I expect to stand with Obama next year.
Equally important, though, I oppose a primary challenge from the left because I believe it would keep progressives trapped in the fiction that presidential campaigns are the be all and end all of progressive politics. They're not, as Obama's election should have proven to everyone. MoveOn, Dean-turned-Democracy for America and much of the lefty blogosphere went all-in for Obama, lauding him as the true-blue progressive in the race, when he was not. They helped bring him the Democratic nomination he should have had to at least compete for among progressives. (Do people now understand that his praising Reagan and saying Social Security needed fixing might have been harbingers of the way he's led?) They dissipated energy that could have been spent in other ways; progressive groups have spent the last two years trying to figure out how to organize the base for truly progressive causes, rather than allegiance to a centrist Democratic president. Meanwhile, the stunning organizing achievements of Obama for America in 2008 -- building an email list of 13 million names, 4 million donors and 2 million active volunteers -- were never put behind a grass-roots effort to support Obama's agenda. We know from the New York Times that the Bill Daley White House shut down an effort by OFA to back the Wisconsin protests.
Labels: angry black lady, joan walsh, joy-ann reid, racism