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#cornel west 24
odinsblog · 7 months
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I know he finally gave the money back (somebody slapped some sense into him), but Cornel West is still defending his “brother,” Harlan Crow, the Nazi. So West is either a sellout or a useful idiot. Sorry, those are your only two choices
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madamepestilence · 2 months
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USA: VOTE IN YOUR 2024 PRIMARY ELECTION NOW
Heya folks, if you live in the US, your time to vote is coming up NOW
You may be recommended to vote Uncommitted to show you don't support Biden, but there's a MUCH better alternative! Primary elections determine what presidents will be eligible for ballot during the presidential election!
Get Dr. Cornel West, Ph.D. on your presidential ballots for November by voting for Cornel West (write it specifically as Cornel West, don't include his title) in your primary elections!
Unfamiliar with Dr. Cornel West, Ph.D.? As a TLDR, Dr. Cornel West, Ph.D. is the most vocal presidential candidate speaking explicitly for a free Palestine, not a false, "two-state," solution, and is seeking to significantly improve the quality of life for Americans, and is a real socialist philosopher, unlike poseur Bernie Sanders.
Learn more here: A video essay I made about the 2024 US election, a detailed Tumblr thread I made about it, Dr. Cornel West, Ph.D.'s official presidential platform
Note: Dr. Jill Stein is just a backup - please vote for Dr. Cornel West, Ph.D.. Claudia de la Cruz is not a viable option, as information has come out that her party, the PSL, has a Conservative 5th Column, and has frequent discrimination issues.
Upcoming voting dates:
(Includes US territories and abroad. Listed alphabetically.)
Primary Elections
Caucus Election? Check follow up post.
Alabama (D/R): Mar 5 Alaska (D): Apr 6 Arizona (D/R): Mar 19 Arkansas (D/R): Mar 5 California (D/R): Mar 5 Colorado (D/R): Mar 5 Connecticut (D/R): Apr 2 Delaware (D/R): Apr 2 Democrats Abroad: Mar 12 District of Columbia (D): Jun 4 District of Columbia (R): Mar 3 Florida (D/R): Mar 19 Georgia (D/R): Mar 12 Illinois (D/R): Mar 19 Indiana (D/R): May 7 Kansas (D/R): Mar 19 Kentucky (D/R): May 21 Louisiana (D/R): Mar 23 Maine (D/R): Mar 5 Maryland (D/R): May 14 Massachusetts (D/R): Mar 5 Michigan (D/R): Feb 27 Minnesota (D/R): Mar 5 Mississippi (D/R): Mar 12 Missouri (D): Mar 23 Montana (D/R): Jun 4 Nebraska (D/R): May 14 New Hampshire (D/R): Jan 23 New Jersey (D/R): Jun 4 New Mexico (D/R): Jun 4 New York (D/R): Apr Nevada (D): Feb 6 North Carolina (D/R): Mar 5 North Dakota (D): Mar 30 Northern Mariana (D): Mar 12 Ohio (D/R): Mar 19 Oklahoma (D/R): Mar 5 Oregon (D/R): May 21 Pennsylvania (D/R): Apr 23 Puerto Rico (D): Apr 28 Puerto Rico (R): Apr 21 Rhode Island (D/R): Apr 2 South Carolina (D): Feb 3 South Carolina (R): Feb 24 South Dakota (D/R): Jun 4 Tennessee (D/R): Mar 5 Texas (D/R): Mar 5 Utah (D): Mar 5 Vermont (D/R): Mar 5 Virginia (D/R): Mar 5 Washington (D/R): Mar 12 West Virginia (D/R): May 14 Wisconsin (D/R): Apr 2
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itsmythang · 6 months
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Next year it's Joe Biden versus:
Donald Trump
Robert Kennedy Jr.
Cornell West
Jill Stein
No Labels
The media
Russia
Possibly Joe Manchin (AKA No Labels)
FOX "NEWS" 24/7/365 MAGA PROPAGANDA
Folks, in 2024, there will be no room for error or division. The stakes are too high. Our democracy hangs in balance. We gotta have Joe's back.
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apenitentialprayer · 4 months
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If you're willing to take a risk and become vulnerable, then it tends to open others to take a risk and become vulnerable with regards to listening to what you're saying.
Cornel West (“On My Intellectual Vocation” from his Reader, page 24)
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schraubd · 4 months
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Out/In List: 2023-24
The other, less old but still venerable Debate Link tradition: The Out/In list! Out                                                                 In Black Sea                                       Red Sea Cornel West, truth-speaker            Cornel West, grifter Paper mills                                     Chat-GPT Pack the Israeli Sup. Ct.                 Don't mess with the Israeli Sup. Ct. Mastodon                                       Blue Sky Achievement Hunter                      Jet Lag: The Game Assistant Professor                         Associate Professor Abraham Accords                          Free Palestine Elon Musk                                      Sam Altman Substack                                         Buttondown Pac-12                                            One Big Mega Conference Surging Nikki Haley                     Trump wins every primary by 50 Reining in the 9th Circuit              Reining in the 5th Circuit #BelieveSurvivors                         #NotAllHamasTerrorists James Corden                                Taylor Tomlinson Electoral Count Act                       14th Amendment Section 3 Cybertruck                                     Lawsuits about Cybertruck Learn to code!                                Learn autoworking! Somali pirates                                Houthi pirates NFTs                                              Index ETFs Grindset                                         Collective bargaining agreement via The Debate Link https://ift.tt/OcXsImg
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GUEST POST BY RICK WILSON
TCINLA
DEC 29, 2023
I have to admit, eight years ago, if you had told me I would consider Rick Wilson a fellow troop in the trenches, I would have replied you were delusional. Which shows how much any of us had a clue about what was going to happen - to us, and to the country.
Since I am going to do some analysis of what we have to look forward to in 2024 this weekend for you (I know - bummer! Can’t I just pop the cork on a bottle of TJ’s Reserve Brut? Sorry, no.) I will start with Rick’s analysis of What Is To Be Done, because as far as I am concerned, he Nails It.
Herewith…
End-of-the-year list articles are, to my chagrin, a constant drumbeat in our culture, and I refuse to do one just for my contrarian nature. Instead, I want to offer a few guidelines for 2024, given the seriousness of the stakes.
Always Attack. I know it’s exhausting. It’s disheartening. It’s work. The autocratic movement in this country never rests. It never sleeps. It’s watch-and-watch 24/7, always-on in its absolute intentionality and determination. You must attack it without a break. Clausewitz called the attack the “…weaker form with the positive purpose,” and he was right. It’s more challenging and more costly to attack than to defend, but the attack is where victory is found. You’ll notice I said “always attack,” not “always communicate,” or “always respond,” or “always wait for the bad guys to bash your skull in with a tire iron before issuing a vaguely condemnatory press release” in the title of this section. Trump has an organic ability to be a media and political singularity, and history shows that only constant, frontal assaults on his ego, his manifold mental pathologies, and his raging insecurities break the pattern of his media dominance. Last week, we released a silly, fun, frankly juvenile ad about Trump’s robust odor. We didn’t do it just to make poop jokes; we did it because we know that when Trump is angry, distracted, and focused on himself, he makes it impossible for his campaign to do what a professional campaign should be doing. It makes his attack against Biden seem even more wildly unhinged and manic. We did the same thing a few weeks before during Trump’s embrace of Hitlerian language and messaging. It’s not Resistance Porn to attack Trump constantly; it’s a proven, demonstrated, and successful campaign strategy. (I’m sorry that the “Why ain’t y’all running 3000 GRPs of broadcast TV?” crowd is too stuck in the dim and distant campaign past to understand this one.)
Save the Family Squabbles For Later From young Democrats to Muslims to progressives, many of you sure seem to hate Joe Biden. You’re enjoying a stompy-foot tantrum and threatening to stay home instead of pulling on the big boy pants and getting in the fight to save democracy from Donald Freaking Trump. We know the long catalog of your complaints. He’s not progressive enough on every little thing. He didn’t cancel your student loans, legalize weed, or pass a subsidy for Instagram influencers. (I made up the last one, but I bet I could get it trending on TikTok.) He backed Israel over the Hamas terror state. You didn’t get every single line item in every legislative fantasy on climate or guns or whatever rings your ideological bell.
That’s the message America is getting, the media is amplifying, and the Trump campaign is obscenely enjoying. Now it’s time for some very tough love: wake the hell up. You’re willing to throw a political tantrum and stay home or vote for RFK Jr. or Jill Stein (I-Moscow), or Cornell West (I-The Matrix) because you’ve made a fantasy world the enemy of the reality of a binary contest. Political power doesn’t flow from your intra-party complaints. It flows from a massive victory in 2024. And if you don’t grow up, suit up, and back Joe Biden with the passion of a millions suns,, it’s not that you won’t be welcomed back to the Democratic Party.
It’s that there won’t be a Democratic Party.
Sell Morning In America Behold the power of assertion and repetition. Stop letting the Fox nattering take you off-message. The economy is rocking along, and it’s good news. Keep making the sale all the way until election day. My colleague Joe Trippi’s formulation that the economic good news takes 3-7 months to lodge in the consciousness of voters is on point. By Spring and Summer, the absurd “We’re in an economic hellscape where the living envy the dead” will begin to make the Fox agitprop look vaguely absurd, and so it’s incumbent to hammer this message until voters get sick of it. Six months before Reagan’s famous Morning In America spot defined the 1984 election, inflation and unemployment were roaring problems. You know how that movie ended for Walter Mondale. Trump’s most powerful asset in 2016 beyond his celebrity was the idea that he was a potent dealmaker, a business leader, and a great executive who could make money. All of it was — and is — an illusion, but that illusion is ripe for correction and shattering. Tell the counter narrative as well; Trump blew it on the economy. Spending was rampant. He suckered middle-class voters to pay for a tax cut for hedge fund executives. Trump talked about energy security, and Biden delivered it. Trump bragged about the stock market, but Biden’s is helping families save and retire with a market that makes Trump’s look sad. Trump’s economy? Weak. Biden’s? Strong. Assert and repeat. Brag about how well Americans are doing. Smile. Take credit. Do a victory roll.
Fight MAGA From The Edges In. Nothing makes normie Republicans more likely to break away from the madness of King Trump than categorizing them as Trump Republicans. The vestigial remains of the old GOP — those Bannon Line Voters the Lincoln Project targets and persuades — really, really, really aren’t comfortable being lumped in with Trump’s cruelty, criminality, absurdity, vulgarity, and the rest of the catalog of his sins. It is why they cringe at the video of January 6th and would sooner die than attend a Trump rally. When these voters, operatives, activists, and writers see the Red-hatted and unkempt mob at the average Trump rally, their cultural reaction is more important than the political reaction. They were accustomed to leading the cattle, not being trampled by it. This is what I like to call “The National Review Problem” for Republicans. The smart ones know just how vile and destructive Trump is for America, the pre-Trump limited-government Constitutionalist conservative movement, and for the Republican Party. They were desperate to boost Ron DeSantis or Nikki Haley over Trump for the last few years, but it’s all been for nothing. Their natural instinct is to compromise for the third straight election, and pick the autocratic madman over the center-left Democrats, and they will contort themselves wildly to get there. They will devote millions of words to arguments that Trump may be a dangerous psychopathic autocrat with a dictator fetish, but that Joe Biden is somehow simultaneously a drooling codger and a devious Lenist mastermind. This doesn’t mean they like it. Or like Trump’s base. Associating them with the loons, the conspirators, insurrectionists, the racists, the criminals, cosplayers, incels, madmen, the make-me-a-sandwich phony masculinity bros, and the rest of the MAGA flotsam. The tone isn’t “Aren’t you ashamed of these people?!?” No, the tone and message is calm, steady, declarative; “This is you.”
Corrupt The Fox Narrative Machine There was a moment where a few people thought that post-Tucker, post-Dominion lawsuit Fox News enterprise may have Learned Their Lesson and would approach news coverage in the 2024 election cycle with a more sober and serious mindset. Some thought Lachlan Murdoch would be more normal than Rupert. Bless their hearts. For the 2024 election, Fox is going to be more insane, conspiratorial, lurid, and omnipresent than it’s been at any point in recent memory. Fox is the single most powerful normative force in the MAGA and Republican world. Fox will flood the proverbial zone with a Chicxulub-scale tidal wave of rageporn tuned to stimulate even the calcified amygdalae of MAGA viewers; the old favorites are back; crime, immigrant caravans, trans people, Black Lives Matter, Antifa, and on and on. They will be elevated and exaggerated beyond human understanding. For decades now, Democrats have struggled to break the code on Fox’s hold on its viewers. It’s seemingly impossible, but like most monocultures, the Fox News monoculture is strong, but brittle. This is still a narrow sliver of a strategy, but the few Democrats who appear on Fox with a countervailing message often do more damage to the otherwise hermetic Fox bubble than an ocean of fact-checking press releases. 
Because Fox is not a news network, but rather a scripted and glossy nationalist Kabuki dance, every time a Democrat slips in even a little dissonance into the Fox ecosystem, it ramifies and grows. Do more.
It’s The Fascism. In early 2022, Reed Galen and I were on a Zoom call with a group of powerful Democratic donors and activists, all of whom were convinced that the 2022 election would be won or lost on prescription drug costs and gas prices. It was absurd. It was idiotic. It was perfectly representative of the Washington Democratic consultant culture of focus-grouped vanilla pudding; inoffensive, meaningless, and imminently forgettable. We both burst out, “No, it’s not! It’s about democracy!” I was so shocked I believe I may have added the word “fucking” in there somewhere. The U.S. Capitol had been attacked just a year before. Trump’s movement wasn’t gone; it had metastasized into an alternate culture determined to overthrow the government one way or the other, a determined and corrosive. This time, it’s about fascism. Donald Trump makes this argument for the Biden campaign and the pro-democracy forces in this country every day. Republican governors and state legislatures are doing the same thing at scale. Mike Johnson and his twisted form of social extremism (it’s not social conservatism by a long shot) are background music for the era of Unlimited Government Conservatism. It’s a picture of a dark, violent future of a powerful government turned against the American people. It’s a story with Trump as its Fuhrer and the architects of a future where the Republic and democracy are inconvenient obstacles to their vision of a grand autocratic future This campaign will not be about policy. All campaigns have an undercurrent of the past vs the future. This one is about a Trumpian future that looks like the past: 1936-1945, to be specific.
Pressure the GOP At Home, Not DC If the worst happens, the firewall against a second Trump term runs through the House and Senate. You won’t win the House or hold the Senate (particularly in this cycle) without weakening the GOP at home. The fight isn’t in DC; it’s in the suburbs in the swing states. It’s in the local media. It’s in preventing the GOP House and Senate members from going home and saying, “I’m here for you” when their behavior in Washington is to tell Trump, “I’m here for you.” The MAGA caucus — and that’s all but a handful of Senators, now — is from top to bottom corrupt and corrupted. They will terrorize America for the coming year with shutdowns, phony impeachments, and mendacious investigations. They will work to provide Put their majority in peril. Force them into splitting from Trump, defending his most indefensible statements and actions, and owning his worst aspects. They lose when they embrace him and lose when they don’t. Trump’s hypersensitivity to any disloyalty, divergence, or even disagreement will do most of the work for us, but the fight is in the states, not D.C.
Don’t Underestimate The New Trump Team. They are much, much better than the 2020 and 2016 interations. They are serious, capable people running a professional and funded campaign operation. The fact that they work for a gibbering lunatic is a detriment, but they’re worlds more professional and competent than before. They’re working very, very hard to discipline him and channel his outbursts into the Truth Social ghetto. They’re building a real voter turnout operation in swing states. I beg you not to underestimate Chris LaCivita and Suzy Wiles. They’re orders of magnitude better at this than Bannon, Kellyanne, and Brad Parscale. The Biden campaign keeps talking about a Spring start. Dear God, go now. Start making the Trump world spend money now.
Miracles Are For Suckers. Hope Is Not A Strategy. If I could weigh one magic wand and accomplish one simple change in the minds of anti-Trump voters, Republican or Democrat. It would be this: stop believing in miracles. Miracles are in short supply when Donald Trump has the luck of the devil. It’s taken me a while to overcome the hope that something Trump And the arc of his fortunes. But nothing does. He is a protean force in American culture now, seemingly beyond all sanction. He is not going to jail. He is not going to be disqualified from the ballot in 50 states. He won’t be disqualified from the ballot in any states when the Supreme Court is done. Trump is going to be the nominee, he is going to lure the media into his narrative frame once again. Unless we fight every single day against it, he’ll succeed. The miracles in politics are the ones we make. They come from work planning, preparation, organization, and focus. Nothing will set the Democratic Party back further and faster than the fantasy that somehow the law or fate will take Trump out of their way. This one will take a lot of work at every return, and there are no shortcuts.
Third Party Candidates = Trump I imagine by now you’re heartily sick of me reminding you that No Labels, RFK Jr, Cornell West, Jill Stein, and the rest of the third-party aspirants are enablers of a second Trump term. This will be a close-run election in every sense. We cannot afford to lose even a few percent in a single swing state. It’s a natural psychological trait to look at two contentious options in our politics and seek an alternative. It’s also a trap; we simply don’t live in a world where a third-party candidate can do anything but spoil this election in Trump’s favor. (Small caveat on RFK, Jr., who may be closer to splitting the R-D divide, but given the Electoral College maps, it’s still not a good bet.)
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mariacallous · 10 months
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In 1948, President Harry Truman was on the ropes. He was personally unpopular and faced breakaway candidates to his left (former Vice President Henry Wallace, running as the head of the Progressive Party) and to his right (the Dixiecrats, headed by Strom Thurmond). Although Truman lost 2.4% of the popular vote and 39 electoral votes to Thurmond and another 2.4% of the vote to Wallace, he managed to beat Republican Thomas Dewey by 49.6% to 45.1% (4.5 percentage points).
The story of the 2024 presidential campaign could be a rerun of 1948 — with a different ending. As in 1948, an unpopular incumbent Democratic president may well face Democratic defections to his left and his right. A leading Black public intellectual, Cornel West, will be filling Henry Wallace’s slot as the presidential nominee of the Green Party. To Joe Biden’s right, No Labels is threatening to run an “independent bipartisan” ticket that could be headed by centrists such as Larry Hogan, the former never-Trump Republican governor of Maryland; Joe Manchin, the moderate Democratic senator from West Virginia; or Arizona’s independent senator, Kyrsten Sinema.
It is much too early to assess the impact of this dual threat, but the early signs are not encouraging for Biden. A recent poll by Echelon Insights, a Republican-leaning survey research firm, found that while Biden would narrowly defeat Donald Trump in a rematch of their 2020 contest, Cornel West would receive 4% of the vote in a three-way race, giving the edge to Trump. West would draw about three-quarters of his support from potential Biden voters, especially Blacks, young people, and voters with graduate degrees.
Meanwhile, a poll by Data for Progress suggested that a centrist independent candidacy would also hurt President Biden more than former President Trump. Like Echelon Insights and other polling firms, Data for Progress found that Biden would defeat Trump in a closely contested two-way race. But in a three-way race featuring Trump, Biden, and an unnamed “moderate Independent candidate,” Trump would come out on top, because the third choice would draw 6 percentage points from Biden’s support versus 3 points from Trump. Otherwise put, in a two-way race, 41% of the potential supporters of a moderate independent choice would support Biden, compared to just 24% who would opt for Trump.
It is very early in the race, of course, so these findings should be read with a healthy pinch of skepticism. Still, they suggest that a four-way race might not go as well for Joe Biden in 2024 as it did for Truman in 1948. The difference, I would suggest, is the baseline balance between the two major parties. In 1944, Democrats were on a roll. In that election, Franklin D. Roosevelt defeated Thomas Dewey by 7.5 percentage points, 53.4% to 45.9%. The Republicans nominated Dewey a second time in 1948, and the Republican candidate ended up with roughly the same share of the popular vote as he had four years earlier. Truman could afford to lose almost 5% of the baseline Democratic vote to breakaway candidates to his left and right and still prevail. Still, it was a narrow victory. If Dewey had done 1 percentage point better in the popular vote, he probably would have won three large states — Ohio, Illinois, and California — that he lost by less than 1 percentage point, allowing him to win a majority in the Electoral College despite losing to Truman in the popular vote.
By contrast, Joe Biden begins with a narrower advantage in what I am calling the “baseline” vote. In 2020, when just about everything went right for him, he defeated Trump by 51.3% to 46.8% (4.5 percentage points) in the popular vote. Because Biden’s baseline edge is 3 percentage points lower than Truman’s, he cannot prevail with losses to his left and right as large as those Truman experienced. If a four-way election were held tomorrow, Biden would probably lose.
Fortunately for the incumbent, the election will not occur for another 16 months. As often happens with new Third-Party possibilities, Cornel West’s 4% showing in the Echelon Insights poll may well prove to be a high-water mark. Running on the Green Party ticket in 2016, Jill Stein received just 1.1% of the popular vote. And notably, when the Data for Progress poll replaced the generic No Labels candidate with an actual candidate (Larry Hogan), support for the moderate independent option fell by more than half.
Still, Joe Biden’s room for maneuver is dangerously small. Even though Stein received just over 1% of the vote in 2016, her vote total was higher than Trump’s margin of victory in three key states — Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin — with enough electoral votes to turn Hillary Clinton’s defeat into a narrow victory. Although we cannot say for sure that Stein cost Clinton the election, we cannot rule out the possibility that she did.
Even though Biden gained a healthy popular vote victory in 2020, a shift of a handful of votes in three states — Georgia, Arizona, and Wisconsin — would have created a 269-269 tie in the Electoral College, throwing the election into the House of Representatives, where Trump would have prevailed. If Cornel West ends up with even half of his current support, he will double Stein’s share, imperiling Biden’s reelection chances. If a No Labels candidate were also in the race, the hill Biden must climb would be even steeper.
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latribune · 2 months
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thalkonvotes · 4 months
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Independent
** The American Independent Party, for example, is a far-right minor political party founded in 1967. The American Independent Party supports some conservative positions on social, economic, and foreign policy issues.
The party is generally pro-life, opposes same-sex marriage, and advocates for limited government intervention in the economy. The American Independent Party also supports stricter immigration policies and increased border security. The AIP has fielded candidates in state and national elections, although it has never won a major political office.
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Heath Vincent Fulkerson (A: 9/15/23; Insufficient Funds)
Howard Russell Cohen (A: 5/3/23; E: 10/13/23)
Hubert Sean Francisco (A: 12/27/22; Insufficient Funds)
Huhnkie Lee (A: 3/4/23; $3,100 Raised Funds)
Ian Netupsky (A: 6/24/21; Insufficient Funds)
Irina D'Amato (A: 12/20/20; Insufficient Funds)
Isaac Riley (A: 10/25/23; Insufficient Funds)
Jacob Matthew Parker (A: 3/11/22; Insufficient Funds)
Jacob Suarez (A: 11/30/22; Insufficient Funds)
James Arthur Shoup III (A: 6/15/23; Insufficient Funds)
James Bills (A: 1/18/21; Insufficient Funds)
James Goodale (A: 2/9/23; Insufficient Funds)
James McCay (A: 10/20/23; Insufficient Funds)
James P. Bradley (A: 11/29/23; E: 12/7/23)
Jaret Gold (A: 6/16/23; Insufficient Funds)
Jason C. Hardy (A: 11/14/23; Insufficient Funds)
Jeff A. Iwerks (A: 11/1/23; Insufficient Funds)
Jeffrey Brian Downard (A: 8/22/23; Insufficient Funds)
Jennifer Marie Astello (A: 2/5/24)
Jeremy Shane Bernheisel (A: 11/7/22; Insufficient Funds)
Jimmy Cooper (A: 11/20/23; Insufficient Funds)
Joanne Noto (A: 6/24/22; Insufficient Funds)
JoeLarry Hunter (A: 12/5/22; Insufficient Funds)
John Allen Prince (A: 10/10/23; E: 1/29/24)
John Brubaker (A: 2/25/21; Insufficient Funds)
John Damms (A: 6/26/23; E: 9/12/23)
John Edward Diaz (A: 11/30/23; Insufficient Funds)
John Gwin Jr. (A: 4/15/21; Insufficient Funds)
John Keehner (A: 12/16/21; Insufficient Funds)
John Roy Brooks (A: 11/23/22; Insufficient Funds)
Johnny Hatten Buss (A: 2/2/24)
Johnny Ishmel Henry (A: 10/25/23; Insufficient Funds)
Jojo Camp (A: 11/4/20; Insufficient Funds)
Jon Castenada (A: 12/11/23; Insufficient Funds)
Jon Edward Stasevich (A: 3/9/23; Insufficient Funds)
Joseph Anthony Nigro IV (A: 9/5/23; Insufficient Funds)
Joseph Foreman (A: 4/18/23; Insufficient Funds)
Joseph Zedan (A: 6/30/22; Insufficient Funds)
Joshua Chiartas (A: 4/25/22; Insufficient Funds)
Joshua Coulter (A: 1/15/24; Insufficient Funds)
Joshua Gray (A: 5/11/22; Insufficient Funds)
Julian Bishop Lewis (A: 9/8/22; Insufficient Funds)
June Lloyd (A: 1/17/24; Insufficient Funds)
Justin Edward Hamilton (A: 1/6/22; Insufficient Funds)
Kelvin Gerad Davis (A: 6/10/21; Insufficient Funds)
Kevin Palmer Smith (A: 7/26/22; Insufficient Funds)
Kevin West (A: 4/4/21; Insufficient Funds)
Khaled Edward Miller (A: 2/1/24)
Kristin Marina (1/6/24; Insufficient Funds)
Kurios I (A: 11/11/20; Insufficient Funds)
Kyle Alexander Sherman (A: 11/15/22; Insufficient Funds)
Kyle DeWick (A: 11/20/23; Insufficient Funds)
Kyle Kenley Kopitke (A: 11/25/20; Insufficient Funds)
La'Rasha Washington (A: 7/27/21; Insufficient Funds)
Lisa Miel Matejka (A: 1/15/22; Insufficient Funds)
Mark Charles Fitzgerald (A: 3/27/23; Insufficient Funds)
Martin Blake (A: 8/19/21; Insufficient Funds)
Mary Jo Walters (A: 7/18/23; Insufficient Funds)
Mathew Lee Tyler (A: 11/12/20; Insufficient Funds)
Matthew Dolan (A: 5/22/21; Insufficient Funds)
Matthew Harding (A: 3/16/22; Insufficient Funds)
Matthew Lichtenberger (A: 11/25/23; Insufficient Funds)
May Alice Catherine Wells (A: 10/16/23; Insufficient Funds)
Melissa Milhorn (A: 12/9/21; Insufficient Funds)
Michael David Anthony (A: 1/5/22; Insufficient Funds)
Michael Edward Jorgensen (A: 3/26/23; Insufficient Funds)
Michael Hood (A: 3/23/23; Insufficient Funds)
Michael Pnacek (A: 1/2/24; Insufficient Funds)
Michael Zayas (A: 6/11/22; Insufficient Funds)
Michelle A. Miser (A: 2/21/23; Insufficient Funds)
Mykal Anstrom (A: 3/11/16; Insufficient Funds)
Natia Langston-Valenzuela (A: 5/29/23; Insufficient Funds)
Nicholas Biller (A: 7/7/21; Insufficient Funds)
Nicholas Lance (A: 7/2/20; Insufficient Funds)
Nicholas Luppino (A: 11/22/22; Insufficient Funds)
Nicholas Parham (A: 3/9/21; Insufficient Funds)
Nikki Ray Pino (A: 1/8/24; Insufficient Funds)
Nikolette Hastings (A: 3/19/21; Insufficient Funds)
Norman Arevalo (A: 1/24/24; Insufficient Funds)
Optimus Prime (A: 1/17/24; Insufficient Funds)
Paul Auger (A: 12/28/23; Insufficient Funds)
Paul Catanese (A: 6/20/23; Insufficient Funds)
Paul Manion (A: 2/17/21; Insufficient Funds)
Paul Matthew Brough V (A: 12/26/22; Insufficient Funds)
Phillip Drake (A: 1/4/24; Insufficient Funds)
Phillip Emerson (A: 2/25/21; Insufficient Funds)
President R19 Boddie (A: 6/11/23; Insufficient Funds)
Princess Khandijah Maryam Jacob-Fambro (A: 11/10/23; Insufficient Funds)
Raistlin Osmon (A: 1/1/24; Insufficient Funds)
Raphael Edward Cruz (A: 1/22/24; Insufficient Funds)
Raul Cortina (A: 8/11/23; Insufficient Funds)
Raymond Fogg (A: 9/15/23; Insufficient Funds)
Rebecca Anne Knighting (A: 8/4/23; Insufficient Funds)
Regina D. DiSilvestro (A: 5/26/23; Insufficient Funds)
Richard Allen Kent (A: 6/11/23; Insufficient Funds)
Richard Charles Moncada (A: 8/12/23; Insufficient Funds)
Richard John Walters (A: 4/7/23; Insufficient Funds)
Rita Feline Williams (A: 12/1/23; Insufficient Funds)
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (A: 10/9/23)
Robert Francis Lungo (A: 10/24/22; Insufficient Funds)
Robert Humphrey (A: 1/12/23; Insufficient Funds)
Robert Wells (A: 1/25/23; Insufficient Funds)
Robert Wendell Smith (A: 5/29/23; Insufficient Funds)
Robin Mitchell (A: 11/12/21; Insufficient Funds)
Rod Mack (A: 12/6/22; Insufficient Funds)
Rodney James Howard (A: 6/24/23; Insufficient Funds)
Roger W. Charles (A: 12/12/23; Insufficient Funds)
Romero Awtro Crawford (A: 4/10/23; Insufficient Funds)
Ronaliseya Renea Stoudemire (A: 4/24/23; Insufficient Funds)
Samantha Hendrick (A: 6/13/23; Insufficient Funds)
Sammy Garret (A: 12/9/20; Insufficient Funds)
Samuel Albert Brown (A: 9/17/23; Insufficient Funds)
Samuel B. Hoff (A: 3/21/22; Insufficient Funds)
Samuel Lyndell Powell (A: 8/10/23; Insufficient Funds)
Saundra Lou Edgell (A: 4/27/23; Insufficient Funds)
Scott Aiden Gardner (A: 4/27/23; Insufficient Funds)
Scott Wayne Nelson (A: 11/15/22; Insufficient Funds)
Sharon E. Brooks (A: 5/9/23; E: 9/12/23)
Shawn Waltz (A: 12/11/23; Insufficient Funds)
Shear'Ree Shear'Ree (A: 3/14/23; Insufficient Funds)
Sheila Robinson (A: 5/11/22; Insufficient Funds)
Shiva Ayyadurai (A: 4/9/23)
Shondra Y. Irving (A: 6/26/23; Insufficient Funds)
Sorinne Ardeleanu (A: 1/21/21; Insufficient Funds)
Stacey Allen Williams (A: 1/9/24; Insufficient Funds)
Suzzanna V. Tanner (A: 4/5/23; Insufficient Funds)
Sylvania Thompson (A: 7/17/23; Insufficient Funds)
Tamiko Powell (A: 1/9/23; Insufficient Funds)
Tanya Pearson (A: 5/11/22; Insufficient Funds)
Terrance Abraham (A: 2/18/23; Insufficient Funds)
Theodore Emory Lind (A: 12/27/23; Insufficient Funds)
Thomas Edward Burton (A: 12/8/22; Insufficient Funds)
Thomas Ernest Ross Jr. (A: 10/17/23; Insufficient Funds)
Thomas James Kidd (A: 4/25/23; Insufficient Funds)
Thomas L. Coats (A: 7/14/23; Insufficient Funds)
Tiffany Shawn Ford (A: 4/21/23; Insufficient Funds)
Timothy Joseph Cyr (A: 6/12/23; Insufficient Funds)
Timothy R. Millus (A: 9/21/23; Insufficient Funds)
Tina Jayne Hahn (A: 2/26/23; Insufficient Funds)
Tina Rose (A: 2/25/21; Insufficient Funds)
TJ Elgin (A: 12/18/20; Insufficient Funds)
Toby Martini (A: 3/13/21; Insufficient Funds)
Tony Zorc (A: 11/15/22; E: 11/28/23)
Van Kent (A: 3/37/23; Insufficient Funds)
Vincent Cordova (A: 9/24/21; Insufficient Funds)
Wenona Gardner (A: 10/6/21; Insufficient Funds)
Wesley Todd Inselman (A: 12/14/22; Insufficient Funds)
William Farms (A: 12/2/23; 12/4/23)
William G. Jackson (A: 2/19/23; Insufficient Funds)
William Kennedy (A: 4/6/23; Insufficient Funds)
William Marsters (A: 8/10/23; Insufficient Funds)
William Wallace (A: 5/9/23; Insufficient Funds)
Willita Bush-Boyd (A: 1/16/21; Insufficient Funds)
Wyatt Endres (A: 5/26/22; Insufficient Funds)
** Summary taken from goodparty.org
Back to 2024 Party List
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wausaupilot · 5 months
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Prep basketball: Monday's scores
The Associated Press BOYS PREP BASKETBALL= Almond-Bancroft 87, Northland Lutheran 39 Ashwaubenon 81, D.C. Everest 60 Blair-Taylor 65, Plum City/Elmwood 51 Brodhead 72, River Valley 52 Chequamegon 46, Boyceville 43 Columbus 63, Marshall 37 Cuba City 67, Galena, Ill. 63 Eau Claire Immanuel Lutheran 63, Cornell 24 Gillett 60, Gibraltar 36 Green Bay West 79, Chilton 74 Howards Grove 77,…
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odinsblog · 7 months
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🤡🤡🤡 clown alert
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Nazi lover Harlan Crow out here collecting weak minded, “educated” negroes like Pokémon. He’s already got Clarence Thomas, and now he’s going for “brother” Cornel West because he’s gotta catch ‘em all, I guess ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
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It’s funny because I’ve seen some dejected Cornel West followers who can’t believe he sold out for $3,300 dollars, less than the price of a crappy used car.
My thoughts are 1) Either West is hard up for cash so he sold out to a Nazi for dirt cheap, or 2) the $3,300 is only the beginning of a very long payoff like Clarence Thomas has been receiving, and therefore he really didn’t sell out for cheap, or 3) Cornel West is simply thee dumbest retail politician ever, because if 1) and 2) aren’t true, then you must ask yourself why Mr. West didn’t simply say, “Oopsies, my bad. That was a clerical oversight and my campaign has already returned the donation.” Easy peasy, problem solved.
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BUT INSTEAD, what West is doing is, he is defending his long “friendship” with Harlan Crow, the Nazi lover. Which, of course, begs several other questions: How long have you known this racist billionaire? What, precisely, has been the nature of this long term “friendship”? Has he ever given money to you or your family or any of your projects before?
Sorry, but those are your only three options, and the longer & harder West continues to stand up for Crow, the more it looks very bad and very suspect for Mr. West.
And you know Black twitter, they hopped into the way back machine and are pulling up all the old receipts, like Cornel West praising Ronald fucking Reagan, for example.
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Good riddance to Cornel West. He’s in the sunken place, sunk into the floor. He’s a clown.
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jackabernard · 5 months
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"Donald Trump - Remember to Thank Cornell West for Your Election in 2024"; Fayette county News; 11-24-23
“Ralph Nader is not going to be welcome anywhere near the corridors [of Congress]. Nader cost us the election.”- Joe Biden, 2000  I like to watch Dr. Cornell West when he is on TV. He’s a lot of fun and sharp as a tack. And he is dedicated. He has also taught at our most prestigious universities. But…how can someone so brilliant be so darn naïve as to run for President (announcing first as a…
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christophe76460 · 6 months
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Votre sens de la justice ?
“Les hommes adonnés au mal ne comprennent pas ce qui est juste, tandis que ceux qui cherchent l'Eternel comprennent tout.” Pr 28. 5
Le mot justice apparaît plus de cent fois dans les Ecritures. Esaïe écrit : “Le Seigneur est un Dieu juste : heureux tous ceux qui espèrent en Lui” (Es 30. 18). Si la justice et l’équité sont des caractéristiques de Dieu, il est normal qu’Il veuille que Ses enfants fassent preuve de justice et d’équité envers les autres. Esaïe écrit :“Apprenez à faire le bien, préoccupez-vous du droit des gens, tirez d'affaire l'opprimé, rendez justice à l'orphelin, défendez la cause de la veuve” (Es 1. 17), et Amos ajoute : “ Mais que le droit jaillisse comme un cours d'eau, et la justice comme un torrent qui n’arrête jamais de couler !” (Am 5. 24). Les gens malhonnêtes et égoïstes ne se soucient pas des intérêts des autres. Ils foulent aux pieds le droit des opprimés, parce qu’ils ne comprennent pas que l’on puisse être généreux envers ceux qui souffrent ou qui sont démunis de tout. La générosité n’est pas innée à l’homme. C’est l’amour de Dieu pour nous qui peut transformer notre cœur et le rendre réceptif aux soucis et peines d’autrui.
Les vrais enfants de Dieu comprennent que leur vie doit être gouvernée par un sens de justice qui vient de Dieu. Notre société est bien différente de celle dans laquelle vivait l’auteur des Proverbes, mais ce sont toujours les mêmes gens qui souffrent d’un manque de justice à leur égard : les personnes âgées, les handicapés, les pauvres, les immigrants, les réfugiés... etc. Lutter contre l’injustice qui prévaut dans notre société n’est pas chose facile, mais Dieu nous demande de le faire. L’apôtre Jacques déclare : “La religion pure et sans tache devant Dieu le Père, la voici : visiter les orphelins et les veuves dans leur détresse ; se garder du monde pour ne pas se souiller” (Jc 1. 27). Jésus s’est mis en colère devant les Pharisiens et leur a crié : “malheur à vous, Pharisiens, vous qui versez la dîme de la menthe, de la rue et de tout ce qui pousse dans le jardin, et qui laissez de côté la justice et l’amour de Dieu...” (Lc 11. 42). Le philosophe Cornel West a dit : “La justice est l’image publique de l’amour !” Comment pouvons-nous faire preuve d’amour envers autrui sans défendre ses droits et l’aider à obtenir justice ? Dans quelle direction le désir de faire preuve d’amour et de justice vous poussera-t-il ? Vous êtes le seul à pouvoir répondre à cette question !
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apenitentialprayer · 4 months
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On Cornel West's Method of Expression
[George] Yancy: What shapes your synoptic style of writing? [Cornel] West: Part of it, for me, has to do with a sense of history, which is very important. Anytime you have a sense of history, then you are always talking about the very complex relations of the present to the past and the ways in which futures are embedded in the present. And anytime you talk about history, it usually takes some narrative form, there is some story likeness, and that tends to be easier to follow oftentimes. I think that is probably one factor that shapes my synoptic style of writing. Also, there is a certain kind of openness about one's own self such that people can see that you're being self-critical and they can see how you are complicitous with some of the very things that you talk about. In other words, it's not a matter of simply pointing fingers or calling names, but really showing that you are in the very mess that you are trying to grasp. Moreover, this tends to open people up a little bit. If you're willing to take a risk and become vulnerable, then it tends to open others to take a risk and become vulnerable with regards to listening to what you're saying.
- Cornel West (“On My Intellectual Vocation” from his Reader, page 24). Formatting changed to avoid wall of text.
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uselectionnews · 7 months
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"It’s Not Me, It’s You: Cornel West’s Messy Breakup," by Calder McHugh in Politico.
"A State With One of the Highest Execution Rates Considers a Moratorium," by Austin Sarat in Slate.
"Scoop: Inside the Jordan and Scalise meeting on the House speaker race," by Juliegrace Brufke in Axios.
"Israel uses white phosphorus in Gaza, video shows," by Meg Kelly in The Washington Post.
"Steve Scalise quits speaker race after humiliating 24 hours," by Andrew Prokop in Vox.
"Movie Theaters Are Figuring Out a Way to Bring People Back," by Sam Adams in Slate.
"The Woman Who Took Down Joe Rogan," by Luke Winkie in Slate.
"Israel must not react stupidly," by George Packer in The Atlantic.
"El Niño is nowhere near done wreaking havoc on the world’s weather," by Umair Irfan in Vox.
"The Left Abandoned Me," by Gal Beckerman in The Atlantic.
"When My Son Was Arrested for Trying to Join ISIS, I Knew the Deeper Culprit" by Raymond Williams in Slate.
"‘This is no time’: Rivals rip Trump for criticizing Netanyahu," by Adam Wren and Natalie Allison in Politico.
"Tupac’s Murder Was Never a Whodunit," by Joel Anderson in Slate.
"Conservatives target Ohio to end their losing streak on abortion votes," Alice Miranda Ollstein in Politico.
"We're in a new Gilded Age. What did we learn from the last one?," by Sara Morrison in Vox.
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ledenews · 10 months
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Wheeling Nailers Re-Sign Defenseman Sebastian Dirven
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The Wheeling Nailers, proud ECHL affiliate of the Pittsburgh Penguins, are excited to announce their sixth player signing of the 2023 offseason. Wheeling has re-signed defenseman Sebastian Dirven to an ECHL contract. Dirven, 25, made his professional debut with the Nailers in April, after completing his collegiate playing career. Sebastian recorded one goal, two assists, three points, and ten shots on goal in his first four career contests. His first point came via an assist in a 6-2 win over Iowa on April 7th, which was followed by his first pro goal the following night in a 4-3 victory against Fort Wayne. "Sebastian is big and mobile, which is a hard combination to find in a defenseman," said Nailers Head Coach Derek Army. "In college, he showed that he can be a solid defensive player and a good penalty killer. He showed us that he can do even more at the pro level." Prior to turning pro, the Bainsville, Ontario native attended Cornell University, where he was enrolled in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, while he played three seasons for the Big Red. Dirven suited up in 93 of the school's 95 games over the course of those three seasons, and amassed three goals, 12 assists, 15 points, and a +22 rating. Sebastian's defensive game shined brightly in his final year at Cornell, as he finished fifth on the team with 24 blocked shots. The 2022-23 Big Red also earned a spot in the NCAA National Tournament and upset fourth-ranked Denver in the opening round. Sebastian Dirven and the Wheeling Nailers will open the 2023-24 season on the road against the Cincinnati Cyclones on Saturday, October 21st. The team's home opener is Saturday, November 4th against the Reading Royals at 7:10. Season memberships and other terrific ticket plans for the 2023-24 season are available now by calling (304) 234-GOAL. The Wheeling Nailers, considered one of the top things to do in Wheeling, West Virginia, provide affordable family entertainment for fans throughout the Ohio Valley. Read the full article
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