Hillary Clinton’s Being Presumptive Nominee Is Historic Only In The Context of a Two-Party System Where Both Democrats and Republicans Work Against Other Parties Gaining A Foothold

Don’t be fooled – the only true divide in America isn’t men vs. women, black vs. white, Muslim vs. Christian or any other binary.

The only one that matters is rich vs. poor and Hillary is very clearly on the side of the rich while Bernie Sanders is on the side of the poor.

It’s great that she’s likely to be the first female nominee* (*of one of two major parties) but it’s not worth celebrating too much, given the advantages she had via her wealth, privilege and connections to obtain this nomination.

(Graphic and inspiration for the thoughts above from Reddit)

Music Monday – “Just wait ’til I finish this glass/Then sweet little lady/I’ll head back to the bar/And you can kiss my ass!”

He’s got a lot of hits and he played many of them this past weekend in Saskatoon.

But what other song could I post today than the Garth Brooks song that made me a huge fan for life?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IGk7DFYx9AI

“Friends in Low Places” – Garth Brooks

~ Swirl ~ (A Poem About How The Orlando Shootings Gave Double Meanings To Everything This Weekend)

(I started writing this Sunday night but didn’t finish until Monday.  I’m backdating it to be a Sunday post though as that seems most appropriate given Sunday’s incredibly tragic events.)

~ Swirl ~

Thursday
My library staff do a tour of the local Muslim school.
We observe prayers.  We learn to say “library” in Arabic.  We ask questions to learn & understand.
The sense of community is overwhelming.

Friday
The kids are with their grandparents so Shea and I have a chance for a night out in some downtown clubs.
We watch young people talking.  We watch young people drinking.  We watch young people flirting.
The sense of community is overwhelming.

Saturday (afternoon)
In the downtown Saskatoon park, the Pride Festival is on.
We see people full of joy.  Full of fun.  Full of life.
The sense of community is overwhelming.

Saturday (night)
A world famous country singer was once seen as controversial for a song proclaiming “When we’re free to love/Anyone we choose“.
We join an audience of young and old, rich and poor, conservative and liberal.
The sense of community is overwhelming.

Sunday
An unplanned trip to the ER ends in a minor operation to drain an infected wound.
Blood everywhere on the blankets, dripping on my pants, on the prescription the doctor hands me.
The sense of fear, of loss, of shock is overwhelming.

Forever.
Muslims.  Bars and clubs.  LGBTQ2.  Music.
Communities.  Blood.   Shock.
Swirl together.

Saturday Snap – Guess Who We Saw in The Lobby of the #yxe Bessborough Hotel This Afternoon?

Random Dude in Cowboy Hat

Some random dude wearing a cowboy hat.  But wouldn’t it have been cool if we happened to see Garth Brooks? 😉

Friday Fun Link – Getting Excited For @GarthBrooks in Saskatoon! #yxe

I’m not going to post a picture of Sasha running around the house naked in a cowboy hat but I can tell you that she’s not even going to the concert yet her parents’ excitement must be contagious.

Mommy was singing and dancing in the kitchen, daddy dug through his old CDs to find the various Garth Brooks albums we have for our drive to Saskatoon on Saturday morning and the kids get to go have a sleepover with Grandpa and Grandma (which for the time being, beats going to concerts.)

The reviews of the first show on Thursday night were glowing and based on his history (one small example – many still say Garth is the best show Craven Country Jamboree ever had just before he hit it really big), this show has the potential to be the best concert we’ve ever seen!

Can’t wait!

10 Moments That Have Defined The US Primaries @hillaryclinton @berniesanders @donaldtrump #politics #uspoli #primaries #election

Here’s a list of some the most memorable moments from this wild and wacky primary season.

For the record, here’s the list

  1. Trump launches his campaign by calling Mexicans “rapists”
  2. The Bernie movement is born
  3. Trump attacks a Fox journalist saying “blood coming out of her…wherever”
  4. Bernie doesn’t take opportunity to attack Clinton on e-mails in early debate
  5. Clinton testifies on Benghazi for 11 hours
  6. Trump loses first primary in Iowa and behaves…graciously?
  7. Jeb Bush: “Please clap?”
  8. Chris Christie taunts repetitive Marcobot
  9. Trump rallies become increasingly violent
  10. Cruz’ last stand: “Trump is utterly amoral”

That’s a pretty good summary of the “highlights” of the primary season but I’ll add a few of my own not mentioned on this list…

  1. In an early Democratic debate in response to a question about “who your enemies are”, Jim Webb says something about “all the people he killed in war”.
  2. Trump actually alludes to the size of his penis being “no problem” during a Republican debate after being attacked about the size of his hands.
  3. Bernie Sanders beats Hillary in fundraising for three (?) months in a row proving his point that you can succeed with a grassroots campaign.
  4. That bird that landed on his podium at one rally and inspired many “Birdie Sanders” memes
  5. Trump holds a press conference where he basically tries to sell his steaks and bottled water products
  6. Cruz tries to kiss his daughter who pulls away.  At a different event later in the campaign, he tries to hug his wife and bops her in the face
  7. Chris Christie’s shocked, stunned face standing behind Trump after endorsing him while Trump makes the odd crack at Christie standing right behind him.
  8. Bernie’s win in Michigan which is the biggest upset (based on polls) in thirty years.
  9. The Attorney General’s report is released confirming that Hillary did violate the rules and many of her statements about her private e-mail server were lies.
  10. Clinton and Trump actually clinching their respective nominations have to be considered memorable moments – for *very* different reasons.

Wow, to show how many memorable moments there have been, here’s another list I found which has a number of moments that weren’t covered in either list above!

  1. Trump defends the size of his hands and by extension, his penis
  2. Carly Fiorina sings
  3. Jeb Bush “Please clap!”
  4. Christie’s face behind Trump
  5. Kasich hugs a supporter
  6. Republican candidates miss their cue to enter a debate stage
  7. “Sick and tired of your damn e-mails!”
  8. Hillary tongue-lashes a Greenpeace protester
  9. Rubio accuses Cruz of not being able to speak Spanish
  10. A team of young cheerleaders in US-flag outfits sings a song praising him before Trump takes the stage
  11. Birdie Sanders

[Update – here’s the mother of all “memorable election” lists with 65 items!]

What Could @BernieSanders Have Done Differently To Beat @hillaryclinton? #primaryday #politics #feelthebern #notmeus

So last night, the Associated Press announced that they’d surveyed all Democratic super-delegates and there were enough who indicated previously undeclared support for Hillary Clinton that AP was ready to consider her the presumptive Democratic Presidential nominee prior to today’s votes in California, New Jersey and a handful of other states.

Journalist Glenn Greenwald summarizes the problems with how this was announced perfectly

This is the perfect symbolic ending to the Democratic Party primary. The nomination is consecrated by a media organization, on a day when nobody voted, based on secret discussions with anonymous establishment insiders and donors whose identity the media organization – incredibly – conceals. The decisive edifice of super-delegates is itself anti-democratic and inherently corrupt: designed to prevent actual voters from making choices that the party establishment dislikes. But for a party run by insiders and funded by corporate interests, it’s only fitting that their nomination process ends with such an ignominious, awkward and undemocratic sputter.

It is definitely another weird development in an election season that continues to be one nearly unbelievable incident after another.

But really, with the only avenues left for Bernie Sanders to gain the nomination being:
1) since neither Hillary or Bernie will have enough *pledged* delegates to clinch the nomination before the Democratic convention, try to make the case to the unelected superdelegates to switch to him as more electable (even if true, hard since Bernie’s campaign has villainized “the establishment” which is basically who the superdelegates are)

2) the announcement of results of the FBI investigation into Hillary’s private e-mail server while Secretary of State (which is what I’m still holding out hope for – all evidence is showing that she *did* break the law very clearly but then it’s just a question of whether a highly placed, powerful politician will be held to the same standard as those on lower rungs.

Anyhow, if Hillary’s nomination is an all-but-sure thing, it makes me think about how close Bernie came and what, in hindsight, he might’ve done differently throughout his campaign to have more success:

  • Perhaps the biggest factor is how much he ceded to Hillary in terms of African American support in some of the southern states which created a gap in delegates he’s never been able to make up.  I’m not sure what, if anything Bernie could’ve done differently to make better inroads running against the wife of Bill Clinton (aka “the first Black President”) who is a southerner, very religious and has very strong connections with that community.
  • It was a memorable line in an early debate for Bernie to say “I’m tired of hearing about your damn e-mails” but it was telling that he admitted that it probably wasn’t good politics to say so.  I wonder if things had been different if he’d been a *bit* more aggressive in pointing out Hillary’s scandals, corruption, and so on to better draw a contrast with himself.  It’s a delicate line to run and we ran into the same thing with the Ryan Meili campaign – if you’re the “positive” candidate and you don’t want to piss off supporters of another candidate who’s on the same “team”, how do you walk that line about making fair comparisons but without getting into the gutter?
  • Here’s another one that was a tough call but I wonder, could Bernie has embraced the fact that he’d be the first minority religion President (as someone who is Jewish) to counter Hillary’s “first woman President” line that she alternately embraced and denied as anything special wanting to be judged solely on her merits.  Honestly, this was probably too dangerous of territory for Bernie to enter and he was smart not to make it about “my identity politics are just as important as yours” since I suspect Bernie’s (cultural but not really religious) Jewishness is a more loaded minefield than Hillary’s gender.
  • This was out of his control but if certain states had voted in a different order, that could have created a different story of the momentum of the race.  Bernie won 7 states in a row but that was right after Hillary won 7 so he was already seen as too far behind to catch up by many commentators.
  • Bernie was great at staying on message and framing everything as relating back to his core message of “income inequality/rigged economy” in answers about everything from the environment to education to health to the number of corrupt politicians the United States has.  But sometimes, I wanted him to give answers on a more practical, personal level (and yes, why not even pander a wee bit?) instead of this high level “umbrella” theme that he used to cover everything.
  • As mentioned, lumping all super-delegates as “establishment” when you are demonizing the “establishment” in your campaign (and have reached a point where you need them if you’re going to get the nomination) was a mistake and he could’ve been a bit better at separating the concept from the actual people maybe?
  • He could’ve done more to effectively use the Internet for fundraising and organizing.  (Just kidding – that was something he kicked ass at!)
  • Finally, he could’ve used the same technique Ted Cruz used and try announcing who his Vice Presidential running mate would’ve been really early.  This is unusual but not unprecedented (I can’t remember who but I think other candidates have done it in past year before Cruz did) and could’ve had numerous benefits – if he picked a woman and announced he was only going to stay for one term, that could’ve somewhat offset one of Hillary’s main selling points (first female President), it would’ve given him another strong surrogate, it could’ve helped reinforce his strengths if it was someone with honesty, youth appeal and charisma.  Depending on who he picked, it might even help negate Hillary’s constant appeals to her connection to Obama! 😉

I know it’s a long shot but with both Clinton and Trump facing record-high unfavourably ratings and Bernie rating as very favourable across the spectrum, I really hope he decides to run as a third-party candidate as I think there’s a real chance he could come up the middle.

He owes the Democratic Party nothing after how they’ve run this election and although there’s a risk he could split liberal voters and make a path for Trump, I really think he’d draw a slight majority of Democratic voters plus enough independents to take it all.

Music Monday – “Silent now but you used to laugh before”

In 1990, just before they got massive, The Tragically Hip played a small club in Regina called “The Venue”.  Someone put a video camera on one of the balconies in the club and has now posted some of this historically valuable footage.

Here’s a clip of an unreleased early song called “Night Comes Down” (or “Night Calls Out” according to The Hip Museum) from that show which highlights the Hip’s early bluesy roots…

Night Calls Out” – Tragically Hip

Hmm, Maybe I Should Do More Political Blogging?

My post about #elbowgate got shared out by a few well-connected people on a couple different social media sites and ended up getting, oh, about a zillion times more traffic to that one post than my blog posts usually get.

Saturday Snap – They Don’t Fit!

Sasha tried to help me get my shoes on the other day…

Shoes Don't Fit