Author Topic: : Does Our Media Work For The People 4 ?---------------  (Read 115723 times)

0 Members and 15 Guests are viewing this topic.

Solstice

  • Guest
An observation:

If it wasn't for the 2 or so actual people behind the few active screen names constantly regurgitating copyrighted content without consent, mindless political memes, and racist tropes, this place - and the other - would be complete ghost towns.

Online

  • Forum Moderator
  • 25 Grand Member
  • *
  • Posts: 59426
  • Reputation: +280/-12
A couple observations

Platner "the victim" spiel which was about his entire speech tonight if he keeps that up will depress Democratic turnout and help Collins win.

People in DC should stay in DC
But he had no problem with Bernie Sanders coming down from DC to endorse him.

The things he says about fair transparent process to replace him are pretty much what hear from Democratic Party of Maine.
To begin with you've got less than 3 weeks. You're not going to have normal campaign and primary.
I posted about 500-600 delegates from every county in state have a convention

The poor common man spiel. Not so poor. Not so successful.
I hear dad paid like $200,000 of $205,000 mortgage.
 It turned out that, far from being a successful oyster fisherman, his biggest customer was his mother, who runs a restaurant. Platner’s claims of a hardscrabble youth were contradicted by stories of living off his parents’ generosity and stints at an elite private school.

What people were attracted to is Platner's positions which is fine I share a lot of that but Democratic candidates all over the country and in Maine besides him that support that

Online

  • Forum Moderator
  • 25 Grand Member
  • *
  • Posts: 59426
  • Reputation: +280/-12
  Why Graham Platner’s progressive supporters ignored glaring warning signs
There are painful but necessary lessons to be learned from the Maine Democratic Senate candidate’s rise and fall.
Michael A. Cohen: There are painful but necessary lessons to be learned from the Maine Democratic Senate candidate’s rise and fall.
MS NOW · ms.now


The first lesson is don’t fall in love with an unvetted political outsider — or, for that matter, any politician. When he announced his candidacy, Platner told a compelling story. He was a political outsider with no experience in electoral politics, a Marine combat veteran and an oyster fisherman in a state where working on the water is a badge of honor.

It was obvious that Platner was allergic to the truth and would say anything to keep his candidacy alive. But it also couldn’t have been clearer that, despite Platner’s protestations, there were more shoes to drop. Yet again, plenty of Democrats ignored the clear warning signs and continued to support him.

 Democratic Party establishment is not so dumb when it comes to politics. Last Fall, when Platner was emerging as a candidate, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer recruited Maine’s two-term Democratic governor Janet Mills to challenge for the seat. And while Mills was a lackluster, ineffectual campaign, Schumer’s instinct was that a vetted, known quantity was a better bet to defeat Collins than an untested political neophyte.   

Over the past several weeks, the Democratic establishment has taken it on the chin from angry and frustrated Democratic voters. But the fact is, Democrats are in a prime position to potentially win the Senate next fall because Schumer and the establishment have put the right pieces in place.

Online

  • Forum Moderator
  • 25 Grand Member
  • *
  • Posts: 59426
  • Reputation: +280/-12
 Schumer recruited former Gov. Roy Cooper, D-N.C., to run for his state’s open seat — and Cooper is currently leading in the polls. Schumer also signed up former Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, to run again for his old seat, former Rep. Mary Peltola, D-Alaska, and tacitly backed state Sen. Josh Turek in Iowa and state Sen. James Talarico in Texas. All four of these races — in states Trump won comfortably in 2024 — are neck and-neck.

Meanwhile, before this week’s allegations, Platner and Collins were more or less tied in Maine, even though the state’s voters favored Democrats on the generic congressional ballot by 11 percentage points.

Finally, the most important lesson from Platner is not to surrender your integrity for partisan advantage. When Platner revealed in October that he had a Nazi tattoo for nearly 20 years and only discovered its true meaning, that should have been the end. Yet, once again, many Democrats compartmentalized that piece of information out of a misplaced devotion to Platner’s outsider candidacy — and willfully ignored the genuine concerns raised by Jewish Democrats. When allegations of toxic behavior toward past girlfriends emerged, Platner’s supporters, who regularly condemn President Donald Trump for his predatory behavior and preach the mantra “believe women,” waved them away.

 

Topix Too