Category Archives: Politics

Banned by Facebook

Used to be “Banned in Boston” was the way to sell books. Now the way to make a video go viral is to say it was banned by Facebook. Susie Madrak reports that,

JoshSchwerin, Priorities USA’s comms director, wrote on Twitter, “They are refusing to let @prioritiesUSA run this ad because, according to them, it violates their sensational content policy. ‘Ads must not contain shocking, sensational, inflammatory, or excessively violent content.'”

“[S]hocking, sensational, inflammatory, or excessively violent content”???

You be the judge:

Posted in Trump | Comments Off on Banned by Facebook

Powerful Stuff: Doc Rivers on Racial Injustice

Doc Rivers, coach of the LA Clippers, after their blowout victory over the Dallas Mavericks, had things on his mind that go way beyond sports.

I’ve never been real fond of Doc Rivers. I may have to reconsider.

Posted in Basketball, Civil Rights | 13 Comments

The Ultimate Insider’s View of Trump

Michael Cohen previews Trump’s speeches at the GOP Convention.

Posted in 2020 Election, The Scandals | Comments Off on The Ultimate Insider’s View of Trump

Sincerely, Estella

From the DNC last night:

Posted in 2020 Election, Immigration | 1 Comment

Election Aftermaths, Primary 2020

A few takeaways from yesterday’s local elections, in which many of my favored candidates lost:

  • KFR wins again and will continue on as State Attorney; Melba Peterson’s campaign was hamstrung by COVID limits on campaigning, and by a huge fundraising disadvantage that couldn’t overcome the name recognition deficit. One can only hope that our State Attorney feels a little bit more pressure to do something about abuses by police and Corrections, and–this is really too much to hope for–rampant campaign finance abuse in local politics.
  • The judicial elections once again provided ample support for the claim that women with Hispanic names tend to beat candidates who lack them. It used to be they beat Anglo men, now maybe they beat everyone non-Hispanic?
    • Unfortunately, this trend extended to the election of the utterly unqualified Rosy Aponte over the capable and experienced Dava Tunis.  It’s enough to make you question the divinity of the vox populi.
  • Another trend I’ve noticed is that judicial candidates with unusual names often do poorly.  (We lost Fleur Lobree that way a few years ago.) That can’t have helped Olanike “Nike” Adebayo, although Joe Perkins ran a well-funded and very very energetic campaign. He, at least, has the skills and smarts to be a judge; we’ll see about the temperament.
  • The November runoffs for County Mayor, and for the District 7 Commission seat will be the most partisan in recent memory and might well depend on how the headline Presidential election drives turnout.  The Mayoral candidates will be Bovo, who ran explicitly as a Trumpist, and Cava, who may not have explicitly run as a Democrat, but did implicitly and clearly was the Democratic Party’s favorite. Bovo’s strategy was well-calculated to get him into the runoff, but are there enough pro-Trump voters, or Cuban voters who’ll look past that, in Miami-Dade to carry him to the finish? I hope not.  He’d be awful. Similarly, in District 7, Cindy Lerner is endorsed by Democrats, and Rachel Regalado by Republicans — but Regalado didn’t wrap herself around Trump like Bovo did, which has to give her a better chance of winning.
Posted in 2020 Election, Miami | 2 Comments

Powerful USPS-Related Video

You have to wonder what the Trump people were thinking — if anything — when they took on the Post Office. Are Mom and Apple Pie next? (Could be, they already threw grandparents under the bus.)

I’m guessing they figured no one could stop them, and then stopped thinking about the problem.

Anyway, looks like they were wrong about that. This ought to hurt:

From VoteVets.

Posted in 2020 Election, The Scandals | 1 Comment