On comics and candidates

Screen Shot 2016-05-25 at 10.21.08 PM.pngSo, Captain America’s a Nazi, supposedly.  And always has been.  He’s headed the Avengers for the majority of their existence and I think he was President once.  But right now is the big time to play that card.

Sure.

I’ve been reading comic books for a while, guys, and I’m old enough to recognize bullshit when I see it. Remember how people got all mad about the recent revelation that Han Solo was married during the original trilogy?  That was transparently a misdirect from the first panel and it got all sorts of people twisted up.  Now, I suspect the first panel of Steve Rogers: Captain America #2 is not going to be Cap saying “…Psych!” and that this will last a little bit longer than Solo’s “marriage.”  But for Christ’s sake, he got his original body back because a living embodiment of a Cosmic Cube decided to screw around with him.  (Comic books.  Shut up.)  So I suspect there are probably some shenanigans going on here.

Now, all that said, I really don’t like this direction, and making Cap a Nazi squicks for all kinds of reason that are more specific to Cap than, say, when they made Iron Man an asshole a couple of years ago.  Which, as it turned out, was a great storyline.  I was going to buy this issue, if only because I love the artist quite a bit, but I can’t reward this nonsense with my money.  But that doesn’t mean that I’m not fully aware that everything’s gonna get rolled back to normal in a few months.  And once it does, they can have my money again.


I think– and if I’ve said this before, it’s indisputably true now– that I’m officially tired of Bernie Sanders now, and it’s time for him to go the hell away.  There has not, to my knowledge, been a single debate between candidates of opposing political parties prior to the conventions in my lifetime, and there sure as shit hasn’t been one between the nominee of one party and the guy who came in second of the other.  And yeah, he came in second.  He lost.  He lost the second he decided he didn’t need to contest the South.  And it should have been obvious to everyone that he lost once New York happened.

It’s clear to me at this point that Sanders makes shitty decisions under pressure.  The first example was his fucking ridiculous family field trip to the Vatican, funded illegally by his campaign, so that he could bother the Pope for five minutes in a hallway for no clear reason.  And this “I’ll debate Trump” thing would be hilarious if he wasn’t clearly taking it seriously.  It’s also sexist as fuck; I refuse to believe he’d be entertaining this nonsense if the person who beat him wasn’t a woman.  Trump is transparently yanking him around by a chain right now and he doesn’t realize it.  It’s fucking pathetic.   And naming Cornel West to the platform committee at the convention is nothing more than a transparent attempt to blow the whole damn thing up.

Screw this guy.  I can’t wait for Al Giordano to announce his primary run for real so I can contribute money to him.


While I’m ranting, let’s cancel the Olympics before they turn Zika into a worldwide epidemic.  I think as soon as “the swimmers and boaters will literally be competing in human waste” became something that we just shrugged at they should have canned the damn thing, and that’s old shit by now.  Add in a planetary infectious disease that causes microcephaly in infants and I just don’t really see the need for the floor competition this year.  dt_160302_olympics_rings_zika_mosquito_800x600.jpg

Primaries and a quick book #review

white-privilege-350.gif.pngTwo primaries today, Kentucky and Oregon.  Both states are 88% white, therefore Sanders will win both.  I’ve seen a couple of reports of a poll out of Oregon that shows Clinton in the lead but I can’t actually find it anywhere and the reports were on Twitter and didn’t include links.  I came across an article on NPR this morning that discusses whiteness in our politics in an interesting way, but while it talks about the astonishing reluctance of most mainstream punditry to even mention racism in connection with Trump’s support, there’s nary a word of the 85% rule.

(Oh, and also: there’s nothing from keeping Trump’s supporters from being both idiots and racists.  Half the problems Republicans see with this country literally do not exist.  There is plenty of room for these people to be stupid and racist at the same time.)

But anyway.

51czyF4FFRL._SX322_BO1,204,203,200_.jpgI finished Tananarive Due’s My Soul to Keep yesterday, a book I read in three big gulps over just a couple of days.  It’s the first book of her four-book African Immortals series, and I think it’s probably the most unapologetic horror novel I’ve read in quite some time.  It’s further evidence that “horror” isn’t really a genre on its own anymore so much as something that infiltrates other genres; the book is equal parts paranormal romance, urban fantasy, and horror, and Due’s writing appears to be what would happen if Anne Rice and Stephen King wrote a book together.

That’s a compliment.

The book I read before this one was Sofia Samatar’s A Stranger in Olondria, and I wrote a rare Goodreads review for it to explain my star-rating.  Samatar is a gorgeous writer; her prose is something I couldn’t equal if my life depended on it, but the story in Olondria kind of left me cold.  Due’s prose is much less flowery and lyrical than Samatar’s is (I could have written My Soul to Keep, which sounds like shade but isn’t; I just think Tananarive Due and I are similar writers) but it’s in service of a much stronger story, one that got in my head and fucked with me something fierce while I was reading it.  As a reader I’m much more likely to respond to strong story and utilitarian writing than I am lyrical writing and a serviceable story– I am, myself, a pretty utilitarian author.  As such I loved the hell out of My Soul to Keep and only enjoyed Stranger in Olondria.  You may feel free to adjust the amount of salt you take with my review if your own preferences are different.

I continue to believe that “no more than 25% books by white dudes” was a great way to structure my reading this year, by the way.  I would never have found this book had I not gone looking for it.  Feel free to check out my Goodreads shelves if you want to see some of the other books I’ve read this year.

Another in a near-endless series of election posts

2012electoralmapresultsfinal110812.jpg

So.

Donald Trump is the GOP nominee.

There are a few ways I could go with this.  I would describe my mood at the moment as “confident, but terrified.”  I think Hillary Clinton’s going to beat this man like a rented mule in November.  But there is a nonzero possibility– it’s not a large possibility, but it exists— that she won’t.  Shit happens.  And patriotism will no longer be remotely possible in a nation that elects Donald Trump president.

The Republicans at this point have proven that they are what the Democrats have been saying they were for the last thirty years.  All of their pretensions are blown away.  They have nominated an open racist and fascist as their candidate for the most powerful person in the world.  And while I’m aware #nevertrump is a thing, I don’t believe it for a second.  Republicans– or at least the pundits and political figures who are being the loudest about #nevertrump right now– always choose party over country, always.  Their former Speaker of the House just admitted to being a rapist and a pedophile and they defended him anyway.  Every single one of the #nevertrump people will come around.  All of them.

There’s lots of talk about high primary turnout.  Take it with a grain of salt, as primary turnout isn’t predictive of the general at all.  Right now, with the best data I can find, the Republicans have had about 25.1 million votes and the Democrats about 21.7 million.  That’s a 3.4 million vote deficit with California and New Jersey, both heavily populated blue states, left to vote; I wouldn’t be surprised if California wipes that deficit out all by itself, especially since Republican turnout is probably going to drop a bit now that the race is settled.  So it doesn’t mean anything, and it’s basically a tie anyway.

As far as the Democratic race, it’s all over but the shouting, although there’s quite a bit of shouting to get through yet.  Just going by the 85% rule, where Sanders wins any state more than 85% white, I would expect Sanders to win West Virginia, North Dakota, Montana, Kentucky, Oregon, and South Dakota, with Clinton winning New Mexico, California, and New Jersey.  You will note which column the states with lots of people are in.  I would guess the four non-state contests– the Virgin Islands, District of Columbia, Guam and Puerto Rico would all go to Clinton as well, but I don’t know the demographics of the Virgin Islands and Guam might fall under the Hawai’i exception, where there aren’t many whites but also few blacks and Hispanics.  Either way there aren’t a lot of delegates there and it doesn’t matter too much which way they go.  I’m more certain about Puerto Rico and DC is a virtual lock for Clinton.

Indiana marks the second time the polls have blown the result.  I have no hard data, this is just my gut feeling, but: Indiana is famously hard to poll, and I find myself wondering if the combination of that difficulty with Sanders’ biggest supporters being cellphone-only means that his people were harder to find.  At any rate, it’s not much of a surprise, because the 85% rule held up.  The other blown result was Michigan, of course, which– again, I’m guessing– was partially the result of a big post-debate Sanders swing that the polls didn’t have time to pick up.  Or maybe not.  Hell if I know.

But back to the general.  Here’s the thing you need to remember.  You should be paying no attention at all to GE polls right now.  Clinton’s ahead, yes, but I would fully expect that with Trump having sewn up the nomination and the Democrats still yelling at each other for a bit, we’re going to see some polls where Trump is ahead, and he should get a bump after the Republican convention.  (Should.  There is a distinct possibility that the Republican convention will be a tacky horrorshow that will cause the nation to collectively take a step back.  It might not help.  I’m really glad the Democratic convention is second.)  It’s not going to matter.  Look at that map up there, and think about the number of states Trump has to flip to win the election, with an electorate that is less white than it was in 2012.  And that’s assuming Clinton flips nothing.  I’m looking at Utah, believe it or not; Mormons hate this guy.  And I still say Indiana could go blue.  And there are probably several more.  Trump needs to flip 62 EV worth of states.  That’s a lot.  Where are they?  Which ones didn’t go for Romney but will go for Trump?

I’ll wait.

(There will be no third party runs, people.  I do wonder if some of the non-pundit, non-politician disaffected Republicans will land Libertarian, which actually have ballot access in most of the country.  But there is no time to put together a third-party run.  These things have deadlines.  They have passed.  No one who has not currently declared is running third party.  Stop talking about it.)

And this entire paragraph is a late addition: I’m seeing a lot of talk about the Republicans’ deep bench again, and how Trump will be hard to beat because he beat all of those Republicans on that deep bench?  That wasn’t a deep bench.  That was a worthless collection of halfwits, charlatans and grifters that I wouldn’t trust to jointly run a Denny’s.    It was a clown show.  Some fucker had to be the last man standing out of all that nonsense, and the fact that the loudest blowhard and bully managed to be that person doesn’t make the bully impressive.

All told: Do not panic.  It’s going to be fine.  split-dinner-1-web.jpg

Some post-voting #INPrimary thoughts

voting_rights.jpg

I didn’t get a goddamn sticker.

Let’s start with some general stuff:  demographically and politically, Indiana ought to be an easy Sanders win.  Not only is the state 86% white, which should all by itself indicate a Sanders win (he’s only won three states less than 85% white, and twelve of thirteen more than that) but we’re an open primary, meaning that whoever wants to pick up a Democratic ballot can do so.  Somehow, though, every poll I’ve seen so far has Clinton ahead, although none by an especially impressive margin.

Also interesting is that Hillary appears to have completely ignored the state, or at least ignored the northern media markets.  Sanders, Cruz and Trump have all had rallies in my city in the last week.  Clinton, as far as I know, had one small event a few towns over and that was the closest she ever got.  I’ve heard radio ads for Sanders, Cruz, and Trump, and seen commercials for Sanders, Cruz, and Trump.  My neighborhood was canvassed by volunteers for Sanders, Cruz, and Trump.  I’ve seen yard signs for Sanders, Cruz, and Trump.  It’s like Hillary’s not even running.  If ever there actually was a silent majority, Hillary Clinton supporters in Indiana are it.

(Note, for the record: every adult I know save one who has told me their preference and lives in Indiana is voting for her.  I know that’s anecdata, but I know Hillary’s people are out there, they’re just being really quiet.)

Cruz’s yard signs are square and weird, by the way.  I’ll update with a picture if I manage to spot one I can actually photograph. Trump’s going to win the state something huge; Cruz was done the second he uttered the phrase “basketball ring” and an endorsement by our enormously unpopular governor is not going to help him.  I don’t think anyone, anywhere should be voting for Trump but I can’t say I mind being a citizen of the state that finally drove a stake into that asshole’s heart.


More specifically, now, and hopefully I do have some readers from elsewhere in the state who can let me know what else is going on:  I voted at about exactly 9:00 in the morning and was voter #128 in my precinct.  There was a line of about a dozen people ahead of me, which has never happened before, and that voter number is higher than usual by quite a bit too.  Our state (maybe just the county? no idea) has switched with this election to using “PollPads” which is basically an iPad app that scans your driver’s license and verifies your address and then  you have to tell it which ballot you want.

With just twelve people in front of me, at 9:00 in the morning, the following happened:

  • One voter was not in the system.  When asked, he said he’d been living at his address for 3 years but– wait for it– had not updated his registration.  This is a clear case of voter dipshittery and the guy was old enough to bloody well know better.  He threw a fit anyway.
  • Two different voters, both elderly, were clearly unused to using iPads for anything and chose the wrong political party.  The poll worker was also elderly and hadn’t been confirming people’s choices with them before hitting the final “accept” button.  They were both told to call a number to get it fixed and wait 20 minutes or so while something got changed in “the system,” and the old man threw a fit, meaning I witnessed two old man fits in less than fifteen minutes.  He flatly refused to call any damn phone number because this was a democracy.  I am not sure what those two things have to do with one another.  At any rate, he got his ballot for the right party (you get two guesses which one, and the first one doesn’t count) and voted without making the call, at which point the poll-worker-in-chief chewed out the poor lady who was handling the iPad right in front of God and everybody for not verifying the parties.  I’m not sure what happened with the other lady.
  • Maybe we train our poll workers better?  The dude was an asshole for yelling at the poll workers but he’s not wrong that they should be double-checking shit, and the notion that you should have to wait 20 minutes for someone off-site to adjust your party choice before you vote is ridiculous.
  • There was one registration iPad.  I don’t know what happens if it crashes.  Polls close at 6, so that last hour is always hectic as hell as people get off work and streak for their polling place.  The lines are going to be fucking ridiculous.
  • Maybe we test this system on a year when there isn’t a Presidential primary, guys?
  • Oh, wait, Republican governor, I’m not surprised at all.  And I’ve also heard from a friend of mine who works polls at a tiny precinct in Amish country that they have two of the damn PollPads.  Gee, I wonder why a small polling place in Amish country might have two and a busier one in the city might only have one?

So.  Yeah.  Potential clusterfuck in the making, here.  We’ll see how it goes.

Why I’m voting for Hillary Clinton today

This post is adapted from my comments on this thread at James Wylder’s website.  source-hillary-clinton-will-announce-her-2016-campaign-this-weekend-660x400.jpg

I spent the majority of the primary season formally undecided between the two Democratic candidates.  I officially “endorsed” Hillary Clinton, if I can pretend I’m important to be able to use that word, about a month ago.  But if you read that post you will note that it’s mostly a post about why I’d decided not to vote for Bernie, as opposed to a post about why I was voting for Clinton.  And after some prodding on the matter by James Wylder, I figured that a more affirmative post was something worth writing– and if I’m going to write such a thing, why not post it on the day my state actually votes in the primary?

So, yeah:  by the time you read this, I will either be about to cast my vote for Hillary Clinton in the Democratic primary, or I will have already done so.  (Also, for those of you local enough for it to matter, Lynn Coleman, Dan Cruz, and Randy Magdalinski.)

I have said some terrible things about Hillary Clinton. If my 2008-era blog were still online, I could point you at some of them. Despite that, I’ll be proudly voting for her today. There are a bunch of reasons why that’s the case; I’ll touch on several of them. And I’ll say this right now: there will be people who can look at my reasons to vote for her and see them as reasons to not trust her. I’m aware of that, but these are MY reasons, so I don’t have to care.

My first reason to be happy to vote for Hillary is one that I know is probably going to catch me some crap: I am deliriously happy to be able to cast a vote for a woman for President. Period. We can argue about whether identity politics are “good reasons,” but ultimately I don’t care. We elected Obama; now I want a woman President. I want the stranglehold white men have on the corridors of power in this country broken, and this is another big crack in that foundation. Others may feel differently; that’s fine.

Second: one of the things I was very likely to tell people in 2008 about Barack Obama was that they should watch his campaign to see how he would govern. Obama ran a master-class campaign in 2008. Clinton did not, and she paid for it. She has– and this is a theme with her– watched and learned from her mistakes, and she is a VASTLY better candidate in 2016 than she ever was in 2008. People give her crap about changing her opinion, and only adopting more leftward positions when forced to. I see someone who’s willing to change her mind and learn from her mistakes. She’s running a clean, leak-free, no-drama campaign for office this year, and her advisors and the people close to her are all competent and doing their jobs. I was LIVID at some of the bullshit her campaign manager and some of her prime surrogates were pulling in 2008, and I know this isn’t about Bernie, but one of my problems with him is that he’s not controlling his people. I know the candidate can’t control their base, but they CAN tell their campaign staff to shut their yaps and do their jobs.

Third, and again this was a reason I frequently cited when I voted for Obama: I want the President to be clearly and obviously smarter than I am. Obama has spent his Presidency being the smartest guy in the room, and when I hear Clinton talk, while I don’t think she’s at his level (very, very few are, I think) I hear someone who is in full command of the details and the minutia of policy and someone smart enough to know their own mind and understand the nuances of what they’re trying to do. This has hurt her in the past (one of the big complaints about her health care bill was how complicated it was) but I need that from a Presidential candidate. She’s got the facts and figures and numbers at her fingertips, and she earned a reputation in the Senate of being 1) a very hard worker and 2) someone who was not afraid to get into the weeds of a new subject rather than rely on advisors. I want that type of person in the Oval Office, and I think she’s the only person in the race who IS that type of person. Maybe Cruz, actually; there are lots of reasons to vote against him but “he doesn’t know what he’s doing” is generally not one of them.

She’s a team player. I was very, VERY worried in 2008 about the PUMAs not coming home to Obama after the convention– much, much more worried than I have been about Bernie’s supporters. And then Hillary waded into the crowd at the floor of the convention and called for Obama to be nominated by acclamation. That was the first moment I’d been personally inspired by her, and it immediately revised my opinion of her up several points. She lost, she got over it, and she immediately went to work for her former opponent. No drama. She has worked hard to fund-raise for down-ticket Democratic candidates and she understands something that I think is critical for this race– that the President can’t do it alone, and if we want real change, just holding on to the White House isn’t enough– we HAVE TO change Congress, and we have to recapture more of the states. If she had lost this election, I have absolutely no doubt that she’d have worked as hard to get Sanders elected as she did for Obama.

Finally, and this ties in with my first point, I find a lot of the reasons people cite to not vote for Clinton to be, frankly, unconvincing.

I do not care about speaking fees. I care about results. I do not believe that Hillary Clinton, to pick one example, would not to work to rein in campaign finance because something something Wall Street. I’ve literally laughed at people for suggesting she doesn’t want Citizens United overturned. Citizens United existed so that right-wingers had a clever way to call Hillary Clinton a c*nt.

Is she ambitious? Absolutely. This is true of every single Presidential candidate in the history of forever. I think that she catches more crap for it than she has any reason to because she’s a woman. Is she untrustworthy? I don’t think so, and, again: “untrustworthy” and “ambitious” are words men use to describe powerful women. I want to be clear; I don’t think everyone voting for Sanders or against Hillary is a sexist, but I DO think sexism very much plays a role in the way we describe her.

Is she warm, empathetic, kind? Maybe. Sometimes. And I feel like she’s, again, done a much better job during this campaign of letting her personality out and being less outwardly controlled. But I don’t need the President to be my mother, or my drinking buddy, or my personal moral exemplar.  I need her to be President.  We’ve got countless examples of male politicians where “I’m a hardass” is virtually their entire reason for their candidacies; I do not need a female Presidential candidate to be huggable.

(Obama ran into a similar thing. He couldn’t ever be angry, because he knew that as soon as he got genuinely mad about something it would get turned back against him because he was a black man. Hillary is in a similar spot.)

I also find accusations that she’s a warmonger to be unconvincing. Is she more hawkish than Sanders? Sure. So am I. But the idea that she’s going to start six wars the day after she enters office is flatly ridiculous, ESPECIALLY in a context where her opponents on the other side have literally and unapologetically threatened to glass the entire Middle East as if it wasn’t a big deal.  She might be slightly more hawkish than Obama, but not much; say what you will about drones, but I’d rather have drones than another goddamned land war.

(You’d rather not have drones either?  Cool.  I ain’t mad atcha.  But your choices are “drones” or “nuclear weapons and land war.”  Trump and Cruz are both openly and obviously itching to use nuclear weapons.  Choose.)

I’ll post a picture of my sticker if I get one.

I’m not going to get a sticker again, am I?

On disenfranchisement and third parties

qc8raqzj8nyxef9ehybr

There’s been a politics post percolating for a while now, and at various points it has been a much angrier politics post than I suspect I’m about to write.  To be very, very brief, I think the last ten days or so flipped Bernie Sanders from I’ll happily vote for him if he’s the nominee to okay, fuck that guy in the heads of a lot of Clinton supporters.  That said, Tuesday basically clinched the nomination for Clinton, and a couple of days later I’m no longer especially interested in shitting on Bernie any more.  There’s no money in it.  I indulged in retweeting a handful of snarky GIFs on Tuesday night– mostly because I thought they were hilarious and not purely to crow– and I think that’s probably as far as I care to go at this point.

That said, let’s talk about political parties for a minute, and primaries, and disenfranchisement.

I have no doubt whatsoever that in any large election (and running a statewide election, much less a statewide election that contains a city larger than forty of the fifty states certainly counts) there are going to be some people who, for one reason or another, are disqualified from voting who should be able to vote.  I had to file a provisional ballot myself in Chicago once; it happens.  Is it regrettable?  Of course it is.  It’s also effectively unavoidable, in that people are people and shit happens.

Supposedly 120,000 people in New York City were “purged” from the voting rolls prior to the election and thus were unable to vote.  Sounds bad, doesn’t it?  Unfortunately:

Of the 126,000 Democratic voters taken off from the rolls in Brooklyn, Ryan said 12,000 had moved out of borough, while 44,000 more had been placed in an inactive file after mailings to their homes bounced back. An additional 70,000 were already inactive and, having failed to vote in two successive federal elections or respond to cancel notices, were removed.

Are there some people who were removed who shouldn’t have been?  Yeah, probably.  But maybe, guys, if you’re planning on voting in an upcoming election, you should check to make sure your registration is up to date a couple of months in advance of the election.  One way to make sure you don’t get purged is to vote in every election– yes, the ones that aren’t terribly exciting, too– and to change your registration when you move.  I don’t actually have any sympathy for the vast majority of these people.

Also, not being able to vote in the Democratic party primary because you aren’t actually a Democrat is not something I’m going to shed tears about.  I do feel like the primary voting process needs to be streamlined and standardized, and we can have conversations about that; it seems ridiculous to me that the process can vary so much from state to state, and I don’t like caucuses at all (and, for the record, didn’t like them in 2008 when my guy was winning them, either).  There’s room to discuss that.  But there’s not a whole lot to talk about when you insist that not being able to participate in the primary election process of a party you don’t belong to is the same as disenfranchisement.  Otherwise, you’ll have to explain why Canadians don’t get to vote in our elections.

They’re not American?  Oh.  Give that some thought, will you?

I get that maybe six months ago you hadn’t decided who to vote for, and I’m sympathetic to the idea that declaring party affiliation six months in advance is a bit on the long side.  I didn’t know who I was voting for six months ago.  But you didn’t know you were a Democrat six months ago?  Get the fuckouttahere.  Go ahead, be an independent; more power to you.  But don’t expect America’s two-party system to accommodate you.


Slight change of subject here: lots of people are going to see that last sentence and go OOH ARGLE BARGLE TWO PARTY SYSTEM GRR HRAAGH THIRD PARTY. 

Shuddup.

You are welcome to be dumb and vote for a third-party candidate.  You’re wasting your time and your vote; the real political parties don’t look at that and go ooh, moving to the <direction> will help us get that voter!, they assume you’re more interested in preening than governance and stop thinking about you.  There’s not a single thing preventing a third party from taking hold in America other than the fact that historically most third parties are run by dumbasses.  How do I know?  The Green Party and the Libertarians, in particular, have existed in this country for decades and haven’t figured out to stop running for President yet.  I’m pretty sure that if either party wanted to get some seats in Congress they could find some appropriate districts and start building a power base.  There’s got to be somewhere where a concerted push by a Green or a Libertarian could end up with a seat.  Go find those places!  Start running for school boards and for mayors and for state governments!  Running for President as a third party does nothing other than massage egos, waste a lot of money, and pull votes from some closer established party that has a chance of getting their agendas enacted.  Jill Stein is never going to be President.  But I bet she could be a Congressperson if the Green Party took the money they were setting on fire for her to run for President and put it into a more local race.  Perhaps start in Vermont?  One way or another Bernie’s not going to be their Senator forever.

I don’t give a shit about your conscience, by the way.


If there’s an overarching point to this, here it is: we have to be grown-ups about the process of governing.  Part of that means recognizing that we’re not always going to get (we are never going to get) 100% of what we want in a political party or a political candidate.  So you vote for the person who has the greatest chance of getting the largest share of what you want enacted.  That means sometimes passing up voting for someone who agrees with you more in favor of someone who you don’t align with as closely but has the ability to govern and get some of the things you want done.  I can remember talking with some Nader evangelists in 2008 when I was at UIC; they rambled a bit about his positions and had absolutely no answer for me when I asked a simple question: How will he govern?  With no allies in Congress and no power base of any kind, how will this man get any part of his agenda enacted?

He won’t, that’s how.  You want to start a movement?  Fine, start a movement.  But you start a movement from the bottom up, by either taking over an existing political party or building one from the grassroots, with local offices, not with a vanity moonshot for the Presidency.  And you do it by voting, and by paying attention to the rules where you live and making sure that your shit is correct.

Lecture ends.  Go forth.  And make sure you’re fuckin’ registered to vote for November, goddammit.

I was gonna write some words, but…

…then I saw this, and what the hell is the Internet even for if I can’t burn an entire post on one YouTube video:

In which you should be on Twudder

There’s an election tonight, so I’ll be around for at least an hour or so just generally babbling and liveblogging.  I feel like all of you should be part of it.  Come find me at @nfinitefreetime.