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AZ Progressive

(3,411 posts)
Tue Mar 1, 2016, 03:48 AM Mar 2016

So, Jesse Jackson is leaving Bernie high and dry...

Jesse Jackson could change the election completely if he endorsed Bernie (after all, Bernie endorsed him twice during his presidential runs and is running on a highly similar platform), but apparently maintaining ties with the Clintons is more important...

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Dems to Win

(2,161 posts)
2. Noticed that.
Tue Mar 1, 2016, 03:58 AM
Mar 2016

I still believe in the Rainbow Coalition, and clearly, so does Bernie Sanders.

How can Jesse NOT endorse Bernie? I don't understand his silence.

retrowire

(10,345 posts)
3. Why wouldn't he return the favor of the endorsement Bernie gave him?
Tue Mar 1, 2016, 04:04 AM
Mar 2016

Maybe I wouldn't be a good politician, but I would return favors to those who stuck their neck out for me.

But what do I know.

TIME TO PANIC

(1,894 posts)
4. Fear of retribution toward friends and family.
Tue Mar 1, 2016, 04:23 AM
Mar 2016

When I say retribution, I'm not saying the Clintons are gonna break their legs or anything like that. I'm just saying things happen.

TIME TO PANIC

(1,894 posts)
8. I can't remember, what did they say about Richardson?
Tue Mar 1, 2016, 05:07 AM
Mar 2016

I remember being shocked at how they treated Obama. I lost all respect for Hillary during the 08' primaries.

hopemountain

(3,919 posts)
5. perhaps because to do so
Tue Mar 1, 2016, 04:35 AM
Mar 2016

will alienate them from their loved ones and congregations and is too divisive for them as community leaders? i refer to the rev. al sharpton, too. neither of them has endorsed hillary, either.

in addition, they are holding hillary and bernie to very high expectations - and for legitimate reasons - no more just talking the talk - they want to see them walk the talk and present viable plans of action for a multiple issues affecting the african american community.

in addition - true leaders let the people decide - they do not decide for those they represent/lead.

yes, their endorsements would help either candidate - but this is not about helping the candidate - it is about communities choosing for themselves. unlike, dws and the dnc.

trust the process.

AZ Progressive

(3,411 posts)
6. Yes, maybe Bernie should have done more for the african american community...
Tue Mar 1, 2016, 04:46 AM
Mar 2016

But we all are the ones that will suffer if he loses. Even he himself has a nice house in Vermont with a congressional pension if he retires.

hopemountain

(3,919 posts)
9. no. "should?"
Tue Mar 1, 2016, 05:23 AM
Mar 2016

keep in mind, main stream media are effectively perpetrating a black out of bernie's rallies, marches, etc. - so you may think bernie "should do more" because this is exactly what the hillary campaign wants you and the african american community to believe.

bernie was the first to proactively respond and engage in talks with black lives matter. within 3 days after the very first black lives matters interruption at a talk he was giving - he met with them and presented plans addressing their issues. bernie listened and continues listening -

bernie has addressed how to put money back into infrastructure to create jobs, free college tuition, $15 and hour - living wage for all people - including african americans and latinos, et al.

all of bernie's platform addresses issues in communities of color across the country. these are issues critical in the african american community as well as other communities. bernie does not define the issues nor his platform and plans as solely for any one specific ethnic or cultural group.

bernie addressed the privatization of prisons and the institutionalized racism resulting in the proportionately higher arrests of blacks and other people of color -long before hillary - and he did so without defining it as solely an issue for the african american community.

there is, however, one group bernie has not addressed specifically - the native american - indigenous - first nations people of america.

LiberalElite

(14,691 posts)
12. Bernie has a Native American advisor - the following was posted in GD-P a few days ago:
Tue Mar 1, 2016, 08:36 AM
Mar 2016
http://www.democraticunderground.com/12511333437

snip

Bernie has named a new Native American advisor to the campaign. Tara Houska is a tribal rights attorney, as well as an environmental activist and a contributing columnist to Indian Country Today Media Network (ICTMN).

snip

TBF

(32,050 posts)
13. Winona LaDuke endorsed him hopemountain -
Tue Mar 1, 2016, 08:36 AM
Mar 2016

I don't know what he has specifically said (or hasn't said) but I did catch that endorsement on Facebook. I don't know her at all but it caught my eye because we have reservations in Wisconsin (my home state).

From Facebook last week:

Natives for Bernie Sanders shared Tara Zhaabowekwe Houska's post.
February 25 at 7:11pm ·

Winona LaDuke is now ‪#?FeelingTheBern‬ and has endorsed him!!
?Tara Zhaabowekwe Houska? to Natives for Bernie Sanders
February 25 at 6:58pm · Washington ·

My niijii and boss, Winona:

“My reservation (White Earth Reservation) in northern Minnesota is fighting a number of proposed pipelines, including one that will accomplish what the Keystone XL pipeline failed to: transporting some of the dirtiest fossil fuel in the world from Alberta, Canada, into the United States. These pipelines would carry both Canadian tar sands and fracked gas from South Dakota. We need politicians who will stand with us and all the other Indian territories that oppose these pipelines being built on our lands. Most of the oil and gas extracted is from lands within Native territories. The best answer for future generations is to keep fossil fuels in the ground. Bernie understands that.”

LaDuke is the co-founder and Executive Director of both the White Earth Land Recovery Project and Honor the Earth, a national advocacy group which raises awareness and financial support for Native environmental issues. She graduated from Harvard with a degree in Rural Economic Development in 1982, and in 1989 earned a Master's Degree in Community Economic Development from Antioch University. She is a 1988 winner of the Reebok Human Rights Award, was named “Woman of the Year” by Ms. Magazine in 1997 and is a two-time Vice Presidential candidate on the Green Party ticket.

“I’m standing with Bernie Sanders because he understands there are issues of race and corporate privilege in our society. We must have the courage to stand up to big corporations. The candidate with that courage is Bernie Sanders.”

‪#?FeelTheBern‬

hopemountain

(3,919 posts)
18. thank you for
Wed Mar 2, 2016, 04:26 AM
Mar 2016

your post and for spreading the awareness. greatly appreciated - because the word is not getting out. i have tremendous respect for winona and have had the honor of meeting her. this endorsement brings courage to my heart.

Donkees

(31,385 posts)
15. Sanders Commitments to "Indian Country"
Tue Mar 1, 2016, 09:06 AM
Mar 2016

The commitments Sanders has made to “Indian Country” include expanding and protecting tribal rights to jurisdiction.
Democratic candidate for President Bernie Sanders achieved a historic upset at the New Hampshire primaries last week by winning 60 percent of the delegates. However, this margin is nothing compared to the margin he carried in one precinct in Iowa: the Meskwaki Indian Settlement precinct in Tama County. Here on the 8,000 acre homeland of the 1,400 member Sac & Fox Tribe of the Mississippi in Iowa he won 83.3 percent of the votes. Clinton only won 16.7 percent.

So it is no surprise when on Feb. 8 Bernie Sanders’ campaign announced at the Affiliated Tribes of Northwest Indians meeting the creation of a Native American policy committee to develop and guide Sanders’ tribal policy platform. ATNI represents 57 Northwest tribes in a seven-state region. Founded in 1953, the organization provides an opportunity for tribal leaders to work together in the spirit of “inter-tribal unity and cooperation” and to jointly set policy and direction for member tribes. It is regarded as one of the strongest regional Native American organizations in the United States


Nicole Willis, a member of the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla, and the former deputy director of First Americans at Obama for America is the new Native American advisor to the campaign.

“In the area of policy, Native America deserves to be courted,” Willis told teleSUR.

She said that the Native American Policy Committee, unique on the campaign trail, will contain a mix of elected officials, experts in Indian policy development and implementation, and regional representatives who will be “delving into rapid, meaningful policy development.”

Masha Mendieta, a national strategist for the Sanders campaign who attended the ATNI meeting, was amazed at the speed at which Sanders acted to expand his message to include the Native American community more fully. “Within 24 hours,” she says, “I knew I was going to ATNI and had these commitments from him. Amazing.”


The main commitments Sanders made to “Indian Country” (as Native Americans often call it) include:

Within 100 days of his presidency Sanders has pledged to convene a climate change summit and to include Native American representation. One of primary issues endangering Native American cultural practices in the 21st century is climate change. For example: climate change greatly endangers the growing of first foods like corn, and the habitats of traditional food sources and the transmission of cultural practices built around them. Sander's opposition to the Keystone XL pipeline will play well with Native voters to whom these projects represent a violation of tribal sovereignty and a grave danger to their homelands. Feelings are so strong on this matter that after the U.S. House of Representatives passed legislation to force the Keystone XL pipeline to move forward in 2014, the Rosebud Sioux Tribe called it an “act of war” in a letter to Congress and said the U.S. lawmakers had “signed our death warrants” and vowed to close their lands to the pipeline.


Affirm and expand Native American nations’ gains in the last couple of years. Not just supporting initiatives like Obama’s Generation Indigenous but to secure funding for this programs. “Gen-I” is a program for Native youth that Obama announced at the 2014 White House Tribal Nations Conference to “focus on improving the lives of Native youth by removing the barriers that stand between Native youth and their opportunity to succeed.” Key programs include: education, health and nutrition, juvenile justice, housing, and youth engagement.


Expanding and protecting tribal rights to jurisdiction. Sanders played a key role as the co-sponsor of the Violence Against Women Reauthorization Act of 2013. The bill was controversial and was bitterly opposed by Republicans because it expanded tribal jurisdiction over non-Indians. Due to a series of Supreme Court rulings, Tribes have been stripped of jurisdiction over non-Indians on their lands and this has created a gap in jurisdiction which has led to an epidemic of predation of Native women by non-Indian men. In 2010, the Justice Department released a report which found that Native women were 2 1/2 times more like to be victims of rape and murder than other American women. The report also found that over 70 percent of the perpetrators of these crimes against Native women were white men. In some counties in the United States, the murder rate for Native women was found to be 9 times that of other American women. Further compounding the lack of lack of protection for Native women, the FBI refused to prosecute in 70 percent of the cases. VAWA went into effect in 2015 with a few tribal pilot projects. Sanders plans to fight for further expansion of tribal jurisdiction in the next authorization of the bill. In the present version of the bill, tribal jurisdiction is limited to only Domestic Violence perpetrators.


Continue the White House Tribal Nations Conference (an annual conference Obama began shortly after he took office) and retain a Native American policy advisor as begun under Obama’s administration.

“I was given an opportunity to speak at the General Assembly,” Mendieta said, noting she hadn’t come to the ATNI meeting prepared to speak and found herself addressing the gathered leaders, deeply moved by the testimonials and speeches from tribal representatives she had heard. She says she urged them to take this opportunity to elect somebody “who fundamentally supported change” and to seize a “once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to shift their relationship with the federal government.”



This content was originally published by teleSUR at the following address:
"http://www.telesurtv.net/english/opinion/Bernie-Sanders-Courts-Native-American-Voters-20160214-0008.html". If you intend to use it, please cite the source and provide a link to the original article. www.teleSURtv.net/english



hopemountain

(3,919 posts)
19. this is a powerful statement for
Wed Mar 2, 2016, 04:29 AM
Mar 2016

indian country, donkees. thank you for bringing me awareness. it will be shared. peace.

Nyan

(1,192 posts)
10. It's not called a "Clinton machine" for no reason, I guess.
Tue Mar 1, 2016, 06:28 AM
Mar 2016

It must be real hard to go through the machine and come out with your soul intact.

SandersDem

(592 posts)
11. I have wondered about this too, but
Tue Mar 1, 2016, 08:13 AM
Mar 2016

unless he has already endorsed, the chance is that the campaign would be timing his endorsement. I do not think Jackson's endorsement would be enough to sway SC or many southern States, IL however....possible. I am hoping it is just strategic timing.

TBF

(32,050 posts)
14. Although Jesse was born in SC I associate
Tue Mar 1, 2016, 08:38 AM
Mar 2016

him with Chicago. Illinois primary is the 15th. Maybe an endorsement then??

Mufaddal

(1,021 posts)
16. I think he has more to lose than Bernie has to gain by an endorsement
Tue Mar 1, 2016, 11:19 AM
Mar 2016

Same as with Warren. That is to say, I think that for those whom Jesse Jackson is still relevant and for whom his endorsement would have much meaning beyond being a symbolic gesture, they are already with Bernie. Most others would simply greet it with, "Oh, isn't that nice." As for Jesse, it could result in being left out in the cold in the smaller black corners of the establishment. But that's just my guess; obviously I could be totally wrong. As long as he continues to not endorse Hillary (again, like Warren), it's nearly as good as an endorsement for Bernie.

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