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In reply to the discussion: White women did their white women shit in GA. [View all]old as dirt
(1,972 posts)264. What's the shittiest thing folks see in this speech?
Doesn't it make it hard to say the shitty religious views shouldn't be allowed in government
when we are fine with the ones we agree with?
when we are fine with the ones we agree with?
Hello, Georgia! Thank you, Georgia! We did it again!
Thank you so much for your trust in me and to God be the glory!
After a long and hard fought campaign, it is now my honor to utter the four most powerful words in a democracy, the people have spoken. I have often said that a vote is a kind of prayer for the world we desire for ourselves and for our children.
It is faith put in action. It is the sober recognition that we pray not only with our lips but with our legs.
And Georgia, you have you been doing just that - praying with your lips and with your legs, with your hands and your feet, with your head and your heart! And here we are standing together!
And Georgia once again as you did in 2021 when you sent an African American man and a Jewish man to the Senate in one fell swoop - you are sending a clear message to the country about the kind of world we want for our children.
I stand before you tonight a proud son of Savannah, Georgia, a coastal city known for its cobblestone streets and verdant town squares. Towering oak trees, centuries old and covered in gray Spanish moss bend and beckon the lover of history and horticulture to this city by the sea. And like those oak trees in Savannah, my roots go deep down and they stretch wide in the soil of Waycross, Georgia, and Burke County and Screven County. In a sense, I am Georgia. A living example and embodiment of its history and its hope, of its pain and promise, the brutality and possibility.
I am grateful that my mother, Pastor Verlene Warnock, is here tonight. A teenager growing up in Waycross, GA, she used to pick somebody elses cotton and tobacco. Tonight, she helped pick her youngest son to be a United States senator. My late father, Rev. Jonathan Warnock, a preacher and a junkman, has long entered into the light but he too is cheering us on.
How grateful I am for my very large and beautiful family. I am glad that they are here tonight. Im number 11 of 12 and so my parents clearly read the scripture which says, Be fruitful and multiply.
We were short on money, but we were long on love, faith, and humor, and they poured into me and my eleven siblings the values and hard work ethic that still guide me today.
Thats whats led me to a life of service, its whats led me in the pulpit and its ultimately whats led me to the U.S. Senate
I also want to thank my two children, Chloe and Caleb. You two are the brightest stars in my world and as proud as I am to be a Senator, I am most proud to be your dad. You help inspire me to do my part to build a world befitting of the curiosity, the creativity and the possibility that I see in your eyes and in the eyes of all of our children.
And on this night, where after being on the ballot 5 times in the last two years for the same job I might add I have been entrusted with a six-year term to serve in the Senate, I cannot express how thankful I am to you, the people of Georgia.
I am deeply honored to be on this journey with you.
Its an overwhelming statement for your neighbors to say we want you to represent us and our families in high office. And its something that inspires me every day.
Now there will be those both in our state, and across the country, who will point to our victory tonight and try to use it to argue there is no voter suppression in Georgia.
Let me be clear. The fact that millions of Georgians endured hours in lines and were willing to spend hours in line lines that wrapped around buildings and went on for blocks, lines in the cold, lines in the rain, is most certainly not a sign voter suppression does not exist.
Instead, it is proof that you, the people, will not allow your voices to be silenced. And I am proud to stand with you.
I believe that democracy is the political enactment of a spiritual idea. The notion that each of us has within us a spark of the divine We all have value. And if we have value, we ought to have a voice.
Thats why when officials in our state tried to block Saturday voting, we sued them. And we won. And the people showed up in record numbers within the narrow confines of the time given to them by a state legislature that saw our electoral strength the last time and went after it with surgical precision.
The fact that voters worked so hard to overcome the hardship put in front of them does not eliminate the fact that hardship was put there in the first place.
Our democracy is stronger when more people are able to exercise their right to vote. This is something we all should be able to agree on. And it is something that I will continue to work on until we pass the John Lewis Voting Rights Act.
Democrats, Republicans, independents, should all be able to agree that whether youre black, brown, white or any other color, no matter what neighborhood you live in, in the United States of America you should have the same ability to exercise your right to vote.
Tonight, I want to pay tribute to all those, over so many years, who have put their voices, and their lives on the line, to defend that right.
Martyrs of the movement like Scherner, Chaney & Goodman; Viola Luizzo, James Reeb. And those who stood up and spoke up like Fannie Lou Hamer. John Lewis, who walked across a bridge knowing that there were police waiting to brutalize him on the other side. Yet, by some stroke of destiny mingled with human determination he walked across that bridge in order to build a bridge to a more just future.
And now, it is up to us to keep building that bridge. To keep doing the important moral work. And Georgia, I want you to know that even as I work for you, I intend to walk with you.
Because here is what Ive learned from being a pastor. You cannot lead the people unless you love the people. And you cannot love the people unless you know the people. And the only way to know the people is to spend time among the people. You cannot serve me if you cannot see me. Georgia, I see you. Parents trying to get your kids through school, I see you. Students trying to pay your way and work your way through, I see you. Farmers who are an answer to our most basic prayer give us this day our daily bread and yet struggle to survive, to save the farm, I see you. Workers fighting for a livable wage and decent benefits, I see you. Small business owners, I see you.
I will always be a voice for Georgia. All of Georgia. Whether you voted for me, or whether you didnt, I will always be fighting for you and I hope to serve our state in a way that makes you proud.
And I remain hopeful that Washington can focus more on what we all share in common rather than what sometimes divides us.
Too many folks in Washington enter the conversation everyday thinking they must be armed as gladiators, focused on that days fight, on getting what they can for their side, whoever they consider that to be. I just see things differently. Im proud of my bi-partisan work. And I hope to do more.
Because I believe first and foremost we are an American people and that we all have a covenant with one another. That we must live up to that uniquely American ideal of E pluribus Unum. Out of manyone.
I believe in what Dr. King called the Beloved Community. Over the forces that seek to divide us, we choose a stateand a nation that embraces all of us. We choose America.
I believe in the American dream. My own life is an iteration of its promise and possibility.
And therefore I believe that we can all do better, when were all doing better.
Thats what drives me to work to expand and lower the cost of healthcare, of creating jobs and standing up for the dignity of work, of addressing inequality and criminal justice reform and of taking on the existential threat of climate change that threatens our future.
And as I return to serve as your Senator for another six years, it's that combination of faith, love and hard work that will keep me focused on making change on behalf of our State and our country.
Before I closeand you can never believe a former pastor when they say theyll closeI want to thank some of the people that made this victory possible.
To my campaign staff, led by my incredible campaign manager and son of Schley County, Georgia, Quentin Fulks, thank you. I want to thank Lawrence Bell who one day dropped on me a crazy idea you should run for the senate and the rest is history.
I want to thank my Senate staff in Washington, led by Mark Libell, and my state team, led by Meredith Lilly, for their work on behalf of our state.
I want to thank the volunteers and all of you who believed that we could win.
We won together
Asking that neighbor at the very end of your block to get to the polls.
Turning to one another in our church pews
Talking about what is at stake here in Georgia
Talking about what a brighter future looks like for all of our families.
Volunteers in every corner of the state knocked doors to get people to the polls
And poll workers worked hard to ensure each and every Georgia voter could make their voice heard in their own democracy.
And tonight, all that hard work paid off.
Thank you Georgia.
I know for many these are hard times. Dark times.
There is no question people are feeling the pain and the pinch your children, your aging parents, your neighbors. Weve been through a lot.
But the scripture says the light shines in the darkness and the darkness overcometh it not and I know with all my heart that our best days are ahead of us.
So tomorrow we can all take a hard-earned rest. Just for a moment though because the work continues
And Im not confused about who I work for.
Some of you have heard me tell the story many times of how my dad would wake me up every morning, 6am, no matter what time of year, no matter what day of the week, hed say Son, get dressed, put your shoes on.
Well Georgia, Im up, Im dressed, Im ready and Ive got my shoes on. And I am so honored that you have placed your confidence in me one more time.
From the bottom of my heart, THANK YOU! God bless you.
Keep the faith! Keep looking up.
Thank you so much for your trust in me and to God be the glory!
After a long and hard fought campaign, it is now my honor to utter the four most powerful words in a democracy, the people have spoken. I have often said that a vote is a kind of prayer for the world we desire for ourselves and for our children.
It is faith put in action. It is the sober recognition that we pray not only with our lips but with our legs.
And Georgia, you have you been doing just that - praying with your lips and with your legs, with your hands and your feet, with your head and your heart! And here we are standing together!
And Georgia once again as you did in 2021 when you sent an African American man and a Jewish man to the Senate in one fell swoop - you are sending a clear message to the country about the kind of world we want for our children.
I stand before you tonight a proud son of Savannah, Georgia, a coastal city known for its cobblestone streets and verdant town squares. Towering oak trees, centuries old and covered in gray Spanish moss bend and beckon the lover of history and horticulture to this city by the sea. And like those oak trees in Savannah, my roots go deep down and they stretch wide in the soil of Waycross, Georgia, and Burke County and Screven County. In a sense, I am Georgia. A living example and embodiment of its history and its hope, of its pain and promise, the brutality and possibility.
I am grateful that my mother, Pastor Verlene Warnock, is here tonight. A teenager growing up in Waycross, GA, she used to pick somebody elses cotton and tobacco. Tonight, she helped pick her youngest son to be a United States senator. My late father, Rev. Jonathan Warnock, a preacher and a junkman, has long entered into the light but he too is cheering us on.
How grateful I am for my very large and beautiful family. I am glad that they are here tonight. Im number 11 of 12 and so my parents clearly read the scripture which says, Be fruitful and multiply.
We were short on money, but we were long on love, faith, and humor, and they poured into me and my eleven siblings the values and hard work ethic that still guide me today.
Thats whats led me to a life of service, its whats led me in the pulpit and its ultimately whats led me to the U.S. Senate
I also want to thank my two children, Chloe and Caleb. You two are the brightest stars in my world and as proud as I am to be a Senator, I am most proud to be your dad. You help inspire me to do my part to build a world befitting of the curiosity, the creativity and the possibility that I see in your eyes and in the eyes of all of our children.
And on this night, where after being on the ballot 5 times in the last two years for the same job I might add I have been entrusted with a six-year term to serve in the Senate, I cannot express how thankful I am to you, the people of Georgia.
I am deeply honored to be on this journey with you.
Its an overwhelming statement for your neighbors to say we want you to represent us and our families in high office. And its something that inspires me every day.
Now there will be those both in our state, and across the country, who will point to our victory tonight and try to use it to argue there is no voter suppression in Georgia.
Let me be clear. The fact that millions of Georgians endured hours in lines and were willing to spend hours in line lines that wrapped around buildings and went on for blocks, lines in the cold, lines in the rain, is most certainly not a sign voter suppression does not exist.
Instead, it is proof that you, the people, will not allow your voices to be silenced. And I am proud to stand with you.
I believe that democracy is the political enactment of a spiritual idea. The notion that each of us has within us a spark of the divine We all have value. And if we have value, we ought to have a voice.
Thats why when officials in our state tried to block Saturday voting, we sued them. And we won. And the people showed up in record numbers within the narrow confines of the time given to them by a state legislature that saw our electoral strength the last time and went after it with surgical precision.
The fact that voters worked so hard to overcome the hardship put in front of them does not eliminate the fact that hardship was put there in the first place.
Our democracy is stronger when more people are able to exercise their right to vote. This is something we all should be able to agree on. And it is something that I will continue to work on until we pass the John Lewis Voting Rights Act.
Democrats, Republicans, independents, should all be able to agree that whether youre black, brown, white or any other color, no matter what neighborhood you live in, in the United States of America you should have the same ability to exercise your right to vote.
Tonight, I want to pay tribute to all those, over so many years, who have put their voices, and their lives on the line, to defend that right.
Martyrs of the movement like Scherner, Chaney & Goodman; Viola Luizzo, James Reeb. And those who stood up and spoke up like Fannie Lou Hamer. John Lewis, who walked across a bridge knowing that there were police waiting to brutalize him on the other side. Yet, by some stroke of destiny mingled with human determination he walked across that bridge in order to build a bridge to a more just future.
And now, it is up to us to keep building that bridge. To keep doing the important moral work. And Georgia, I want you to know that even as I work for you, I intend to walk with you.
Because here is what Ive learned from being a pastor. You cannot lead the people unless you love the people. And you cannot love the people unless you know the people. And the only way to know the people is to spend time among the people. You cannot serve me if you cannot see me. Georgia, I see you. Parents trying to get your kids through school, I see you. Students trying to pay your way and work your way through, I see you. Farmers who are an answer to our most basic prayer give us this day our daily bread and yet struggle to survive, to save the farm, I see you. Workers fighting for a livable wage and decent benefits, I see you. Small business owners, I see you.
I will always be a voice for Georgia. All of Georgia. Whether you voted for me, or whether you didnt, I will always be fighting for you and I hope to serve our state in a way that makes you proud.
And I remain hopeful that Washington can focus more on what we all share in common rather than what sometimes divides us.
Too many folks in Washington enter the conversation everyday thinking they must be armed as gladiators, focused on that days fight, on getting what they can for their side, whoever they consider that to be. I just see things differently. Im proud of my bi-partisan work. And I hope to do more.
Because I believe first and foremost we are an American people and that we all have a covenant with one another. That we must live up to that uniquely American ideal of E pluribus Unum. Out of manyone.
I believe in what Dr. King called the Beloved Community. Over the forces that seek to divide us, we choose a stateand a nation that embraces all of us. We choose America.
I believe in the American dream. My own life is an iteration of its promise and possibility.
And therefore I believe that we can all do better, when were all doing better.
Thats what drives me to work to expand and lower the cost of healthcare, of creating jobs and standing up for the dignity of work, of addressing inequality and criminal justice reform and of taking on the existential threat of climate change that threatens our future.
And as I return to serve as your Senator for another six years, it's that combination of faith, love and hard work that will keep me focused on making change on behalf of our State and our country.
Before I closeand you can never believe a former pastor when they say theyll closeI want to thank some of the people that made this victory possible.
To my campaign staff, led by my incredible campaign manager and son of Schley County, Georgia, Quentin Fulks, thank you. I want to thank Lawrence Bell who one day dropped on me a crazy idea you should run for the senate and the rest is history.
I want to thank my Senate staff in Washington, led by Mark Libell, and my state team, led by Meredith Lilly, for their work on behalf of our state.
I want to thank the volunteers and all of you who believed that we could win.
We won together
Asking that neighbor at the very end of your block to get to the polls.
Turning to one another in our church pews
Talking about what is at stake here in Georgia
Talking about what a brighter future looks like for all of our families.
Volunteers in every corner of the state knocked doors to get people to the polls
And poll workers worked hard to ensure each and every Georgia voter could make their voice heard in their own democracy.
And tonight, all that hard work paid off.
Thank you Georgia.
I know for many these are hard times. Dark times.
There is no question people are feeling the pain and the pinch your children, your aging parents, your neighbors. Weve been through a lot.
But the scripture says the light shines in the darkness and the darkness overcometh it not and I know with all my heart that our best days are ahead of us.
So tomorrow we can all take a hard-earned rest. Just for a moment though because the work continues
And Im not confused about who I work for.
Some of you have heard me tell the story many times of how my dad would wake me up every morning, 6am, no matter what time of year, no matter what day of the week, hed say Son, get dressed, put your shoes on.
Well Georgia, Im up, Im dressed, Im ready and Ive got my shoes on. And I am so honored that you have placed your confidence in me one more time.
From the bottom of my heart, THANK YOU! God bless you.
Keep the faith! Keep looking up.
https://www.11alive.com/article/news/politics/raphael-warnock-victory-speech-full-text/85-1da60dc5-1ba5-4127-9ba6-9ab41d10339e
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What can I say, I'm a white woman, voted Democratic all my life, I don't know what to tell you
Walleye
Dec 2022
#1
Yeah I don't know what happened. I was brought up in the 50s in the Wesley Methodist Church
Walleye
Dec 2022
#182
it should not have been close but dems still stupidly ignore the radio advantage. we let 3 Ga unis
certainot
Dec 2022
#219
thanks. if i had time and resources i'd start using AI to digitize rw radio. absent that i will
certainot
Dec 2022
#232
the MIT media lab prototype using AI to automatically record transcribe analyze 2.8 BIL talk radio w
certainot
Dec 2022
#252
How would they stop RW radio? Why do you think they're "ignoring" it? "Force" them how?
betsuni
Dec 2022
#253
no individuals or even ind orgs are to blame - it's the astounding general stupidity of city-dweller
certainot
Dec 2022
#254
It's the 30% of white women who really don't want or need equal pay or equal rights and they don't
Samrob
Dec 2022
#215
Of course. I understand that I am a second class citizen. Good for nothing but cranking out
onecaliberal
Dec 2022
#15
Well, since the original post is about the failure of white women in GA
Better Days Ahoy
Dec 2022
#224
I agree completely. My first thought on reading the OP was "what about the white men?!"
yardwork
Dec 2022
#158
That's often bc of guns, oppression of BIPOC, Women, RW sections of Religion...
electric_blue68
Dec 2022
#175
Latino Men and Latino women is interesting. Slightly more of the men voted Dem than women did
JI7
Dec 2022
#6
I'm a white woman in Gwinnett county Georgia. I happily voted Warnock. It's not all of us. Nt
jezebel321
Dec 2022
#7
This is what's off about the notion that reversing Roe will inspire women to vote Democratic
Effete Snob
Dec 2022
#11
Give the statistics, we can talk about the white women that voted overwhelmingly R
Cuthbert Allgood
Dec 2022
#89
I fully understand that. Why do you think it's painting with a broad brush.
Cuthbert Allgood
Dec 2022
#103
Thinking that the trope (often true) that Women are More Empathetic, and Kind that they'd tend to be
electric_blue68
Dec 2022
#194
Oh, for sure, but we knew we are horrible. The narrative was that Roe would change things.
Cuthbert Allgood
Dec 2022
#99
Rutgers-Eagleton Center for American Women & Politics (45% of women voted paternalistic since 1974).
TheBlackAdder
Dec 2022
#52
Well, I think it's ignorance. Red-neck upbringing by racist parents and no wish to change
judesedit
Dec 2022
#53
+1, this reeks of mass normalization of the horrible. Much similar is going on in Russia where they
uponit7771
Dec 2022
#133
Looking at those demographics, I can certainly understand why Republican leaders are trying
70sEraVet
Dec 2022
#74
They're probably incentivized by the patriarchy's benefits of the pedestal life role of mother &
ancianita
Dec 2022
#80
All the white men I know would not have voted for him either, except one - my 97 year old father
Beaverhausen
Dec 2022
#114
I'm not. I have said multiple times in this thread that we know white men are horrible.
Cuthbert Allgood
Dec 2022
#121
Religious beliefs are a big part of our country's conservative political agenda. A lot
jalan48
Dec 2022
#159
I'm not a religious person but I don't think Warnock's statements were out of bounds.
jalan48
Dec 2022
#174
Doesn't it make it hard to say the shitty religious views shouldn't be allowed in government
Cuthbert Allgood
Dec 2022
#176
True, I'd rather we didn't have our politicians touting their religious bnafides but
jalan48
Dec 2022
#178
Thanks for posting. Did not see the speech elsewhere. A great closer "dark times" btw. WE WON!
machoneman
Dec 2022
#265
For the last time. I'm NOT talking about anything offensive in his speech.
Cuthbert Allgood
Dec 2022
#271
That's exactly why they wrap their party in the bible. It's the only way they can win.
lindysalsagal
Dec 2022
#96
Do you happen to have any theories why their vote went this way in GA? thx in advance. Walker ...
uponit7771
Dec 2022
#125
I'd guess there are very few esp in The South, though we do have quite a bit of...
electric_blue68
Dec 2022
#190
30% of white women do care assuming this poll is correct and who really knows...this included
Demsrule86
Dec 2022
#128
"It's like their political party is religion and can't ever be wrong." The GOP is a religious cult
Ford_Prefect
Dec 2022
#165
I love all of our voters. Without the any one of the groups listed here we would not have won.
Midnight Writer
Dec 2022
#166
A Big *Thank You* to almost all of our Black Women & Most of our Black Men Citizens...
electric_blue68
Dec 2022
#181
I'm Very Grateful that I was Born in NYC thus affording me a better chance of being part of a...
electric_blue68
Dec 2022
#188
Yeah, sigh, well, MS.Wiley was My First Choice in our new Rank Choice voting system.
electric_blue68
Dec 2022
#195
Hello ex-NYC'r. What part. I've lived in upper Washington Hgts, Brooklyn near...
electric_blue68
Dec 2022
#198
I looks like 3% of Georgia white women did not vote how their husbands told them to...
Chainfire
Dec 2022
#199
🤔 I think bc all my white (like myself) women friends are center to left Democrats that I Forget...
electric_blue68
Dec 2022
#201
I don't get why you're picking on "white women" when the "White men" are just as vile
FakeNoose
Dec 2022
#217
I cannot help but shake my head in wonder over why anyone would really vote for Walker at all.
cstanleytech
Dec 2022
#238
A possible reason is, there is no separate thread about white Georgian men being evil
Temeret
Dec 2022
#257