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Greg Palast talks protest & voter suppression – Sarah Syed first-person view of a protest

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Greg Palast recounts his LA protest experience, presents eyewitness to George Floyd murder, & talks voter suppression. Sarah Syed first-person account of a protest.

Having both Greg Palast and Sarah Syed on the same show illustrates a multigenerational progressive movement.

Greg Palast almost had a confrontation with LA Police until they realized he was a reporter with a cameraman. He also provided us with an eyewitness to the murder of George Floyd. Palast then continues into his passion, voter suppression, a subject he wrote about in his recent book.

Sarah Syed gives a first-person account of her attendance and assistance to the Houston George Floyd protest.

We also discuss many other important issues.

George Floyd has changed millions, unknowingly.


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Blog of the Week


Progressives Have Good Chance to Move a ‘Receptive’ Biden to the Left, Says Sanders

“It is not good enough just to elect Joe Biden. We’ve got to continue the movement in this country for transformative change.”

Sen. Bernie Sanders told The New Yorker Tuesday that he believes former Vice President Joe Biden can be pushed to the left on a number of issues if he wins the 2020 general election.

In an interview titled “Bernie Sanders Is Not Done Fighting,” the Vermont independent senator refused to “sugarcoat” his political differences with his former primary opponent, who is now the presumptive Democratic nominee challenging President Donald Trump in November. During the 2020 primary debates, Biden claimed Sanders’ plan to expand Medicare to all Americans was not “realistic” and said the country is “not looking for a revolution” weeks before the coronavirus pandemic revealed the economic precarity in which millions of people live in the United States.

However, Sanders expressed hope that the joint task forces created by his and Biden’s campaigns could help push Biden to embrace policies that prioritize the needs of working and marginalized Americans.

Whether Biden does so, Sanders said, will determine whether the former vice president can effect meaningful change during his potential presidency.

“It is not good enough just to elect Joe Biden,” Sanders told the magazine. “We’ve got to continue the movement in this country for transformative change, and to understand that we are way, way, way behind many other industrialized countries in providing for the needs of working families.”

The need for Biden to push a more progressive policy agenda should now be apparent to former skeptics in the midst of the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, suggested Sanders. The public health and economic crisis caused by the outbreak has so far pushed more than 16 million Americans off their employer-sponsored health insurance, according to the Economic Policy Institute, and has caused an explosion in demand at food banks across the U.S. as many unemployed people began struggling to afford basic necessities after missing just one or two paychecks.

“What we are seeing right now, the great economic message of today, is that, when you live paycheck to paycheck and you miss a few paychecks, a few weeks of work, your family is suddenly now in economic desperation. Literally. Struggling to put food on the table and pay the rent,” Sanders said. “So we’ve got to rethink.”

“The fight continues for a Medicare for All single-payer program, and that becomes especially obvious when you have seen in recent months millions of people losing their jobs,” the senator added. “So I’m going to continue that fight.”

Sanders said Biden has been “much more receptive to sitting down and talking with me and other progressives than we have seen in the past,” a reference to former Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton.

“I think it is fair to say that our relationship with Biden is a stronger relationship,” he told The New Yorker.

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