Cubiclerevolt
Member
https://money.yahoo.com/inspired-bernie-sanders-young-progressives-120021502.html
Jewel Hurtado first heard of Bernie Sanders when she was 17, still a high school student and trying to figure out whom to vote for in California's 2016 Democratic presidential primary.
The Central Valley resident watched a video of the Vermont senator talking about challenges confronting the working class and people of color, people like many in her small agricultural town. He spoke about equality for the LGBTQ community, a group she knows well as a bisexual woman. His message about universal healthcare coverage resonated with Hurtado, who was uninsured at the time.
"Yeah, maybe he was just another old white man politician," she said, "but that’s not what it was about for me. It was about the fact that I felt seen."
She wanted to push for those changes, too. So she ran to be a delegate with the Democratic Party when she was 18. In 2018, she launched a bid for a seat on the Kingsburg City Council and won by eight votes. - Emphasis mine.
Hurtado is just one of a legion of young progressives inspired by Sanders who have set out to run for local, state and federal positions to advocate for issues the senator helped bring into the mainstream conversation during his 2016 and 2020 presidential bids. From the Central Valley to Lewiston, Maine, they have won public office so they could advocate for changes both small and sweeping.
Blah blah blah socialism is "brave and inspiring" ad nauseam.
The question is what are we doing to counter this? How do we get our kids involved to counter this?
If we do not act, we are going to get overrun.
The difference with the progressive left, is that they are motivated and undeterred by failure (being the fact they are losers, they are used to this). While we sit around with our dicks in hands they are running for office and winning city council spots and so forth. This is exactly how it vaulted people such as Kyrsten Sinema into the national spotlight.
The biggest problem we face is that we are all individuals and it's hard to get us to agree on issues. I just wish we could be united with certain things we all believe in to just hold the line.
Jewel Hurtado first heard of Bernie Sanders when she was 17, still a high school student and trying to figure out whom to vote for in California's 2016 Democratic presidential primary.
The Central Valley resident watched a video of the Vermont senator talking about challenges confronting the working class and people of color, people like many in her small agricultural town. He spoke about equality for the LGBTQ community, a group she knows well as a bisexual woman. His message about universal healthcare coverage resonated with Hurtado, who was uninsured at the time.
"Yeah, maybe he was just another old white man politician," she said, "but that’s not what it was about for me. It was about the fact that I felt seen."
She wanted to push for those changes, too. So she ran to be a delegate with the Democratic Party when she was 18. In 2018, she launched a bid for a seat on the Kingsburg City Council and won by eight votes. - Emphasis mine.
Hurtado is just one of a legion of young progressives inspired by Sanders who have set out to run for local, state and federal positions to advocate for issues the senator helped bring into the mainstream conversation during his 2016 and 2020 presidential bids. From the Central Valley to Lewiston, Maine, they have won public office so they could advocate for changes both small and sweeping.
Blah blah blah socialism is "brave and inspiring" ad nauseam.
The question is what are we doing to counter this? How do we get our kids involved to counter this?
If we do not act, we are going to get overrun.
The difference with the progressive left, is that they are motivated and undeterred by failure (being the fact they are losers, they are used to this). While we sit around with our dicks in hands they are running for office and winning city council spots and so forth. This is exactly how it vaulted people such as Kyrsten Sinema into the national spotlight.
The biggest problem we face is that we are all individuals and it's hard to get us to agree on issues. I just wish we could be united with certain things we all believe in to just hold the line.