This is me as well. As of right now she wouldn't be might first choice candidate! But we've seen this "attack early, attack often" behavior coming from the right wing and it's a carbon copy of it.To be clear, I'm not sold on Harris eitther. Nobody should be sold on anybody right now. The far left has already started mobilizing against her though, and the pieces are usually slanted garbage that provide only the context needed to push the point and nothing more.
Can any of you purity leftists actually detail what Harris did wrong? Not "she should've prosecuted Mnunchin" bullshit. If that's your argument, what evidence did they have? A leaked memo is not evidence.
The fact that the CA Housing Bill of Rights increased CA AG power to investigate and prosecute financial crime leads me to believe that she did not have the power at the time to actually do anything about it.
Fleischmann, a secret witness who said she gave federal prosecutors evidence of mortgage-securities wrongdoing she saw at the bank in 2006-07, clicked on the video link. "Wonderful," she thought. At last, Holder would announce plans for criminal charges.
But Holder didn't mention JPMorgan — the banking giant that six months earlier had reached a record $13 billion civil settlement with prosecutors for marketing toxic mortgage investments like those that contributed to the national financial crisis. Although he foreshadowed then-upcoming cases against two other global banks, Holder said prosecutors should coordinate with regulators to avoid damaging the economy when major financial institutions are hit with criminal charges.
At that point, Fleischmann says she determined to switch roles — from anonymous informant to very public whistle-blower — regardless of the JPMorgan confidentiality agreement she'd signed when she was among bank workers laid off in 2008.
"It was this nonsensical statement," said Fleischmann on Friday, recounting the turning point one day after outing herself in a Rolling Stone story posted online.
"What he was doing, to me as a lawyer, is not how you're supposed to deal with securities fraud," Fleischmann added in the telephone interview. "At that point, I stopped believing the government was going to go forward with cases against individuals, no matter how strong the case was."
literally no one expected sanders to immediately deliver on a sweeping revolutionary socialist agenda if he were elected, but starting from the left can get you more of what you really want than starting from the middle
This is me as well. As of right now she wouldn't be might first choice candidate! But we've seen this "attack early, attack often" behavior coming from the right wing and it's a carbon copy of it.
And this ladies and gentleman is the perfect example of someone being completely misinformed.Never understood why the "bailout" wasn't a loan that wallstreet and banks HAD to pay back.
Gov straight up gave them a fat check and said buy hookers and blow
Also it's quite telling that it's only the black possible candidates catching this much heat in the first place. And not Biden (right to Obama on almost everything), Warren (who also has rich donors), or Sanders (who seem to have no problem with the military industrial complex)
Hmmmmmmmm
So, can you cite anything that justifies that reaction?
Focus on that over what other issues? We had this debate already with Bernie's failed, laser focus campaign on reforming corporate america and the finance industry. The majority of democrats, followed by a majority of states, made back to back choices to support candidates who were RELATIVELY less inclined to make this issue a the top priority.but what we need to focus on now is how to address mortgage and investment banking going forward. If she starts saying the right things and pushing for the right policies in that regard I will be the first to support her.
I wonder how many people actually know why Warren is a Senator today.
You serious? I knew numerous people who were damn sure that college was one vote away from being free, that they would get 15 an hour and various things. People spewed that shit like it was the gospel during the primary.So, can you cite anything that justifies that reaction?
Harris and her team probably could've leveraged whistleblower testimony, their expertise and their documentation alongside countless complaints against OneWest's foreclosure practices against the blacks/hispanics. But just like the DOJ at the federal level we know what Sen. Harris chose to do assuming she received that info:
https://www.usatoday.com/story/mone...-fleischmann-jpmorgan-whistleblower/18652819/
Lazy gov't officials across the board aren't doing anything useful with the information they're being given on a silver platter. Furthermore, when they secure "record-breaking" civil penalities against the worst in the business they don't thank individuals who are doing all the legwork. Courageous folks across the country took on virtually all of the risk while gov't officials sat on their ass as people were victimized left and right.
The fact you're lead to believe Harris didn't have the authority to investigate why Mnuchin and his supporters purchased one of the most notorious fraud operations (IndyMac) in the US is sad. IndyMac's specialty was orginating/securtizing Alt-A and peddling reverse mortgages to ignorant marks. Mnuchin's scheme was to fraudulently foreclose and profit under the pretense his business was there to save the day.
Restriction on dual track foreclosure: Mortgage servicers are restricted from advancing the foreclosure process if the homeowner is working on securing a loan modification. When a homeowner completes an application for a loan modification, the foreclosure process is essentially paused until the complete application has been fully reviewed.
Guaranteed single point of contact: Homeowners are guaranteed a single point of contact as they navigate the system and try to keep their homes – a person or team at the bank who knows the facts of their case, has their paperwork and can get them a decision about their application for a loan modification.
Verification of documents: Lenders that record and file multiple unverified documents will be subject to a civil penalty of up to $7,500 per loan in an action brought by a civil prosecutor. Lenders who are in violation are also subject to enforcement by licensing agencies, including the Department of Business Oversight, the Bureau of Real Estate.
Enforceability: Borrowers will have authority to seek redress of ”material" violations of the new foreclosure process protections. Injunctive relief will be available prior to a foreclosure sale and recovery of damages will be available following a sale. (AB 278, SB 900)
Tenant rights: Purchasers of foreclosed homes are required to give tenants at least 90 days before starting eviction proceedings. If the tenant has a fixed-term lease entered into before transfer of title at the foreclosure sale, the owner must honor the lease unless the owner can prove that exceptions intended to prevent fraudulent leases apply. (AB 2610)
Tools to prosecute mortgage fraud: The statute of limitations to prosecute mortgage-related crimes is extended from one to three years, allowing the Attorney General's office to investigate and prosecute complex mortgage fraud crimes. In addition, the Attorney General's office can use a statewide grand jury to investigate and indict the perpetrators of financial crimes involving victims in multiple counties.
(AB 1950, SB 1474)
Tools to curb blight: Local governments and receivers have additional tools to fight blight caused by multiple vacant homes in their neighborhoods, from more time to allow homeowners to remedy code violations to a means to compel the owners of foreclosed property to pay for upkeep.
(AB 2314)
You serious? I knew numerous people who were damn sure that college was one vote away from being free, that they would get 15 an hour and various things. People spewed that shit like it was the gospel during the primary.
You serious? I knew numerous people who were damn sure that college was one vote away from being free, that they would get 15 an hour and various things. People spewed that shit like it was the gospel during the primary.
So what you're saying is if the Democrats ran on a platform that was, say
DEMOCRATS 2020
FREE HEALTH CARE
FREE COLLEGE
NO MORE WARS
It would be super effective and convincing for the left-leaning people who didn't vote for Hillary?
So, can you cite anything that justifies that reaction?
The author who first wrote about Harris, Booker etc was blasted for this. His follow up was hilarious. Essentially "Let me now write about Biden faults to show my impartiality, but also let me clarify that for some reason the left loves him regardless of these faults". It was basically an admission the left is oblivious to their own biases.
I mean, probably, but...it would be a pretty bad idea? The GOP today should help clarify what happens to parties that make promises they know are impossible to keep.
So what you're saying is if the Democrats ran on a platform that was, say
DEMOCRATS 2020
FREE HEALTH CARE
FREE COLLEGE
NO MORE WARS
It would be super effective and convincing for the left-leaning people who didn't vote for Hillary?
I mean, probably, but...it would be a pretty bad idea? The GOP today should help clarify what happens to parties that make promises they know are impossible to keep.
The way that the voting demographics and timetable played out in the primaries. http://graphics.wsj.com/elections/2016/how-clinton-won/So, can you cite anything that justifies that reaction?
Why is it impossible?
If there was a sufficiently charismatic presidential candidate who won and also took Congress, why couldn't they enact that agenda?
Edit - I'm genuinely asking. Other countries have those things. If someone were elected with a huge mandate, couldn't they at least make significant progress towards those things?
I'm not saying I know who the candidate would be our whether those ideas poll well enough to win an election on... but it's not impossible, surely.
Why is it impossible?
If there was a sufficiently charismatic presidential candidate who won and also took Congress, why couldn't they enact that agenda?
Edit - I'm genuinely asking. Other countries have those things. If someone were elected with a huge mandate, couldn't they at least make significant progress towards those things?
I'm not saying I know who the candidate would be our whether those ideas poll well enough to win an election on... but it's not impossible, surely.
There's no such thing as free healthcare or free college. Those are government subsidized programs. Any promises made verbatim will be properly lambasted by anyone except the few on the far left. Any pragmatic approach (*cough Hillary *cough) will be lambasted by those few on the far left looking for verbatim pie-in-the-sky statements.
Why is it impossible?
If there was a sufficiently charismatic presidential candidate who won and also took Congress, why couldn't they enact that agenda?
Edit - I'm genuinely asking. Other countries have those things. If someone were elected with a huge mandate, couldn't they at least make significant progress towards those things?
I'm not saying I know who the candidate would be our whether those ideas poll well enough to win an election on... but it's not impossible, surely.
I mean, certainly it's impossible while there's a large bipartisan consensus on the need to continue murdering foreign brown people for the profits of military contractors and resource extraction, but if we scaled that back the other two goals would probably even be more achievable.I mean, probably, but...it would be a pretty bad idea? The GOP today should help clarify what happens to parties that make promises they know are impossible to keep.
I mean, certainly it's impossible while there's a large bipartisan consensus on the need to continue murdering foreign brown people for the profits of military contractors and resource extraction, but if we scaled that back the other two goals would probably even be more achievable.
Just a quick tactical strike!I don't know if your vacation was too long or not long enough!
I mean, 2016 definitely proved that voters are pretty stupid, but I still think they can appreciate that 'free' in this sense means 'paid for by the government with tax dollars.'
I don't think they're such crazy things to ask for considering the entire rest of the developed world, combined with the current rock bottom status of American prestige.
Clinton had a lot of progressive policy proposals but I don't believe she ever talked about something on this scale. My thinking is that her pragmatism is exactly what hurt her electorally.
As far as 'no more wars' goes, yeah. It's hyperbole of course. But a lot of people I know see the Democrats' willingness to bomb people as their worst quality (and the biggest disappointment of the Obama administration.) I know American military adventurism isn't really talked about in the mainstream political discourse - I definitely had someone with a Hillary avatar tell me to 'stop crying about American imperialism' last month - but I think a candidate who was willing to engage on the issue could pick up a lot of voters.
Heres what every student and family should expect under Hillarys plan:
Costs wont be a barrier
Every student should have the option to graduate from a public college or university in their state without taking on any student debt. By 2021, families with income up to $125,000 will pay no tuition at in-state four-year public colleges and universities. And from the beginning, every student from a family making $85,000 a year or less will be able to go to an in-state four-year public college or university without paying tuition.
All community colleges will offer free tuition.
Everyone will do their part. States will have to step up and invest in higher education, and colleges and universities will be held accountable for the success of their students and for controlling tuition costs.
A $25 billion fund will support historically black colleges and universities, Hispanic-serving institutions, and other minority-serving institutions in building new ladders of opportunity for students. Read Hillarys agenda to support HBCUs and minority-focused institutions here.
The one-quarter of all college students who are also parents will get the support they need and the resources they deserve. Read more about Hillarys plan to support student parents here.
Read the fact sheet
Debt wont hold you back
Borrowers will be able to refinance loans at current rates, providing debt relief to an estimated 25 million people. Theyll never have to pay back more than 10 percent of their income, and all remaining college debt will be forgiven after 20 years.
Delinquent borrowers and those in default will get help to protect their credit and get back on their feet.
To reduce the burden for future borrowers, Hillary will significantly cut interest rates so the government never profits from college student loans.
Hillarys plan will crack down on predatory schools, lenders, and bill collectors.
A new payroll deduction portal for employers and employees will simplify the repayment processand Hillary will explore more options to encourage employers to help pay down student debt.
Aspiring entrepreneurs will be able to defer their loans with no payments or interest for up to three years. Social entrepreneurs and those starting new enterprises in distressed communities will be eligible for up to $17,500 in loan forgiveness.
Hillary will take immediate executive action to offer a three-month moratorium on student loan payments to all federal loan borrowers. That will give every borrower a chance to consolidate their loans, sign up for income-based repayment plans, and take advantage of opportunities to reduce their monthly interest payments and fees.
Fully paid for: This plan will be fully paid for by limiting certain tax expenditures for high-income taxpayers.
We have more work to do to finish our long fight to provide universal, quality, affordable health care to everyone in America
To get the 60 senate votes to pass such a bill, there would likely be democratic senators from rather conservative states.
Even if the majority of Americans supported all of that free stuff, it really wouldnt matter. All that would matter is if a majority of that conservative state supported all that free stuff.
Of course, you could ask that senator to die on the hill of free stuff, but remember, the senator is from a conservative state. That senator might not even agree with agenda because he/she is more conservative than a typical democrat, so why should that senator die on that hill?
So what you're saying is if the Democrats ran on a platform that was, say
DEMOCRATS 2020
FREE HEALTH CARE
FREE COLLEGE
NO MORE WARS
It would be super effective and convincing for the left-leaning people who didn't vote for Hillary?
Here was Clintons college proposal:
She also backed a public option to expand healthcare options beyond Obamacare.
These were realistic, pragmatic goals, and yet they were mostly ignored....because voters ARE that stupid.
That's what I'm saying! Maybe people don't vote for realistic pragmatism. Maybe they want to be part of something big, some once-in-a-generation political realignment. It's happened in the United States before.
.
If we back it off to "make significant progress towards," I am happy to agree that we could accomplish that with a sufficiently popular president and Congressional support.
The problem is that, if we promised the moon and delivered the stars, people will condemn us for not delivering the moon. This entire discussion is proof of that, honestly, because we constantly go back and forth on condemning the record of the most effective progressive president in a hundred years because the huge progressive victories he achieved weren't maximalist enough. The ACA is slammed as an insurance company payoff because covering 70% of uninsured Americans, bending the health care cost curve, ending preexisting condition discrimination, and creating a consensus that all Americans should have healthcare weren't good enough! The stimulus bill gets slammed as a payout to the big banks because nationalizing failing institutions, giving out interest-bearing loans that preserved the economy and made money for the Treasury, heavily rewriting bank regulations, and drastically increasing infrastructure and green energy spending to the point of revolutionizing solar power weren't good enough!
(This is all separate from the problem with promising "no new wars," which I firmly believe we just can't actually do because we can't guarantee no situation will arise that justifies a defensive or anti-genocidal war.)
Hillary's strategy was to promise things she thought she could actually accomplish. This strategy seemed to suck, fair enough. But I still think there are significant risks with promising exactly the things people want, because people, in general, are not public policy experts, and the things they want are simply unlikely to be feasible. We need to push for goals that are realistically achievable while still meaningful. Like, if you said MEDICARE FOR ALL, I would support that as Democratic messaging, because I believe we can do it.
You're still not addressing the baked in challenges that liberals face regarding the structure of the senate and how it over-represents rural america. The wave has to come from more than just liberal city centers and blue states.
So many of these arguments basically boil down to "the Democrats lost because they weren't left enough" vs "the Democrats lost because they were too far left." I don't know if there's any concrete evidence one way or the other, but until I see some I have to think it's the former.
Obama got sixty senators. I don't think it's, like, inconceivable that someone else could get a couple more, or (way better) get sixty senators who were on average a little more progressive.
For the record, I actually don't think anybody (except some racists lol) is arguing that the Democrats were too far left, and a lot of us would generally like the Democrats to be further left, especially now.
There are definitely some people who argue that Bernie split the party but in general I think those people are sore winners. Bernie is kind of dopey on social justice messaging but he's clearly working hard for the Democratic Party.
I mostly just reject the argument that we weren't left enough, partly because my observation is that many (not all, by any means) of the people who argue that don't have much perspective on how left they actually were.
I mostly just reject the argument that we weren't left enough, partly because my observation is that many (not all, by any means) of the people who argue that don't have much perspective on how left they actually were.
As a die-hard Bernie progressive, the issue of Kamala Harris is simply this:
- Americans rightfully rejected (Hillary Clinton), and WILL again reject a politician that has been shown to be beholden to donors (Mnuchin in Kamala's case) instead of doing their job as representatives of the people or doing what is the right thing to do.
- Disenfranchised progressives and independents will be reeling if the party donors and the old corrupt party leaders ONCE AGAIN cherry pick who they want their pro-donor nominee to be. The mere notion that Clinton donors have picked their next anointed queen will bring back memories of 2016 in a furious way.
- The minute Kamala was criticized, the usual Clinton lapdogs in the media started barking at progressives for asking questions, as if we should just fall in place with what/who they have chosen for us (same shit as in 2016). This is having the OPPOSITE effect. Moreover, progressives have always been on the side of letting potential candidates square off on the ISSUES, instead of money dictating who the next candidate should be.
P.S.Nina Turner is better than Kamala Harris anyways!
Americans gave Hilary the majority of the votes before they even got to see that Trump would be the biggest corporate cock sucker in US presidential history. But you somehow think ties to corporations are going to doom the next Democratic candidate.
Seriously ...
If you take the he bottom 20 state populations and added up, California would still have a larger population than all of those put together. Most of those are red states. They get the same amount of senators as we do.
Utah, Arkansas, Kansas, Nebraska, West Virginia, Idaho, Montana, South Dakota, Alaska, North Dakota and Wyoming are all apart of those 20 states. Of these, you may in a crazy wave get support for UHC in Alaska and possibly WV is Manchin is still around.
If you get 60+ senators, 10+ of them will have to come from states I listed above or in other red states. Those will not be "progressive" senators. They'll be moderate. You're seriously downplaying this.
Hillary's strategy was to promise things she thought she could actually accomplish. This strategy seemed to suck, fair enough. But I still think there are significant risks with promising exactly the things people want, because people, in general, are not public policy experts, and the things they want are simply unlikely to be feasible. We need to push for goals that are realistically achievable while still meaningful. Like, if you said MEDICARE FOR ALL, I would support that as Democratic messaging, because I believe we can do it.
Sadly most folks think fixing economic issues will fix social issues. A stupid privileged position to take that ignores history but it is something many folks believe.
So what you're saying is if the Democrats ran on a platform that was, say
DEMOCRATS 2020
FREE HEALTH CARE
FREE COLLEGE
NO MORE WARS
It would be super effective and convincing for the left-leaning people who didn't vote for Hillary?