kamala harris was talking about with the communities of color, the impact on countries, caribbean countries that got the worst of it with emissions versus other countries that are sheath polluters. everyone is laughing at me. this is really what was going on. jesse: no one is laughing. jessica: it was a much more nuanced argument. the fema director backed up kamala harris. sandra: why it doesn t she come out and say something? jessica: i don t know. jesse: apparently this just went over everyone s head. it s much more nuanced and complicated for us cretins to understand. katie: when you engage in the woke bureaucracy in the middle of a crisis which is beginning part the melting pot by just deciding and thinking about, these people are here and are they more oppressed and we have to decide who s more deserving of the grievance award instead of just saying there s a
alone. also let it spread out. that is their version. equity. everybody is unsafe. here s your slogan if you re running for office. if you want more weeks, keep going woke. katie: you seem veteran of 9/11 murdered after going out to get lunch. the response from people who want to be in charge of the city council is this doesn t happen that often. it s disheartening and demoralizing. among ems workers, the police, the city needs to make the situation better. jesse: permission to speak on behalf of all new yorkers. greg: please do. jesse: 9/11, super storm sandy, mob wars, crack academic. bear stearns, covid-19 race riots. new yorkers are pretty tough. we have immigrants from tough places. you might get propositioned by a
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Entertainment helped me survive this year
Following the killing of George Floyd and the subsequent protests and rioting in La Mesa on May 30 and 31 events that took place in my neighborhood racial injustice weighed heavy on my mind. I started exploring to learn more about what democracy is supposed to be and how it operates in practice. One result of my research was discovering an online event followed by reading a book culminating in watching a documentary. This turned out to be the most critical entertainment combo that helped me survive the racial injustice/pandemic/election year that was 2020.
It began with attending the Brennan Center for Justice’s “Why Fixing Democracy Is Easier Than You Think,” an online conversation featuring author David Litt and Valerie Jarrett, a senior adviser to President Barack Obama. I didn’t know who David Litt was or how democracy was tied to voter disenfranchisement, but, after reading about the June 2020 event in a Brennan Center new