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Post by Jake Jortles on Aug 7, 2019 7:55:17 GMT -5
Yeah I wish it was 2-3 hours like Yang and Tulsi did. Getting them as far away from the stump speech as possible should be the goal. Still really enjoyed hearing Bernie in this setting, and I think this interview will help him a lil bit.
Even if this is was doubled (they said hundreds, for whatever that number actually is.. of course is up in the air)
When you don't see any people of color at your rally, maybe you should re-think your position. ESPECIALLY all these sycophantic family members, or controlling police officers directing their families to join in.
Because what you are saying is that Eric Garner's death is less relevant than this guys job, while he still gets to live, and probably will profit off this in the end because we live in a sick nation that rewards this shit. Yet being on desk duty for 5 years and finally getting fired means rally. Yet I bet you when we take the streets it's unpatriotic. It's astounding.
That hour with Bernie was awesome, but I found myself upset at Joe Rogan’s questions. For some reason I am struggling to remember them now, but I felt like their was opportunities to follow up with objections a conservative might raise so Bernie could address them, but JR was all, “what can be done?” every time.
Post by itrainmonkeys on Aug 8, 2019 12:41:55 GMT -5
I didn't read that article yet but I did see something about Warren saying she would overturn restrictions on local run internet. Like when some towns or cities will work on their own set up and not be blocked by the big internet companies. That would help but I need to check out what that plan in the article is about
Ehhhhhhh idk about that one. I do think that the internet should be treated as a utility, but I don't want the federal government controlling it.
The major issue here is that until it's treated as a utility on a legislative level, the companies are using pass federal/state deals to game the system entirely. They are intentionally raising rates and bottlenecking speeds to deal with their loss of cable television revenues (now tied into a lot of the companies now that provide both your TV and Internet). If they weren't gaming a system that we gave them contracts for (please remember that Comcast laid most of the fiber optic wire in the country under a Bush contract) -- and there are tons of under privileged areas without a reasonable solution to internet access. The plan needs to be laid out this big to have any competition with private companies who have had a completely unfair advantage over the consumer.