ok we might have an answer... Christopher Swann is the only one I've found who is explicitly speaking out against the genocide in Gaza.

he is also campaigning on medicare for all, guaranteed income, and abolishing ICE

his website: https://www.swannforsenate.com/

the bad news is he has raised less than $5,000 according to the FEC and I have seen zero ads from him. so apparently no one knows who he is. #ChristopherSwann #Illinois #Chicago #politics

Swann For Senate

Swann For Senate's campaign

Swann For Senate
#BookAdventCalendar2022 Day 2 - Never Go Home by Christopher Swann. 2nd in the Faulkner family series (3rd July 2023!). You don't have to read the first to totally enjoy this (but it's great too!) This is the story of Susannah Faulkner, who calls herself a "high-functioning sociopath" who will stop at nothing to protect her family. Chris' writing will keep you on the edge of your seat in this #Thriller and you'll not want to put it down!
#Bookstodon #AmReading #Books #ChristopherSwann
I hope that The Southern Literary Review will soon have a presence on Mastodon. Until then, enjoy The Official Southern Literary Review 2022 Holiday Gift Guide! I'd like to add two books to this list that were somehow overlooked. Lark Ascending by Silas House, and Never Go Home by Christopher Swann
#SouthernLiteraryReview #RobertGwaltney #AnnHite #KarenZacharias #JasonMott #JanisseRay #ChristopherSwann #WritingCommunity #Bookstodon #AmReading @SilasHouse
https://southernlitreview.com/reviews/the-official-southern-literary-review-2022-holiday-gift-guide.htm?fbclid=IwAR26nGdbiyZurVvmNivo-uJVt0tKQdY6dHUfeG6q0rMSi6d1e1zurnKHNyo
The Official Southern Literary Review 2022 Holiday Gift Guide - Southern Literary Review

Donna’s Picks For readers who liked Where the Crawdads Sing:  In the Lonely Backwater by Val Niemen For fans of graphic novels: The third in a series by Robert Gipe, Pop For Tony Soprano fans and fans of dark financial world fiction: Coyote Loop by L. C. Fiore For Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil fans: The […]

Southern Literary Review