If you are a white leftist and you talk “both parties are the same they are both capitalist” you will loose most of your black audience. I think it ought to be obvious that this isn’t because blackfolks love Democrats (in most cases, there is always someone being simple in any group) —no. it’s because the difference between the parties is material and obvious and these are unstable times.

When I hear such talk I wonder if the speaker is working on voter suppression.

Voting brings me no joy — but I never miss an election out of a kind of stubborn spite. I’ve never heard anyone explain how having all the marginalized and left leaning people not vote would be more annoying to the Democrats and Republicans than if we all do vote— and for the Democrats especially in the primaries.

I also don’t think voting is real political engagement, but it’s kind of the bare minimum. Even if you do a write-in for every office.

@futurebird While the parties have similarities, they have stark differences that make it easy for me to vote blue, every time.

I wish that it made a huge difference in the state I live in. It makes some difference in local and statehouse races, but as I've said many times before, there is no national strategy to reduce or eliminate the reinforcing impact of right wing media, and nowhere is that more painfully obvious than in any of the center red states in the continental U.S.

What bugs me most is the lost opportunities.