It's 2023, and there's a US election in 2024 that will determine the future of climate change, war in Ukraine, the global economy, reproductive rights, and global fascism.

And folks still want to talk about Cambridge Analytica in 2015, instead of stuff like this:

https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/2024-election/democrats-scramble-reach-voters-florida-cancels-mail-ballot-requests-rcna91294

The reason you can't make any progress on:
* Climate change
* Reproductive rights
* Trans rights

Is because too many Black folk are denied the right to vote. Focus on that instead of your pet issue.

Democrats scramble to reach voters after Florida cancels mail-in ballot requests

Florida Democrats are organizing to chase down people who vote by mail after election officials in the state cancelled all standing mail ballot requests.

NBC News

I'm a climate doomer, because I know that no progress on the climate can happen unless Black voting rights in the US get sorted. And we aren't even paying attention to the Black voting problem, let alone close to solving it.

There is no path to making meaningful progress on climate change that doesn't go through Black people in the US getting to vote. None. The fact that we still can't accept this, is why I'm not optimistic about our chances to do anything meaningful about the climate.

@mekkaokereke Do you see any hope in this?
“The Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) is launching a super PAC to mobilize Black voters ahead of 2024 in an effort to give the House a Democratic majority and, in the process, elect the nation’s first Black Speaker of the House.”

The Rolling Sea Action Fund

https://thehill.com/homenews/race-politics/4103913-new-congressional-black-caucus-pac-set-to-mobilize-black-voters-ahead-of-2024/

New Congressional Black Caucus PAC set to mobilize Black voters ahead of 2024

The Congressional Black Caucus is launching a super PAC to mobilize Black voters ahead of 2024 in an effort to give the House a Democratic majority and, in the process, elect the nation’s first Black Speaker of the House. The Rolling Sea Action Fund will raise money as well as invest in different advertising and…

The Hill

@mickeleh Absolutely not. I think campaigns like this are less than helpful. They turn Black voters off. Especially Black men.

My threads on here are all about racist voter suppression. But the media conversation is always around "getting out the vote" or "mobilising Black voters?" The solution is to yell at the victims to try harder?

The word "suppression" didn't appear in this article even once.

No one is more motivated than Black voters. They don't need to be mobilized. They need help.

@mickeleh

Black people wait in line for 8 hours to vote, and take another day off work to register. GOP changes things to make it 9 hours, and requires 3 days off work. The Dem response to this is... to ask Black voters to suck it up because "democracy needs you!" and take the 3 days and 9 hour voting line?

And if Black voters don't take that 3 days off work and wait in line to vote for 9 hours, in sufficient numbers to win for the Dems, then we are blamed for losing the election?

@mekkaokereke @mickeleh Washington switched to mail-in ballots only before I turned 18. I've only ever voted by mail-in ballot.

My ignorance: I didn't realize Washington and Oregon (two of the whitest states) were the only two states that do this until the whole fracas about mail in ballots in 2020.

I still haven't gotten over realizing people have to wait multiple hours in line to vote. It's barbaric and backwards.

I fill out a form on my kitchen table weeks before the election. Takes 5 min

@sidereal @mekkaokereke @mickeleh
Washington state native, here. I was voting before we moved to all mail-in. It was annoying but not difficult. Because, yeah, privilege.

The day they allowed no-excuse permanent absentee ballots I signed up, and never looked back. I hated going to churches to vote - and yeah, I ended up going to a lot of churches to vote.

It's important to note that Washington still allows people to vote in person, if they prefer.

I wish every state did it our way.

@realtegan @sidereal @mekkaokereke @mickeleh Michigan recently codified no-excuse permanent absentee ballots. I haven’t voted in person since before the pandemic.

@gorskon @realtegan @sidereal @mekkaokereke @mickeleh

I lived in Michigan for nearly all my voting life until we moved to Oregon a few years ago. Mail-in / drop-off voting is the only civilized way.

In Oregon, I get a text & email when the ballot is coming. The ballot arrives on my doorstep. I read the info packet and vote at my leisure in the kitchen. We drop the ballots off, we get email & text that it's been received.

At no point in that process do I stand in a line, not like I did back in Michigan. Everyone should get to do it this way

@lmorchard @gorskon @realtegan @sidereal @mekkaokereke @mickeleh

Mail-in voting is great! It is, however, possible to set up in-person voting in a way that never requires anyone to stand in a line, though. I’ve never stood in a line since my immigration to Canada, also from Michigan (and I’ve voted at both busy and non-busy times). It’s plenty civilised here. The US just chooses not to set it up like that.

@IPEdmonton @mekkaokereke @mickeleh

We do, in some places. I have never had to stand in a significant line when voting in person in my small Massachusetts city. The places where it is chronic seem to be minority urban neighborhoods in places with hostile state governments. It's hard not to think that it is intentional vote suppression.

@mattmcirvin @mekkaokereke @mickeleh I mean, sure. But I never lived in a neighbourhood like that before I left the US, and yet standing in line to vote was standard. Since I’ve been voting in Canada (decades now), not even once. So I think that in addition to there being a systemic effort to suppress certain kinds of people’s votes in particular, there’s also a reluctance in the US to spend the money and resources it would take to make voting easy and accessible and pleasant just in general.
@IPEdmonton @mattmcirvin @mekkaokereke @mickeleh We HAVE mede it easy and accessible and pleasant. But not for everyone in the country. It's not an accident

@jonathanpeterson @mattmcirvin @mekkaokereke @mickeleh

If you read the other things I said in this thread, you know I disagree with that statement rather vehemently, and you know that it's based on having personal experience voting both in the US and in Canada. You can choose not to believe me, but if you haven't had the experience of voting in a country other than the US, I don't see why you would.

@IPEdmonton @mattmcirvin @mekkaokereke @mickeleh I'm not excusing it. My wife and I have spent an evening shuttling water and food to folks stuck in line for hours trying to vote in southwest Atlanta.

But I think you'll find voting for someone like Donald Trump is voting is a quite a simple process. Though hardly necessary, they can just have their Senator give them a ring to check in when they want something.

Lines are for the poors and the browns, but not the experience of all.

@jonathanpeterson @mattmcirvin @mekkaokereke @mickeleh

Again, that’s the opposite of what I’m saying here—that there are ALWAYS lines in the US, even in areas that aren’t being systemically disenfranchised. And if you don’t have the experience of voting in another country, I don’t know why you’d be able to disagree with my point.

@IPEdmonton @mattmcirvin @mekkaokereke @mickeleh and I'm telling you there AREN'T lines if you live in wealthy suburbs. In Atlanta, we see it on social media every election. We have the same quality variations in voting experience varying wildly by district, county and state that we do with the quality of public education or healthcare. What on earth would voting experience in Canada have to do with the differences between US inner city, low-density rural and wealthy suburban districts?

@jonathanpeterson

And I'm telling YOU that I PERSONALLY experienced lines in all the different US jurisdictions I voted in before I left the US. And every other American I've discussed this with, including in this very thread, has agreed that there is always SOME line in US polling places, it's just that the lines are shorter in places that aren't being systematically disenfranchised. (In Canada that is not the case.)

@jonathanpeterson

As for what Canada has to do with this, it's because you're responding in a side thread, initiated by me, that was specifically about how there are lines in the US (even in places that "poor and brown") and there are not lines in Canada (even in places that are). If you don't intend to be participating in that conversation, then we should both stop trying to talk to each other right now, because we're clearly talking past each other.

@jonathanpeterson

What I'm disagreeing with, in case it's not yet clear, is your comment that the US has made voting easy and accessible and pleasant for people who don't live in poor and minority parts of the country. I think you'd be stunned at how different it is to vote in other countries, even as compared with those NON-poor-and-minority areas in the US. (I sure was, when I started voting here.)

@IPEdmonton This wasn't a conversation triggered by a post about the most optimally easy voting process imaginable but on the hugely onerous hurdles to voting that the GOP has been putting in front of young people, people getting a college education, poor people, & people of color - all democratic demographic strengths in all the states where they have the power to do so.

Perfect world pedantics to hijack discussions of US racism and progressive policies are WAY too common. Be better.