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FSogol

(45,514 posts)
216. Very true. He also released a comprehensive plan detailing criminal justice reform
Wed Aug 5, 2015, 09:01 AM
Aug 2015
A Reinvestment and Rehabilitation Framework for America’s Criminal Justice System
The full body of Governor Martin O'Malley's law enforcement reform plan

____America’s criminal justice system is badly in need of reform. For too long our justice system has reinforced our country’s cruel history of racism and economic inequality—remaining disconnected from our founding ideals of life, liberty, and equal treatment under the law.

Our country needs new leadership that will honestly assess our broken criminal justice system and put forward solutions that will:

•Ensure that justice is delivered for all Americans—regardless of race, class, or place.

•Build trust between law enforcement and the communities they serve.

•Ensure fairness and equal treatment for all people at every step within our justice system.



We must also strive to make our “corrections” facilities actually achieve rehabilitation. Almost all men and women who serve time in jail or prison return to their former communities.

BUILD TRUST IN LAW ENFORCEMENT

The causes of crime are complicated. But our fundamental values and principles as Americans are simple: that all people are created equal, and should be protected equally under the law.

Public officials especially, including police officers, must treat all communities fairly and earn their trust. The next president should work closely with law enforcement agencies to implement best practices in policing, and build cultures of transparency, accountability, and respect.

Ensure Transparency and Accountability in Law Enforcement

As President Obama’s Task Force on 21st Century Policing observed, law enforcement is at its best when officers work together with neighborhood residents to ensure public safety and promote the dignity of all people. This “guardian” ethic better protects citizens and law enforcement alike. Moreover, people have the greatest trust in law enforcement when officers’ strategies and policies reflect their own values and input, and when policing data and practices are transparent and accessible to the public.

As president, Governor O’Malley will:

Mandate and Expand Data Reporting. The FBI does not collect data on police-involved shootings. Local data is also poor and incomplete. O’Malley has called for—and will strongly support—legislation to require law enforcement agencies to report data on all police-involved shootings, custodial deaths, discourtesy complaints, and use of excessive force. This data should be centralized in a universal database and made publicly available, allowing communities to observe trends and develop policy responses when necessary.

**Establish a National Use of Force Standard**. State laws governing when police officers can use excessive force vary greatly. In order to protect citizen and officer safety, O’Malley will put forward national guidelines on the use of force, linked to the expanded mandatory reporting detailed above. He will support legislation to require states to review and amend their own use of force laws to comply with federal guidelines.

Expand Community Collaboration and Civilian Review of Police Departments. O’Malley would reward and encourage police departments to implement best practices in goal-oriented community policing, including through the eligibility criteria in federal grant programs. These include undergoing racial bias training and crisis de-escalation training; establishing internal accountability measures to track and review civilian complaints and address officer misconduct; and creating and empowering civilian review boards to independently monitor and audit policing cases.

Use Technology to Advance Transparency. Technology—including but not limited to body cameras—can improve policing and build community trust in law enforcement. But it must meet community and local law enforcement needs, without infringing on individual rights. O’Malley will work with law enforcement, advocates, and other stakeholders to establish national standards for deploying and developing technology, while protecting privacy and communities’ access to data produced by body cameras or similar tools.

Improve Access to Justice within the Criminal Justice System

To build trust in law enforcement, we must also build trust in our justice system, adopting policies and reforms that improve fairness and ensure access to justice.

As president, Governor O’Malley will:

**Encourage Independent Investigations of Policing Cases.** Local prosecutors must work closely with local police on a day-to-day basis, creating possible conflicts of interest in cases regarding police misconduct. As a result, states and cities have begun to appoint special independent prosecutors—or prosecutors from other jurisdictions—in cases where police use deadly force. O’Malley will make these measures model practices, and support legislation to encourage all states to adopt them.

**Strengthen Federal Civil Rights Protections.**Under the Obama Administration, the Department of Justice’s Civil Rights Division has successfully launched investigations into the deaths of Trayvon Martin, Eric Garner, and Michael Brown. However, the Department’s ability to prosecute cases is limited because federal officials must meet a very high legal standard to bring civil rights charges. O’Malley would call on Congress to revise this standard so that the federal government can act as an effective backstop for ensuring justice.

Reform Civil Asset Forfeiture to Prioritize Public Safety. Civil forfeiture allows law enforcement to seize any property they allege is involved in a crime, even if the owner has not been charged or convicted. Originally designed as a way to cripple large criminal organizations, civil forfeiture is now rarely used to address actual crime and is too often abused. O’Malley will support bipartisan efforts in Congress to reform civil forfeiture statutes, reorienting law enforcement activity toward improving public safety and community policing.

INCREASE FAIRNESS IN SENTENCING

Skyrocketing spending on prisons and jails drains investment from schools, job creation, and community services: corrections spending at every level totals more than $80 billion a year. Racial bias remains ingrained in the justice system, and more needs to be done to reduce recidivism and expand successful reentry programs.

Ensure Fair Sentencing

Sentencing laws should treat all individuals fairly—ensuring that dangerous individuals are held accountable, setting lower penalties for less serious offenses, and providing opportunities for full rehabilitation.

As president, Governor O’Malley will:

Eliminate the Sentencing Disparity Between Crack and Powder Cocaine. This sentencing disparity has resulted in vast racial disparities within the justice system. Before Congress lowered the sentencing ratio in 2010 from 100:1 to 18:1, unjustifiably higher penalties for crack offenses led to African Americans serving roughly as much time for non-violent offenses as whites for violent offenses. O’Malley has called for and will continue to support legislation to completely eliminate this sentencing disparity.

**Declassify Marijuana as a Schedule I Drug.** O’Malley will direct the Attorney General to move to reclassify marijuana, while supporting bipartisan congressional efforts to legislatively reclassify marijuana as a Schedule II drug.

Reform Mandatory Minimum Sentencing. Over the past 30 years, mandatory minimum sentences have led to punishments that often do not fit the crime. Unnecessarily harsh sentences for non-violent offenses have not deterred crime, and have disproportionately impacted communities of color. O’Malley will support legislation that eliminates mandatory minimums for low-level drug offenses, while giving judges more flexibility to tailor sentences based on the facts of each case. He will also continue the Department of Justice’s successful Smart on Crime initiative, directing U.S. Attorneys to exercise greater discretion in their charging decisions.

Forge Consensus for Ending the Death Penalty. The death penalty is a racially biased and ineffective deterrent, and the appeals process is expensive and cruel to surviving family members. O’Malley has long opposed the death penalty as a matter of principle and as a matter of policy. As president, he will continue to oppose capital punishment and work to abolish death sentences under federal laws.

Medicalize our Response to Addiction and Mental Illness

Incarceration is an inadequate—and in most cases inappropriate—response for people in crisis. Far greater investment in community mental health and substance abuse treatment is required to provide individuals with the care and support they require, outside of the justice system.

As president, Governor O’Malley will:

Make Robust Investments in Drug Treatment. O’Malley will work to expand existing federal grants to states to support comprehensive drug treatment systems. He will call for tripling the number of states eligible for grants, as well as increasing the aid provided to each state. He will call for requiring states to make matching investments—ensuring that addiction is treated, and not ignored, at the local level. He will also support regulations and legislation to expand evidence-based treatment for addiction under Medicare and Medicaid.

Make Robust Investments in Community Mental Health Infrastructure. Although the rate of serious mental illness is two to six times higher among incarcerated populations, more than 80 percent of people with mental illness in jails and prisons do not receive care. O’Malley will invest to provide adequate mental health treatment and substance abuse treatment within correctional facilities. Additionally, he will call for community-based recovery for individuals suffering from mental illness, setting a national target for reducing the number of Americans with serious mental illness behind bars. He will work with Congress to make critically needed investments in housing, supported employment, and outpatient treatment.

Train and Equip Law Enforcement to Serve People in Crisis. Police officers have increasingly become first responders to people with mental illness or substance abuse problems, often without adequate training. O’Malley will establish federal guidelines for law enforcement on how to best serve people in crisis—including de-escalating encounters, equipping specialized staff and response teams, and intervening in partnership with civilian service providers. He will use existing federal funds to support state Crisis Intervention Training, work with Congress to make additional investments, and require states to adopt federal crisis intervention guidelines.

Address the Discriminatory and Punitive Application of Student Discipline

Underinvestment in public education has left many districts financially strapped, often unable to staff the counselors, special education teachers and social workers their students need. This has coincided with an increased reliance on suspensions, expulsions, and school resource officers to enforce school discipline—including for behavior that is far from a crime. As a result, student discipline increasingly reflects the adult criminal-justice system—with children, especially children of color, being charged, arrested, and even detained in juvenile facilities. This trend has dramatic economic implications as well: children with arrest records have a fraction of the chance of graduating compared to students without arrest records.

As president, Governor O’Malley will:

Enforce and Codify Federal Discipline Guidelines. Federal law already prohibits public school districts from administering student discipline in a discriminatory way. The Departments of Education and Justice put forward guidance last year to help schools identify, avoid, and remedy discriminatory discipline, so that all schools ensure equal educational opportunities for all students. O’Malley will enforce this guidance by bringing federal investigations or charges when necessary, and call to codify the guidance into law.

Reinvest in Other Services and Supports for Teachers and Students. Underinvestment in public education has left many schools with too little funding for counselors, special educators, teacher training, and other needs. This has sometimes created an over-reliance on law enforcement and school resource officers to enforce discipline. O’Malley will invest in federal grants to help deploy counselors and other school staff, including by reprioritizing existing federal funding currently used to place law enforcement officers in schools.

Fulfill the Constitutional Right to Counsel

The flood of misdemeanor cases for petty crimes has greatly overburdened state courts. Many poor defendants—about one in four—do not receive court-appointed legal counsel, despite their right to it. Crushing caseloads for public defenders can create an “assembly-line mentality” toward justice that contributes to individuals being unnecessarily imprisoned for minor offenses.

As president, Governor O’Malley will:

Ensure Access to Counsel and Legal Assistance. O’Malley would invest to protect every American’s constitutional right to counsel, providing funding for legal aid programs and public defenders, and ensuring their independence.

Bring Accountability, Due Process, and Immediate Relief to our Immigration System

Immigration-related cases make up more than 40 percent of federal prosecutions, more than any other type of prosecution—including drug crimes. Yet families are denied justice throughout the immigration system. Conditions at immigrant detention facilities are deplorable, due process is limited, assembly-line justice is common, and families are needlessly torn apart.

As president, Governor O’Malley will:

Use Detention Only as a Last Resort. O’Malley will direct the Department of Homeland Security to use alternatives to detention for the vast majority of people, including for all children, families, LGBT individuals, and other vulnerable individuals. This includes using the family placement and community-based supervision policies he successfully implemented in Maryland. He will also work with Congress to repeal mandatory detention and deportation laws, and to codify higher detention standards. When detention must be used, O’Malley will ensure conditions are humane and in line with our basic values as a nation.

End Operation Streamline.

Under Operation Streamline, federal attorneys criminally prosecute, in assembly-line settings, virtually all undocumented immigrants that enter the United States through the Southern border. Fast-track prosecutions and group hearings raise serious concerns regarding the violation of due process. Moreover, thousands of immigrants who try to enter or re-enter the United States are the parents of U.S. citizens attempting to reunite with their loved ones.

O’Malley will direct federal prosecutors to focus only on priority entry and reentry cases—those involving national security or serious crimes—and work with Congress to repeal the Operation Streamline program.

Disentangle Local Law Enforcement From Immigration Enforcement. Our immigration policies have fallen short of their goal to pinpoint and detain individuals who pose a clear and present danger to public safety. Instead, they have created an indiscriminate dragnet that can encourage racial profiling and undermines trust between law enforcement and New American communities. O’Malley has outlined his plan for disentangling law enforcement from immigration enforcement, including by closing loopholes in DOJ guidance that allow DHS agencies to profile Americans based on their ethnicity and religion.

Set High Standards for Customs and Border Protection (CBP). CBP is the nation’s largest law enforcement agency, and CBP officers must have the support and tools they need to do their jobs well. O’Malley will require CBP to implement the best practices in law enforcement, including equipping officers with body cameras, tracking and disclosing discourtesy and brutality complaints, providing robust training, and holding agents accountable for the use of excessive force.

Ensure Due Process. O’Malley will also implement critical reforms to expand due process protections in our detention and immigration systems, including providing counsel for immigrants in deportation proceedings, increasing the number of immigration judges and courts, ending telephonic and video hearings for detainees, and ensuring language access.

ECONOMIC INEQUALITY

Actions to address racial disparities in the criminal justice system should be accompanied by a wide range of policies that help to alleviate deeply rooted disparities in economic security and opportunity among communities of color.

Today, too many families are hurt by active discrimination. What’s more, the legacy of institutionalized discrimination—such as redlining—has amplified the disproportionate harm that the recession inflicted on communities of color. As a result, our nation has endured 30 years of worsening economic inequality.

As a nation, we must strive to remove barriers to full participation in the social, economic, and political life of our nation, once and for all. Legal equality is absolutely necessary but not sufficient – we must strive for equal opportunity and a fair shot for everyone. That means helping to ensure good jobs that provide stable incomes; universal, high-quality childcare; affordable housing and homeownership; and greater equity in our education and health care systems—for all Americans.

Governor O’Malley has already called for a number of actions that would support greater economic security and opportunity for communities of color, including:


•Raising the minimum wage to $15 dollars an hour.
•Empowering labor unions.
•Greatly expanding access to national service and job opportunities for young people.
•Ensuring young people can attend public colleges and universities debt-free.
•Passing comprehensive immigration reform.
•Investing in universal childcare.



In the coming weeks and months, Governor O’Malley will lay out comprehensive plans to address poverty and support the millions of American families striving to join the middle class, as well as put forth agendas to reform K-12 education, address homeownership and the rental crisis, and improve access to affordable healthcare.

Reduce Recidivism By Through Investments in Reentry

Up to 60 percent of individuals released from jail or prison return within three years. Programs that help people in prison or jail transition into society are saving taxpayer dollars that might otherwise be wasted on re-arrest or re-incarceration. Successful reentry options also give motivated individuals the tools and support they need to leave the criminal justice system for good, compete for a job, find stable housing, support their families, and contribute to their communities.

As president, Governor O’Malley will:

Invest in Job-Training Programs That Work. Roughly 9 million people return home from jail, and 650,000 from prison, every year. Getting and keeping a job is crucial to their ability to reenter their communities—and thus to reducing recidivism, and incarceration costs, overall. O’Malley will build on successful programs in Maryland and other states to train, place, and support those exiting the criminal justice system so they can secure employment. As president, he will work with Congress to secure additional funding for—and legislation that expands—community-based job training programs.

Support Reentry Programming. Since 2008, the bipartisan Second Chance Act has funded critical community services that help people return to their families from prisons, jails, and juvenile facilities. O’Malley will work with Congress to reauthorize and expand funding for Second Chance Act programs, and other important services that ease the transition back to the outside world. Such services include referrals for housing and benefits, substance abuse treatment, mentoring, education, and job training.

Expand Good Time Credits. O’Malley will support legislation to allow people in federal prison to earn sentence-reduction credits by completing education and reentry programs. More broadly, he will support evidence-based, cost-effective reforms that allow people in prisons or jails to earn more good time credit for greater sentence reductions than federal law currently allows.

Support Access to Higher Education in Prison. O’Malley will use existing funds and work with Congress to support multi-year educational and vocational training programs in correctional facilities, including providing funding for professional teachers and staff. He will also support legislation and take executive action to restore eligibility for Pell Grants for people in state and federal prison, which was eliminated in the 1994 crime bill. These investments will increase individuals’ chances of finding jobs once they’ve done their time, and decrease their chances of cycling back into prison later in life.

Dramatically Reduce the Use of Solitary Confinement and Ban Solitary for Juveniles.

Research shows that prisoners subjected to prolonged isolation may experience depression, rage, claustrophobia, hallucinations, and severe psychosis that can lead to random violence or suicide. Federal judges have called the long-term lack of interaction, mental stimulus, and exposure to nature “beyond what most humans can psychologically tolerate”. As president, O’Malley will reverse the runaway growth of solitary confinement, limiting its use to the most serious in-prison offenders. He will also fight to pass legislation banning the federal use of solitary confinement for juveniles nationally.

Provide Pathways to Full Restoration of Rights and Benefits

Nearly one in three Americans has a criminal record that, because of employer biases and state laws, could prevent them from even being considered for good-paying jobs. Moreover, nearly six million Americans are denied the fundamental right to vote because of regressive state laws that target people with felony convictions. This results in one out of every 13 African Americans being unable to vote.

As president, Governor O’Malley will:

Ban the Box. O’Malley will use existing federal dollars to encourage states to adopt “fair chance” policies, which direct employers to delay criminal record inquiries and individually assess job applicants based on their qualifications. He will make the federal government a model employer by adopting fair chance hiring policies for all federal contractors and agencies.

**Expunge or Seal Criminal Records.** O’Malley will also support legislation that provides paths to recourse for people with criminal records. This includes automatically expunging or sealing juvenile records, so young people have a fair chance to turn around their lives; allowing some categories of formerly incarcerated people to petition a court to seal their records; and expunging the records of arrests that did not lead to formal charges.

Restore Voting Rights to People with Felony Records. All those who served time and reentered society should be allowed to vote. O’Malley will call for and strongly support legislation restoring voting rights to individuals with felony records. He will explore and take advantage of every opportunity to use federal funds and administrative solutions to encourage states to restore voting rights.

Ensure Access to Temporary Support. O’Malley will call for and strongly support legislation that would end the drug felon ban on access to SNAP and TANF assistance. Formerly incarcerated people and their families should have access to crucial support to help them get on their feet after serving their time.

Work to Eliminate For-Profit Prisons

There are approximately 130 private prisons in the United States. They house nearly half of all immigrant detainees, in addition to six percent of the state and 16 percent of the federal prison population. These facilities earn the private prison industry $3.3 billion in annual revenue, backed by nearly $25 million in lobbying over the past 25 years. This includes industry lobbying to protect perverse incentives, the strict enforcement of sentencing and immigration laws, and contracts that require correctional facilities and immigration detention centers to remain full even when crime is falling.

As president, Governor O’Malley will:

Phase Out Federal For-Profit Prisons. This includes closing for-profit immigration detention centers, while using alternatives to detention in the immigration context whenever possible.

REINVEST TO ENSURE JUSTICE

As a nation, our divestment in education, job creation, and healthcare has resulted in some communities turning to law enforcement as a first and last resort—from providing student discipline to addressing addiction and mental illness. Reversing this trend by reinvesting in these areas will relieve our overburdened justice system, and ensure that law enforcement is able to focus on the most violent crimes.


read entire plan: http://t.co/b6QMEcCmrk

BLM Representative on MSNBC [View all] Skwmom Aug 2015 OP
Or, maybe the BLM rep mcar Aug 2015 #1
What did Hillary say? RobertEarl Aug 2015 #4
What did Hillary say? On which day? 840high Aug 2015 #15
I do remember her 2008 campaign flops RobertEarl Aug 2015 #20
Careful with that petard... it can hoist in unexpected directions. LanternWaste Aug 2015 #250
If you support Hillary ... JoePhilly Aug 2015 #8
Exactly right Joe mcar Aug 2015 #43
The Tebow candidate fbc Aug 2015 #121
IT's called 'cognitive dissonance' AgingAmerican Aug 2015 #232
"If you support Hillary ... you are suspect. Period." ? Petrushka Aug 2015 #234
I saw it also billymayshere Aug 2015 #2
As they say, follow the money. Skwmom Aug 2015 #5
Which show was it? Sharpton or Matthews? And the BLM Rep. was__Thanks. appalachiablue Aug 2015 #162
Oh, that's clever...MSNBC...I get it! PatrickforO Aug 2015 #91
what you call disparaging may be a fact for other Supersedeas Aug 2015 #254
they do seem to be coming in pretty handy, for Hillary nt HFRN Aug 2015 #3
Reality is coming in handy for Hillary. nt SunSeeker Aug 2015 #163
I thought BLM was sincere. DemocratSinceBirth Aug 2015 #6
Did you really focus on the words? Skwmom Aug 2015 #12
Members of the BLM? ... 1StrongBlackMan Aug 2015 #21
It reminds of the old yarn that southern blacks in the Jim Crow south... DemocratSinceBirth Aug 2015 #24
Yep ... 1StrongBlackMan Aug 2015 #32
I heard the same thing JustAnotherGen Aug 2015 #51
Heard??? Hell ... HEARING! 1StrongBlackMan Aug 2015 #75
Yes, we gotta throw BLM under the bus now. murielm99 Aug 2015 #93
I took a look ... NanceGreggs Aug 2015 #156
Me too Nance! SunSeeker Aug 2015 #164
BLM needs to show up at a Hillary event Scootaloo Aug 2015 #54
No dang kidding. Price is high enough to keep out the riff-raff and all the messiness involved nc4bo Aug 2015 #120
Oh yea and vote for memememe. nc4bo Aug 2015 #132
"Riff-raff"? oasis Aug 2015 #133
Yes, riff-raff. People like me and my husband! nc4bo Aug 2015 #144
Crystal clear. And oasis Aug 2015 #161
We're good oasis. Keyboard discussions nc4bo Aug 2015 #214
I can't tell you how much it saddens me about what you and your husband experienced. Stardust Aug 2015 #166
Stardust, no they are not hollow, you get it. Thank you! nc4bo Aug 2015 #217
I've been trying to think of ways we can eradicate racism, and here are some of my ideas... Stardust Aug 2015 #236
Really scary! Chemisse Aug 2015 #252
My money says that NEVER happens during this campaign. n/t cherokeeprogressive Aug 2015 #151
Why? Apparently, BLM approves of her message. 1StrongBlackMan Aug 2015 #153
if I recall, it was stated they would be "going after" all the candidates Scootaloo Aug 2015 #158
Apparently, from BLM's view ... 1StrongBlackMan Aug 2015 #160
Ah. So, she CAN take black voters for granted. Scootaloo Aug 2015 #165
No. But okay. n/t 1StrongBlackMan Aug 2015 #170
Yup. "#BLM" has backed off its prior position. Just for Clinton. Scootaloo Aug 2015 #181
And O'Malley ... 1StrongBlackMan Aug 2015 #182
oh, #BLM decided to give O'Malley a pass, too? Scootaloo Aug 2015 #194
They don't appear to have confronted him since NRN ... 1StrongBlackMan Aug 2015 #212
Well, they haven't confronted Sanders since NRN, either Scootaloo Aug 2015 #226
So you're going with the conspiracy theory, huh? n/t 1StrongBlackMan Aug 2015 #227
Patrisse Cullors vowed that the organization would be going after all the candidates Scootaloo Aug 2015 #228
So conspiracy theory it is! n/t 1StrongBlackMan Aug 2015 #230
Holding someone to their own words is not conspiracy theory, 1StrongBlackMan Scootaloo Aug 2015 #231
Hillary as a former FLOTUS is under Secret Service protection azurnoir Aug 2015 #203
Will never happen AgingAmerican Aug 2015 #233
BLM is losing credibility in my view. Maedhros Aug 2015 #7
Well ain't that peculiar? Juicy_Bellows Aug 2015 #9
This is classic Clinton politics ram2008 Aug 2015 #10
Bernie was marching for civil rights when Hillary was a Goldwater Girl HFRN Aug 2015 #16
So did Joe Lieberman. And? Nt stevenleser Aug 2015 #38
So did Joe Lieberman and Charlton Heston And? Nt DemocratSinceBirth Aug 2015 #102
And she was trying to get assualt weapons banned when Bernie was trying to protect them. William769 Aug 2015 #53
And yet the Brady Campaign gives him a 100% positive lifetime score. progressoid Aug 2015 #119
"Weird" indeed, since Sanders voted against the Brady Bill. SunSeeker Aug 2015 #167
Dang.That's a great score for a "gun nut" like Bernie. beam me up scottie Aug 2015 #206
"Sanders Votes for Background Checks, Assault Weapons Ban" beam me up scottie Aug 2015 #204
bart... SidDithers Aug 2015 #74
... HFRN Aug 2015 #187
Dang!! What a cute kid!!!nt bravenak Aug 2015 #202
I'm glad I didn't see it 99th_Monkey Aug 2015 #11
It is sad. n/t Skwmom Aug 2015 #14
Just because BLM supports a cause in which I believe strongly, Maedhros Aug 2015 #37
I didn't want to say that, because I can't prove it, not yet. 99th_Monkey Aug 2015 #49
These are the possibilities: Maedhros Aug 2015 #69
I wish you, or someone, writes an article soon to shed more light on this stuff 99th_Monkey Aug 2015 #76
gobear10's post is the gold standard. Maedhros Aug 2015 #198
You forgot to queue the conspiracy sound track. n/t 1StrongBlackMan Aug 2015 #78
So...no possibility AT ALL that Bernie was at fault for his own actions R B Garr Aug 2015 #219
I was discussing the incident itself, not Bernie's reactions. Maedhros Aug 2015 #229
Bernie WAS given an opportunity to respond; he did respond. R B Garr Aug 2015 #240
If they really called Bernie a phony sadoldgirl Aug 2015 #13
They didn't talk about O'Malley. But the host of netroots Skwmom Aug 2015 #17
Esp. interesting given O'Malley's abysmal record w/ Blacks in Baltimore 99th_Monkey Aug 2015 #31
Except ... 1StrongBlackMan Aug 2015 #68
You make an awful lot of statements speaking for "Black folks." When did this monolith Ed Suspicious Aug 2015 #85
Did you not read my "anecdotal experience" part? That's called a "qualifer." ... 1StrongBlackMan Aug 2015 #96
When did you understand how black people feel? kwassa Aug 2015 #159
I can tell you this. I don't know what white males think Ed Suspicious Aug 2015 #168
+1 840high Aug 2015 #19
Black Lives Matter is a large movement with no actual leaders Report1212 Aug 2015 #18
Three black feminists founded BLM. Skwmom Aug 2015 #23
Notice that they seem to be more concerned with building their brand recognition, Maedhros Aug 2015 #60
Big difference between founders and leaders Report1212 Aug 2015 #66
In June 2015 she says, 'All Lives Matter' in black Ferguson Church udbcrzy2 Aug 2015 #94
Clinton mouths some words and voilà whatchamacallit Aug 2015 #22
Clinton will do the same that Obama has done while in office to curtail racism.. frylock Aug 2015 #101
Exactly whatchamacallit Aug 2015 #110
Obama did NOTHING?! No communication, no pushing of laws.. "brothers keepers"!? NOTHING?! uponit7771 Aug 2015 #199
Because it must be a conspiracy when someone disagrees with you (or your candidate) ... Right? n/t 1StrongBlackMan Aug 2015 #25
My candidate is Bernie, sadoldgirl Aug 2015 #26
I don't know that BLM is ignoring O'Malley ... 1StrongBlackMan Aug 2015 #34
Pssst I heard Clinton JustAnotherGen Aug 2015 #56
LOL. n/t 1StrongBlackMan Aug 2015 #84
Only a "nickle"?! Come on Hillary! Cha Aug 2015 #112
'Well, I can't be bought, but I can be had.' You just lost 5¢! I'm telling the Gio! n/t freshwest Aug 2015 #116
It's really not hard to see why one sector of the left in this country never gets anywhere. stevenleser Aug 2015 #27
Well ... He said what he was supposed to say ... 1StrongBlackMan Aug 2015 #36
Tone deaf mcar Aug 2015 #47
And the Clintons earned it... how, exactly? villager Aug 2015 #64
Bainsbane and 1strongblackman explain it down thread. She listens and seems to get it stevenleser Aug 2015 #129
Since it was your assertion, I'd love to know what was behind it -- i.e., the "earning," or not villager Aug 2015 #136
It wasn't my assertion. stevenleser Aug 2015 #140
Ok. You did say "You earn it when you earn it and that can take time and a lot of effort" villager Aug 2015 #145
There are a lot of POC still angry about the comments in 2008. Some percentage will never forgive stevenleser Aug 2015 #218
Maybe you should give them the benefit of your genius Armstead Aug 2015 #72
Ha. This group wouldn't listen. They think they know everything better than everyone else stevenleser Aug 2015 #131
Of course....he marched with MLK in 1965! As you say, what more do you want? George II Aug 2015 #109
Yes, and look at the priorities BainsBane Aug 2015 #195
AMEN!! Kerry tried to the same thing, I've been saying it for months that Kerry dropped 2% with... uponit7771 Aug 2015 #200
This is the kind of rhetoric people used when the LGBT community rejected "civil unions" DemocraticWing Aug 2015 #241
No it's the opposite. The group demanding rights and to be heard is the one that needs defending stevenleser Aug 2015 #242
You were suggesting it wasn't just people supporting Bernie, beyond a campaign. DemocraticWing Aug 2015 #244
I guess Bernie is just going to have to win without that guy's vote. SolutionisSolidarity Aug 2015 #28
Apparently, his record on civil rights sucks whatchamacallit Aug 2015 #35
No ... His record on civil rights is good ... 1StrongBlackMan Aug 2015 #42
Um... whatchamacallit Aug 2015 #46
Meals come from economic justice, not social justice. DisgustipatedinCA Aug 2015 #77
When you are allowed a seat in the restaurant. n/t 1StrongBlackMan Aug 2015 #86
Let's call the restaurant 1SBM's Moving Goalpost. I like it. nt DisgustipatedinCA Aug 2015 #105
Bernie is not a member of the Democratic Party ... 1StrongBlackMan Aug 2015 #39
So, as a candidate without a Democratic pedigree, SolutionisSolidarity Aug 2015 #55
Your belief is correct ... 1StrongBlackMan Aug 2015 #73
Ok, I misunderstood your point. SolutionisSolidarity Aug 2015 #197
Yep. Cleita Aug 2015 #29
#BlackLivesMatter could be the downfall of Bernie's campaign Cali_Democrat Aug 2015 #30
Don't you read DU?!? n/t 1StrongBlackMan Aug 2015 #44
#BlackLivesMatter represents all black people like Anonymous represents all computer users. fbc Aug 2015 #124
More BLM bashing. Because this worked out so great for team Sanders the first time around... DanTex Aug 2015 #33
Yep. It is absolutely adorable watching these people in action. Number23 Aug 2015 #40
Any minute now ... I expect someone to just say ... 1StrongBlackMan Aug 2015 #50
I have no doubt that's part of the plan. And the truth of the matter is is that the majority Number23 Aug 2015 #57
Barack Obama and his campaign figured it out...twice (2008 & 2012) Cali_Democrat Aug 2015 #67
Posted without comment ... 1StrongBlackMan Aug 2015 #82
This interview has bothered me from when it was first published. Raine1967 Aug 2015 #178
I posted a comment, comparing ... 1StrongBlackMan Aug 2015 #185
You make a good point. Raine1967 Aug 2015 #192
For Webb and Sanders, cringe-worthy on two different levels ... 1StrongBlackMan Aug 2015 #211
You know it's coming! Cali_Democrat Aug 2015 #63
No problemo! There's a ready-made group who shares his vision, strangely enough. Or most of it: freshwest Aug 2015 #114
one poster practically told me that lunamagica Aug 2015 #128
I'm not surprised ... 1StrongBlackMan Aug 2015 #142
I've read something of those tone also, Bernie can win the "disaffected" vote and bring in uponit7771 Aug 2015 #201
That was said about 6 weeks ago nt. BainsBane Aug 2015 #149
I co-sign this post JustAnotherGen Aug 2015 #58
Girl... this place. Number23 Aug 2015 #61
They crack me up sometimes JustAnotherGen Aug 2015 #65
Now you got some "person of color" shitting all over them in another OP Number23 Aug 2015 #71
But if only you black people would understand when we whitesplain to ya. AllFieldsRequired Aug 2015 #80
I like to think JustAnotherGen Aug 2015 #83
Me too! 1StrongBlackMan Aug 2015 #87
All one can hope for is that this sadoldgirl Aug 2015 #88
Yes, my post IN RESPONSE to the "person of color" who called out #BLM is the one that's causing Number23 Aug 2015 #98
What are you using quote marks for? romanic Aug 2015 #207
Didn't I tell you to buzz off? Or was the time out you got recently not quite enough of a hint? Number23 Aug 2015 #208
+1000 ismnotwasm Aug 2015 #70
"So what's your tactic? Accuse a group of black activists drawing attention to the slaughter of Cha Aug 2015 #122
I'm just going to silently watch them ignore my advice and lose.nt bravenak Aug 2015 #172
In fairness Bernie and O'Malley were not given time at the town hall still_one Aug 2015 #41
+10 n/t whathehell Aug 2015 #52
I'm a strong O'Malley supporter JustAnotherGen Aug 2015 #97
you assessment is correct. I am not sure how many are aware of the meetings he had still_one Aug 2015 #113
Very true. He also released a comprehensive plan detailing criminal justice reform FSogol Aug 2015 #216
They are reading from the same script. It's called human decency! William769 Aug 2015 #45
Please elaborate on how Bernie Sanders is not a decent human being. SolutionisSolidarity Aug 2015 #62
Your strawman will not help your candidate. Nt stevenleser Aug 2015 #134
Human decency, something Sanders never "tried"? arcane1 Aug 2015 #79
See my #134 above nt stevenleser Aug 2015 #135
In other words, nothing. arcane1 Aug 2015 #154
I agree, your strawman amounts to nothing. Nt stevenleser Aug 2015 #174
Hear, hear! George II Aug 2015 #92
Absolutely Bill.. that's some "script" they have there.. Compassion! It's all a "conspiracy"! Cha Aug 2015 #100
Who was the representative and what show was it? nt sufrommich Aug 2015 #48
This OP makes me sick. nt artislife Aug 2015 #59
You know why? Clinton LISTENS BainsBane Aug 2015 #81
Sadly ... I'm starting to believe Bernie can't get to where he needs to be with BLM/AAs ... 1StrongBlackMan Aug 2015 #90
Please elaborate. frylock Aug 2015 #106
Read the thread ... 1StrongBlackMan Aug 2015 #111
I've read the thread.. frylock Aug 2015 #126
Why are you so angry? ... 1StrongBlackMan Aug 2015 #141
I thinks it's rather JackInGreen Aug 2015 #147
What questions??? ... 1StrongBlackMan Aug 2015 #150
Why are you so angry? ... bahrbearian Aug 2015 #169
LOL ... I'm not. Notice the absence of profanity, personal attacks and the like. n/t 1StrongBlackMan Aug 2015 #179
Yes, please answer those questions bobbobbins01 Aug 2015 #196
Exactly Bobbie Jo Aug 2015 #210
That is the problem BainsBane Aug 2015 #143
Clinton LISTENS for a mere $2700 a head. frylock Aug 2015 #104
We need to have a DU gofundme type thing, pick a representative and crash a HRC nc4bo Aug 2015 #123
Sanders has been doing everything BLM asked him to do, and then some. arcane1 Aug 2015 #107
Your tactic is not working. Nt stevenleser Aug 2015 #130
Well, you certainly burned me! arcane1 Aug 2015 #152
And you are still not helping Bernie. Nt stevenleser Aug 2015 #173
But you are! arcane1 Aug 2015 #175
Oddly enough, more than you are in this thread. Nt stevenleser Aug 2015 #177
You can keep repeating the same nonsense every day BainsBane Aug 2015 #247
I never said "Clinton alone is responsible for the nature of campaign finance in America" arcane1 Aug 2015 #248
Clinton listens to MONEY ibegurpard Aug 2015 #115
Because BLM is a all about big money? BainsBane Aug 2015 #245
Yes, Hillary has been doing that and she's winning over more people.. these tweets are from Cha Aug 2015 #118
Humility BainsBane Aug 2015 #146
Humility and Empathy. Cha Aug 2015 #189
I think Sanders listens too. DemocraticWing Aug 2015 #243
The ONLY ones characterizing Bernie as an enemy of BLM BainsBane Aug 2015 #246
They often are. Nt NCTraveler Aug 2015 #89
The minute Clinton sews up the nomination, Black Lives won't Matter so much anymore tularetom Aug 2015 #95
History suggests otherwise. Bill Clinton was called the first black President somewhat tongue in stevenleser Aug 2015 #148
We'll see, won't we? tularetom Aug 2015 #171
Yes, except my opinion has history with the Clintons in its favor stevenleser Aug 2015 #176
Clinton really included minorities in the mass incarceration boom, that's for sure. Comrade Grumpy Aug 2015 #183
And I am sure minorities factor that in in their evaluation of him. Nt stevenleser Aug 2015 #184
And having it screamed at us like we did it to ourselves is very helpful to Bernie.nt bravenak Aug 2015 #193
Our prison system thanks you for your support. GeorgeGist Aug 2015 #235
I thought the same thing moobu2 Aug 2015 #99
gosh, i'm shocked to read this. frylock Aug 2015 #108
I've been hidden while talking about this, but the BIAS is unfounded and unprecedented. orpupilofnature57 Aug 2015 #103
If a group feels their support hasn't been earned, it hasn't been earned. It's up to a candidate stevenleser Aug 2015 #138
This message was self-deleted by its author orpupilofnature57 Aug 2015 #239
You talking BIAS?? You called us black folks 'usurpers'.nt bravenak Aug 2015 #180
Seriously? Wow. On a more general note B, I can't believe we're here again stevenleser Aug 2015 #186
I cannot BELIEVE this muthafuckingshit. bravenak Aug 2015 #188
It's like a moronic, racially condescending f-----g Groundhogs Day. stevenleser Aug 2015 #190
After all the good work I did for them? I'm LIVID. I fucking asked those muthafuckas to stop this bravenak Aug 2015 #191
Post removed Post removed Aug 2015 #223
Yes. God complex. bravenak Aug 2015 #224
I'm not talking about your feelings ibegurpard Aug 2015 #225
I have charisma. bravenak Aug 2015 #238
there seems to be this ridiculous notion ibegurpard Aug 2015 #117
In his favor nc4bo Aug 2015 #125
that's why the new slam is "it does't matter if he marched with MLK" MisterP Aug 2015 #251
Yes. Bernie Sanders never pandered before and he isn't doing so now. beam me up scottie Aug 2015 #205
The claim of "Phony rhetoric" in the face of NorthCarolina Aug 2015 #127
They support Hillary. They are campaigning for her. The rest is subterfuge. GoneFishin Aug 2015 #137
What was the show? JackInGreen Aug 2015 #139
I really want to watch the segment and see what everyone is talking about. Cheese Sandwich Aug 2015 #155
Agreed JackInGreen Aug 2015 #157
this is an amazing admission that Bernie's campaign takes precedence over the movement bigtree Aug 2015 #209
Oh spare me ibegurpard Aug 2015 #220
I won't 'spare you' an inch bigtree Aug 2015 #221
you're welcome to regard things any way you wish ibegurpard Aug 2015 #222
I suppose any black American can claim to be a BLM leader, and our bought-and-paid-for ... Scuba Aug 2015 #213
For pity's sake, that person is only one member of BLM. Vattel Aug 2015 #215
The center-rightist coopted the antiwar movement to serve their cause even though betterdemsonly Aug 2015 #237
And if I didn't know better, I'd would really think you're exploiting a schism that doesn't exist... LanternWaste Aug 2015 #249
MSM is pro HRC and anti Bernie PowerToThePeople Aug 2015 #253
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