US "The Squad" Megathread - Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Ilhan Omar, Rashida Talib Derangement Syndrome

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I honestly only know about American politics from what I read on the Internet but since we all love shitting on leftists I figured we'd get a kick out of this. Also it's trending on Twitter so you know it's important.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/poli...irect=on&noredirect=on&utm_term=.960552c9ba53

NEW YORK — Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, a 28-year-old political novice running on a low budget and an unabashedly liberal platform, upset longtime U.S. Rep. Joseph Crowley on Tuesday in the Democratic congressional primary in New York.

The surprise victory by the community organizer in a district that includes parts of the Bronx and Queens came after an energetic, grassroots campaign that mustered more than enough support in a low-turnout race that many had expected to be an easy win for Crowley, a member of the Democratic House leadership.

“The community is ready for a movement of economic and social justice. That is what we tried to deliver,” said Ocasio-Cortez, who has never held elected office and whose candidacy attracted only modest media attention.

She told The Associated Press after her victory that she didn’t have enough money to do polling in the race, but felt in her gut that her message had a chance to connect.

“I live in this community. I organized in this community. I felt the absence of the incumbent. I knew he didn’t have a strong presence,” she said.

Crowley has been in Congress since 1999 and hadn’t faced an opponent in a primary election since 2004, when Ocasio-Cortez was just a teenager. He was considered a candidate to become the next House speaker if Democrats win the majority.

“It’s not about me,” Crowley, 56, told his supporters at a campaign party following his loss. “It’s about America. I want nothing but the best for Ms. Ocasio-Cortez. I want her to be victorious.”

He later played guitar with a band at the election night gathering, and dedicated the first song, Bruce Springsteen’s “Born to Run,” to Ocasio-Cortez.

Crowley represents New York’s 14th Congressional District, where he is also the leader of the Queens Democratic party.

Ocasio-Cortez was outspent by an 18-1 margin during her race but won the endorsement of some influential groups on the party’s far left, including MoveOn, as well as the actress Cynthia Nixon, who is running for governor. She defeated Crowley by 15 percentage points.

Born in the Bronx to a mother from Puerto Rico and a father who died in 2008, Ocasio-Cortez said she decided to challenge Crowley to push a more progressive stance on economic and other issues.

She attended Boston University, where she earned degrees in economics and international relations, and also spent time working in the office of the late U.S. Sen. Edward Kennedy.

After graduating, she returned to the Bronx where she became a community organizer. In the 2016 presidential campaign she worked for U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders.

Among her issues is expanding the Medicare program to people of all ages and abolishing Immigrations and Customs Enforcement. She recently went to Tornillo, Texas, to protest against policies that have separated parents from their children at the southern U.S. border.

Ocasio-Cortez gained some internet attention for a campaign video called “The Courage to Change,” a two-minute spot for which she wrote the script and featured footage from her own home.

Crowley is chair of the House Democratic Caucus, the fourth-highest ranking position in Democratic leadership in that chamber of Congress.

His loss drew the attention of President Donald Trump.

“Wow! Big Trump Hater Congressman Joe Crowley, who many expected was going to take Nancy Pelosi’s place, just LOST his primary election. In other words, he’s out! That is a big one that nobody saw happening. Perhaps he should have been nicer, and more respectful, to his President!” he tweeted.

The Republican candidate for the office, Anthony Pappas, is running unopposed and had no primary. Pappas teaches economics at St. John’s University.

She was a Bernie campaigner, is supported by BLM, and wants to abolish Immigrations and Customs Enforcement. Also this was in a solid-blue Congressional District so you know she's a shoo-in for next Congress.

But hey, we did get to see Trump laugh at Crowley on Twitter.
 
Timmy isn't as bad as the quartering, but you can assume everything he'll say from looking at the title and the first 3 comments. Whenever quartering video plays just do yourself a favor and bump it up to 1.5x speed.

True, but....

In fairness you can do that with any puece of news. Or should be able tp. If you can’t tell everything by the headline alone the writer is doing a real bad job.


Timmy also doesn't make 20 minute segments celebrating his own internet slap-fight victories.


Anyways, even if you're right, she's less than 30 years old. She couldn't have hit the wall this early without some actual effort.

Find me a veteran congresswoman whose face doesn't look like a discount rubber mask from a Halloween shop.... Pelosi, Boxer, there's some who look freakishly awful when you see them up close..... there's something about poltiics that makes bitchy self-conceited people age very very poorly. Must be all those years of not getting your way even when you not only demand a manager, but ARE one.

Which is really weird, because what the heck kind of stress is she feeling from her job that would age her that bad?

She went in thinking that her word would be law, that people would defer to her, vote for whatever she propsed, and make her the hero, she expected her sage wisdom to single-handedly defeat Drumpf, she went in thinking it would be all sunshine and rainbows, that she was the future, that all the inflated ego from online boot-lickers would translate into real power, as naive as a freshmen in PoliSci, sure that her political stances were truths about to be vindicated, not positions to be defended.

Her dream job turned out to be hard work and ultimately didn't get what she wanted and doesn't understand why even her own district hates her now.

She's been throwing a tantrum ever since the GND crashed and burned, and staying angry all the time is what makes you age. Not just stress, but self-inflicted stress from never knowing a moment's peace while on the job or, because she's a social media addict, off it either.

If by Economics minor, you mean a minor in Economics, then yeah, I can buy it. As in... an economics class where the supply curve is the name of the spin class you take right after your diaper is changed, and right before nap time, the obligatory tantrum, and copious amounts of crayon chewing. THAT is a believable AOC backstory.

Maybe her mum went to Boston U and convinced AOC that the daycare on campus was some super secret ejumuhcation dealio.

Also, just as majors have been devalued by decreasing the rigor required to get one, so everyone can have one, so probably have the standards for minors. I'll bet you could stack the right electives so you could get a minor in economics without even taking ECON101, like if you take two history courses, a statistics course and a something that deals with how minorities are oppressed the world over, you probably qualify. Hence your institution churning out someone with economic credentials who doesn't understand how inflation works.

Back when I was in college, the classes required for my major left me only 6 credits shy of a minor in Sociology, completely by accident, I could've gotten one had I known ahead of time and tweaked a few electives.
 
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AOC Drops By Unemployment Office To Tell People How Lucky They Are Not To Have Oppressive Jobs

View attachment 1253268

NEW YORK, NY—In a rare visit to her district, Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez dropped by the unemployment office to explain to everyone why losing their jobs was actually a good thing.

Ocasio-Cortez explained how those who had worked for oil companies were involved in an inherently evil industry. Furthermore, she said, by losing their jobs, they were pushing America closer and closer to a socialist utopia where nobody works. Finally, she told them they had thrown off the capitalist shackles of work and income.

"What a great turnout today!" she said cheerily as she turned on her megaphone, though she was shouting into it backward until an aide helped her turn it around. "Work and income are capitalist constructs! You should be thankful! I'm just so excited to see that everyone here, like, is totally ready for a socialist workers' paradise. Like, if nobody works, then the government just has to pay for our stuff, because, like, otherwise, money wouldn't exist."

Nobody seemed to understand her, but she pressed on. "Anyway, just keep fighting the good fight and topple our capitalist overlords!"

"You love to see it!"

She tripped on her shoelaces and fell on the way out, but an aide was ready to free her with a pair of scissors he always keeps handy just for such an occasion.

I knew this was a Babylon Bee article because there's no way she would actually visit her district.
 

New York has canceled its Democratic presidential primary for the first time ever due to the coronavirus pandemic -- igniting a backlash from supporters of Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, whose campaign had asked that his name be allowed to stay on the ballot.

The move by Democrats on the New York State Board of Elections -- nixing the election scheduled for June 23 -- followed Sanders’ announcement earlier this month that he would suspend his presidential campaign, rendering former Vice President Joe Biden the presumptive Democratic nominee.

With this decision, New York became the first state to cancel its primary altogether, though 16 states have postponed their primaries amid the pandemic and many have taken steps to encourage voting by mail.

The announcement drew fire from Sanders supporters. On Sunday, Sanders’ campaign asked the New York State Board of Elections to let his name remain on the Democratic primary ballot, saying doing so would impede “efforts to unify the Democratic Party in advance of November elections.”


"It is completely wrong for the BOE to cancel New York’s Presidential Primary," tweeted New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who had endorsed Sanders in the race. "This decision is not informed by public health: the state is still holding elections for every other seat that day, & so far the only way your ballot will 100% be counted in NY is to vote in person!"
https://twitter.com/AOC/status/1254829322352893955
The pro-Sanders group, Our Revolution, claimed officials are "suppressing" the votes of Sanders supporters.

“Suppressing the Sanders vote in New York will again lead to attacks on the Party across the nation and harm the volunteer effort that our group and others are building,” said Paco Fabian, the group’s communications and campaigns director. “What is the possible motivation here besides trying to return control of 274 delegates to the bureaucratic party. Apparently, The NY State Board of Elections thinks democracy is a beauty contest.”

The canceling of the primary – which was originally scheduled to be held Tuesday before being postponed to June 23 -- complicates the delegate selection process as there were 274 convention delegates at stake in New York's primary. While it's clear Biden’s the presumptive nominee, there are other things -- like party platform and rules --that delegates vote on at conventions.

"Any substantive change to a state's first determining step in allocating delegates like this one will need to be reviewed by the DNC's Rules and By-Laws Committee," David Bergstein, a Democratic National Committee spokesman, told Fox News. "Once the state party submits an updated selection plan on how they plan on allocating delegates, the committee will look at that plan and make a determination."

The state still plans to hold congressional and state-level primaries on June 23, but New York Democratic Party chair Jay Jacobs said canceling the state’s presidential primary would mean a lower expected turnout and a reduced need for polling places.

“It just makes so much sense given the extraordinary nature of the challenge,” Jacobs said last week. No other contest is on the ballot in about 20 of the state’s 62 counties on June 23, meaning voters in those counties will have no need to go to the polls on that day.

The move is likely to upset Sanders, whose campaign on Sunday asked the commissioners not to cancel the primary. Sanders endorsed Biden on April 13, but when he suspended his campaign he said he hoped to keep amassing delegates in an effort to influence the Democratic party platform.

Fox News has reached out to the Biden and Sanders campaigns for comment.

Sanders never terminated his campaign with the Federal Election Commission, and Biden's campaign has publicly supported Sanders' decision to remain on the ballot so that he'll be represented at the party's national convention in August.

The Elections Board effectively canceled the primary by removing Sanders' name from the ballot, thanks to an appropriations bill signed by Gov. Andrew Cuomo on April 13 which gave the State Board of Elections the authority to remove a candidate from the ballot if they have suspended their campaign.

Michael Seymour, an attorney representing the Sanders campaign, argued in a letter to the board obtained by The Huffington Post that the Vermont senator suspended his campaign under the assumption that he would remain on the ballot and the new rule should not be retroactively enforced.

“The retroactive application of [the change in election law] would severely impact Senator Sanders’ core substantive rights,” Seymour wrote in the letter. “Because of the severity of this potential deprivation, the presumption against retroactive application must operate with maximum force.”

----------

What does this have to do with Cortez? Aside from being quoted in the article, she's previously called for a huge turnout for her primary election. This is going to depress primary election turnout badly.
 

New York has canceled its Democratic presidential primary for the first time ever due to the coronavirus pandemic -- igniting a backlash from supporters of Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, whose campaign had asked that his name be allowed to stay on the ballot.

The move by Democrats on the New York State Board of Elections -- nixing the election scheduled for June 23 -- followed Sanders’ announcement earlier this month that he would suspend his presidential campaign, rendering former Vice President Joe Biden the presumptive Democratic nominee.

With this decision, New York became the first state to cancel its primary altogether, though 16 states have postponed their primaries amid the pandemic and many have taken steps to encourage voting by mail.

The announcement drew fire from Sanders supporters. On Sunday, Sanders’ campaign asked the New York State Board of Elections to let his name remain on the Democratic primary ballot, saying doing so would impede “efforts to unify the Democratic Party in advance of November elections.”


"It is completely wrong for the BOE to cancel New York’s Presidential Primary," tweeted New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who had endorsed Sanders in the race. "This decision is not informed by public health: the state is still holding elections for every other seat that day, & so far the only way your ballot will 100% be counted in NY is to vote in person!"
https://twitter.com/AOC/status/1254829322352893955
The pro-Sanders group, Our Revolution, claimed officials are "suppressing" the votes of Sanders supporters.

“Suppressing the Sanders vote in New York will again lead to attacks on the Party across the nation and harm the volunteer effort that our group and others are building,” said Paco Fabian, the group’s communications and campaigns director. “What is the possible motivation here besides trying to return control of 274 delegates to the bureaucratic party. Apparently, The NY State Board of Elections thinks democracy is a beauty contest.”

The canceling of the primary – which was originally scheduled to be held Tuesday before being postponed to June 23 -- complicates the delegate selection process as there were 274 convention delegates at stake in New York's primary. While it's clear Biden’s the presumptive nominee, there are other things -- like party platform and rules --that delegates vote on at conventions.

"Any substantive change to a state's first determining step in allocating delegates like this one will need to be reviewed by the DNC's Rules and By-Laws Committee," David Bergstein, a Democratic National Committee spokesman, told Fox News. "Once the state party submits an updated selection plan on how they plan on allocating delegates, the committee will look at that plan and make a determination."

The state still plans to hold congressional and state-level primaries on June 23, but New York Democratic Party chair Jay Jacobs said canceling the state’s presidential primary would mean a lower expected turnout and a reduced need for polling places.

“It just makes so much sense given the extraordinary nature of the challenge,” Jacobs said last week. No other contest is on the ballot in about 20 of the state’s 62 counties on June 23, meaning voters in those counties will have no need to go to the polls on that day.

The move is likely to upset Sanders, whose campaign on Sunday asked the commissioners not to cancel the primary. Sanders endorsed Biden on April 13, but when he suspended his campaign he said he hoped to keep amassing delegates in an effort to influence the Democratic party platform.

Fox News has reached out to the Biden and Sanders campaigns for comment.

Sanders never terminated his campaign with the Federal Election Commission, and Biden's campaign has publicly supported Sanders' decision to remain on the ballot so that he'll be represented at the party's national convention in August.

The Elections Board effectively canceled the primary by removing Sanders' name from the ballot, thanks to an appropriations bill signed by Gov. Andrew Cuomo on April 13 which gave the State Board of Elections the authority to remove a candidate from the ballot if they have suspended their campaign.

Michael Seymour, an attorney representing the Sanders campaign, argued in a letter to the board obtained by The Huffington Post that the Vermont senator suspended his campaign under the assumption that he would remain on the ballot and the new rule should not be retroactively enforced.

“The retroactive application of [the change in election law] would severely impact Senator Sanders’ core substantive rights,” Seymour wrote in the letter. “Because of the severity of this potential deprivation, the presumption against retroactive application must operate with maximum force.”

----------

What does this have to do with Cortez? Aside from being quoted in the article, she's previously called for a huge turnout for her primary election. This is going to depress primary election turnout badly.
I’m not too knowledgeable on the mechanics of politics. What’s the point of running a primary at this point when Biden is the only candidate still in the running?
 
I’m not too knowledgeable on the mechanics of politics. What’s the point of running a primary at this point when Biden is the only candidate still in the running?
"Here's how Bernie can still win. I'm in for another $500, who is with me?"
That's why. People got too invested and won't get let it go.
 
At this point I wonder how many Bernie Bros are really a fan of his supposed politics and how many are just suffering a severe case of sunk cost fallacy.
 
I’m not too knowledgeable on the mechanics of politics. What’s the point of running a primary at this point when Biden is the only candidate still in the running?

There are a lot of politics involved with primaries. You got media ad buys, consultants, ground teams, miscellaneous local contractors, etc. that might feel jilted if they get ignored. If you skip them, their feelings might get hurt and they don’t show up to vote or the ground team for the general might take a hit. Most political people at the lower levels are hothouse flowers that wilt easily if their asses aren’t properly kissed. See Hilldawg’s campaign where she prematurely shut down offices in Ohio because she thought it was in the bag. She lost the state by eight points.
 
AOC Drops By Unemployment Office To Tell People How Lucky They Are Not To Have Oppressive Jobs

View attachment 1253268

NEW YORK, NY—In a rare visit to her district, Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez dropped by the unemployment office to explain to everyone why losing their jobs was actually a good thing.

Ocasio-Cortez explained how those who had worked for oil companies were involved in an inherently evil industry. Furthermore, she said, by losing their jobs, they were pushing America closer and closer to a socialist utopia where nobody works. Finally, she told them they had thrown off the capitalist shackles of work and income.

"What a great turnout today!" she said cheerily as she turned on her megaphone, though she was shouting into it backward until an aide helped her turn it around. "Work and income are capitalist constructs! You should be thankful! I'm just so excited to see that everyone here, like, is totally ready for a socialist workers' paradise. Like, if nobody works, then the government just has to pay for our stuff, because, like, otherwise, money wouldn't exist."

Nobody seemed to understand her, but she pressed on. "Anyway, just keep fighting the good fight and topple our capitalist overlords!"

"You love to see it!"

She tripped on her shoelaces and fell on the way out, but an aide was ready to free her with a pair of scissors he always keeps handy just for such an occasion.

Who let @tuscangarder out of the house? Also too believable, considering the absolute state of the DNC.
 
I’m not too knowledgeable on the mechanics of politics. What’s the point of running a primary at this point when Biden is the only candidate still in the running?
They would cancel the Dem Pres Primary but leave all the rest running. People give slightly less than zero shits about down-ballot primaries, so if you can't go vote for Bernie or even Biden, many will stay home, which will allow primary results to be other than expected.

Potentially this is an attempt by the NY Dems to ratfuck AOC or something. I don't know.

Who let @tuscangarder out of the house? Also too believable, considering the absolute state of the DNC.

he ded
 

Bernie Sanders poses as critic of corporate bailouts he voted for

Over the past week, Senator Bernie Sanders has taken to social media to object to various aspects of the CARES Act. On April 27, he hosted a virtual town hall on the effect of the coronavirus pandemic on undocumented immigrants, in which he protested the denial of benefits to immigrant workers in the bill. He failed to mention that he had voted for and praised the bill, knowing full well that it denied benefits to all undocumented workers.

On social media, Sanders has also lamented the lack of funding for agencies such as the United States Postal Service, while business interests and donors linked to Donald Trump have been richly rewarded.

Sanders, Elizabeth Warren and a smattering of other Democrats, who a month ago argued in favor of and voted for the biggest transfer of taxpayer money to the corporate elite in the history of the world, and last week backed a second bailout bill, have sent a letter to Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and Small Business Administration head Jovita Carranza demanding “accountability.”

The letter is dated April 27 and signed by Sanders, Warren, Amy Klobuchar and 17 other Democratic senators, along with independent Senator Angus King. It “urges” Mnuchin and Carranza to “develop strong supervisory mechanisms to identify instances of unjust enrichment” while “committing” to “transparency measures.”

The letter is a pathetic face-saving effort under conditions where popular outrage is growing over the fact that the government, with the backing of both parties, has placed the public purse at the disposal of the financial oligarchy, while refusing to mobilize the resources necessary to combat the coronavirus pandemic.

Sanders followed up the letter to Mnuchin with an equally worthless tweet lamenting that Carnival Cruise Lines, the largest cruise line company in the world, owned by the billionaire former sponsor of Trump’s reality television series The Apprentice, Micky Arison, received $6 billion in Federal Reserve guaranteed loans.

If Sanders is opposed to corporate bailouts, especially ones with no strings attached and no accountability, then why does he vote for them? And if he really believed that a measure pushed by Trump and the former head of OneWest Bank Mnuchin, who carried out illegal foreclosures of thousands of homeowners, would protect workers and restrain Wall Street, then he would not only be a fake, he would also be a fool.

Prior to voting “yes” on the $2.2 trillion CARES Act, Sanders took to the Senate floor to hail the bill as a boon to workers. In a video clip still viewable on Sanders’ Twitter page, the “democratic socialist” defends the bill against a proposed Republican amendment that would have means tested the 13-week $600 weekly federal supplement to state jobless benefits included in the bill. He warns his Republican colleagues: “If it [the amendment] does go far, I will introduce an amendment to deal with the corporate welfare, the $500 billion in corporate welfare…”

Thus, while promoting the measure, he admits that it is a piece of “corporate welfare.” So much for Sanders’ crusade against the “billionaire class!”

Three days before the passage of the CARES Act, the Dow Jones Industrial Average had cratered over 10,000 points, falling to 18,591. In the month since the bill’s passage--while the death toll from COVID-19 was rising in leaps and bounds, hospitals across the country were furloughing doctors and nurses, and millions of unemployed workers, blocked from receiving jobless benefits, were lining up in food lines that stretched for miles--the Dow rose by a record 25 percent, closing Wednesday at 24,633.

The bipartisan support for the oligarchy continued with last week's refilling of the corporate slush fund in the form of the misnamed “Paycheck Protection Program and Health Care Enhancement Act.” The bill was passed, again, with the unanimous support of Senate Democrats and only one dissenting vote by Democrats in the House.

The votes of Sanders and other phony “progressives” demonstrate that they are defenders of the capitalist class and the profit system. They oppose any challenge to the ownership of the means of production—the banks, industry, transport, telecommunications, hi-tech, land, natural resources—by a tiny and fabulously rich minority of the population.

Instead of seizing the fortunes of the super-rich and using their vast wealth to finance a coordinated national and international response to the pandemic, and turning the corporations that are being bailed out at the expense of society into public utilities democratically controlled by working people, they dutifully line up to prop up the oligarchy.

As they well know, the cost of this theft of social resources will be placed squarely on the backs of the working class.

Unfortunately for Sanders and his fellow “progressives”—Warren, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Rashida Tlaib, etc.—the people are neither blind nor stupid. They see what is happening and they are seething with anger. They are increasingly seeing through charlatans and political scoundrels such as Sanders and looking for a real alternative to the capitalist status quo.
 
Damepesos just tweeted out
1588367300798.png 1588367308606.png
Curious how his speeches changed over the years especially when he became a millionaire.
 

050120aoc1jm-e1588360265150.jpg


Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez introduced legislation Friday to expand disaster aid to individuals impacted by the coronavirus pandemic.

Ocasio-Cortez said the current criteria only allow the Federal Emergency Management Agency to provide direct assistance to individuals during natural disasters such as wildfires, tornadoes, hurricanes and earthquakes — not a pandemic.

Sen. Kamala Harris introduced a companion measure in March.

AOC’s 14th Congressional District, which includes parts of Queens and the Bronx, has been among the hardest hit by the COVID-19 outbreak.

“Nearly 20,000 people in my district have tested positive for a deadly virus. Thousands of my constituents are without work. We built temporary field hospitals in public parks. This is what a disaster looks like. FEMA needs to begin immediately dispersing aid to individuals hurt by COVID-19,” she said.

The Pandemic Disaster Assistance Act would ensure that after any disaster declared by a governor or the president, individuals would be able to apply directly for FEMA aid from the following programs: Disaster Supplemental Nutrition Assistance (D-SNAP), Disaster Unemployment Assistance (DUA), medical assistance, funeral aid and child care support.

AOC caught flak last week when she was the only House Democrat to vote against the $484 billion COVID relief package, or Payroll Protection Plan. The new law replenishes funds to a small-business loan program and steers $75 billion to reeling hospitals and $25 billion for COVID-19 testing.
Ocasio-Cortez claimed the measure was inadequate given the extraordinary need.

------------
Too little too late. You don't get to play hero after sitting in your fancy out of district apartment for a month. It's kind of funny that this is what it took to get AOC to actually visit her constituents
 
Who let @tuscangarder out of the house? Also too believable, considering the absolute state of the DNC.
This article is an example of Poe's Law. Some can't tell what's satire and reality because everything's been turned on it's head in the 2010s and 2020s. Hopefully this paradigm shift ends soon and this intermediate time of whacked out politics ends, and we can have the Seventh Party System.

To go further into detail on this I'll say this. AOC is a product of the paradigm shift, just as Nick Fuentes is a product of it as well after the collapse of the alt-right which is also a product of the paradigm shift. The Squad is a product of the political infighting within the Democratic Party and the temporary rise of far left dems. There's three possible outcomes of this paradigm shift and the political infighting within the Democrats themselves. The first is that the Neo-liberals retain control and nothing changes, second the Progressives and DemSocs take control of the Democrats and tank the party with wedge issues for the whole of the Seventh Paradigm Shift, and third is that Business Democrats that have populist elements take the helm of the party. The third option would make the Democrats more viable for a seventh paradigm shift.

These are just my predictions, the future is in fact bipolar and unpredictable. Point being, AOC and the Congressional Gang of Four as I call them are the result of a paradigm shift and are most likely flash in the pan politicians. I may possibly think about writing a paper on the Seventh Party System.
 

View attachment 1266719

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez introduced legislation Friday to expand disaster aid to individuals impacted by the coronavirus pandemic.

Ocasio-Cortez said the current criteria only allow the Federal Emergency Management Agency to provide direct assistance to individuals during natural disasters such as wildfires, tornadoes, hurricanes and earthquakes — not a pandemic.

Sen. Kamala Harris introduced a companion measure in March.

AOC’s 14th Congressional District, which includes parts of Queens and the Bronx, has been among the hardest hit by the COVID-19 outbreak.

“Nearly 20,000 people in my district have tested positive for a deadly virus. Thousands of my constituents are without work. We built temporary field hospitals in public parks. This is what a disaster looks like. FEMA needs to begin immediately dispersing aid to individuals hurt by COVID-19,” she said.

The Pandemic Disaster Assistance Act would ensure that after any disaster declared by a governor or the president, individuals would be able to apply directly for FEMA aid from the following programs: Disaster Supplemental Nutrition Assistance (D-SNAP), Disaster Unemployment Assistance (DUA), medical assistance, funeral aid and child care support.

AOC caught flak last week when she was the only House Democrat to vote against the $484 billion COVID relief package, or Payroll Protection Plan. The new law replenishes funds to a small-business loan program and steers $75 billion to reeling hospitals and $25 billion for COVID-19 testing.
Ocasio-Cortez claimed the measure was inadequate given the extraordinary need.

------------
Too little too late. You don't get to play hero after sitting in your fancy out of district apartment for a month. It's kind of funny that this is what it took to get AOC to actually visit her constituents
If they're going to stage a shitty photo of AOC doing "work", at least make sure she is wearing appropriate footwear. She isn't getting shit done in those boots. And don't get me started on the jacket.
 
Everything about that photo looks staged, from the people in the background just standing or milling; especially the guy in the back. The masks look like they got plucked directly out of the box without anything else being done. It looks like every other photo op she's done to be honest.
 
I think it's adorable! It's a cute outfit, it's just that those are office boots, not walking around in the rain boots.

But yes everything about this woman is stage managed and choreographed. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez has more in common with Ariana Grande than she does Bernie Sanders, who at least writes his own hits.

i thought jimmy dore said theres no proof that AOC voted no. it was a voice vote and no roll called.
Who the hell knows. Bernie actually did vote for it in the Senate but what Sanders does and what AOC does are not connected.
 
If they're going to stage a shitty photo of AOC doing "work", at least make sure she is wearing appropriate footwear. She isn't getting shit done in those boots. And don't get me started on the jacket.
AOC needs to go back to her "Sandy at Standing Rock" attire or "Fake Photo in front of Empty parking lot of poor immigrants" look. You can smell how expensive her clothes are through the photo here. She believed her own hype and is so tone-deaf.
 
Everything about that photo looks staged, from the people in the background just standing or milling; especially the guy in the back. The masks look like they got plucked directly out of the box without anything else being done. It looks like every other photo op she's done to be honest.

The lack of gloves are a nice touch.
 

For A.O.C., ‘Existential Crises’ as Her District Becomes the Coronavirus Epicenter
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez says the toll of the virus in her district has made the case for more health care and less income inequity. But it has also exposed the vulnerabilities and isolation of her voice in Congress.



The dash to overnight millennial celebrity can take abrupt detours.

Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, the democratic socialist from the Bronx, was propelled from an anonymous existence as a bartender after her upset victory in 2018 straight onto magazine covers, late-night TV and the top of every partisan love-hate list in America. It made her perhaps the most exposed and fixated-on House freshman in history.

Today, the youngest woman ever elected to Congress — known simply as A.O.C. — owns another distinction, this one far grimmer: She represents the nation’s most devastated hot zone of the coronavirus outbreak.

New York’s 14th Congressional District, which includes the working-class immigrant clusters of the Bronx and Queens, has had 19,200 coronavirus cases as of April 30, more than all of Manhattan, despite having almost a million fewer people. Residents of the neighborhoods of Corona and North Corona in her district — the names are an eerie coincidence — have had more coronavirus cases than any ZIP code in the country.

Ms. Ocasio-Cortez, 30, knows many who have died, as well as others who were sickened with the virus, or left hungry or jobless. She sends notes and makes calls to as many surviving family members as she can, serving as a kind of legislative first responder. But it can be hard to keep up.

I’ll be on calls with service workers, front-line workers, and they’re the ones who have to pull bodies out of apartments,” she said, sitting in her empty and freezing campaign headquarters in the Bronx on a recent afternoon, surrounded by bags of donated food she was preparing to deliver to families in her district. The usually crowded streets were quiet, except for a steady assault of rain and sirens.

“There’s just so much first-, second- and third-degree trauma here,” she said.

She wore no mask, either to protect her face from germs during this interview (conducted at a 12-foot distance) or to cover up her emotions generally. The wreckage in her community has made a darkly eloquent case, she said, for her agenda of universal health care and less income inequity. “This crisis is not really creating new problems,” she said. “It’s pouring gasoline on our existing ones.”

But more personally, it has exposed the little-seen vulnerabilities and isolation of the most prominent new voice in Congress.

A case in point: Ms. Ocasio-Cortez had just returned from Washington after a vote last month on the latest relief bill in Congress. She was the only Democrat to vote against the $484 billion package that passed overwhelmingly. She had many problems with the measure: Generally, she found it far too generous to corporations and not to local governments, small businesses and people struggling to buy food or pay rent.

Several colleagues had told her they also disliked the legislation, but it was not until right before the vote that she realized she would be by herself. Passage was never in doubt, but to be the lone member of a caucus to vote a certain way carries its own stigma.

“Our brains are just designed to experience a lot of excruciating pain at the idea of being alone,” Ms. Ocasio-Cortez said. “When you cast those lonely votes, you feel like your colleagues respect you less, and that you are choosing to marginalize yourself.” It can be difficult to appreciate the “powerful psychology of the House floor,” she said, along with the overall social pressures of Congress.

“I walked home in the rain,” Ms. Ocasio-Cortez said, describing her mood after the bill passed. “I was very in my feelings, big time, and I felt very discouraged.” She said she would have appreciated, at least, a heads-up from the colleagues who had said they were probably no votes but then flipped at the last minute.

“I was just, like, heartbroken,” she said.

Ms. Ocasio-Cortez’s colleagues are, for the most part, farther removed from the virus’s daily toll, which has only heightened the alienation she felt when she arrived on Capitol Hill last year. “I have, like, existential crises over it,” she said.

At the root of this has been the hardship the pathogen has imposed on where she lives, something that can be difficult to appreciate from the sanctuary of the Capitol. New York’s 14th Congressional District comprises a patchwork of diverse, vibrant and vulnerable urban communities covering the eastern part of the Bronx and north-central Queens. Roughly half of the predominantly working-class population is of Hispanic descent. They make up many of the city’s grocery workers, transit operators, custodians and child care providers, 75 percent of whom are minorities.

Nearly everyone in the district has had some personal connection to someone lost to the virus. They include Lorena Borjas, a 59-year-old transgender immigrant activist in Queens and Mohammad Gias Uddin, a 64-year-old Bangladeshi community leader who ran A&A Double Discount in the Bronx. Ms. Ocasio-Cortez knew both of them, as well as others she called “strong anchors” in the community.

“Just this morning, we were just talking to our landlord here who had just lost his brother,” she said. “Both of his children are hospital workers.” She speaks all the time to people who cannot afford food, rent and burials. The catastrophe is woven tightly into her day-to-day fabric.

It is not the same for many members of Congress, a world far from the shuttered taquerias, overrun emergency rooms and refrigerator trucks doubling as makeshift morgues that sit within a few miles of Ms. Ocasio-Cortez’s home in the Bronx. The disconnected reality contributes to her sense of feeling misunderstood by her colleagues, something she felt well before the virus ravaged her district.

“I felt like my colleagues were making opinions about me based on Fox News,” she said. “It almost felt like instead of them actually talking to the person who was next to them, and physically present in front of them, they were consuming me through television. And I think that added a lot to the particular loneliness that I experienced.”

Rookie stardom carries its own isolation in Congress, a habitat filled with some of the planet’s most jealous and thirsty creatures. Ms. Ocasio-Cortez has owned her outsize profile, for better or worse, since beating a 10-term incumbent, Representative Joseph Crowley, in the 2018 Democratic primary. “You come in and you have a stunning victory, and for whatever reason the media has turned you into a sensation,” said Representative Peter Welch, Democrat of Vermont. “It’s quite a situation to come into.”

Ms. Ocasio-Cortez once made an off-handed remark about how she felt like kissing the ground whenever she returned to New York. A senior colleague chastised her. “You know, I heard what you said,” he told her. “Being here is a privilege.” Yes, of course it was, she reassured him. Serving in Congress was “the greatest privilege of my life,” she added. Of the exchange with that colleague, Ms. Ocasio-Cortez summarized it like this: “It’s one of those small interactions that will kind of lead to sadness later.”

She believed misconceptions had taken hold about her: that she was angry and strident. That she was naïve. “That I just don’t know how this town works,” she said. “That I’m stupid. Or I’m lucky. That was a big thing the Democrats were saying. That I was a fluke. Which is basically just 10 different ways of saying she’s not supposed to be here.”

Ms. Ocasio-Cortez’s life trajectory has always involved toggling between starkly distinct worlds. When she was 5, her parents moved the family from their apartment in the Parkchester section of the Bronx to Yorktown, in Westchester County, so that she and her brother could attend better schools. She would sometimes join her mother, who worked as a house cleaner, to help scrub the homes of the neighbors, including that of a school tutor, which she cleaned in exchange for SAT lessons.

She attended Boston University, another enclave of relative wealth and privilege that brought its own culture shock. “The first week everyone was asking each other, ‘What school did you go to?’ And I was like, ‘Uh, public high school,’” she said. “There were all of these unwritten social cues. Everyone knew how to dress.”

In mid-March, when some of the first coronavirus cases started showing up in the United States but before its rapid spread, Ms. Ocasio-Cortez was mostly sheltered at home like everyone else — in her case, the Parkchester apartment she shares with her boyfriend, Riley Roberts, and a French bulldog named Deco. Getting to spend time in her district has been grounding, she said, despite all the despair. It has allowed Ms. Ocasio-Cortez to perform tactile work in her community, reclaiming her previous role as a grass-roots activist.

Still, national intrigue will inevitably find her. She was a high-profile supporter of Senator Bernie Sanders’s presidential campaign and remains a coveted potential endorsement for former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr., the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee. Her policy positions, she said, have only been affirmed by the damage the coronavirus has inflicted, disproportionately, upon lower-income populations.

“When everything started to hit the fan,” Ms. Ocasio-Cortez said, the more moderate Democrats “had no answers. There was no policy.” Her liberal wing did, she said. “It’s just doing progressive things faster,” she said, mentioning higher wages, hazard pay and lowering the age of Medicare eligibility to zero. “There is no argument from the more conservative part of the party to countervail that.”

While Ms. Ocasio-Cortez said she would support the person Democrats nominate to face President Trump, she has to this point resisted. She is wary of questions that suggest Mr. Biden must do certain things to earn her support, which she says could smack of self-importance.

But Ms. Ocasio-Cortez barely hides her lack of enthusiasm for Mr. Biden, although she says she believes that the comfort he engenders could buy him ideological latitude. “I think the fact that he is an older white man kind of has a Santa Claus soothing effect on a lot of traditional voters,” she said. “I’m convinced that Biden could essentially adopt Bernie’s agenda, and it would not be a factor — as long as he continued to say things like malarkey. And just not be Trump.”

Speculation about Ms. Ocasio-Cortez’s career moves has been another distraction. She has been mentioned as a potential primary challenger in 2022 to Senator Chuck Schumer of New York, the minority leader — an idea that is a particular hobbyhorse of Mr. Trump’s. The New York Times columnist Thomas L. Friedman has also floated her as an American ambassador to the United Nations in a Biden administration.

“Probably not,” she said when asked about serving in a Biden government, although the Friedman column did get her attention, given the U.N.’s headquarters in New York.

“That was the one perk of this,” she said. “I would get to stay home.”
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That was a long article! Bad writers often confuse word count with talent and then the New York Times hires them. In any case, onto my commentary.

“I was just, like, heartbroken,”
The people who are heart broken are the simps and rubes who believed in you, Sandy. Your victims are heart broken. You don't get to be heartbroken after you humiliate your community! Nope. They are going to remember Sandy strutting around town in sexy leather boots while their grandparents were dying.
 
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