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n2doc

(47,953 posts)
Mon Jan 18, 2016, 01:42 PM Jan 2016

The Moment at the Democratic Debate That Proved What This Campaign Is Really About

By Charles P Pierce

CHARLESTON, SOUTH CAROLINA—Let's begin at the very end, during the closing statements of Sunday night's Democratic presidential debate, because something happened that's really important to the substantive bedrock of the campaign. There are the shiny objects and there are the horse-race turning points and there are the big noisy issues that everyone gloms onto because said glomming will get you on the news the next day, or onto one of The Sunday Showz the following weekend.

On Sunday night, the latter were represented by a couple of smackdowns between Hillary Rodham Clinton and Bernie Sanders on the issues of gun safety, healthcare reform, and cleaning up regulation of the financial sector. In truth, there wasn't much daylight between them on either of the last two, which is why HRC framed her attack on Sanders—over both the Affordable Care Act and the Dodd-Frank reform bill—as a defense of a president to whom, she said, Sanders had been less than loyal. She mentioned that Sanders had mused about finding a primary opponent in 2011. (Left unsaid, of course, is the fact that there was only one person on the stage who'd actually tried to keep Barack Obama from being president and, back in 2007-08, she wasn't exactly shy about why. Welcome to the Elision Fields.)

Meanwhile, Sanders kept trying to hang The Great Vampire Squid of Goldman Sachs around Clinton's neck. This latter prompted the best moment of the night from poor Martin O'Malley, who otherwise has been reduced virtually to panhandling the moderators to get any run at all. He said that both of the other two were in the satchel, one way or the other. This was the kind of thing that is going to get some people writing today about the "contrast" between the Democratic candidates on Sunday night and the Republican candidates this past Thursday, which is roughly the difference between a public policy seminar at the Kennedy School and the Apostle John, mad from thirst, raving about seven-headed beasts from his cave on Patmos.

But the really interesting part of the debate came right at the end, during HRC's closing statement, in which she said:

CLINTON: … Lester,I spent a lot of time last week being outraged by what's happening in Flint, Michigan, and I think every single American should be outraged. We've had a city in the United States of America where the population which is poor in many ways and majority African-American has been drinking and bathing in lead-contaminated water. And the governor of that state acted as though he didn't really care. He had request for help and he had basically stonewalled. I'll tell you what, if the kids in a rich suburb of Detroit had been drinking contaminated water and being bathed in it, there would've been action. So I sent my top campaign aide down there to talk to the mayor of Flint to see what I could to help. I issued a statement about what we needed to do and then I went on a T.V. show and I said, "It was outrageous that the governor hadn't acted and within two hours he had…I want to be a president who takes care of the big problems and the problems that are affecting the people of our country everyday.
SANDERS: Well, Secretary Clinton was right and what I did which I think is also right, is demanded the resignation of governor. A man who acts that irresponsibly should not stay in power.

Make no mistake. The appalling scandal regarding the poisoning by lead of the citizens of Flint, Michigan, and the lack of response from the deregulated government brought to Michigan by Governor Rick Snyder, is a percolating issue everywhere in America, especially in the African-American communities. We prayed for the citizens of Flint at Mother Emanuel on Sunday morning, and many of the politicians who gathered to spin for the various candidates barely could contain their outrage. It is an issue among the people who rarely get their issues heard. And they are extremely pissed.

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http://www.esquire.com/news-politics/politics/news/a41280/democratic-debate-charleston-recap/
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The Moment at the Democratic Debate That Proved What This Campaign Is Really About (Original Post) n2doc Jan 2016 OP
Bernie called for his resignation before Hillary did. Just another of Bernie's ideas she co-opted. Live and Learn Jan 2016 #1
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