Elizabeth Warren Is Completely Serious

Authored by nytimes.com and submitted by MaryWannaWeed
image for Elizabeth Warren Is Completely Serious

A month earlier in Mingo County, W.Va., where more than 80 percent of voters cast a ballot for Trump, Warren went to a local fire station to talk about her plan for addressing the opioid crisis. It’s big: She wants to spend $100 billion over 10 years, including $50 million annually for West Virginia, the state with the highest rate of deaths from drug overdoses. In Trump’s latest budget, he has requested an increase of $1.5 billion to respond directly to the epidemic. Against a backdrop of firefighters’ coats hanging in cinder-block cubbies, Warren moved among a crowd of about 150. Many hands went up when she asked who knew someone struggling with opioids. She brought up the role of “corporations that made big money off getting people addicted and keeping them addicted.” People with “Make America Great Again” stickers nodded and clapped, according to Politico.

If Warren competes for rural voters in the general election (if not to win a red state then to peel off enough of them to make a difference in a purple one), her strong support for abortion rights and gun control will stand in her way. Lately, she has framed her argument for keeping abortion clinics open in economic terms, too. “Women of means will still have access to abortions,” she said at a town hall on MSNBC hosted by Chris Hayes of the effects of new state laws aimed at closing clinics. “Who won’t will be poor women, will be working women, will be women who can’t afford to take off three days from work, will be very young women.” She finished by saying, “We do not pass laws that take away that freedom from the women who are most vulnerable.”

Biden and Sanders have been polling better with non-college-educated white voters than Warren has. David Axelrod, the former Obama strategist and political commentator, thinks that even if her ideas resonate, she has yet to master the challenge of communicating with this group. “She’s lecturing,” he said. “There’s a lot of resistance, because people feel like she’s talking down to them.”

Warren didn’t sound to me like a law professor on the trail, but she did sound like a teacher. Trying to educate people isn’t the easiest way to connect with them. “Maybe she could bring it down a level,” Lola Sewell, a community organizer in Selma, Ala., suggested. “A lot of us aren’t involved with Wall Street and those places.”

Warren may also confront a double bind for professional women: To command respect, they have to prove that they’re experts, but once they do, they’re often seen as less likable. At one point, I asked Warren whether there was anything good about running for president as a woman. “It is what it is,” she said.

When I first talked with Warren in February, when her poll numbers were low, I wondered whether she was content with simply forcing Democratic candidates to engage with her ideas. During the 2016 primaries, when Warren did not endorse Sanders, she wanted influence over Hillary Clinton’s economic appointments should she win the presidency. Cleaving the Democratic administration from Wall Street — that was enough at the time. She could make a similar decision in 2020 or try to get her own appointment. If Warren became Treasury secretary, she could resuscitate the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which Trump has worked to declaw, and tip all kinds of decisions away from banks and toward the families who come to her town halls and tell her about the loans they can’t pay.

By mid-June, however, when I went to Washington to talk to Warren for the last time, she was very much in the race. New polls showed her in second place in California and Nevada. She had more to lose, and perhaps as a result, her answers were more scripted, more like her speeches.

jsn0125 on June 17th, 2019 at 14:13 UTC »

After Trump I think America if it can get over this socialist scaredy pants crap might be pleasantly surprised how they might actually like a little help in their lives such as healthcare.

athomps121 on June 17th, 2019 at 13:48 UTC »

Like Bernie Sanders recently pointed out: "The boomer generation needed just 306 hours of minimum wage work to pay for four years of public college. Millennials need 4,459.”

From 1970 - 2009:

Income of top 0.1%: +413% Income of top 1%: +213% Income of bottom 99%: +7%

Since 1996 wage growth is far lower than increases elsewhere:

Net worth of Americans aged 18 to 35 has dropped 34% since 1996 College Tuition: +197% Textbooks: +207% Child Care: +122% Medical Care: +105% Housing: +61%

THE US HAS THE LEAST REPRESENTATIVES PER CITIZEN THAN ANY OTHER INDUSTRIALIZED NATION. and its still growing.

We elect our representatives and representation is increasingly disproportionate through gerrymandering, representative caps, voter registration purges. Money talks (and corrupts) and lobbyists get a phenomenal return on investment. We the people have our own lobbyists we pay with taxes, they're called congress....and they don't do shit. Every year, less and less legislation is passed.

Republican states lead in:

Taking more tax funds than they contribute per capita Highest gun death rates Overdose deaths, cancer incidence & mortality rates, obesity & diabetes Highest teen birth rate, Maternal death rates & infant mortality Lowest disposable income and economic mobility, lowest minimum wages (or none at all) Highest medical bankruptcy rates Lowest ranked in education .... and also note that the US has a pretty pitiful ranking in the world for Math, Reading and Science. Lowest access to digital learning for students Brain drain: college educated adults leaving their home states LEAST LIKELY TO HAVE PAPER BALLOTS! see thread here on voting machine corruption MOST unhappy states

The top 1% of earners I would expect to be the one group that changes the least. Their wealth has grown far more than any other class, the last time they had this high a share of total US income was before the Great Depression.

According to a study by the Tax Justice Network , which campaigns against tax havens, by James Henry, former chief economist at consultants McKinsey & Co. an estimated $32Trillion is stored in offshore tax havens.

I want to know why society values a CEO 400x + MORE than the lowest paid worker or how that benefits the world in the long-run. Building capital is exponential (easier when you have more), and the issue will only get worse when ownership of production and housing funnels upwards.

Money speaks, and I don't see what good it is to structure our society so a collective few are calling all the shots. The largest corporations are made up of mostly:

Fossil fuels ( $201 million annual lobbying to delay or block policies that tackle climate change). Running active campaigns to muddy the waters around science.

Healthcare: We pay more per capita than any other country....and it's not even close. These dirty DEMOCRATIC socialist countries are providing healthcare (including preventative ) for cheaper and yet the best republicans can come up with is the long waiting lines and too many people suing doctors (tort reform)

NOTE: higher return when we invest in preventative healthcare, because healthy people make a healthy economy

Defense (lobbying and profiting off of war (or even private prisons) is morally corrupt and these industries depend on the government to stay afloat. Ridiculous.

Note: the USA tax revenue to GDP ratio is 27.1%, below the average for OECD of 34.8%. (source IMF world economic outlook database)

... but of course, republicans will discredit anything that paints their policies in a poor light just like the Congressional Budget Office, the IRS, the Federal Reserve, the Bureau of Labor and Statistics or Bureau of Consumer Protection). Same goes for defunding NASA climate research, cuz if you can’t measure CO2 you can’t research its effects

viva_la_vinyl on June 17th, 2019 at 12:31 UTC »

The wealthy need a stable society in which to enjoy their wealth. But just barely stable. They are constantly plumbing for the sweet spot where they can contribute the minimum and remain above the threshold.

Reaganomics began the trend of trashing govt and worshipping extreme individualism and greed. It's a kakistocracy, govt by the worst.

There has to be a pull back