this post was submitted on 30 Jun 2025
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Politics
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That the establishment is flailing tells you this is a movement with legs. I don't think they can shut it down like 2016 Bernie, so ... it'll be interesting to see what comes next.
Very few revolutions succeed overnight (without then making things worse than before). The way that people gave up after Bernie got cheated, and figured "welp let's leave things on autopilot then, I am discouraged now that we know the people on top are willing to cheat to hold onto power, that's unfair and I don't want to play anymore", is some lazy soft first world part time activism crap.
(And yes, I am equally part of the problem, not trying to point fingers just agreeing with you more or less. Things build over time. The more you push the more they build.)
The great Bernie blocks of 2016 and 2020 did not destroy my hope for revolution, but they did prove to me that the national DNC will never be the route to that revolution. Mamdani is showing us the way: grassroots local politics, build the base by pushing progressive policies on the local level. I suspect the establishment Dems still have more levers to pull if they want to block Mamdani's policies once he is in office. If we want revolution, we gotta support him and fight to prevent these blocks. Primary any Rep or senator that tries to prevent him from helping the common person.
Yeah, 100% agree. See also David Hogg, who tried to reform the DNC from within, and how well that turned out.