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pk10534 t1_j7mclpe wrote

I mean shit at this point you could put Sadam Hussein on the ballot and I’d vote for him over Mosby.

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TheSpektrModule t1_j7lxhql wrote

I guess that explains why his office has lost any interest in effective constituent service recently.

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jabbadarth t1_j7ldb7q wrote

Can't wait fir mosby to claim racism somehow.

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wtfworldwhy t1_j7nvuxg wrote

When I needed to get a permit for my POD, I called the permit office no less than 30 times and emailed several times with zero response. No one even answered the phone. One email to Zeke and he basically made them do their job and respond to me. It’s insane that the city is so fucked up and incompetent that I have to contact a politician to get a basic service, but I definitely appreciate Zeke’s help in the matter.

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AttisofAssyria t1_j7l3u63 wrote

Oh, girl, Nicky gonna bust a gavel at ya for that.

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FelixandFriends t1_j7muqrz wrote

I don’t particularly like Zeke or think he is very effective, but he’s a good politician. People in my neighborhood/district love him.

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TitsMageesVacation t1_j7novdn wrote

I’m in his district, and no one I know likes him, finds him effective, or thinks he’s at all genuine.

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FelixandFriends t1_j7nr4hp wrote

Tbh I don’t personally know anyone that likes him (none of my neighbors do to my knowledge) but he’s popular on social.

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[deleted] t1_j7lsw4r wrote

[deleted]

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z3mcs t1_j7m0rlt wrote

I really don't know why people continue to believe the myth that black folks (in Baltimore or anywhere else) don't vote for white people. It's silly. If black folks are supposed to grow up believing "You can do anything you put your mind to", and that this country is a meritocracy aside from a select few situations, and racism is "a few bad apples", then certainly a white guy has a shot in an election, considering there's tons of white guys that got the votes of those same black people, for other offices.

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DfcukinLite t1_j7m9f2f wrote

You say dumb shit every day on here, but this is up there.

I love how you’re now pretending that white people don’t still hold and held more Baltimore city public office positions than black people do in this city today currently or previously…

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ThebesSacredBand t1_j7m39oi wrote

It's been 0 days since Nazis tried to attack Baltimore and this is the perspective of white people in the area.

I hate this country.

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Mikel32 t1_j7nx077 wrote

I think we’ve all had enough. I think the Oriole Bird needs to run for office.

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online-songs t1_j81tzoa wrote

Zeke is the right guy for this job, 100%

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S-Kunst t1_j7tqyfq wrote

You only need to drive around a council person's district to get an idea if they proactive for their district or self-active, for themselves. Dilapidated buildings constant trash, decayed commercial areas, many vacant buildings, Constant demolitions as an answer to blighted areas, all are a sign the council person is not driving around tending their fields.

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Juicy_jay6969 t1_j7lzghf wrote

What's he going to do to make Baltimore better? Put more useless stop signs on the street? Hold press conferences to pass his bullshit bills a couple doors down from crime scenes while completely ignoring the victims?

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TheSpektrModule t1_j7m09lh wrote

> Hold press conferences to pass his bullshit bills

Remember how he hyped his "Healing City" bill? God, what a load of fluffy BS nonsense.

That being said if it's a choice between Zeke Cohen and Nick Mosby, Zeke will get my vote in a heartbeat.

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SnooRevelations979 t1_j7mtguc wrote

Between Zeke and Mosby, as a liberal anti-progressive, I'll write in Clark W. Griswold.

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[deleted] t1_j7mu48p wrote

not trying to debate, what does liberal anti-progressive mean?

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addctd2badideas t1_j7mxaw8 wrote

Just to chime in, I wouldn't define myself as such but I find the progressive wing of the Democrats to be absolutely impractical and absurdly ideological. As a supporter of universal healthcare, police reform and taxing the wealthy to fund social programs, I always thought I was progressive but apparently not enough for the "real" progressives.

I guess to be a real progressive in this era, you have to shout "ACAB" all the time and constantly call for the abolition of capitalism.

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SnooRevelations979 t1_j7n1i75 wrote

Better said than what I wrote above, and I agree wholeheartedly.

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addctd2badideas t1_j7n61ne wrote

I just wouldn't go so far as to call myself "anti-progressive." I'm not their enemy even if they don't realize it. Most of us are on the same side, even if they are more concerned with what conservatives call "virtue signaling" than working on the problem. At least their hearts are in the right place.

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rockybalBOHa t1_j7p1h7o wrote

And the bigger point is that a city government has no role in determining macroeconomic systems. Schools, police, transportation, garbage collection, and other basic services...that's what a city government actually does.

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Autumn_Sweater t1_j7neqwn wrote

anti police / abolition politics has been almost entirely driven by the police themselves, their inability to stop killing people and their incompatibility with and organized resistance to any supposed liberal reforms or solutions. likewise the essence of capitalism revealing itself in a hundred miserable ways in people’s lives has turned people against that system

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pends t1_j7ph7vw wrote

The most popular progressive politician (Bernie) doesn't call for the end of capitalism or abolition of police. This sounds like a boogeyman

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addctd2badideas t1_j7picff wrote

He doesn't do so directly because it would have cost him votes but his supporters, at least the ones that are vocal on social media, are very much in favor of dismantling capitalism as an economic model. Bernie leaves in little dog whistles in his speeches though to encourage them.

I'm not a fan of unfettered and under-regulated capitalism but what I hear from the left sometimes truly scares me. As if they haven't ever learned about the millions dead in the Soviet Union or Communist China in school. I'm fine with "Democratic Socialism" if you can make it work alongside regulated capitalist markets, but some folks don't seem to care that much about the "democratic" aspect of it.

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sit_down_man t1_j7pmvrf wrote

Dude comparing death tolls of economic systems is not the argument you’d wanna take here. There are a million criticisms of 20th century communist states, but the amount of death and misery caused by capitalist states in that time (and what continues today) dwarfs those by an insane margin.

And honestly, none of this matters bc there is barely a Left in the US, and even the most left-leaning politicians are lukewarm social democrats. And I personally do like Bernie a lot, I think he’s a decent person, but if he’s the left wind of acceptable discourse, then I don’t really think people have the right to be complaining about the dangers of the “progressive US left” or whatever lol

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addctd2badideas t1_j7pxp0c wrote

60 million people have been killed by communist regimes by execution, starvation and a variety of other means. And it's not just that the regimes have killed that many people, it's that the whole idea of communism was that it was supposed to be a system that leaves no one behind.

What unfettered socialism and communism proved is that even without a capitalist system, you will still have fat cats and starving dogs. At least within a highly regulated capitalist system, you theoretically have more opportunity for the poverty class to become upwardly mobile.

Naked socialism has been proven to be an egregious system that just because it's designed to be equitable, doesn't mean it actually is. Capitalism remains the least worst economic model.

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sit_down_man t1_j7qfbho wrote

There are so many falsehoods here man, jesus.

First of all 60 million (wherever you got that number from) is nothing compared to deaths caused by america, colonial Europe, mid century fascists, famines in India and Ireland caused by Britain, American sponsored genocide in the Philippines, millions dead in the Middle East, etc. then start throwing in the millions who die each year from starvation, homelessness, lack of healthcare/health insurance, unsafe work conditions.

Again, deaths in mid-century communist states were bad (literally any communist or socialist will agree), but this is a fraction of deaths attributed to capitalist countries.

Saying that both systems will leave “fat cats and starving dogs” is true but still not 1 for 1. In the Soviet Union, even the most elite politicians lived in humble apartments. While they certainly enjoyed things that others didn’t, it’s pretty inaccurate to compare this to the inequalities of America or the western capitalist world. I don’t think I need to explain to you how well our wealth and elite live versus how those left behind live. I mean just take a look around our city to see the height of poverty.

Also, we’ve had many good studies comparing “socialist” states to capitalist ones at similar stages of development, and the socialist ones consistently outperformed their peers and usually had qualities of life on par with far MORE developed capitalist nations. The CIA even had a study in the 70’s or 80’s where they compared nutritional intake in the USA to the USSR and the average Soviet citizen was receiving a higher caloric diet than an American. Additionally, in the USSR, China, Cuba, even the DPRK, post-revolution reforms led to massive increases in literacy and life expectancy, guaranteed housing and jobs, and other QOL markers. We only need to look to the dissolution of the USSR to compare systems. The fall of the USSR led to the greatest decrease in life expectancy in modern history in a non war period. Many Eastern European countries are literally just now getting back to the level of GDP they enjoyed pre-collapse.

I know that’s a lot of text, but bottom line, we have data to compare systems and we have a century of political experiments to observe, and the overwhelming evidence is that socialist and communist states have the average citizen a better life than they would have had under capitalism. If you want a good starter text on this stuff, “Blackshirts and Reds” by Michael Parenti is a really informative read and touches on a lot of these comparisons.

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todareistobmore t1_j7q329j wrote

> I guess to be a real progressive in this era, you have to shout "ACAB" all the time and constantly call for the abolition of capitalism.

The absolute funniest thing about this idiocy is that it's in defense of a protest vote declared 16 months in advance of the primary.

The only reason to care about this race before next spring is if you're planning on backing or volunteering for any particular candidate.

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addctd2badideas t1_j7qbop5 wrote

Generally, candidates like to float this out early to see what the news commentary and social media reaction is so they can plan accordingly. But yes, it's not much to care about yet for the average voter.

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SnooRevelations979 t1_j7n1eax wrote

To me, while I share a lot of values with progressives, they seem to be most interested in gestures and who is gesturing. They also don't seem to have tons of interest in local governance and its prosaic details (fire department, police, trash clean up, etc.) or the role of local government vis-a-vis state and federal government. They are more interested in signaling on national issues. There's also an underlying tide of evangelicalism that I don't subscribe to.

I'm a liberal because I believe there's a huge role for government to help people get out of poverty and protect rights, including the rights of minorities. But, in most cases, that is role of higher levels of government, not the government of a poor shrinking city.

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sit_down_man t1_j7pn658 wrote

It just means a standard liberal lol. These people are describing the most basic liberal Democrat worldview

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SnooRevelations979 t1_j7n2gfj wrote

I should also add that the term "progressive" has a lot of baggage that modern progressives seem pretty unaware of.

A hundred years ago, progressives were indeed advocating for public health (which largely accounts for our doubled lifespan in that time), and more equal income distribution. But they were also generally eugenicists.

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