Islanders both on Ocracoke and Tangier have lamented the growing loss of their way of life and culture for the record in documentaries and BBC interviews. That same sense of loss is felt across American communities that feel under “attack” merely for existing, often times as white super-majority communities. In my experience, while casual racism or prejudice remain undeniable (and abberant) truths of the American experience, so too does the sense that America is changing so quickly and so rapidly, that many people who do not belong or hail from the emerging narratives in our society feel under threat.
Dilip Kumar, Legendary Indian Actor, Dies at 98.
The Day the Music Died: An American Ballad
A Reflection on Media Trends & Millennials.
TLDR: Another Hamza ("Hot Takes") Insights on the World Post.
I like to divide my generation, Millennials, roughly into two segments:
-The Ren & Stimpy Cohort
-The Avatar Cohort
Let's start with the first group, The Ren & Stimpy Cohort.
For those of you unfamiliar, The Ren & Stimpy Show was a cartoon rooted in gratuitous violence, desensitization to unsanitary behavior, and riddled with stereotyping, and normalization of bullying. There are people who like the show, there are *a lot* of people who do not like the show. Regardless, it set the tenor & tone of social behavior for many middle & upper-middle-class young people in the US (it was only syndicated on cable). It originally aired in 1991.
The show's impact was huge, and cannot be understated. While there is truth to the idea that the show also took on adult hypocrisy, and the Sallingeresque phoniness of product marketing and American popular culture, it inculcated an entire swathe of young Americans with a sense of gross entitlement, "me" culture, and acceptance of bullying. My *very strict* parents banned it in our household when I was five, but school friends often referenced the show, and acted out its emotional abuse on people around them. It also normalized the "whining" or "take out your rage in any way accept constructive self-improvement" that older Americans often like to grouse about Millennials.
Now, let's talk about the Avatar cohort.
The Opening Credits to Avatar: The Last Airbender
14 years later, Nickelodeon decided to take a gamble on Avatar: The Last Airbender. It was the only time since the "Chan Clan" cartoons by Hanna-Barbera that the entire main cast of characters was of Asiatic background. It was the *first time* ever a person with a disability (one of the main characters is blind) was featured prominently. The show focused on major life lessons: friendship, team work, test-taking anxiety, responsible and irresponsible adults and teens, family problems, and personal redemption stories (the bad guys often change their ways after traumatic journeys that mimic real-life scenarios -- if we could control air, fire, water and earth with our hands lol). It also fostered a strong sense of cross-generational tolerance and friendships, something that was deemed "weird" by older Millennials.
While I was starting college during the original run of Avatar, I grew up in a family-oriented environment. My sister, brother and I watched the show every single week when I would come home, and loved the storyline. We also appreciated that as minorities ourselves, the cast of characters had names or racial demographics that made us feel included (even if we are not East Asian). The show ended with the major antagonist, who had been acting out because of childhood trauma, teaming up with the major protagonist to do good. When you're late teenager in college, you identify a lot with that, and the show fundamentally changed the way I viewed how to forgive and how to redeem.
These two very different models of American socialization, the pro-bully, pro-violence, pro-othering through taunts and abuse approach of Ren & Stimpy, and the pro-inclusion, pro-redemption, pro-pluralism approach of Avatar, have come to symbolize the very different ways Millennials communicate and operate in the world around us. Those with an affinity for the latter show (or who grew up watching it), generally seem to have a much more robust sense of self-responsibility, proactive service to others, and forgiveness. Those who were reared on the latter by largely irresponsible parents who didn't bother to monitor what their kids were watching (yes, I'm judging you), well you can take it from there just from that loaded statement.
The major theme to take away from reading this blog post is the following: words matter, media messaging matters, and responsible parenting always matter. It used to take a village to raise a child. Now it takes a smartscreen, and a whole lot of discipline & example-setting by the adults in one’s life.
America is Going Blue.
This was originally shared on my Facebook timeline at 11:08 am yesterday, Wednesday, November 4, 2020. It is shared here for the purposes of record.
GA will probably flip.
MI is going blue
WI is going blue
PA is likely going blue.
NV is going blue.
AZ had a very bad break-up w/ an abusive GOP and is going blue.
NE is throwing in one chip to blue.
Calm down, Democrats.
This was originally shared to my Facebook Timeline around 1:30am on Wednesday, November 3. It is posted on my blog for record.
America is home to 3,000-some counties, each with their own peculiar way of doing things, like how often they update their ballot counts, who updates them and where they update them. One of the most fiercely fiesty jurisdictions in America is Delaware County of Pennsylvania. Indeed, all of Pennsylvania's counties have the tendency to just not follow directions well. It's why New Jersey's turnpike is so strict--they want to punish Pennsylvania joyriders for making their lives miserable all the time. This really bad tendency to not take directions well also drives producers at national news outlets insane every four years, because no one really knows how that crazy place will end up voting. I blame the Shoefly Pie.
But I digress. Basically, millions of the potentially 7 million ballots in the state that Maryland lost a war to *right before* independence (lolz) have not been tabulated. Many of those votes are in blue constituencies or constituencies that don't exactly leap at the idea of a man grabbing their cheerleaders by their genitals. The point is: there is likely a red mirage at work.
Look closely at vote totals and trends nationwide, they generally follow the pattern of 2018--that southern states that should never have been in play are much closer than usual, and that increasingly the paths for Trump to win are not materializing.
Take it easy, and please: *STOP* texting me for political updates. I am sleeping. I have gotten out of bed twice now, and found 121 messages (seriously, what the hell is wrong with all of you?!). I want to sleep. God didn't give me Brad Pitt's looks or Salman Khan's abs. I must sleep to earn either.
Georgia Election Update (10:55:45AM)
Georgia’s state election officials are holding a press conference right now, as we speak.
“An accurate & fair count is much more vital than having a fast count.” - GA election official
-This is the first time in 20 years that Georgia has used paper ballots.
-"Like all of you, [election workers] are tired." -GA state elections official
-There are absentee ballots from our overseas military voters and provisional ballots that need to be tabulated
-60,000 ballots remain uncounted.
-"No one is involved in voter fraud." -- emphasized with emotion by a very tired state director for elections right now in Georgia.
-"Accuracy matters. The only way any side will be satisfied is by us being as accurate as possible with these votes."
-Every county in Georgia has been supplied a "high-capacity" ballot scanner in anticipation of how much interest there has been in this election.
Understanding Islamic New Year
1) it is just a measure of time—and a rough one at that. Muslims generally use the lunar calendar to keep track of religious festivals. We have a solar calendar that helps keep track of time more accurately for scientific purposes. Muslims generally don’t wish each other a happy new year, bc time passing is a natural phenomenon.
2) It’s largely a time of mourning. 1400 years ago an Arab monarch put to death the majority of the Prophet Muhammad’s (pbuh) family in order to silence them for dissenting against their rule—in the first ten days of the new year. Generally that memory, known as the Massacare at Karbala, is not a pleasant memory, though *some* extreme Arab Nationalists do celebrate it since it marked the proto-rise of Arabism.
3) if you’re Sunni you might fast on the tenth day, as a mark of respect for Yom Kippur, the annual 25 hour fast of Judaism that happens on the tenth day of the Jewish spiritual new year (Jews technically observe four New Years every single Jewish calendar year).
4) Sunnis in South Asia and Iran don’t usually fast. Iranian Sunnis because their Shia neighbors are mourning the Massacre at Karbala, and South Asian Sunnis because their understanding of Islam is more syncretic—we often blend Shia folklore & Sunni religious law together. Even today, Sunni poets in Urdu, Punjabi & Sindhi (three major South Asian languages) write songs and poems about Imam Husayn (who was killed at Karbala) & his family, condemning the evil Arab monarch who killed him. Most of India & Pakistan’s Muslims converted to the Faith after Sufi missionaries scoured the subcontinent, and those missionaries believe their respective religious orders were founded by the family of the Prophet (pbuh) who either died or survived the Massacre at Karbala 1400 years ago. Therefore, the connection to Karbala is stronger amongst those of us from that part of the world originally.
5) It is a charged time of political activism & has been for 14 centuries. Every Muslim ruler and government worries when the new year comes about. That’s because the Massacare at Karbala left a legacy of standing up to injustice across the Muslim world during the new year, as a way of accounting for the misdeeds of politics elites. Everyone from the Shah of Iran to the Bhutto political dynasty of Pakistan, and the Nehru family next door in India have had to contend with unrest and protests during the Islamic new year by activists & instigators seeking genuine reform & social justice. Much of the Arab World has previously sought to ban political expression even more heavily during the Islamic New Year—with mixed results.
Persepolis.
Satrapi’s memoir is a trilogy, with the first book having the name of the entire series. I have read all three, but it is her childhood and its vivid recollections of loss, the haunting reverberations of injustice being rationalized around her, and the depictions of a young girl just trying to live her life that has me coming back to remind myself: the world is full of interesting people, and prejudice often blinds us to the good in us all.
Accepting That Even I Have White Privilege.
As someone who has faced bigotry and prejudice in his life, but also benefited from its nuances and wrongful categorizations, I have stayed quiet during our recent demonstrations in an effort to learn from black leaders and activists what it is that I can do personally to advocate change and an end to our country’s deeply ingrained culture of structural racism. One thing I’ve decided to do is to finally call out Desi Culture’s advocacy of racism as a cardinal virtue of its existence. I begin that journey today.
Elected Officials Call on Maryland Governor to Cancel Rent & Mortgage Payments
Just over a third of Maryland’s State Delegates have signed a letter organized by Silver Spring’s Delegate Jheanelle K. Wilkins calling for rent and mortgage payments to be suspended by Maryland’s Governor Larry P. Hogan during the COVID-19 pandemic. Maryland is currently under a state of emergency thanks to the Novel Corona Virus, during which time the state governor (arguably one of the most powerful governorships in the land) has the authority to stay derogatory debts from causing real harm to tenants and homeowners.
Currently, foreclosure actions and evictions have been stayed by the Maryland Court of Appeals and a separate decree by the Governor, who is using his emergency powers as laid out by law to do so. However, staying these legal proceedings does not waive their due payment on the first of every month. In other words, rents and mortgage payments remain due, will compile with interest and late fees, with derogatory credit all but guaranteed. This situation is what has triggered the call by Delegate Wilkins and others for Governor Hogan to further use his emergency powers to waive the collection and due payment of rents and mortgages.
Progressives Lead the Call for Change
Nearly half of formerly prosperous Montgomery County’s state legislators signed on, with a number of signatories being from neighboring, economically ascendant Prince Georges County. Last year, Gorgeous Prince Georges County became Maryland’s dominant economic engine after 12 years of stagnant growth and mismanagement at the highest levels of Montgomery County’s government. The mismanagement of the county’s government led to the arrest and conviction of then-County Executive Ike Leggett’s Chief Economic Advisor for embezzling millions.
Past Foreclosure Crises & Political Indifference
Montgomery County’s economic future has been hazy for some time. Some 12,000 manufacturing jobs were lost during the aftermath of The Great Recession. Moreover, during the same spell of time, Maryland was the country’s foreclosure capital as the O’Malley administration did little to assist struggling homeowners through administrative or legislative means. A second wave of the foreclosure epidemic struck in 2014, again with Governor O’Malley doing little to assist Marylanders as he tried to raise his profile for a run for president. Countless Marylanders lost their homes while elected officials looked on at posh fundraising dinners for the re-election campaigns.
Millennials & Diversity Rising
That all began to change in the wake of the 2016 election of Donald Trump. A new, diverse cadre of elected officials emerged victorious in the state’s 2018 elections with a mind to challenge the state’s image as an establishment heartland. Progressive voices in the House of Delegates like Joseline Pena-Melnyk, Wanika K. Fisher, C.T. Wilson, Jheanelle K. Wilkins, and Vaughn Stewart have begun an aggressive campaign to change the harsh unequal realities that Maryland has become known for throughout the country thanks to HBO shows like The Wire and Netflix documentaries such as The Keepers and Dirty Money, not to mention NPR’s Serial Podcast. Few states of Maryland’s population size have had that much continuous negative national coverage in so short a time.
Economic Malaise is now the Maryland Way
Maryland’s economic health is ranked 37th out of 50 in the country by Wallet Hub, and the state’s foreclosure rate was well above the national average months before the COVID-19 crisis. Per the federal government, nearly 5 in 100 homeowners with a mortgage were in foreclosure during the height of the Great Recession a decade ago. Mortgage industry data strongly suggests another foreclosure crisis far greater in scope than the 2008 one is on the horizon as we speak. That suggests that Delegate Wilkins and her colleagues have made the right call to put public interest above private profits.Millennials and Gen Z Marylanders have essentially never seen economic stability in their lifetimes.
Merry Christmas
Christmas—western and traditional (orthodox) is my favorite holiday of the year.
The scant historical evidence strongly suggests Jesus Christ was born in springtime. Muslims believe the Anointed One was of a monophysite human nature (he wasn’t divine). The Quran states Mother Mary gave birth to him under a palm tree.
What does not change from faith to faith, and culture to culture is the miracle that a young man taught the universality of God’s love, and the rejection of accumulating wealth without social and political justice.
The story of Jesus Christ is perhaps the greatest parable in the Western canon of the power of the oft-maligned professions of teacher (rabbi) and community organizer (messiah). Christ faced down corrupt social institutions, indifferent and unrepresentative government, crushing poverty and a broken justice system that penalIzed women and minorities out of spite and political convenience. Even after an unjust death sentence, he rose again to prove that the arc of history is long—but it will always bend to Justice.
In these trying times where a literal King Herod and Jezebel occupy the White House, we would do well to ponder how we will honor the Christian spirit of the season.
Merry Christmas.
Taylor Swift's "The Man" Should Be an Anthem for the 2020 Election
Montgomery County Has a Chance to Lead the Country on Comprehensive Police Reform
Despite the rather ominous title, the proposal I favor in this post is more or less conciliatory in nature rather than confrontational. As the grandson and nephew of policemen, I understand and value the role law enforcement play in helping keep everyday people safe. But we live in times where intentions, actions, missteps and reactions thereof can all have potentially deadly consequences for citizens. Some might say that has always been the case. However, as a democratic society, we are supposed to praise the idea that no one is above the law—including those who enforce it.
That is why I support the Young People’s Amendment to County Council Bill 14-19, which would ensure that at least two young people under the age of 35 would be included in any future Policing Advisory Commission (PAC), as proposed in the original bill. The fact is that in any given month, a majority of stops and arrests in the county by MCPD are of people belonging to that particular age range (under 35). As a millennial myself, I have a hard time believing that I am somehow more inclined towards criminality than someone over the age of 35. Therefore, I see the value in making sure people of my age and background have a voice in helping to advise our police force on how we can work together to both reduce crime and the likelihood of young people spending the best years of their lives behind bars.
While one elected official tried to make claims that young people should instead be placed on an imaginary youth council that does not exist, others like Tom Hucker and Will Jawando have been strong champions of the proposal. I think it merits our attention as county residents, and it would be a positive first step for Montgomery County.
Tunisia's Democratic Experiment
While in Tunis, I stayed in an old mansion owned by the former Bey of Tunisia, just footsteps from Ibn Khaldun’s childhood seminary.
Over the summer, I had the opportunity to travel to Tunisia along with a group of brilliant academics from the Democracy & Governance program at Georgetown University. The country has undergone some immense changes in the past decade, not the least of which is that it alone has emerged from the smoldering ruins of the “Arab Spring” as a democracy. The experience was incredibly rewarding for me personally, as I have been fascinated with Tunisia since my time at a journalism startup, called Cont3nt (pronounced “Content”), where I recruited and handled confidential news sources from within Tunisia during the Jasmine Revolution.
Earlier this week, the Arab terrorist known as Abu Bakr Al Baghdadi was killed in the troubled region known as the Eastern Arab World. For the past 100 years in that part of the world, several millenarian movements have attempted to set up a universal Sunni Caliphate headed by an ethnic Arab to rule over all Muslims and do war with non-Muslims. That effort has largely opposed the idea of democracy, spurning it as an unholy form of government devoid of divine sanction. Baghdadi was famous for bringing together religious extremists with secular Arab nationalists known as the Ba’ath to further his goals for a Caliphate based in the Arab world.
Tunisia was once home to Ibn Khaldun, one of Islam’s greatest legal scholars and historians. He also happened to be one of the fathers of the Western Arab World (the “Maghreb”)’s philosophical tradition. While in Tunisia, I was lucky enough to pray daily in the mosque where Ibn Khaldun studied theology in the old medina of Tunis. While there, I spent a great deal of time chatting with the locals about the challenges the country has faced regarding the country’s democratic transition.
Arab Extremist Movements Don’t Reflect the Reality of Islam or the Arab & Muslim World
Extremists largely from the eastern regions of the Arab World have tried to steer Muslims away from democracy. They believe that only a pure-blood Arab can rule over Muslims as the Caliph of Islam. However, despite the success of extremists at global terrorism, most Arabs & Muslims across the world revile these extremists.
The battle between Islam and Democracy that Osama Bin Laden, Abu Bakr Al Baghdadi and other Arab millenarians have sought to paint is a bit of a nothing-burger. In the 1940s, Islamic religious leaders in Indonesia (home to the world’s largest Muslim population) formed a union across the country’s 17,000-island archipelago which openly declared Islam to be in favor of democracy and social pluralism. In India, two major figures in the democratic movement to establish the country were Islamic religious scholars: the first Prime Minister Sheikh Abdullah of Jammu & Kashmir and India’s first Education Minister & president of the Congress party, Maulana Azad. Turkish religious scholars have long signed off on democracy and political pluralism—including the exiled Fethullah Gulen as well as pro-government religious leaders. Before their overthrow by Arab nationalists, both Egypt and Syria experimented with democracy in the mid-twentieth century, with religious parties and figures vying for seats in their respective legislatures. All in all, more Islamic religious authorities of merit have supported democracy rather than have opposed it over the course of the past 100 years.
Tunisia’s Hopes
Many Tunisians expressed their hope that their country could become the “halal alternative” to the jihadism that is rife in Libya, Syria, Iraq and elsewhere in the Arab World. On multiple occasions and across Tunisia’s very fragmented political landscape, Tunisians insisted their society and culture represented the guardianship of traditional Islamic jurisprudence and religious doctrine which favored democratic pluralism (as argued by Sacheddina, Ahmed and others).
However, there is also increasing frustration at the failure of successive parliaments to parley meaningful reforms into law. Tunisia’s welfare-stye economy is highly statist, and the currency has devalued as much as 1/3 since its democracy came into being. While corruption is down, European tourism vanished after terror attacks brought the country to its knees in 2015. Reforms allowing for limited federalism in the country have been pushed through—and were badly needed: Tunisia is physically the size of the entire Atlantic seaboard. However, the country still does not have any justices appointed to the constitutionally-mandated supreme court as a result of years of division and mistrust by factions in the previous parliament who agreed only to legislate through consensus. This has meant that while the country is stable, its economy is on life support.
Still, in comparison to a time where the former Ben Ali regime actively used rape as a sanctioned tool of government policy, things are looking much better. Despite a terror attack this summer only steps away from where I had gone for a stroll with a fellow American ex-pat in the capital, Tunisians seem undeterred in their attempts to consolidate their democracy. Time will tell if the rest of the Arab World will adopt Tunisia’s approach, but there are signs that Malaysia, Pakistan, and others are following in the footsteps of Ibn Khaldun.
Interfaith Activists to Conduct a Teach-In on Kashmir Crisis at American University (09/26)
Analysis: Elizabeth Warren, Beto O'Rourke & Joe Biden Clear Winners
Beto O’Rourke had his strongest night yet.
After deciding not to court voters in Spanish (thank you, Beto), the presidential candidate and skateboarder unleashed his RFK-esque passion for public policy through going unscripted on gun reform.
Elizabeth Warren said as much as she needed to, and not a word more.
Despite attempts to get her to go on record about the financial cost to taxpayers for some of her reforms, Warren remained disciplined and in her best form last night. She also spoke close to least last night as she allowed gaffes and wrong-headed jabs at age (looking at you, Castro) dominate the night. Her point that she’s met no one who so far loves their healthcare company resonated with a lot of Americans on both sides of the aisle.
Juan Castro tried to channel Kamala Harris’s love of being the Bully.
And it failed. Not only was Castro actually wrong in casting doubt on Biden’s memory which in turn makes us wonder if Castro has a memory or hearing problem of his own, he came off as unpresidential, desperately looking to insult an older, more credible public servant. Castro will not survive this, and if he does, if Biden wins the nomination, like Kamala he’ll face an unlikely future.
Sanders Still Resonates.
Younger Americans are increasingly dividing up between Mayor Pete Buttigeg, Beto O’Rourke, and internet sensation Andrew Yang. But the lion share of. younger voters I’ve spoken to across the country continue to favor either Bernie Sanders or Elizabeth Warren—reflecting national polls. In particular, Sanders direct challenge to the powers that be (big banks, soulless insurance companies, and pro-climate change interests) continues to ring as the truest of the platforms offered by any candidate.
Joe Biden is Not Going Anywhere.
Gaffes that date him, jokes about his age, claims by flagging candidates that he’s not racist, “but…” — they’ve all failed, again and again. Joe Biden still connects with a Americans across the board because they’ve come to either trust him or respect that he, along with Sanders and Warren, isn’t running for president to fulfill his ego. He cares about America, and wants to serve the country. Keep that in mind going forward.
3 Reasons Why I Don't Believe Kamala Harris Will Serve Americans
1. Dishonesty & Hypocrisy
You cannot throw people in jail for smoking marijuana, and then give an interview where you laugh about how *you* smoked marijuana for years.
2. "A Soldier's Story: Redux"
You cannot justify keeping an innocent black man in prison through misleading judicial procedure for committing murder he did not commit because it helps you look tough on crime.
3. Cannibalizing Spirit of the Law
The deliberate misapplication of the law in the matter of truancy during one of the worst economic downturns in American history demonstrates virtue signaling at its worst & most degenerate condition.
Let's elect a Real Democrat.
18 Years Later: A Prayer on 9/11
For an entire generation, the memory of the villainry of September 11th is seared into our minds, but for a select group of us, those events were even more impactful, because they led to 18 years of suspicion, discrimination, illegal surveillance, curtailing of our civil rights, and in some cases, death and physical harm. As a millennial, half a dozen people I knew have now died in combat fighting two wars, one in Afghanistan and another in Iraq. More than a few dozen have come home to an America that can scarcely understand the trauma of war and the dramatic toll prolonged exposure to violence can take on a mind.
Five Things I like About Beto (Only Two Are Political)
Beto O’Rourke isn’t a leading contender for the presidency right now.. But that hasn’t stopped me from going on to say multiple times in recent TV & Podcast appearances that he’s part of a cadre of authentic candidates that I admire and believe have a great future in public service. I decided to put together a couple of things I like about him, only two of which are political.
Beto Was in A Rock Band
Gnarly, right?
I am damn sure that if I had ever attended a Beto jam session with his rock buddies, that I would probably light my brain in fire. That being said, being in a grunge band with that kind of hair gains any candidate instant street-cred with younger voters who really want a candidate who draws outside the lines. Being in a hard rock band doesn’t make Beto a candidate younger voters can directly relate to, as some rather shoddy analysts have tried to conclude. The heavy metal & grunge eras were well-over by the time I was a junior in high school (I’m a millennial), and Gen Z voters will have a hard time seeing how that prehistoric set of sounds even qualifies as “music”. That being said, it does make him more human than say, a candidate who used to throw people in jail for smoking pot, and then tries to make themselves relatable by laughing in an interview about how she used to smoke pot (cough…Kamala).
He Skateboards
I should probably point out at this juncture that my parents are immigrants from South Asia, and skateboard were considered a dangerous influence that could lead to tattoos, girls and a life of crime and drugs. It did not help that the one Pakistani immigrant friend I had in elementary school who skateboarded did exactly those things. But we won’t go there. Beto’s lifelong passion for skateboarding is the sort of thing you don’t expect any 46 year-old father with an Ivy League education to do. It’s unexpected, refreshing and a very healthy way to get exercise and meet diverse people who are not political junkies. That last point is incredibly important to Beto: he really does like to just meet everyday people.
His Old College Buddies Describe Him As Having “Radical Authenticity”
Beto attended Columbia University in New York City
It’s usually not a good sign when presidential hopefuls have people who knew them in college reminisce in public about their wayward youths. Ted Cruz, who nearly lost his Senate seat in deep red Texas to Beto found that out when an old classmate started tweeting about his purported issues with hygiene. But not too surprisingly “His artist friends knew him as the scruffy guy who got them into trouble for skateboarding through the dorm,” recalls Boris Kachka, a classmate of Beto’s at Columbia University in the 1990s, before adding he was also captain of the crew team (God, I wish I was Beto).
Beto Is Not Winning & He Doesn’t Care: He’s Still Running Things His Way
Yesterday I wrote about how Beto O’ Rourke decided to take a Bolt Bus from New York to Boston, instead of a flight. His campaign staff gave a rather interesting rationale: the bus is less polluting. I see a far more compelling reason: Beto hates being a stuffed shirt, and really enjoys being a a regular person. Millions of Americans simply cannot afford to fly, and Beto isn’t looking to win the 1% vote in first class on American Airlines. He’s genuinely concerned about the direction of America today, and likely chose the Bolt Bus as a way to really talk to everyday voters—-even if he isn’t winning the presidency as of right now in the polls.
A Bridge Between Americans: Pluralism is His Strong Suit
Hard Punk Rocker & former miscreant. Ivy League education & crew team captain. Skateboarder & f-bomb aficionado. Texas-born Irishman with a Hispanic nickname whose dad was a Southern Democrat who raised money for Jesse Jackson, and whose mom was a moderate Republican. Beto is a brackish mish-mash of all th constituent parts that make America one single whole. It is in the personhood of Beto O’Rourke that Americans find a man who is truly in touch with who we are and wha makes us such a great and diverse people. That pluralistic combination is both impressive and fantastic. And it is chief amongst my reasons as to why I really like Beto O’Rourke.