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Right Wing Watch: A Project of People For the American Way” The Week’s Weirdest Moments on the Extreme Right: ‘Million MAGA March’, QAnons’ despair, Love = Hate Alternate Reality Rally

Dec. 2, 2020
Right Wing Watch: The Week’s Weirdest Moments on the Extreme Right: ‘Million MAGA March’, QAnons’ despair, Love = Hate Alternate Reality Rally
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Fans of the current occupant of the White House recently rallied in your nation’s capital, arriving by the thousands to lodge their protests in an event at a large plaza just blocks from the White House — before marching up Pennsylvania Avenue to rally again in front of Supreme Court. There they stood, maskless and packed in tightly as they yelled false accusations of an election stolen from the man they love.
A coalition of conspiracy theorists, white nationalists and garden-variety white supremacists entertained themselves by listening to speakers from one or another constituency of the right-wing coalition, each with a tale of grievance. All, it seemed, bought into the president’s disinformation campaign to baselessly claim that in cities with Democratic mayors and populations where Black people form the largest voting bloc, the election had been “rigged” against the man with the elaborate comb-over.
At Freedom Plaza, during the Nov. 14th event, white nationalists going by the organizational name “America First” held large flags emblazoned with the president’s name. The man with the celebrated name drove by the gathering on the way to his Virginia golf course, the better to signal his approval. And, as the saying goes, the crowd went wild.
In the evening, after the permitted events ended, a group called the Proud Boys — a kind of pro-Trump fight club — engaged in street brawls, picking fights with anti-fascist activists. And, as the saying goes, a delightful time was had by all.
Q Lives!
Among the speakers who addressed the maskless crowd arrayed in front of the Supreme Court was Rep.-elect Marjorie Taylor Greene, who has expressed her support for the QAnon conspiracy theory and its adherents, a number of whom were present for her speech.
An internet figure known only as Q is the anonymous prophet fueling the QAnon movement; the person or people who post under the Q moniker have spent years flooding the internet with unfounded conspiracies, proclamations about the so-called deep state’s cabalistic control of the United States, and the current White House occupant’s role as the anointed savior fighting off the forces of evil. After launching the ruse in 2017, Q quickly amassed a large following through his posts (known as “Q drops”), and the movement grew among right-wing circles.
QAnon eventually morphed into a cult where supporters claim that a cabal of elite pedophiles made up of Democrats, Hollywood figures, and business executives is behind a global Satanic child sex-trafficking ring. The unfounded conspiracy theory also alleges that Trump is planning a day of reckoning known as “The Storm,” during which thousands of these alleged wrongdoers will be arrested and executed. Many believed that the supposed reckoning and the eventual defeat of the deep state would begin with Trump’s victory in the 2020 election. Joe Biden’s victory served as a body-blow to the movement’s ardent followers, and making matters worse for these true believers, Q seemed to have disappeared in the days following the election.
Then, on Nov. 12, Q miraculously reappeared, just in time to shore up the dejected QAnon adherents. At 9:32 p.m. Eastern Time, Q posted an American flag along with a short message aimed at rallying his digital troops.  “Nothing can stop what is coming. Nothing!” Q wrote.
And throughout QAnonland, the people rejoiced.
When Love = Hate
The day after the Washington, D.C. pro-Trump rally, a group calling itself the Walk Away movement — which includes LGBTQ, Black, and Latino people who say they have “walked away” from the Democratic Party — convened, with several speakers said the movement is all about love. Speaker Drew Hernandez, however, did not seem to get the “love” memo, because he celebrated Proud Boys’ violence against anti-fascist and Black Lives Matter activists, adding that he was ready for civil war.
“And right now, it’s your time, America!” Hernandez exclaimed. “It’s your time to rise! Whether Donald Trump wins or not, it’s your time to rise! Because we will not go down without a fight! We will not go down without bloodshed!”
Love, it seems, is complicated.
Right Wing Watch is a project of People For the American Way

Cedric Richmond Leaves House to a Go to a Bigger House, the White House

Dec. 2, 2020

Cedric Richmond Leaves House to a Go to a Bigger House, the White House

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Cedric Richmond

Special to the Trice Edney News Wire from TheNorthStarNewsToday.com

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Cedric Richmond resigned from Congress after being selected to work for President-elect Joe Biden.

Richmond will work for the White House Office of Public Engagement, making him one of the highest-ranking Black in the incoming administration, other than Kamala Harris, the Vice President-elect.

He announced that he was leaving office Tuesday. His district Baton Rouge and River Road areas. The majority of this district is New Orleans, where he lives.Richmond has held a number of leadership positions including Chair of the Congressional Black Caucus, The House Democratic Assistant to the Majority Whip.

He has represented his district since 2011. He is a graduate of Morehouse College and Tulane Law School.

Young Voters Showed Up and Showed Out By Julianne Malveaux

Nov. 30, 2020
Young Voters Showed Up and Showed Out
By Julianne Malveaux
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(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Voters between 18 and 29 made history in the 2020 election.  According to the Center for Information and Research on Civic Learning & Engagement, or CIRCLE (https://circle.tufts.edu/2020-election-center), at least 52 percent of them, and perhaps as many as 55  percent voted. 
That turnout is at least ten percentage points higher than in 2016, and the highest voting level among that age group since the 26th Amendment granted those over 18 were granted the right to vote in 1971.  Not only did young people vote in unprecedented numbers, but they also voted heavily in swing states like Georgia and Michigan.  Arguably, young people are responsible for the Biden victory.  Virtually every population subgroup can claim part of the credit for the Biden victory.   Black women voted for him by higher margins than any other group.  Latinx voters in Arizona put him over the top n that state.  Among young people, every group, except white men, voted for former Vice President Joe Biden.

The CIRCLE study of young voters offers lessons for upcoming elections.  Young voters made up their minds about their electoral choice later than other votes.  Three-quarters of those over 29 had their minds made up from the beginning.  CIRCLE also suggests that information about early voting, mail-in ballots, and other procedures was not as available as it might have been.  Despite a massive attempt to get out the vote by African American activists, fewer African American youth voted in person, partly because many did not get enough information about voting mechanics.  Some of this is due to voter suppression, and some may be due to insufficient outreach.  Also, many who are students may have faced barriers in voting.
                                                                                                                                                            
Those of us who are elders have often lamented that young folks don't vote, but the CIRCLE study suggests we need to hold our powder.  Young voters did not vote as much as the rest of us (total voter participation hovers at 70 percent), but they voted more than they ever had, and they had more significant barriers than older voters did.  And for those of us who lean left, we must acknowledge that this summer's Black Lives Matter protest may have pulled young people to the polls.  According to the CIRCLE studies, young people are concerned about COVID, climate change, racism, and the economy.  If federal, state, and local governments manage these issues and offer young people the opportunity for engagement, the 2020 coalition may stick together.
The 2020 youth coalition is, in some ways, our hope for the future.  Young people mostly voted for Biden along race and gender lines, but the young white male holdout suggests that some of today's race challenges may persist into the future.  Meanwhile, within the Democratic-leaning 2020 youth coalition, there are apparent tensions and differences around how we prioritize these concerns and how we emphasize the intersectionality of these concerns.  It's not either/or with the economy, COVID, climate change, and racism; it's all of the above.  The Biden team will have to walk a tightrope to balance everyone’s needs and concerns.
I am excited about the 2020 youth coalition and look forward to how they may continue to come together for better health care, a more inclusive economy, planet-saving policies to slow climate change, and the dismantling of systemic racism.  I'd be even more excited if young Trump supporters dared to stand up to the man who lives in his own delusional world to tell him to concede this election.  Our nation, and the world, have been treated to the obscene image of a grotesque toddler throwing a tantrum on the international stage.  If Republican elders don't step up to stop the madness, perhaps young people, especially those who voted for 45, can talk some sense into him.  After all, when we say that young people will inherit this world, we don't divide them by party.
Young people showed up and showed out in 2020.   For the sake of our future, they need to keep it up.
Dr. Julianne Malveaux is an economist and suthor.  She may be reached at www.juliannemalveaux.com

Georgia Voters Will Decide Fate of Senate and a New South By Jesse Jackson

Dec. 1, 2020

Georgia Voters Will Decide Fate of Senate and a New South
By Jesse Jackson 

NEWS ANALYSIS

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Jon Ossoff and Rev. Raphael Warnock

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - On Jan. 5, Georgia voters will decide the runoff for their two U.S. Senate seats. Their votes will determine whether Republicans retain control of the Senate or whether Democrats gain a 50-50 tie, with Vice President Kamala Harris the tiebreaking vote.

The race is a microcosm of America’s struggle to find a way forward and of Georgia and the South’s struggle to build a new South. The two Democratic challengers reflect the new age still waiting to be born. Rev. Raphael Warnock, senior pastor at Atlanta’s Ebenezer Baptist Church, the congregation led by the late Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., is a distinguished heir to the King tradition.

Thirty-three-year-old Jon Ossoff, educated at Georgetown and the London School of Economics, was born and raised in Atlanta, interned for the late Rep. John Lewis and served as a national security staffer to Rep. Hank Johnson. He has been CEO of Insight TWI, a London based documentary maker that focuses on detailing corruption in foreign countries.

Both Rev. Warnock and Ossoff have put forth a moderate platform for change. Both support immediate action to forestall an economic collapse as the pandemic spikes. With Republicans blocking action in the Senate, millions now face an end to unemployment insurance, an end to the eviction moratorium — with one-third of households behind on their rent or mortgages — and an end to the student debt moratorium, with millions of young people still struggling to find jobs. Without assistance, states and localities will be forced to cut services and lay off employees like teachers and firefighters.

Both Warnock and Ossoff support strengthening the Affordable Care Act by adding a public option and reducing prescription drug prices but oppose Medicare for All. Both call for bold action to deal with the reality of catastrophic climate change but oppose the Green New Deal. Both are for lifting the minimum wage, and for assistance to small businesses. Their Republican opponents are the sitting senators — Kelly Loeffler and David Perdue. Both Loeffler and Perdue are multimillionaires. Both were charged with insider trading, selling stocks after receiving private briefings on the threat posed by the pandemic. Both dubiously claimed that their advisers made the trades without their knowledge.

Both tout themselves as Donald Trump supporters. They oppose the Affordable Care Act, and support alternatives that would leave hundreds of thousands of Georgians without health care. Both, lavishly supported by oil and gas interests, refuse to consider climate change a major threat. Loeffler, the co-owner of the Atlanta Dream, a women’s professional basketball team, loudly denounced support given to the Black Lives Matter movement, leading her players to wear T-shirts saying Vote Warnock. Neither Perdue nor Loeffler bother to offer a serious agenda to address the problems that Georgians face. They joined Republican leader Mitch McConnell in blocking the rescue act in the midst of the pandemic.

Neither Loeffler nor Perdue have a clue or a care for working for poor people in Georgia. So how do they hope to get elected? Both have adopted the same strategy: echo Donald Trump’s divisive race-based populism and benefit from systematic suppression of the vote. They’ve booked nearly $200 million in vicious attack ads against their opponents, painting them as a threat to all things American.

Perdue falsely paints Ossoff as a “radical socialist.” In a classic anti-Semitic trope, Perdue’s campaign released an ad that lengthened Ossoff nose. Loeffler paints Warnock as a “radical” who will “change this country forever,” nonsensically promoting herself as the “firewall in stopping socialism in America.” In her stump speech, in less than 45 seconds, she wildly links the distinguished minister to Obama’s minister Rev. Jeremiah Wright, Fidel Castro, George Soros, and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. Loeffler and Perdue won’t admit that Joe Biden won the presidential election, nor that he won Georgia. Adopting Donald Trump’s baseless claims of fraud, they wrote a joint letter calling for the resignation of the Georgia secretary of state, a conservative Republican supporter of Donald Trump.

He scorned the demand as “laughable.” What isn’t laughable is the long lines that black voters had to suffer in order to cast a vote in the primaries and November election. For years, Georgia — controlled by Republicans — has passed various measures to suppress the votes of minorities and the young, including gerrymandering districts, requiring photo ID, aggressive purging of voter rolls, and more. Notably, as the electorate has grown by over 2 million in the last seven years, Georgia has reduced the number of voting places by 10 percent. This has had a disproportionate effect on young and nonwhite voters whose registrations have surged. The contrasting campaigns make it clear that a vote for Loeffler or Perdue is a vote for continued dysfunction and obstruction.

A victory by either would further commit Republicans to Donald Trump’s toxic use of race-based division, lies and calumnies to divide working people, gaining victories for those who serve the rich and corporations. Two of the wealthiest senators, Loeffler and Perdue personify the con. Neither America nor Georgia can move forward until the growing majority that is desperate for change overcomes the systematic efforts to divide and suppress.

This country cannot begin to address the threats it faces - the pandemic, the economic collapse, corrosive and extreme inequality, catastrophic climate change, racial inequity, growing insecurity and a declining middle class - until those standing in the way are defeated. Loeffler says the “future of the country is at stake on January 5.” Of her many delusions, that one may be the closest to the truth.

Civil Rights Groups Escalate Fight Against High Prescription Drug Costs: Sharpton Calls for 2021 to be ‘The Year of Black Health Equity’ By Hazel Trice Edney

Nov. 30, 2020

Civil Rights Groups Escalate Fight Against High Prescription Drug Costs:
 Sharpton Calls for 2021 to be ‘The Year of Black Health Equity’
By Hazel Trice Edney

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Rev. Al Sharpton, NAN: “Let us make 2021 the year of Black health equity.”

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Hilary Shelton, NAACP: “The bottom line is that we believe that health care is a civil right."

(TriceEdneyWire.com) – D. B. Wright, former head of a non-profit religious organization in Washington, D.C., was well taken care of by his leadership board. He enjoyed an employment package that included full health care among other benefits.

“Being gainfully employed and having one of the best health insurances, I never thought about what medicines cost,” he said in a recent interview. But then crisis hit. Following a divorce he moved back to his hometown of Albany, Ga., where he took a job with no benefits, which he eventually lost due to severe illnesses over the past five years. That’s when reality set in.

“I had to borrow money from my family and friends in order to get the medication that I needed to treat various issues.” Those issues included surgery to remove a baseball size tumor on his liver, a gall bladder removal and ultimately chronic pancreatitis.

In excruciating pain, Wright was prescribed a medicine called Creon to help with his digestion and relieve the pain. It worked wonders in the hospital. But upon discharge, he learned that Creon would cost him $850 a month, well beyond his income of zero except what he could borrow from friends and family. Even with a coupon or pharmacy discount, he said, the price “was still beyond my financial ability.”

Also dealing with high blood pressure and suffering through a spinal disorder that rendered him temporarily unable to walk, Wright has resolved what he believed to be the bottom line in America when it comes to prescription drugs. The doctors and pharmacists may be sympathetic, but the medication simply “costs what it costs,” he said. “It was a horrendous experience. And it’s so interesting that you need these medications to survive. It was horrible to go through. You kind of feel like if you don’t have the money, you don’t matter.”

The experience of D.B. Wright, who asked to only use his initials to protect his privacy, is among the reasons that civil rights leaders and lawmakers across the nation are now pressing increasingly hard to establish public policies to monitor and help make prescription drug prices affordable.  Best known for their efforts to address police misconduct, voting rights protections, racial inequality, and economic injustices, civil right organizations are now escalating their focus on issues in the area of health care - particularly the high cost of prescription drugs.

“While there has been much partisan back and forth on these issues in Washington, there has not been enough conversation about reining in the profits and excesses of health insurance companies, which refuse to cover critical procedures, medicines and services in order to preserve their billions of dollars in profits,” said the Rev. Al Sharpton in an Oct. 30, 2020 letter to Congressional Black Caucus Chairwoman Karen Bass (D-Calif.) “Let us make 2021 the year of Black health equity.” 

Sharpton’s letter is part of a growing focus on racial disparities and inequities in health care, partially ignited by findings that people living in predominately Black counties are nearly “three times more likely to die of the COVID-19 than predominately white counties,” he said in his letter. The letter culminates more than a year of efforts by his National Action Network (NAN) and other civil rights and health organizations to deal with the suffering of people who must sometimes risk their lives by choosing to take care of other crucial bills instead of paying for prescription drugs. 

Similarly focused, the NAACP national board of directors last year passed a resolution calling for Prescription Drug Affordability Boards (PDAB) in every state, which would “act as a watchdog for the public. It will carefully review drug costs and establish fair and affordable costs for state and local government.”  

The resolution continues, the “NAACP supports the creation of a Prescription Drug Affordability Board in each state to determine how best to make prescription drugs more affordable for their residents, including by examining the entire drug supply chain, including the role of drug manufacturers and Pharmacy Benefit Managers (PBMs), and establishing maximum affordability payment rates for expensive drugs that create significant affordability problems for residents, building upon the tradition of health care cost scrutiny.” 

The state of Maryland last year became the first state in the nation to successfully create a PDAB with the national and state NAACP chapters “playing a critical role,” as well as dozens of Black faith groups, labor, business and other non-profits, said Vincent DeMarco. DeMarco is president of the Maryland Citizens’ Health Initiative (MCHI), which led the PDAB initiative in the state.  The Maryland board has won accolades from DeMarco. 

“They are doing a very good job right now of examining what drugs are really high cost and what would make prescription drugs more affordable for people,” he says. “So, it’s really an exciting new way at the state level to address this problem.”

Meanwhile, the national NAACP has continued to press for national solutions. Following up with another resolution in September 2020, the organization continued to press for equity and affordability in prescription drug access. The resolution outlined the harsh realities that people like D.B. Wright have faced. 

Quoting the 2019 AARP Prescription Drug Survey of likely voters aged 50 and older, the resolution said that of the 463 African-American respondents, “40% believed they might have to limit necessities such as food, electricity and fuel in the future to afford their prescription medication,” the resolution states.  

Even with state assistance through programs like PDABs, advocates recognize that prescription drug prices are so out of control that some are still far too expensive.

“Maryland has made considerable gains in ensuring that quality healthcare is more affordable and accessible for residents of our state,” said a statement on the MCHI website. 

“However, expensive life-saving drugs– some of which are close to six figures for treatment– threaten to derail the progress made in expanding health coverage. To contain rising healthcare costs, we must contain skyrocketing prescription drug costs.” 

The struggle to rein in high prescription drug prices has reached the U. S. Congress, but to no avail. U. S. Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.) last year introduced the Prescription Drug Affordability and Access Act, which would have created “an independent agency—the Bureau of Prescription Drug Affordability and Access—tasked with conducting reviews of drug prices and determining an appropriate list price.” 

However, the bill, S.3166, was sent to the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions on Jan. 8, 2020, but went no further during the 116th Congress.  Technically, with only a few weeks before Congress goes to Christmas break, this means the bill will likely die in committee, but can be reintroduced in the 117th Congress when it reconvenes Jan. 3.

“In a country as wealthy as ours, it’s downright shameful that people have to choose between taking their medicine or paying for other basic necessities,” Booker lamented in a statement. “Every day, millions of Americans struggle to afford their lifesaving medication while the manufacturers of these drugs profit hand over fist with limited to no oversight. On top of that, many of these drugs were developed through research funding from the federal government. We need systemic change that will meaningfully address the exorbitant, rising cost of prescription drugs and put the focus back on patients, not profits.” 

Health advocates such as Sen. Bernie Sanders and former senator, now Vice-President Elect Kamala Harris—who co-sponsored the bill with Booker — will likely not give up the fight. And given the incoming new Congress and White House administration the NAACP has said it will support the efforts that Sharpton and Booker, a CBC member, have expended.  

“Sen. Booker’s bill was an excellent first step,” said Hilary Shelton, director of the NAACP Washington Bureau and vice president for advocacy and policy. “The bottom line is that we believe that health care is a civil right. And that means that the full gamut of what is quality health care is very important. This is one of many issues that still needs to be addressed and improved upon. It’s not the only issue and it’s not stand alone. It’s crucially important in the categories of health care and economics. It’s an important component of a comprehensive health care system that provides high quality health care for all Americans.”

The issue is no doubt headed for increased debate in Washington as the civil rights community applies the pressure. But outside of the growing political battle, there are real people waiting and fighting alone, says Wright, who recently received a court ruling allowing him 100 percent disability benefits; plus, Medicaid which now covers the cost of his medicines.

“It took four years to get disability insurance or Medicaid,” he said. “I would hope that the government grows a heart and recognize that the least that they can do is care for those who cannot care for themselves. I’m not talking about people who are trying to milk the system. I’m talking about real people who are having real challenges in life.”

This article is part of a series on the impact of high prescription drug costs on consumers made possible through the 2020 West Health and Families USA Media Fellowship. 

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