Tag: fundraising

  • The Progressives Are Winning

    We – the people, the “left” – are stronger every day.

    We have it right. We know – at least in broad general terms – what needs doing to create a smooth transition into the next chapter of human evolution, and we know how to do it. All we need now is more people tuned in and turned on, so to speak.

    It is absolutely critical to this effort to break the hold panderers and grifters have over left wing discourse in this country. I’m talking about the clickbaiters who don’t really do anything but copy and paste other people’s tweets into their branded template and call themselves activists, Twitter insta-pundits whose only discernible contribution to the discourse is being able to write “fuck” a lot and direct it toward right-wing public figures (James “Sweary History” Fell excepted because that’s his gimmick and he’s written books and done other things and has an identity beyond his Twitter handle). Superfluous grifters. The kinds of drizzling puddles of humanity that charge you five hundred bucks to “engage” with you for four tweets. The kinds of self-proclaimed “liberal” and “leftist” and “progressive” “activists” who are so bad at what they do that they will unironically create a campaign shaming mental illness and playing on violent racist tropes to defeat a candidate that was a laughingstock in the first place.

    Now people are catching up and catching on, and the time is (at least of those presented thus far) optimal to start pushing hard on this whole concept of media and information literacy, discernment of sources, knowing who’s getting paid by your social media activity and making sure they really are who they represent themselves to be.

    These people and others of their same basic mentality and ethical vacuum have spent ridiculous amounts of energy trying to end progressive integrity completely, and they have failed. They have failed because they understand neither integrity nor progress. Fundamentally they want to make money, and the way they’ve chosen to do that is by pandering to the political biases of people who think of themselves as progressive. In doing so, they’ve cratered genuine leftist movement in this country and did a great deal to give us President Donald Trump by throwing their weight behind status-quo middle-path capitalism in the hopes of making political careers for themselves through sycophancy to entrenched power.

    They hurt us, and they hurt our country, and they made fools of us, and they took millions of dollars from us.

    Now it’s time to return the favor. Not by going after them personally (because that’s petty and weak), but by ending the whole series of logical breaks, ethical corner-cutting, and self-deception that empowered their grift in the first place.

    We must stop taking our cues on the left from people who don’t care about what’s right but only about what’s profitable. It’s a conflict of interest; if all you care about is numbers, it doesn’t take long to start making sacrifices to integrity in order to chase them.

    The folks who do this are a big part of why instead of looking for new progressive leadership so we can all have the lives we want, need, and deserve, we continue looking at the old pillars of the center-right capitalist wing of the DNC, which is the wing that controls most of the party, hoping that somehow THIS will be the time when capitalism-lite works.

    The win condition of capitalism is fascism. It’s unavoidable, and it’s time to start crafting whatever we decide to call the thing that is post-capitalism.

    These bad actors don’t want to move past capitalism because it’s the only reason they have any power in the first place and they know that they can’t survive on a level playing field where merit and integrity are more important than one’s ability to buy their way in.

    They’re part of the reason we’re not moving forward like we should be, and it’s time to shed their anchoring weight from the evolution train.

    We have the numbers and we have the ethical high ground. They’ve got money, and right now that’s an advantage. We live in a capitalist system and to some degree are forced by that to need money; that’s why I have a Patreon.

    The only reason people like Omar Rivera (Occupy Democrats) and Matt Desmond (Being Liberal/AddictingInfo) and other grifters and panderers like them aren’t out here doing the same thing I do, asking directly for contributions to help them stay alive and able to produce work, is they lie through their teeth about what they’re doing (generally lies of omission; they just don’t mention it). They’re living on what they make online just like I do, I’m just honest about it. I say “hey I’m doing this work and need to survive.” They want to sell you branded beach towels – the illusion and presentation of an identity offered as a for-profit saccharine homoncular pretense of activism, intended primarily for consumption by that particular breed of human who values style and social validation over truth and accuracy and progress. I and others like me – writers and activists of integrity – are trying to eat, pay bills, and have the equipment to put our skills and talent to the best use to make the world better.

    It’s the same thing all these people who do kickstarters for books and stuff are doing; trying to survive and pay the bills long enough to do what they believe they’re supposed to be doing. “Pay me, and I can write a novel.” It’s really not that complex or underhanded, until people like the Occupy Democrats and Being Liberals of the world get involved and try to turn it all into a grift, and they’re terrified you’ll notice that some of us aren’t doing that, so they work to take us out before you do notice and realize you’re being taken for a ride by them. Since they’re starting from a position of power and are willing to make compromises to core principles (if they’re even able to recognize a compromise when they see one), they naturally have the upper hand against the rest of us.

    The behavior tends to be self-rewarding and self-perpetuating; it’s hard to lose money by pandering to people’s egos…and when money’s the point, any damage done to discourse or our overall political health, for instance by allowing critical messages of truth and progress to be dulled and deflected by those more interested in pleasing those holding power, is just another bullet point on the collateral damage list.

    With friends like that, the US left definitely does not need enemies.

    That’s why it’s so important that we, the people, get it together on an individual level and take it upon ourselves to seek true literacy with humility and an open mind. In particular we need to be very cautious about allowing the knee-jerk emotional reactions of our ego to lead us into ignoring realities that are unflattering or unpleasant.

    That set of problems solves itself when people get too smart to fall for cheap appeals to ego and bias in the first place. That’s what I’ve been working to do for these last dozen years or so, beyond a broader lifetime of other activism.

    That’s why I particularly scare them and why I draw so much heat from them: because that’s exactly what we’re making happen and I’m the face of that.

    Thanks for continuing to energize and support me and us and what we do here. We’re right.

    We are right.

    We have the answers we need.

    Now we just have to push past the bastards that don’t want anyone to hear them.

  • Support Historical Statues (Fundraiser)

    In light of recent events, all the protesting and complaining about the removal of confederate-themed statuary from various US cities has convinced me that the statue defenders are right.  It’s just plain wrong for a bunch of hand-wringing, pearl-clutching liberal pantywaists to try to remove our glorious history by destroying monuments to a breakaway republic that attempted to destroy the United States in the name of owning people.

    How could anyone possibly be expected to remember the glorious and noble battle to own black people if we don’t have statues of random traitors scattered about our cities?  Why, pretty soon they’ll be tearing down statues of Christopher Columbus and we’ll forget he discovered our beautiful country!  (*He didn’t.  He never set foot in what became the continental United States.  He was also an incredible dick.  And there were plenty of people here when he got here, as the Vikings almost certainly found out five hundred years before Columbus did.)

    So with that in mind, I’ve decided to start a campaign to place this statue of Osama bin Laden in the 200 largest cities in the United States!  Sure, some people might think we’re glorifying a radical terrorist who killed thousands of Americans in an attempt to end the United States – just like those goofy Antifa liberals think that’s what we’re doing with confederate statues – but REAL AMERICANS know the truth:  if we don’t put these statues up, pretty soon people are going to forget all about 9-11 and IT WILL HAPPEN AGAIN!

    TRUE PATRIOTS JOIN NOW!  For your contribution over five hundred dollars, we will inscribe YOUR NAME as a TRUE AMERICAN PATRIOT at the bottom of a statue in the city you select, from the list below:

    New York New York 8,323,340
    2 Los Angeles California 4,015,940
    3 Chicago Illinois 2,694,240
    4 Houston Texas 2,340,890
    5 Phoenix Arizona 1,703,080
    6 Philadelphia Pennsylvania 1,591,800
    7 San Antonio Texas 1,578,030
    8 San Diego California 1,447,100
    9 Dallas Texas 1,382,270
    10 San Jose California 1,033,670
    11 Austin Texas 988,218
    12 Fort Worth Texas 932,116
    13 Jacksonville Florida 926,371
    14 Columbus Ohio 922,223
    15 Charlotte North Carolina 905,318
    16 San Francisco California 896,047
    17 Indianapolis Indiana 875,929
    18 Seattle Washington 783,137
    19 Denver Colorado 734,134
    20 Washington District of Columbia 720,687
    21 Boston Massachusetts 710,195
    22 El Paso Texas 685,575
    23 Nashville Tennessee 673,167
    24 Detroit Michigan 667,272
    25 Portland Oregon 664,103
    26 Las Vegas Nevada 662,000
    27 Oklahoma City Oklahoma 655,407
    28 Memphis Tennessee 647,374
    29 Louisville Kentucky 624,890
    30 Baltimore Maryland 590,479
    31 Milwaukee Wisconsin 585,589
    32 Albuquerque New Mexico 561,188
    33 Tucson Arizona 553,871
    34 Fresno California 538,195
    35 Mesa Arizona 527,666
    36 Atlanta Georgia 523,738
    37 Sacramento California 521,769
    38 Kansas City Missouri 505,198
    39 Miami Florida 486,388
    40 Colorado Springs Colorado 485,946
    41 Raleigh North Carolina 481,958
    42 Omaha Nebraska 470,702
    43 Long Beach California 463,218
    44 Virginia Beach Virginia 447,841
    45 Minneapolis Minnesota 437,069
    46 Oakland California 435,224
    47 Tampa Florida 413,704
    48 Arlington Texas 402,762
    49 Tulsa Oklahoma 396,543
    50 Bakersfield California 390,233
    51 New Orleans Louisiana 390,128
    52 Wichita Kansas 388,771
    53 Aurora Colorado 382,742
    54 Cleveland Ohio 379,233
    55 Anaheim California 352,911
    56 Honolulu Hawaii 342,933
    57 Riverside California 336,285
    58 San Juan Puerto Rico 331,165
    59 Santa Ana California 330,389
    60 Henderson Nevada 330,084
    61 Lexington Kentucky 328,690
    62 Corpus Christi Texas 325,406
    63 Stockton California 316,996
    64 St. Paul Minnesota 311,895
    65 Cincinnati Ohio 306,487
    66 Irvine California 303,956
    67 Greensboro North Carolina 299,946
    68 Pittsburgh Pennsylvania 294,860
    69 Lincoln Nebraska 293,905
    70 St. Louis Missouri 293,792
    71 Orlando Florida 291,739
    72 Plano Texas 288,539
    73 Anchorage Alaska 285,634
    74 Newark New Jersey 282,862
    75 Durham North Carolina 282,737
    76 Chula Vista California 277,289
    77 St. Petersburg Florida 271,842
    78 Jersey City New Jersey 271,099
    79 Fort Wayne Indiana 270,989
    80 Toledo Ohio 270,651
    81 Chandler Arizona 268,675
    82 Laredo Texas 264,703
    83 Madison Wisconsin 264,030
    84 Scottsdale Arizona 262,222
    85 Lubbock Texas 260,823
    86 Reno Nevada 260,258
    87 Gilbert Arizona 258,935
    88 Buffalo New York 255,244
    89 Glendale Arizona 254,500
    90 North Las Vegas Nevada 253,923
    91 Winston-Salem North Carolina 251,762
    92 Chesapeake Virginia 248,106
    93 Garland Texas 246,627
    94 Irving Texas 243,738
    95 Hialeah Florida 243,208
    96 Norfolk Virginia 242,234
    97 Fremont California 239,525
    98 Boise Idaho 234,576
    99 Paradise Nevada 233,689
    100 Richmond Virginia 232,055
    101 Arlington Virginia 231,803
    102 Spokane Washington 223,266
    103 Tacoma Washington 222,603
    104 Modesto California 218,758
    105 Fontana California 218,573
    106 Des Moines Iowa 217,891
    107 San Bernardino California 217,671
    108 Baton Rouge Louisiana 216,701
    109 Frisco Texas 215,060
    110 Salt Lake City Utah 213,367
    111 Moreno Valley California 212,992
    112 Oxnard California 212,715
    113 Santa Clarita California 210,543
    114 Birmingham Alabama 208,940
    115 McKinney Texas 208,487
    116 Port St. Lucie Florida 206,410
    117 Fayetteville North Carolina 205,646
    118 Grand Rapids Michigan 205,289
    119 Glendale California 204,765
    120 Rochester New York 203,792
    121 Huntsville Alabama 202,910
    122 Amarillo Texas 202,028
    123 Huntington Beach California 201,941
    124 Spring Valley Nevada 199,722
    125 Cape Coral Florida 199,503
    126 Tallahassee Florida 199,205
    127 Yonkers New York 199,021
    128 Aurora Illinois 198,870
    129 Grand Prairie Texas 198,442
    130 Akron Ohio 198,148
    131 Little Rock Arkansas 197,371
    132 Montgomery Alabama 197,282
    133 Overland Park Kansas 196,636
    134 Augusta Georgia 196,303
    135 Tempe Arizona 194,218
    136 Sunrise Manor Nevada 192,934
    137 Knoxville Tennessee 191,060
    138 Sioux Falls South Dakota 190,519
    139 Columbus Georgia 189,296
    140 Mobile Alabama 186,804
    141 Ontario California 186,653
    142 Vancouver Washington 186,516
    143 Worcester Massachusetts 186,433
    144 Fort Lauderdale Florida 184,599
    145 Chattanooga Tennessee 184,143
    146 Shreveport Louisiana 183,819
    147 Brownsville Texas 183,748
    148 Peoria Arizona 180,219
    149 Rancho Cucamonga California 180,031
    150 Salem Oregon 179,944
    151 Providence Rhode Island 178,901
    152 Eugene Oregon 178,329
    153 Elk Grove California 177,406
    154 Santa Rosa California 177,132
    155 Newport News Virginia 177,064
    156 Pembroke Pines Florida 177,058
    157 Oceanside California 176,950
    158 Cary North Carolina 175,102
    159 Fort Collins Colorado 172,862
    160 Corona California 171,213
    161 Garden Grove California 170,328
    162 Springfield Missouri 169,552
    163 Alexandria Virginia 165,748
    164 Bayamon Puerto Rico 165,383
    165 Clarksville Tennessee 164,496
    166 Enterprise Nevada 164,314
    167 Hayward California 161,314
    168 Jackson Mississippi 160,080
    169 Lakewood Colorado 158,660
    170 Lancaster California 158,627
    171 Hollywood Florida 158,239
    172 Palmdale California 156,299
    173 Salinas California 155,619
    174 Springfield Massachusetts 155,472
    175 Bellevue Washington 154,647
    176 Killeen Texas 153,973
    177 Kansas City Kansas 153,600
    178 Macon County Georgia 152,519
    179 Sunnyvale California 152,427
    180 Pomona California 152,405
    181 Escondido California 152,245
    182 Pasadena Texas 151,891
    183 Murfreesboro Tennessee 151,066
    184 Naperville Illinois 149,196
    185 Joliet Illinois 148,227
    186 Paterson New Jersey 145,871
    187 Savannah Georgia 145,754
    188 Rockford Illinois 145,020
    189 Midland Texas 145,012
    190 McAllen Texas 144,279
    191 Waco Texas 144,015
    192 Roseville California 143,921
    193 Torrance California 143,912
    194 Thornton Colorado 143,890
    195 Metairie Louisiana 143,481
    196 Miramar Florida 143,219
    197 Bridgeport Connecticut 143,010
    198 Olathe Kansas 142,841
    199 Denton Texas 142,173
    200 Surprise Arizona 142,049

    Act now, we’re limited to only five inscriptions per city!

    (Disclaimer.  This is obviously a joke at the expense of idiots.  However if you would like to contribute to keeping me in a position to continue creating new work, you can find out more about how to do so here.  Thanks!)