Originally published at AlterPolitics
Green Party Presidential Candidate Jill Stein sits down with RT America to discuss the current state of the nation and the systemic forces that work against all efforts for real progressive reform. The video proceeds the following transcript highlights:
Stein explains how the 2-party political establishment works to marginalize all political opposition:
RT: You’re going to be on ballots but not in all states. Can you explain what it is in the system of the US that makes it so hard for a third party to break into this two-horse race?
JS: Exactly. The American system is designed to eliminate political opposition, like some of the dictatorships we criticize that have rigged political systems. In many ways the American system is also rigged, but in ways that are not so straightforward.
You have to actually see what it takes to get on the ballot if you are not already on as one of the big machine parties. Each state has its own set of rules which are very demanding, very detailed and bureaucratic and require lots of signatures in order to get on the ballots.
For the most part you need a lot of money, many millions of dollars, to buy your way on to the ballot, basically by hiring signature gatherers and people to keep track of this.
Stein explains that beyond their rhetoric, the 2 establishment parties are virtually one in the same:
RT: The Green Party often describes itself as the party that represents “Main Street” versus Wall Street. In what way do Barack Obama and Mitt Romney represent Wall Street that is against the interests of the American people?
JS: You know, Mitt Romney doesn’t even pretend to do anything other than advance the economic elites’ agenda. He has a track record which is to advance the likes of his own to acquire enormous amounts of wealth by tearing down other companies and businesses, firing workers and off-shoring jobs, gobbling up the profits themselves.
He’s got a track record which is pretty clear and he has a pretty straight-ahead Wall Street agenda.
With Barack Obama and the Democratic Party it is a little harder to see clearly what they are about because they do talk a populist line, but to actually look at their record – it is pretty clear who their allegiances are to.
George Bush provided about $800 billion in bailouts for Wall Street. But under Barack Obama it has been many trillions, some $4.5 trillion worth of bailouts that has already been dispersed and there there are many more trillions worth of loans and emergency loans and guarantees and quantitative easing through the Fed. All kinds of backdoors to basically funnel either out-and-out bailouts or free money to Wall Street.
So Mitt Romney is a wolf in a wolf’s clothing. Barack Obama is a wolf in a sheep’s clothing, but they both essentially have the same agenda.
How the establishment has worked to stifle and silence the Occupy Movement:
RT: Can you talk a little bit more about your involvement with the Occupy Wall Street movement? Has the movement been big enough to make a tectonic shift in the US politics?
JS: I believe that that tectonic shift is happening and Occupy is one of the indicators it is happening. It is happening because one out of every two Americans is either in poverty or low income. Americans are really hurting and are desperate for solutions which they are not getting.
There is a rebellion that is in full swing. Occupy speaks for that rebellion. We saw in polls early on that a substantial majority of Americans was very sympathetic and supportive of the Occupy agenda.
RT: With the majority it is kind of a silent rebellion.
JS: Exactly. We are silenced. I believe it is not silent but our voices are continually muzzled. Through all kinds of ways. We cannot speak out politically. The media is very much in the hands of big corporations.
RT: The Congress approval rating is 11 per cent, so people are unhappy – but it is silent.
JS: Yes, by design. So that people have to work very hard to break through. And Occupy got the critical mass by assembling in our public squares, and they were very effective in breaking through – until the public relations campaign began to be conducted against them.
And we saw that, because that PR campaign actually got leaked. It was a many many hundreds of thousands of dollars campaign that was constructed even before the counterattack began. So you have both a media counter attack and than you had a counterattack by way of police brutality and suppression of our civil liberties as people were brutally attacked.
Stein describes U.S. foreign policy over the last decade as a failure, and how Barack Obama embraced George W. Bush’s policies:
RT: Let’s talk foreign policy. What is at the basis of the US serving as the world police? Would you carry on with it as a president?
JS: This world police policy is bankrupting Americans. We’re spending about $1 trillion a year on the military-industrial security complex. That budget has roughly doubled over the last 10 years, and we’re certainly not more secure for it.
We’ve spent trillions of dollars in Iraq. When we withdrew from Iraq how did we do it? We withdrew from Iraq in the dead of night, on a secret undisclosed date, because we were afraid that we would be ambushed in the process. How many friends exactly did we make in this war? What kind of a stable democracy did we make in Iraq? Iraq continues to tether on a brink of a civil war. It has certainly not become a straunch and reliable ally for the US, or for democracy, or for women’s rights, for that matter.
The barrel of a gun has not been an effective diplomat, and we need to heed that and take a lesson from it.
Unfortunately, President Obama basically embraced George Bush’s militaristic approach to foreign policy. On his third day in office he intensified the bombings in Pakistan, then went on to spread the drone wars into Somalia and Yemen. He surged the troops into Afghanistan. We still have about twice as many troops as we had under George Bush. It has certainly not made Afghanistan a safer and more secure place. We’re not in a better position to withdraw now and declare victory than we were years ago.
We know that when you have the kind of civilian casualties that you have with drone bombing, you’re simply aiding and abetting those very terrorist organizations that you’re trying to go after in the first place.
RT: What makes you concerned with regards to Mitt Romney’s foreign policy plans – if anything?
JS: His plans are basically, “let increase the military budget.” He has a lot of machismo and bravado when he beats the war drum. He wants to really flex muscle against Iran. But so too does the Obama administration, though they are less warmongering about it. But they are basically in agreement about coming down very hard on Iran, and holding no options off the table. So, they both threaten to use war where we should be using diplomacy.
On the 2-establishment parties’ financial dominance over third parties:
RT: We talked about money in politics. Everyone knows that campaigns are not cheap. You’re a physician. Your net worth is probably far from Mitt Romney’s $200 million. Your party is financing a lost cause at this stage. What is the real goal at this stage?
JS: In my view to say it is a lost cause is to say that our economy is a lost cause. It is to say that it is inevitable that we’re going to crash.
I mean the uphill battle for our election is identical to the uphill battle to rescue our economy.
We are a real political party. We’re not just the storefront that looks like it is main street, but is actually funded by Wall Street – that’s what the other political parties are. They pretend to really have the public support, but what they really have is the support of this 1 per cent. They have a propaganda campaign going on and intensive public relations and psychological warfare that is intended to convince people that they don’t have any options.
WATCH:



66 Comments

Thank you, TheCallUP.
Recommended.
I hope that many here at FDL will look at and hear what Jill Stein is saying, for it matters very much, indeed.
DW
He’s just a Republican in Cheap clothing.
Thank you DWB!
Yuh ain’t lying….
Posted a fat comment on Greenman’s post today describing my thoughts in support of Jill Stein. Most important is her Green New Deal (read this thing, it’s not pie-in-the-sky). This is doable.
And her campaign is not hopeless as some imply. Precisely because of the paralysis of sameness between the two major candidates Obama and Romney and precisely because of the utter desperation of so many millions of Americans who are being abandoned by these twin corporatists, Jill Stein presents an uncommonly exciting candidacy, not to mention she is uncommonly well-informed, savvy and articulate. She can, indeed, win if we get behind her and get to work.
As to clothing, I would say Mr Obama is a sheep in sheep’s clothing. In fact I have often thought of him as a Judas goat leading the left to slaughter, far more dangerous politically than a mere wolf.
Jill Stein is my candidate, but Obama is a wolf in wolf’s clothing, too.
The only difference is that Obama puts the Emperor’s new clothes on top of the wolf’s clothing, especially when campaigning. So do many other Democrats.
One definition of insanity is to keep voting as you have always voted and expecting things to improve.
Many, many thanks, the Call Up. Recommended.
Over the weekend I have been looking at comments to an editorial by William Rivers Pitt, most of which is in praise of Jill Stein but…he’s not going to vote for her because she can’t win! How about that for a self-fulfilling prophecy?
The irony of it is that what it means is he’s announcing he will not vote for her, and therefore HE won’t win. Readers, that is.
That’s okay. We are building a new network of worthwhile political commentary, and this video is part of it.
The comments went on for over 400 entries, and there were very few voices in favor of Mr. Pitt’s convoluted position. There was a lot of pushback, and insightful comments carefully answering the stale arguments of “lesser evil” claims, which were brief and rude by contrast. One of those stayed on until truthout cut short her paycheck by closing the comments – or maybe she just needed to get back to her life in the deluxe box at the Olympics.
I found it enormously heartening. We have lots of friends out there, more than we know. And I’ll only be voting for Greens from now on, so any of you ‘goodhearted Dems’ running for office better switch over mighty soon or you are also going down the drain with Obomney.
We just might have another Seabiscuit phenomenon in the making. A real one this time.
http://my.firedoglake.com/greenman518/2012/08/11/jill-stein-offers-actual-progressive-policies-missing-from-obama-romney-platforms/
Wolf in wolf’s clothing, wolf in sheep’s clothing. Accurate assessment.
she has a good viewpoint and wants to do all the right things. Too bad her chances of success are nil.
What would Stein have to do to be included in prez “debates”?
In my opinion the Green Party is doing everything wrong by focusing on Presidential politics when the party doesn’t have enough grass roots infrastructure to even run candidates at the state and Congressional level. I just voted my primary here in Washington State. There was only one Green candidate on the entire ballot. This when several races had only one candidate running.
A major problem with our politics in the nation is that we engage in “election spectacle” and then when one is done, instead of doing the day to day work of impacting policy, we focus on the next election spectacle. Coupled with this is the “great man” philosophy with a top down view of politics. So we think in terms of getting the right great man (or woman) into the top offices to then implement the right stuff from the top down.
This is a horrid sickness of our body politic that is the hand maiden for the plutocrats control of our faux democracy.
The Green Party by focusing on Presidential politics as the be all and end all of the party’s existence reinforces the problem. (Other Third Parties are doing the same thing.
Occupy was a vital and healthy alternative to this kind of politics and I for one refuse to believe that Occupy doesn’t have a future.
Are you kidding, eCAHN…? You of all individuals, should know that the ‘fix is in’…! ;-)
…I for one refuse to believe that Occupy doesn’t have a future.
I absolutely refuse to let it die in my isolated ‘neck of the woods’…! ;-)
Just askin’. Not a sin is it.
Of course, my no-so-hidden agenda for asking a simple Q is to point out exactly what you say, i.e., inject a bit of reality into the thread. :-)
Current rules – meet Constitutional requirements for Prez, be on ballot in enough states to theoretically get enough Electoral College votes, and poll 15% in 5 national polls.
http://www.debates.org/index.php?page=candidate-selection-process
It’s nice to see that Jane has decided to allow front page status for discussion of real alternatives to the two-party system.
If she won, I think the only way Jill Stein could implement the policies we so desperately need is to vigorously encourage public pressure on the legislature, which would be a very refreshing change to the hippie punching the base got from Obama/Biden/Rahm/etc. way in the beginning. I agree with you, we need to focus on smaller elections.
Obot: Obama doesn’t have a magic wand, he needs support from congress. He can’t do any of the very liberal things he wants, because the devils in congress are making him do more conservative things.
Me: Great! Let’s have Obama refuse all campaign contributions and at the same time he can encourage everyone to elect more “progressive” candidates in congress!
Obot: We can’t do that because Romney will win and put more conservatives in the Supreme Court?
Me: What good are Obama’s appointees? Kagan and Sotomayor both rejected the Montana challenge to Citizen’s United. Republicans’ one time judicial posterboy Roberts is now reviled because he ruled in favor of “socialist” Romneycare — err, Obamacare. What difference will the two candidates make in appointments>
Obot: *crickets*
Thanks for this. How refreshing to hear a voice based in compassion and insight. I’ve told friends and family I ‘ll be voting Green in 2012. Have to start somewhere.
Is Stein anywhere near close to passing those requirements?
What does she poll nationally?
How many states is she on the ballot?
Does she have a plan for above, if she doesn’t already pass the test? W
Yes, my thoughts did range to the unlikely that she would be elected. Then what. Like what would the dog do if it caught the bus?
She’s on the ballot in about 30 states, filed as a write-in in 7 (don’t know if that “counts”), and is petitioning in most of the remaining states (deadlines vary). I don’t know if any polls are even asking about her by name at this point. However, the Libertarians are on the ballot in (I think) all 50 states, and I think I’ve heard (seen a tweet?) that there may be some type of initiative, petition or whatever, to expand the debates.
She has no chance of meeting those qualifications because the MSM has kept her under wraps. It’s all part of the fix.
Someone more versed in politics than I am told me that the purpose of 3d party is not necessarily to win, but to expand the debate.
One of the reasons I asked about Stein’s probability of getting into one.
Seems unlikely that will happen.
What’s Plan B? Does she have enough PR resources to get her voice heard without being in the formal debates?
Do Libertarians have a candidate?
Would Libertarians consider supporting Stein on the antiwar confluence of interests, since you say that Libers are on the ballot in 50 states.
Well, I hear she’s been front-paged at FDL! :)
Maybe social media, livestreaming, and other activism can publicize some form of alternate debate among third party candidates, or can help in putting pressure for expanding the traditional debates, but I don’t have any info to evaluate those possibilities.
Oh, sorry that wasn’t clear. Libertarians have their own candidate, and with the amount of ballot access they have, would have a shared interest in an initiative to expand the debates. I don’t know the ballot status of other 3rd parties, there may be others who can make this a part of their case to be included.
I may have a tough time deciding here in Florida, where the plan for some time has been to vote for Stein unless it’s clear my vote could put Romney through.
I burn with anger at Obama for his connivance with Wall Street, his willingness to harm Social Security, for playing God with drone missiles in four countries, for increasing spying on us, for continuing torture, failing to fight coal, to help New Orleans, for failing to help stem global warming or challenge the military industrial complex, and on. . . Other than on gay rights, where he has had to be prodded to do the right thing, I see nothing positive in his Presidency. But Romney, now coupled with Ryan, looks like fascism to me–the death of all social programs and open embrace of the police state. The veneer of civility that Obama must maintain to play Democrat at all, the lip service he must play to fairness, looks better than oily smiling, fascism from here.
Somebody tell me if I err in such thinking!
I do like that this third party candidate is calling out our political system in a way to educate people for future elections. I’m going to look at it as a different public service campaign.
Dude whether Obama wins or Romney wins we are still fucked, just sayin.
It won’t make a damn bit of difference.
The country has been hurting heavily from the abuse of the 1%. And yet, the moneyed interests and the conservatives (in both parties) wont give an inch. Gay marriage was the easiest front to advance in because it doesn’t adversely affect the 1%’s bottom line, and it even serves to keep the right outraged and thus frame the political argument even further an further to the right.
I refuse to pick between only an open fascist and a false liberal duplicitously going through the motions. I’ll vote Stein whether she has a chance during and after the elections or not. But I do hope we get a smarter, liberal third party that opts for change through the legislature, and through state and local levels.
It will make some difference, but not one we can intelligently figure out in advance.
Mostly I’m thinking of unintended outcomes.
Like is bombing Iran good or bad?
Depends on your model of what it takes to create real change.
If you think that real change can take place only under extreme circumstances, then you might favor Israel risking its existence by doing so.
If OTOH, you think taking such an extreme stand is crazy, then doing all you can to avoid the Israeli attack is important.
The Green Party’s options for “local politics” is limited to a few localities here and there in America, where there are enough Greens to form locals. You might get a few Green mayors or city councilmembers here or there, and that would max out the Party’s whole “local” potential.
The only way the Green Party is going to reach localities where there are no locals is to run campaigns throughout big states like California, or nationwide.
Since your vote may be rigged, you might consider not beating yourself up for its “result” whatever that result may be.
You err.
This longtime Floridian, where Democrats were never very democratic, will be voting third party…
again.
It’s heartening to see so much intelligence on display here at FDL, the poster and commenters both. Surprising in fact too.
At least when Romney gets elected president we’ll have a solid base of hypocritical “liberals” who will stand ready to oppose everything he does–even as they stand silent today while Obama is actually doing almost everything Romney is promising to do.
Why vote for Jill if it is no threat to Obama ? Does anyone still Obama is the safe and warm choice .That is so fucking craven ,why not just say”" I’m unwilling to ever take a moral stand .and yes I know my lesser-evil mindset has pushed the center into fascism , but I was born to be boneless “”.
I agree that any viable third party should be attempting to compete on local and state levels long term. Politics require alliances. Even if we manage to get Jill Stein in as President she could only propose legislation, not create it. Without alliances in DC Congress would likely ignore her much as they do Sanders or other indies. That being said, you have to start somewhere. This election cycle seems as good as any to say ENOUGH.
The two major party candidates are close enough they could be twins. The parties action(not their words) are close enough that we have been sliding rightward for what feels like forever. We are literally facing the option of whether to go off the cliff at 60 MPH or just put the pedal to the floorboard.
The only viable way I see to change the narrative is to create a liberal third party option so that Democrats don’t figure us as a default vote and the powered elite have to try and buy up another party. We have to disrupt the ratchet effect somehow.
Jill Stein isn’t going to win.Other than just chat blather ,no serious person would even think in those terms.We progressives never win ,we are powerless losers .I believe we will continue being a joke with dems ,”"fucking retards with no where else to go ,”" until we garner some power via political currency. Then we will be feared and hated ,i.e. ,the NRA or AIPAC .and be willing to leverage our clout accordingly .
Jill Stein is working to sell our polity and we should support and admire her .Talk of winning or keeping third parties working only at local levels ,is a devious means of simpletons conveying ”shout the fuck up and vote for Obama “” .Transparent and pitiful .
The reality is that dismissing her as an option is certainly not going to change the narrative. I doubt she’ll be included in any televised debates. That being said the fact that she is not included in a conversation does not mean people should automatically dismiss her as an alternative to candidate bad and candidate worse.
Anyone who thinks there is an easy way to change the system and that we aren’t going to have to fight has either a) not been paying attention or b) needs their heads examined or c)both. It’s going to be an uphill climb but the alternative is apathy and handwringing.
eCahn ,you have been grousing about Obama more than any daily FDL ,and now you advance the straw criterion of t v debate to support Jill .Dude ,do you have a belief system ? Think of the little people who view you as the”" smart one”" and give them some guidance.
Thank you and Bravo.
Jon Walker! please take a note
maybe someone here who loves maddow and the rest of those libs over at msnbc can call one of them up and ask why this woman hasnt been on any of their shows.
you all agree how wonderful that group is dont ya?
BWAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHAHAHHHAHHHAH
My fellow Americans, you don’t have a choice. 2020 is game over for the planet. Both corporate parties will do nothing to address the problems of global warming. Those televised debates are fake and meaningless. Hire the next President on their policies and the past performance. I’m sure you’ll find Dr Jill Stein is who she says she is and she represents the best interests of the 99 percenters.
The absence of any serious vote for Jill Stein will reveal once again how hollow the “progressives” really are in this country. Hopefully the youth will be paying attention this time.
For the naysayers here…. firstly you are likely trolls. Secondly what Eygpt, Iceland, South American, can do…. so can we. Thirdly, winning isn’t just about this election… it could be about having influence by getting a fair portion of the voting public, or it could be a stepping stone into future elections. Of course those from the limited two corporate parties is going to say your only choice is between evil and criminal but, that obviously isn’t true.
Romney and Ryan may be Fascist, if they are claiming to be even worse than Obama. But remember, politicians lie.
But Obama’s Slavery, Genocides, and Torture regime in Bahrain should be enough to bring him down, if people ever hear of it.
Libertarians do indeed have a candidate, Gary Johnson. He started off running for the Republican nomination, but did not get enough media coverage or raise enough money to get in the debates. I think including all the major parties in debates would really open up the discussions. What about Green, Dem,Rep, and Lib? That is not unmanageable. Unfortunately, I have less hope of other parties being given media coverage. Getting coverage by FDL reaches the already well informed. How do you reach out to the masses
We can reach the masses through the Marijuana voters. Twice as many people want their own individual freedom, twice as many people want Marijuana Legal as the record number that voted for Obama.
Marijuana is the leading cash crop in every state, and people in every state have to deal with Obama’s anti-science policies.
Obama is in full climate-change denial: He’s ready to take us to another Oil war, against Russia if that’s what it takes to raise the price of Oil and extra dollar. Just so we can keep heating up the planet with Coal and Oil.
Gary Johnson said he agrees with Obama that the banks did nothing wrong in our economic collapse. Libertarianism lets corporations run wild.
Thanks, FDL. Will forward to everyone I know . . . make our own media.
My mom grew up in Nazi Germany; some of my uncle’s family were murdered there. The Holocaust has colored my whole life. There’s a difference between smiling liberal deference to the hard-right and fascist warrior state, which holds it marginally at bay, and fascism itself. I think that something most progressives, facts laid out for them, can see.
The problem is that a similar feckless (largely false by its own outworn standards, even then) liberalism opened the door for Hitler anyway. That may be the reason that I choose–in my own token fashion–to let Obama hang in the wind anyway.
Twice as dangerous as a wolf.
Unfortunately Matthew Detroit, there is no reality to what you’re looking at. “O” is selling us out behind closed doors. The way he changed the day after he took office tells me that maybe the fix was in before he took office. What you see is an illusion.
Sorry, I don’t understand this reply. Believe me, fascism/corporatism is real. And whether millions suffer or far fewer makes a difference. To say it’s all illusion is sophistry. . . of the very worst sort.
What’s more (to place the argument in constructivist terms you might appreciate_: if a certain kind of discourse of basic fairness survives, even if just barely, we are in a different realm, in with a fighting chance. If a discourse of (Ayn) Randian naked wanking and even murderous self-interest gains the upper hand we really may be lost.
I think what lakota is trying to say, here, is that since all the main players in power are already motivated by murderous self-interest, there’s really no way of telling whether or not fascism has “gain(ed) the upper hand.” At some point the powers that be may find it necessary to control the public through a totalitarian police state — after all, they thought it was quite necessary to repress Occupy in that way.
It is also quite difficult to discern what sort of “fighting chance” we have — how could we possibly displace the military-industrial complex, the economic managers, the think tanks, the mass media corporations, the secret teams, and the owning class from power with things as they currently stand?
We couldn’t. We have to start from where we are. But I think my personal position on the preferability of open and avid fascism to (at least) continued lip service to justice is clear above. Artaud, the French philosopher and playwright, used to argue that it was better if things got worse. But you have to be pretty privileged, in my opinion, to make that argument, willing to live with other people’s suffering, possibly on a mass scale. And there is worse and there is (possibly) no return. . . especially from the Armageddon that right-wing Christians avidly believe in.
P.S. There’s a whiff of mysticism in some of Lakota’s posts that–respectfully, from a materialist Humanist perspective–I do not buy at all. I am possibly responding to this as well.
HeyNomab@51,Ron Paul is a pure ,if not political libertarian ,and he was leading the anti-bankster audit and whatnot .Was this why his followers have no enthusiasm for the Lib. ?.
She didn’t say fascism and corporatism isn’t real. She said that it is already here. When you have health care companies behind closed doors creating policy with politicians you already hav fascism.
Obama is window dressing. We’ll still move steadily rightward. You aren’t “saving” millions when you vote for Obama. You might be able to argue they’ll die a slower death but they’ll still die because at the end of the day both parties objectives are the same. The big difference is that one party will out and out tell you to your face that you exist to serve the 1% and that you deserve nothing while the other mouths platitudes and enacts the same type of policy in the guise of “saving you.”
That may be part of it. The way Ron Paul’s voters split will be very important for this election.
Nor did I suggest she did say that. But again–there are substantive differences. And suggesting that there aren’t just. . . isn’t. . . very nuanced, useful, or true.
I don’t think that that IS “the big difference.” (It’s not even close to true the Republicans say that.) There are numerous differences, historical, ideological, and other. I say this as a lifelong enemy of capitalism.
No more important than any other portion of the electorate comprising less than 10%. Ron Paul’s supporters are loud but they aren’t nearly as numerous as they like to imagine.
Frankly Johnson is an actual libertarian and this should be a no brainer for real libertarians(who I actually can respect even if I ideologically disagree with them.) It’s an insult to lump Johnson in with pseudolibertarian Paul(and yes when you run around arguing that state governments should have the right to limit medical procedures or limit who someone can enter into a marriage contract with you are a pseudolibertarian). I guess we get to see how many of the so called libertarian movement are just selfish authoritarians instead of people who actually intellectually consistent and believe government should have almost no say in anything.
Jill, how dare you compare that Hee Haw donkey on a leash with a viscous wolf.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970204397704577072590201172360.htmla Donkey on a leash ie hew ho
US’s winner take all elections means the undecided voter makes all the decisions. The ideal state is going into the voting booth before deciding between Jill Stein and Obama.
The Left never learned how to swing either loving Obama or suddenly having nothing to do with him, crashing the country to the right.
No its not a right-wing conspiracy it’s the Constitution,
http://my.firedoglake.com/richardkanepa/2012/08/13/from-homeless-child-to-community-leader-now-vice-presidential-candidate-better-more-accurate-story-than-chopping-down-the-cherry-tree/
There is absolutely nothing mystic about my posts. I was victimized by the previous administration, and ignored by the present administration which is no more than a continuation of the past administration.
There is no greater delusion, than “self delusion” my friend.