Category: Audio

Radio WINA Interview with 5th District Candidate Jane Dittmar

https://soundcloud.com/1070wina/mn-110316-jane-dittmar

After 18 months of campaigning, we’re down to the final days. The election may be over this Tuesday, but its impact will be felt for decades.

Virginia is one of the fiercest battlegrounds in the nation — that’s why a group of generous donors has stepped up to stand with Virginia Democrats.

Donate now and they will match every single contribution made to our Get Out the Vote efforts by midnight on November 6 >>

The GOP wants to turn back the clock on the progress we’ve made. But Virginians are fighting back.

Right now, hundreds of volunteers are making phone calls and knocking on doors.

5 DAYS TO GO!
 
Join your fellow Madison Dems as we work to elect Hillary Clinton and Jane Dittmar on November 8. There are lots of opportunities to get involved!
 
  •      Saturday, 11/5 9-6 Coordinated Campaign Phone Bank
  •      Sunday, 11/6 noon-6 Coordinated Campaign Phone Bank
  •      Monday, 11/7 Phone Bank from home on your own schedule
Election Day, Tuesday, 11/8
 
  •      All day: errand runners needed (snacks for poll watchers, etc.)
  •      Noon-6: Coordinated Campaign Phone Bank
  •      4-7: Greeters needed at Oakpark and Brightwood precincts
  •      6:30-late: Celebration Potluck, election returns on big screen TV

Please email volunteer@madisondems.org for directions and instructions

If all of our grassroots supporters step up now, we even have a chance to take back the House, something everyone thought was impossible just a few weeks ago.

We’ve got five days to go — Will you help Democrats finish this election strong?

Beyond Vietnam – Break The Silence

“Today we come together, across the country and across the commonwealth, to celebrate the life, contributions, and legacy of Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. His tireless efforts on behalf of those denied equal rights and equal protection paved the way for a nation united under the belief that regardless of race, gender, economic circumstance, or social situation, we all deserve a fair chance at achieving the American dream.

“As we reflect on the life and legacy of Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King ,Jr. we must redouble our efforts to ensure we find solutions to make Virginia a more welcoming place for all who want to live, work, or raise a family in our great Commonwealth.”  -DPVA Chair Herring Statement Honoring Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

The greatest MLK speech you never heard

MLK

Sermon delivered at Riverside Church in New York on April 4, 1967.

Complete Transcript

via CNN

Why it’s important: This was King’s most controversial speech. Even some members of his own staff warned him not to give it. With this sermon, King decisively came out against the Vietnam War at a time when many Americans still supported it. People were furious. President Lyndon Johnson stopped talking to him. Civil rights leaders criticized him, and major newspapers told him to stick to civil rights. Yet King put principle over personal popularity and continued to oppose the war. One year later to the day he gave this speech, King was assassinated in Memphis, Tennessee.

What he said: Money that should have been spent on Johnson’s War on Poverty was being lost in Vietnam’s killing fields. He said, “A nation that continues year after year to spend more money on military defense than on programs of social uplift is approaching spiritual death.” The speech distilled King’s belief that racism, economic exploitation and war were all connected as “triple evils.”

Signature lines: “We are taking the black young men who had been crippled by our society and sending them 8,000 miles away to guarantee liberties in Southeast Asia which they had not found in Southwest Georgia and East Harlem. So we have been repeatedly faced with the cruel irony of watching Negro and white boys on TV screens as they kill and die together for a nation that has been unable to seat them together in the same schools.”

What others say: “It’s Dr. King’s most underappreciated speech,” says Vorris Nunley, a professor of rhetoric at the University of California, Riverside. “Former supporters, black as well as white, backed away from this too compassionate, too radical, too political King.”

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We are in the fight of a generation.
We are in the fight for a generation.

Our strength lies in both our numbers and the level of involvement of our members.

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2023 Founders Dinner - I'm a Democrat