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Tuesday, February 25, 2020



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FEBRUARY 24 AND 25, 2020

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POLITICS 101

Do the Russians want Bernie to win? Not really — they want Democrats to turn on each other
Whether you support Sanders or someone else, there's a lot you can do to help stop Russian efforts to sow division
AMANDA MARCOTTE
FEBRUARY 24, 2020 6:30PM (UTC)

PHOTO ART -- Bernie Sanders / The Red Square in Moscow (Getty Images/Salon)

ate on Friday, the Washington Post published a story that caused major ripples through the progressive political world, headlined, "Bernie Sanders briefed by U.S. officials that Russia is trying to help his presidential campaign." This report was a follow-up to a similar report, from earlier in the week, that Russian intelligence agencies, as in 2016, are seeking to interfere in the 2020 election with an eye towards re-electing Donald Trump.

The responses from Sanders and Trump to these twin revelations couldn't have been more different. Sanders released a statement saying, "My message to Putin is clear: Stay out of American elections" and noting that some "of the ugly stuff on the Internet attributed to our campaign" is likely coming from Russian agents and not supporters.

Trump, on the other hand, reacted angrily, denying the information provided by his own agencies and immediately replacing his acting director of national intelligence, Joseph Maguire, with an even more subservient and vastly less qualified toady, Richard Grenell. Unsurprisingly, the new appointee immediately made sure to release a report denying that Russia is helping Trump, a bit of obvious propaganda that should fool absolutely no one.

This whole situation is no doubt highly confusing to many people. Why would Russia be supporting both Trump and the man who is currently leading the Democratic primary campaign? Especially since, as demonstrated by these differing responses, only Trump actually seems interested in accepting the assistance of Russians who are spreading disinformation online?

The answer is simple: Russia is not actually trying to help Bernie Sanders. The Kremlin wants Trump to win. What Vladimir Putin's spooks are interested in is not even really Sanders himself, but in exploiting his candidacy to sow chaos.

Duration -- 01:48 min.

See, Russian intelligence understands that there is both a subset of Sanders supporters and a subset of anti-Sanders Democrats who are overly eager to engage in hysterics and abusive behavior. And that conflict, between the abusive online "Bernie Bros" and the more histrionic Sanders opponents, has great potential to sow divisions in the Democratic ranks and drive down general election turnout, whoever the Democratic nominee eventually is. Which, in turn, helps Trump.

As Russian sources told GQ reporter Julia Ioffe over the weekend, "our candidate is chaos" and stoking these tensions is useful "for starting a pan-American brawl."

Trump himself understands this, as he frequently stokes conspiracy theories on Twitter, such as insinuating falsely that the Democratic party is somehow conspiring to deny Sanders the nomination. He doesn't do this because he likes Sanders, whom he calls "Crazy Bernie." He does this because he knows that this conflict between Democratic voters ultimately helps him.

The good news is that there a way to fight back against Russia's efforts to exploit the Sanders campaign: Everyone, Sanders supporters and opponents alike, "progressive" or "moderate," needs to simmer down and focus on the true enemy, which is Donald Trump (and his Russian backers).

I know, that's easier said than done, especially since both sides in this conflict are prone to minimizing the excesses of their own "team" and claiming that the other side is exaggerating or even making up the problem. So the first step, as is so often true in these situations, is admitting that the problem exists. 

There has clearly been a tide of harassment and abuse from Sanders supporters, as experienced by the Culinary Union of Nevada, whose leadership was met with a deluge of harassing emails and phone calls calling them "bitches" and "whores" and threatening them with violence, for daring to criticize Sanders' health care plan. (It appears a large proportion of the union's members voted for him despite all this.) Sanders has denounced these attacks but has also resisted admitting the obvious, which is that his campaign attracts more of this ugliness than other campaigns do.

There are also plenty of Sanders critics who are going way over the top, such as MSNBC host Chris Matthews, who reacted to Sanders' landslide victory in the Nevada caucuses over the weekend to "the fall of France in the summer of 1940," an unfortunate comparison that casts Sanders, who lost family members in the Holocaust, in the role of the Nazi invaders.

So both pro- and anti-Bernie forces bear some blame here for letting things get out of hand. The good news is that means both sides can take measures to dial down the intra-Democratic tension and stop priming themselves for Russian efforts to sow disinformation and paranoia. 

Here's some helpful steps that will keep everyone calmer and more focused on what really matters: Beating Trump.

Sanders supporters: Don't harass people. Not even if you think they "deserve" it. Did you see a criticism of Sanders from a lady online and you would like to shut her up by making fun of her childhood history of abuse? Here's an idea: Why don't you do literally anything else? Similarly, if you're a famous podcast personality who is angry that Pete Buttigieg claimed victory over Sanders in Iowa, perhaps find a way to vent that doesn't involve pornographic, violent homophobia.

If you think this kind of vicious behavior is encouraging undecided voters to come over to Sanders, I'm afraid it is definitely not doing that. Sanders can't win without getting those "resistance wine moms" on board, so be at least a little bit nicer to them, even if they remind you of your own mom making you clean your room. 

Sanders opponents: The world isn't ending, so calm the hell down. Sanders is not a Communist, and isn't really even a socialist, under any meaningful definition of that term. He is an FDR-style social democrat whose platform is about expanding the social safety net, not about nationalizing industry or executing the rich. He is not sold out to Russia — that would be weird, since Russia under Putin is a right-wing kleptocracy and he is against such things. Realistically, he won't be markedly different as president than any other Democrat. So please stop freaking out.

Don't like it when Sanders tweets that he won't be stopped by the "Democratic establishment"? Well, guess what? When you freak out at him for a bit of silly political hyperbole, you are merely confirming to his supporters that the "establishment" is out to get him and encouraging them to donate more money to him. So stop shooting yourself in the foot with these overreactions.

Everyone: Conspiracy theories only help Trump, so cut it out. No, the DNC is not conspiring against Sanders. And no, Sanders is not working for Russia to undermine the DNC. But when you spread conspiracy theories either for or against Sanders, you are encouraging Democratic voters to distrust each other and bicker among themselves. Which, of course, is exactly what Russia and Trump want you to do. Here's a thought: How about not doing what Trump and Putin want you to do! Step one is don't spread conspiracy theories.

If you're being trolled, don't take the bait. I get trolled on social media by Sanders supporters (and probably some Russian bots) constantly, because I'm fonder of Sen. Elizabeth Warren than I am of Sanders, and I'm not keen on hiding it. I've found that liberal use of the block button, however, is the best response possible to such ill-advised tactics. I don't know whether these people are deliberately trying to demobilize the left and discourage people from supporting Sanders in the general election, or if they're just nimrods who don't know how ugly they look to outsiders. (Probably a combination of both.) Either way, arguing back just gives them the attention they crave and is a bad idea.

If Sanders is the nominee, he's going to need to beat Trump, and those trolls are hurting him. So I'm going to try to limit the reach of trolls by blocking them. I recommend you do the same if you're getting trolled. It's also good for your sanity.

Don't gaslight. Bernie Bros are real. So are the hysterical anti-Bernie people. If someone is feeling aggrieved by either category of people, it does no good to tell them they're imagining things. That's just going to make them angrier and more defensive. Instead of getting into a Trump-pleasing bicker-fest over the exact size and scope of a problem, or policing whether someone else is "allowed" to be irritated, find something else to do with your time. Take a walk, read a book and, hey, maybe volunteer for the candidate you support.

Right now, it looks fairly likely that Bernie Sanders will win the Democratic nomination. Or on the other hand, he may not! Either way, the eventual nominee will be hobbled mightily if the Russians and Trump succeed, as they did in 2016, in sowing bad blood between Sanders supporters and the rest of the Democratic coalition. The only way to fight back, no matter how hard it may be, is to stifle the urge to engage in intra-party bickering. To get through this primary and beat Trump in November, it's time to remember the wisdom of Thumper and, when in doubt, to say nothing at all. (Unless you're bagging on Chris Matthews, which is highly understandable. But even then, may I recommend gentle mockery instead of acting like his tomfoolery is the end of civilization?)

AMANDA MARCOTTE
Amanda Marcotte is a politics writer for Salon. Her new book, "Troll Nation: How The Right Became Trump-Worshipping Monsters Set On Rat-F*cking Liberals, America, and Truth Itself," is out now. She's on Twitter @AmandaMarcotte 


SO, NOW THERE IS A NAME FOR OUR MOVEMENT, BUT NOT A COMPLIMENTARY ONE – “THE PROGRESSIVE UPRISING!” HOW ABOUT SIMPLY “PROGRESSIVES”? BERNIE SAID THINGS WOULD GET UGLY, AND THEY SURELY ARE. THE DNC IS COMING OUT INTO THE OPEN NOW, IT SEEMS. 

NEWS POLITICS & ELECTIONS
Pelosi Slammed for Backing Koch-Backed Texas Democrat Over Progressive Contender
BY
Jake Johnson, Common Dreams
PUBLISHED
February 23, 2020

PHOTOGRAPH -- Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) holds a press conference on President Trump's 2021 Budget Request on February 11, 2020, in Washington, D.C.
TASOS KATOPODIS / GETTY IMAGES

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi stirred outrage Saturday by visiting Texas Rep. Henry Cuellar at his campaign headquarters in Laredo and voicing hope that the Koch-backed, anti-choice Democrat will ride to a “resounding victory” over progressive primary challenger Jessica Cisneros* on March 3.

“We want this to be not only a victory, but a resounding victory for Henry Cuellar,” Pelosi told dozens of Cuellar campaign workers and supporters. “Every step you take, every door you knock, every call you make, will make that resounding victory possible—and it includes getting out a big Democratic vote prepared to vote again in the general election so that we turn Texas blue.

“We assume that Henry will win, but we don’t take anything for granted,” Pelosi added. “The word ‘assume’—ass of you and me. Assume nothing.” Ahead of her visit to Cuellar’s campaign office, Pelosi headlined a fundraiser for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, which has also thrown its weight behind Cuellar in Texas’ 28th congressional district.

Justice Democrats, which is supporting Cisneros, sent an email to supporters late Saturday blasting Pelosi’s support for Cuellar as “utterly shameful.”

“Nancy Pelosi is backing a ‘Democrat’ who votes with Trump nearly 70% of the time, has an ‘A’ rating from the NRA, is anti-choice, and has received tens of thousands of dollars from the Kochs,” the group wrote.


Waleed Shahid
@_waleedshahid
Instead of lifting up progressive women like @JCisnerosTX, Pelosi is stumping for a "Democrat" who is anti-choice; voted with Trump 70% of the time; received $ from the NRA and the Kochs; and is a top recipient of $ from the private prison and fossil fuel lobby. Unbelievable. https://twitter.com/PatrickSvitek/status/1231343719707746309 …


Patrick Svitek
@PatrickSvitek
Replying to @PatrickSvitek
.@SpeakerPelosi: “We want this to be not only a victory, but a resounding victory for Henry Cuellar.” #TX28

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Cuellar is the first-ever congressional Democrat to receive reelection support from Americans for Prosperity Action, a super PAC funded by billionaire Charles Koch.

As HuffPost reported, Cuellar’s reelection bid is also backed by “large national and Texas corporations and business associations, including the American Bankers Association, Texas Bankers Association, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, and the Laredo Chamber of Commerce.”

By contrast, Cisneros—a 26-year-old immigration and human rights attorney—is running a union-backed campaign fueled by grassroots donors and supported by progressive members of Congress, including Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) and Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.).


Jessica Cisneros
@JCisnerosTX
We’re running a grassroots, people-powered campaign.

We’re not taking a dime from corporate PACs or lobbyists.

We’re not endorsed by the Koch brothers.

We’re not receiving outside help from Republican special interests.

We’re going to win March 3. 💪🏾

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Referring to Cuellar and other right-wing Democrats like him, Ocasio-Cortez tweeted Saturday that “there are [Democratic] reps in SAFE blue seats who side with the NRA, are anti-LGBT+, and yet are protected because they advance the interests of big donors, Wall St., fossil fuels, etc.”

“It’s not ‘wrong’ to take that on and do better,” the New York Democrat wrote. “This isn’t about swing seats or pushing communities ‘too far left.’ It’s about accountability. Working families deserve so much better. And if we aren’t willing to admit where we can do better, then what is the point? Our job is to serve the people, not the powerful.”

This piece was reprinted by Truthout with permission or license. It may not be reproduced in any form without permission or license from the source.
Jake Johnson
Jake Johnson is a staff writer for Common Dreams. Follow him on Twitter: @johnsonjakep.

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HERE ARE THREE LOCAL TEXAS NEWS OUTLETS THAT SHOW AN INTEREST IN SANDERS WITHOUT ANY SLIGHTS OF THE SORT THAT WASHINGTON POST AND OFTEN THE NYT LIKE TO DISH OUT. BERNIE IS TRYING TO HIT AS MANY CITIES AS POSSIBLE, SEVERAL A DAY. I DO HOPE HE’S GETTING A LITTLE REST IN THERE. 

Cisneros outraises Cuellar in race for congressional seat
Photo of Benjamin Wermund
Benjamin Wermund   Feb. 24, 2020 Updated: Feb. 24, 2020 6:28 a.m.

Photographs -- Laredo attorney Jessica Cisneros (left), 26, is challenging veteran Congressman Henry Cuellar, 63, in the 2020 Democratic primary.
Photo: Express-News file

AUSTIN — Jessica Cisneros, a 26-year-old immigration attorney from Laredo, raised more money in the first six weeks of the year than the longtime Democratic congressman she’s challenging, with the help of a few famous supporters, including actress Susan Sarandon.

U.S. Rep. Henry Cuellar, the House District 28 incumbent backed by both the Democratic establishment and the Koch Brothers, still has far more money on hand — more than $2 million — just days before the March 3 primary. But Cisneros, who raked in more than $350,000 over the first six weeks of the year, outraised Cuellar by $100,000. She ended the period with just less than $296,000.

Photo of Benjamin Wermund
Benjamin Wermund
Follow Benjamin on:
BenjaminEW

Benjamin Wermund is the Houston Chronicle’s Washington correspondent. He previously covered federal education policy and national education issues at POLITICO, and before that covered higher education at the Chronicle and K-12 education at the Austin American-Statesman. He’s a Texas native and a diehard Spurs fan.

Past Articles from this Author:
DNC adds Texas to 2020 targets days before Super Tuesday
Progressive attorney outraises Texas Rep. Henry Cuellar in race for congressional seat
Bernie Sanders' ascension in Texas leaves moderate Democrats fighting for scraps


Bernie Sanders' ascension in Texas leaves moderate Democrats fighting for scraps
Photo of Benjamin Wermund
Benjamin Wermund   Feb. 21, 2020 Updated: Feb. 21, 2020 12:05 p.m.

Three Photographs -- 3Democratic presidential candidates former South Bend, Ind., Mayor Pete Buttigieg, left, and Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) participate in the Democratic presidential primary debate at Paris Las Vegas on Wednesday, Feb. 19, 2020, in Las Vegas. (Mario Tama/Getty Images/TNS)Photo: Mario Tama, HO / TNS

AUSTIN — With Bernie Sanders ascendant in the Democratic presidential primary — apparently even in Texas — the four moderates in the race are vying to be an alternative to Sanders’ brand of democratic socialism.

“I don’t think there’s any chance of the senator beating President (Donald) Trump,” Michael Bloomberg, the billionaire and former New York mayor who has poured $25 million into ads in Texas alone, said of Sanders at Wednesday’s debate in Nevada, voicing the concerns of many moderate Democrats.

“We’ve got to wake up as a party,” said Pete Buttigieg, the former South Bend, Ind., mayor who has placed second in the first two states to vote. “We could wake up two weeks from today, the day after Super Tuesday, and the only candidates left standing will be Bernie Sanders and Mike Bloomberg, the two most polarizing figures on this stage.”

Photo of Benjamin Wermund
Benjamin Wermund
Follow Benjamin on:
BenjaminEW

Benjamin Wermund is the Houston Chronicle’s Washington correspondent. He previously covered federal education policy and national education issues at POLITICO, and before that covered higher education at the Chronicle and K-12 education at the Austin American-Statesman. He’s a Texas native and a diehard Spurs fan.

Past Articles from this Author:
DNC adds Texas to 2020 targets days before Super Tuesday
Cisneros outraises Cuellar in race for congressional seat
Progressive attorney outraises Texas Rep. Henry Cuellar in race for congressional seat


MARIANNE WILLIAMSON ANNOUNCED HER ENDORSEMENT AT AUSTIN, TX. 

TEXAS 2020 ELECTIONS
A confident Bernie Sanders barnstorms Texas with burst of momentum
The Democratic presidential candidate swung through Texas this weekend as he enjoyed a resounding victory in the Nevada caucuses and eyes another big win March 3.
BY PATRICK SVITEK   FEB. 23, 2020UPDATED: 5 PM

Texas 2020 Elections

We're tracking Texas 2020 election news, from the top of the ballot to the bottom. Texas 2020 early voting begins Tuesday and runs through Feb. 28. The primary in Texas is March 3. View your sample ballot here and add important 2020 deadlines to your calendar here. MORE IN THIS SERIES

A confident Bernie Sanders barnstormed Texas this weekend with just over a week until its delegate-rich Democratic presidential primary, reaping the momentum of an easy win Saturday in the Nevada caucuses and setting his sights on another major victory here.

"We have won the popular vote in Iowa, we won the New Hampshire primary, we won the Nevada caucus, and don’t tell anybody because these folks get very, very agitated and nervous — we’re gonna win here in Texas, and in November we’re gonna defeat Trump here in Texas," Sanders said Sunday afternoon in Houston.

The independent U.S. senator from Vermont made a similar declaration Saturday evening in San Antonio, where he took the stage shortly after networks projected him the Nevada winner. Announcing the victory, Sanders said his campaign has "just brought together a multigenerational, multiracial coalition, which is not only going to win in Nevada — it's going to sweep this country."

Sanders got yet another boost Sunday afternoon in Austin, where a former rival, Marianne Williamson, made a surprise appearance to endorse him. The eccentric self-help author and spiritual adviser, who ended her campaign in early January, rallied the crowd with references to Sanders' success across the first three early voting states.

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"By doing all those things, Bernie Sanders has taken a stand, and Bernie Sanders has been taking a stand for a very long time," Williamson said. "He has been consistent, he has been convicted, he has been committed, and now it’s time — I’m here and you’re here — because it’s time for us to take a stand with Bernie."

Early voting is already halfway over for Texas' March 3 primary. It began Tuesday and ends Friday.

Former Vice President Joe Biden has led most polls of the Texas primary until recently. Sanders has pulled ahead of Biden, within the margin of error, in two surveys released in recent days, including a University of Texas/Texas Tribune Poll that came out Feb. 14.

Sanders, who was in Texas about a week ago for a Dallas-area rally where he also expressed confidence about winning here, had the state to himself this weekend as most of his primary opponents traveled to Nevada, South Carolina (the next state on the nominating calendar) or other Super Tuesday states. Sanders drew thousands to large venues across Austin, El Paso, Houston and San Antonio. In Austin alone, his campaign claimed a crowd count of over 12,700.

The candidate traffic in Texas is set to pick up soon; both Elizabeth Warren and Michael Bloomberg announced Saturday that they will return to Texas. Warren will have a town hall Thursday in San Antonio with Julián Castro, her rival-turned-surrogate and the former U.S. housing secretary and San Antonio mayor. It will be her first visit to the state since September.

Bloomberg will hold rallies Wednesday and Thursday in Fort Worth and Houston, respectively, making his sixth trip to the state since launching his campaign in late November. He has made far more visits to the state over the same period than any other candidate as he skipped the first four contests.

The airwaves are also getting more crowded in Texas. Three candidates have been on the air: Bloomberg, Sanders and Tom Steyer. But that will change Tuesday, when Warren begins a new buy across three states including Texas, specifically in Austin and San Antonio. As part of the buy, she is airing a spot voiced by Castro and featuring images of him.

Sanders, though, commanded the spotlight this weekend in Texas. His visit to El Paso was particularly notable because no other remaining primary candidate has been there besides Bloomberg. Their attention to the border city — far from Texas' biggest media markets — won them praise Saturday from El Paso's most famous politician, former 2020 presidential candidate Beto O'Rourke, who does not plan to endorse before the Texas primary.

"This is a community that is often overlooked despite the critical role it plays for our country," O'Rourke wrote on Twitter. "Hope others will follow their lead."

In El Paso, Sanders narrowed in on issues including the mass shooting at a Walmart store there last summer. Before the rally, Sanders visited the memorial for the 22 victims of the Aug. 3 massacre that authorities have said was committed by a white supremacist who wanted to ward off a “Mexican invasion” of Texas.

PHOTOGRAPH -- Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders addresses supporters at a campaign rally at the Abraham Chavez Theatre in El Paso on Feb. 22, 2020.  Briana Sanchez via USA Today Network

"I was thinking what a horror it is to see that not only was there a mass shooting, there was a mass shooting here just trying to kill Latino people," he said. "What we have got to do as a country is do everything possible to end the hatred. We are all human beings with common dreams."

Sanders held his El Paso rally at the downtown Abraham Chavez Theatre, where venue officials said the crowd inside met the 2,500-person capacity and about 100 more were in an overflow room. Outside the venue, Sanders supporters said they were impressed the candidate traveled to Texas the same day as the Nevada caucuses.

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"I think it’s very big for him to leave the caucus to come talk to El Paso," said Jessica Ceniceros, 21. "I think it’s what we need as a city and as Texas as a whole. It just shows that he cares about us."

The rallies drew both diehard Sanders supporters and Texans showing up more out of curiosity, both as the primary nears and as Sanders' chances of winning the nomination grow. That was apparent in interviews with people waiting for Sanders' rally Sunday afternoon at Austin's Auditorium Shores, a waterfront park outside downtown where Warren held her last campaign event in the state.

"I'm not a huge Bernie fan, but I'm not against Bernie by any means," said Christian Boddy, a 30-year-old software project manager who lives in Austin. "If he gets the ticket, I'll go for it, but I'm here to support him and I'm not against him, so I'm here to learn more."

While Sanders spent the weekend predicting a general election breakthrough in traditionally red Texas, Republicans scoffed.

"Bernie Sanders’ socialist agenda will not resonate with Texas voters," Samantha Cotten, a campaign spokeswoman for President Donald Trump, said in a statement. "Whether it’s wanting to destroy the energy industry, government-run health care or massive tax increases, Texans will reject Sanders’ extreme policies and reelect President Trump."

Julián Aguilar contributed reporting from El Paso, and Alex Samuels contributed reporting from Austin.

Disclosure: The University of Texas and Walmart have been financial supporters of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribune's journalism. Find a complete list of them here. 


A MULTIRACIAL, MULTIGENERATIONAL MOVEMENT: RALLY IN HOUSTON
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Bernie Sanders
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A MULTIRACIAL, MULTIGENERATIONAL MOVEMENT: This movement is about empowering people the political process has ignored for far too long. We have the multiracial, multigenerational coalition to win the White House. Live from Houston:

Make a plan with your family and friends to vote now until Tuesday, March 3rd, for Bernie Sanders. Find your polling location and more information about to vote at: berniesanders.com/texas
You can also text "TEXAS" to 67760.

Category   News & Politics 


IF ELEPHANTS CAN BE TAUGHT TO PAINT AND CLEARLY ENJOY DOING IT, WHY HAS ART BEEN DROPPED FROM SO MANY K-12 SCHOOLS TO SAVE MONEY? IS SOMETHING BADLY WRONG HERE? I THINK SO. 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=foahTqz7On4


NOW SEE A PET POLAR BEAR, FOLLOWED BY OTHER ANIMALS. 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7GMNRwNh1yU
Incredible Human And Animal Friendships | Animal Odd Couples | Real Wild
Duration 58:51


IN THE AGE OF AI 

Manufacturing Consent: Noam Chomsky and the Media – Feature, Documentary


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