Update: Vice President Kamala Harris is now the Democratic presidential nominee

T_Holmes

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Charlamagne is a troll...he makes a lot of sense at times and then he contradicts himself..nothing wrong with it, but you have to understand where he's coming from. He likes to generate discussion so he may not believe what he's actually saying when he's talking and tends to play "devil's advocate" a lot. This is why him and Joe Budden have a "love - hate" relationship because they are similar in this way.
In one respect, I get that. But the problem is his audience is not always nuanced to get that he doesn't necessarily mean what he's saying.

This is one of those tricky tightropes that people who are both "journalists" and entertainers have to walk. And they don't always get it perfect. And I'm not trying to hold him more accountable than other people, but the fact is that in a lot of places, he carries more weight as a vocal and popular black media presence.

When the chips are down, he usually gives the correct take. But he isn't always quoted from that point, and it does become a problem
 

OutlawR.O.C.

R.I.P. shanebp1978
BGOL Investor


I’m willing to bet he has more money than Elon. He owns Forbes and refuses to include his networth when the list of the top richest folks are published.


Yeah I would definitely bet on him being more liquid than Elon.

Net worth may favor Elon but readily available cash and solid/stable investments would be in Bloombergs favor I believe.
 

SIDESHOW

Uncle Juice
BGOL Investor

Taunting Trump: Harris campaign's sneer tactics​



Image of Harris X post


When former President Trump suggested he might back out of the Sept. 10 debate, the Harris campaign posted sound effects of squawking, whining chickens, layered over video of Trump speaking.
  • Another tweet featured a flock of chicken emojis.
Why it matters: The same Democratic digital team in Wilmington, Delaware, has pivoted from the stuffier, decorous Biden for President campaign to a saucier, more ruthless Harris for President campaign.
The big picture: Trump has always been the taunter — "Sleepy Joe," "Crooked Hillary," "Little Marco," "Low-Energy Jeb," "Meatball Ron." Now he's the taunted.
  • It's another dimension of Vice President Harris' "happy warrior" approach to a campaign that's sure to get uglier this fall.
Between the lines: Top Trump advisers tell me they expect he'll debate — both because neither side can afford to be seen as hiding, and because Trump will relish the stage.
  • But Monday's widespread coverage of the backstage fight over the "muted mics" issue meant Harris was continuing to control the campaign conversation as she roared out of Chicago into her first post-convention week.
The other side: When I asked the Trump campaign about Harris' mocking posts, communications director Steven Cheung replied:
"Acting like whiny schoolchildren is not a political strategy, but it is a coping mechanism for the Kamala campaign who knows they have a weak candidate incapable of being authentic. If anyone thinks that using emojis is some cutting-edge message technique, they are severely out of touch with reality and the seriousness of the challenges Americans face after a disastrous Harris-Biden administration."

 

DC_Dude

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Black owned news


Why Democrats Are Built To Win In November​

NewsOne Featured Video
DNC at United Center.

Source: Robert Gauthier / Getty
That was a great convention. But now what?
Elections are about organizing and mobilizing. First, you have to organize your campaign infrastructure; recruiting, training volunteers and staff, crafting issue platforms, mapping out a strategy, building coalitions, setting up phone banks, printing walk lists for canvassers, integrating internet and mobile technologies, and of course, raising money.
Once you’ve built that organization, you have to mobilize it to energize your base, convince undecideds, engage unlikely voters and make sure all of them cast their votes on Election Day.
Think of it like NASCAR. First, you have to build your car. Then you race it.

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Of course, you can still make adjustments and fine-tune the engine during the race and the same holds true for a campaign. Just because you kicked off your door-to-door ground efforts doesn’t mean you stop registering voters, recruiting volunteers or raising money. Taking a pit stop doesn’t mean the race is over. But, race day is not the time to build your transmission from scratch.
Now, let’s be honest. As Democrats, our car hasn’t always been ready for the green flag and, after the bunting and balloons, our post-convention energy fades away because we have nowhere to put it.
But there’s something different about the party’s infrastructure now thanks to President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris prioritizing DNC Chair Jaime Harrison and the Democratic National Committee (our party’s national infrastructure).
You see, collectively they knew how staffing shortfalls, lackluster fundraising, and weakened state parties hamstring the national Democratic Party and how that disorganization impacts the whole ticket from President to Soil and Water Commissioner.
So Democrats went to work and, with a wildly successful fundraising effort, invested $90 million in state and electoral midterm programs tripling its 2018 investment. On top of that, Harrison and the DNC made its largest-ever midterm cash transfer of $27 million to the Democratic Senate and Congressional Campaign Committees, kicked off new efforts like to engage and empower Black voters Chop It Up, A Seat at the Table and Adopt a Precinct and gave neglected state and local parties the real support they needed to register and organize new voters that made the difference in national and local elections alike.
Thanks largely to those efforts, Democrats beat back the midterm “red wave” that seemed all but inevitable in 2022 and made history with victories across America.
Because we treated our party’s infrastructure as an investment, not an expense, the results are undeniable, and coupled with dramatic 2023 victories in Virginia, Kentucky and Ohio, it’s clear that Democrats have built a campaign infrastructure that can win and win big. But, with new investments like a $25 million ad buy in African American and Hispanic-owned media, providing $20 million in support to state and local parties this past June and more, Harrison isn’t taking his foot off the gas.
Instead, Democrats are making sure the car is in peak condition so we can run the “High Tech and High Touch” campaign we need to not only Beat Donald Trump and the Trump Project 2025 but win a mandate up and down the ticket.
I’m talking about a “High Tech and High Touch” campaign that invests in social media to combat AI misinformation and trained canvassers that go door-to-door in urban neighborhoods and rural districts alike. I’m talking about a “High Tech and High Touch” campaign that engages voters where they are whether it’s a barbershop or a subreddit. I’m talking about a “High Tech and High Touch” campaign that leverages text messaging, phone banking, online fundraising and one-on-one conversations between neighbors because this election is too important for anything less.
I’m talking about a “High Tech and High Touch” campaign that doesn’t just win the White House because defeating Donald Trump is only part of the equation. If we want President Kamala Harris to protect reproductive freedom, then she needs an Election Day mandate at her back. If we want her to cut the price of groceries, housing and more, she needs a governing majority to do it. If we want to expand the child tax credit, cap the price of insulin for everyone, cut taxes for the middle class and create an opportunity economy for all Americans, then our victory can’t be limited to Kamala Harris and Tim Walz.
We need to win the House, the Senate, races up and down the ticket and the 10 states with referendums on reproductive freedom on the ballot in November.
As Gov. Tim Walz said last week, “It’s the fourth quarter. We’re down a field goal. But we’re on offense and we’ve got the ball. We’re driving down the field.”
Antjuan Seawright is a Democratic political strategist, founder and CEO of Blueprint Strategy LLC and a senior visiting fellow at Third Way. Follow him on X, formerly known as Twitter @antjuansea.
 
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