Author: greenecodemocratcom

  • Michelle Obama trolls Trump by tapping her microphone during epic takedown

     

    Carla Herreria Senior Writer, HuffPost Hawaii

     

    michelle-obama-campaigning-for-hillary-clinton

    Michelle Obama campaigning for Hillary Clinton

     

    Michelle Obama may have only recently jumped on Hillary Clinton’s campaign trail, but she has already mastered the art of insulting The Orange One Who Must Not Be Named.

    During a rally for the Democratic presidential nominee in Charlotte, North Carolina, on Tuesday, the first lady executed yet another perfect takedown of Donald Trump― and, again, she didn’t even have to say his name.

    Obama mostly stayed on-script at the rally, calling for a “steady,” “measured” and “honest” leader while denouncing misogyny and “not paying taxes.”

    But she picked up the fire when she went all in on Trump, ragging on his late-night Twitter rant and his disrespect for veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder. Then, with a tap of her microphone, she burned Trump over his uncanny ability to blame others for his missteps.

    “When [Clinton] gets knocked down, she doesn’t complain,” Obama said before tapping on her microphone. “She doesn’t cry foul. No, she gets right back up, comes back stronger for the people who needs her most.”

    The mic tap was an apparent nod to Trump’s suggestion that he was given a faulty microphone to sabotage his performance during the first presidential debate.

    “When making life-or-death, war-or-peace decisions, a president can’t just pop off or lash out irrationally,” Obama said to the crowd of about 1,400 people. “And I think we can all agree that someone who’s roaming around at 3 a.m. tweeting should not have their fingers on the nuclear codes.”

    Obama continued her takedown of the GOP nominee by pointing out that Trump is the type of candidate who “implies that veterans who serve our country so bravely are somehow weak because they’re dealing with the wounds of war.”

  • Ailing Obama health care act may have to change to survive

         By ROBERT PEAR, New York Times

    president-obama

    President Obama

    WASHINGTON — The fierce struggle to enact and carry out the Affordable Care Act was supposed to put an end to 75 years of fighting for a health care system to insure all Americans. Instead, the law’s troubles could make it just a way station on the road to another, more stable health care system, the shape of which could be determined on Election Day.

    Seeing a lack of competition in many of the health law’s online insurance marketplaces, Hillary ClintonPresident Obama and much of the Democratic Party are calling for more government, not less.

    The departing president, the woman who seeks to replace him and nearly one-third of the Senate have endorsed a new government-sponsored health plan, the so-called public option, to give consumers an additional choice. A significant number of Democrats, for whom Senator Bernie Sanders spoke in the primaries, favor a single-payer arrangement, which could take the form of Medicare for all.

    Donald J. Trump and Republicans in Congress would go in the direction of less government, reducing federal regulation and requirements so insurance would cost less and no-frills options could proliferate. Mr. Trump would, for example, encourage greater use of health savings accounts, allow insurance policies to be purchased across state lines and let people take tax deductions for insurance premium payments.

    In such divergent proposals lies an emerging truth: Mr. Obama’s signature domestic achievement will almost certainly have to change to survive. The two parties agree that for too many people, health plans in the individual insurance market are still too expensive and inaccessible.

    “Employer markets are fairly stable, but the individual insurance market does not feel stable at all,” said Janet S. Trautwein, the chief executive of the National Association of Health Underwriters, which represents more than 100,000 agents and brokers who specialize in health insurance. “In many states, the individual market is in a shambles.”

    Mr. Obama himself, while boasting that 20 million people had gained coverage because of the law, acknowledged in July that “more work to reform the health care system is necessary.”

    “Too many Americans still strain to pay for their physician visits and prescriptions, cover their deductibles or pay their monthly insurance bills; struggle to navigate a complex, sometimes bewildering system; and remain uninsured,” Mr. Obama wrote in The Journal of the American Medical Association.

    The marketplace faces a major test in the fourth annual open enrollment season, which starts on Nov. 1, a week before Election Day. In many counties, consumers will see higher premiums and fewer insurers, as Aetna, Humana and UnitedHealth have curtailed their participation in the exchanges, and many of the nonprofit insurance cooperatives, created with federal money, have shut down.

    Mr. Trump has said that Congress must “completely repeal Obamacare,” and Republicans in Congress have repeatedly tried to do so. But parts of the law appear to be here to stay. One such provision, now widely accepted, says that insurers cannot deny coverage because of a person’s medical condition or history.

    For their part, many Democrats are clamoring for a public insurance option, as they did nine years ago.

    “Supporters of the public option warned that private insurance companies could not be trusted to provide reliable coverage or control costs,” said Richard J. Kirsch, who led a grass-roots organization that fought for passage of the Affordable Care Act in 2009 and 2010. “The shrinking number of health insurers is proof that these warnings were spot on.”

    On Sept. 15, Senator Jeff Merkley, Democrat of Oregon, introduced a resolution calling for a public option. The measure now has 32 co-sponsors, including the top Senate Democrats: Harry Reid of Nevada, Chuck Schumer of New York and Richard J. Durbin of Illinois.

    “You need competition to make the exchanges successful,” Mr. Merkley said in an interview. “A public option guarantees there’s competition in each and every exchange around the country.”

    As they did before the Affordable Care Act was enacted, insurance lobbyists are mobilizing to kill the public option. The main trade group for the industry, America’s Health Insurance Plans, says it would do nothing to stabilize the exchanges, and in an urgent “action alert,” the group asked member companies to lobby against Mr. Merkley’s resolution.

    Senator Lamar Alexander, Republican of Tennessee and chairman of the Senate health committee, said the Democrats’ public option plan would compound the problems it seeks to solve.

    “Obamacare exchanges are collapsing because of federal mandates and a lack of flexibility,” Mr. Alexander said. “We need to give states more flexibility and individuals more choices so more people can buy low-cost insurance.”

    Mr. Trump would replace the Affordable Care Act with an assortment of conservative policies, including some that are similar to ideas favored by House Republicans and by think tanks like the Heritage Foundation or the American Enterprise Institute. But Democrats and some Republicans say that Mr. Trump has not laid out a comprehensive, coherent alternative to the Affordable Care Act.

    Mr. Trump would eliminate the requirement that most Americans carry health insurance. He would encourage the sale of insurance across state lines, in a bid to increase competition. And he would convert Medicaid, now an open-ended entitlement, into a block grant, giving each state a lump sum of federal money to provide health care to low-income people.

  • Eutaw City Council accepts bids on water project; disputes claims to pay Sheriff’s Department for setting up voting machines

    In its regular meeting on September 27, 2016, the Eutaw City Council approve bids for the proposed $3.1 million water improvement Project from USDA Rural Development.
    The Council approved two bids, one from Caldwell Tank Inc. of Louisville, Kentucky for $1,092,000 for replacement of the water tank behind City Hall; and a second bid from Apel Machine and Supply Company of Hanceville, Alabama for $1,557,344.92 for the replacement and extension of pipes, digital meters, fire hydrants and other improvements.
    Mayor Edwards said “The city is still negotiating the interim financing for this project and hope to have this completed soon so we can sign contracts with these low bidders so the water project can get started.” The Mayor also reported that work would begin within thirty days on the Prairie Avenue resurfacing project. S. T. Bunn was selected as the contractor for this project.
    The City Council was presented with an invoice for $6,000 for “delivery, set-up, technicians fee and pickup of electronic voting machines,” for the October 4th City runoff elections. The invoice specified that payment be made, prior to delivery of any equipment, to Jeremy Rancher or Charles Davis, who are on the staff of the Sheriff’s Department.
    Mayor Edwards explained that the same deputies had submitted a bill for $6,000 for the August 23 City elections and that she had paid $5,000 of that bill. The total request from deputies Rancher and Davis was $12,000 to provide the voting machines.
    Both the Mayor and Councilwoman Shelia Smith protested the high cost of the election arrangements and whether the Sheriff’s Department or individuals working for the Sheriff’s Department could legitimately charge for providing voting machines that belong to the County.
    After some discussion, new Probate Judge Judy Spree made the machines available to the City of Eutaw for the election and had members of the City police force transport and set up the machines. The Mayor is still disputing the original $5,000 payment and requesting a refund.
    In other business the City Council approved travel for council members and staff to various conferences and training events.

  • Sheriff files suit to enforce Settlement Agreement

    sheriff

    On September 30, 2016, just one day after the Greene County Commission finalized its budget for 2016-2017 fiscal year, the Greene County Sheriff Jonathan Benison, through his attorney Flint Liddon, filed a suit with the Greene County Circuit Court alleging that the Greene County Commission had “fulfilled essentially none of the terms of the Settlement Agreement and the Sheriff had fulfilled all of the terms of the Settlement Agreement.” The agreement referenced here is the settlement reached in February, 2016 between the commission and the sheriff in which the sheriff would provided additional bingo resources to the county and the commission would utilize a portion of those resources to support the sheriff’s department including providing some upgrades at the county jail.
    The Sheriff’s suit, among its attachments, lists the particulars of the February agreement including the provision that the Sheriff would provide to the county an additional $5 per bingo machine per month totaling $85 per machine from all the gaming facilities in the county. According to the Greene County Commission, the sheriff has not paid the additional $5 per bingo machine since the agreement was reached in February.
    In reviewing the entire agreement, it is apparent that the commission’s ability to meet the budget request of the Sheriff Department is contingent on the sheriff complying with the payments of the $85 per bingo machine to the commission.
    The sheriff’s suit asks the court to enforce the terms of the Settlement Agreement signed by both parties. The court’s enforcement would necessitate that the sheriff pay the county $85 per bingo machine per month from February 2016 through the county’s 2019 fiscal year from all gaming facilities in the county.

  • Sheriff reneges on agreement; Commission reduces sheriff’s budget request Greene Co. Commission approves fiscal year 2016-2017 budget

    The Greene County Commission, at an emergency meeting held Thursday, September 29, 2016, approved its fiscal year 2016-2017 budget, reducing the Sheriff Department’s allocations by $138,727.73. According to the commission, this amount represents the additional resources Greene County Sheriff Jonathan Benison agreed to provide to the commission from increased fees generated from Bingo machines. This agreement between the Greene County Commission and Sheriff Benison resulted from a directive of Circuit Court Judge James Moore at the December 15, 2015 hearing and provides that the sheriff will raise the fees on Bingo Machines at each facility in the county from $80 to $85 per month, beginning February 2016. To date, the additional $5 per machine has not been provided to the commission.
    The court agreement stated that the $85 per machine, collected by the sheriff for the commission, would be earmarked and allocated with 60% of the funds to be used for infrastructure projects and 40% for use by the commission to meet needs of the county general fund. The commission explained that part of the 40% would be allocated toward the sheriff’s budget, however, without the increase of $5 per machine, the county does not have sufficient income to meet the sheriff’s budget as requested.
    The commission reported that various communications have been sent to Sheriff Benison, requesting the agreed upon funds for the county and explaining the process that authorized the sheriff to impose and collect the additional $5 fee per Bingo machine. The commission reported there has been no response from Sheriff Benison in this regard.
  • Raymond Steele wins run-off for Mayor of Eutaw

    mayor-raymond-steeleRaymond Steele was elected Mayor of Eutaw in Tuesday’s run-off election by a vote of 718 (58.4%) to 511(41.6%) for Hattie Edwards the incumbent Mayor. Steele previously served three terms as Mayor of Eutaw from 2000 to 2012.
    Steele carried five of six voting boxes including decisive victories in Branch Heights and the Absentee Box (see chart of results on page 7 of this paper). The mayor’s race was the only one on the ballot while all City Council seats were determined in the August 23 primary election.
    There was little drop-off in the voting between the first election when 1,233 votes were cast and the run-off where 1,229 votes were cast, based on unofficial voter returns that will be confirmed on October 13, 2016.
    The new city officials will take office in November. Mayor Raymond Steele will be joined by City Council members: Latasha Johnson (District 1), LaJeffrey Carpenter (District 2), Shelia H. Smith (District 3), Joe Lee Powell (District 4) and Bennie Abrams (District 5).
    In an interview with the Democrat after his victory, Steele said:
    “I want to thank the citizens of Eutaw for their confidence in me. I look forward to working with the Eutaw City Council, other agencies and the citizens of the city to move Eutaw forward. I hope to continue with the proposed water improvement project. I want to encourage business and commercial development at the Interstate Exit 40 to bring jobs and raise our tax base.
    “I want to ask the City Council to unconditionally accept the roads and streets in Branch Heights, so that we can seek federal and state monies to fix these roads. I am open to hear the concerns of city residents and hope we can build a brighter future for our city.”
    Hattie Edwards said, “I thank my supporters for their support and believing in me.”
    The Democrat learned on Tuesday that incumbent Mayor Ollie Vester of Forkland postponed the municipal run-off election in that city despite instructions from the Alabama League of Municipalities to proceed with the election. Vester is disputing the results of the August 23 election and asked for a recount, however her request was filed beyond the deadline for such challenges.
    A special municipal election in Boligee is now scheduled for October 24.

  • Former First Lady of two African nations, Graca Machel launches new women’s network

    By Stacy M. Brown (NNPA Newswire Contributor)

    gracamichel_gmichel_web120
    Graça Machel said that the primary mission of WIMN is to amplify the voices of women’s movements, influence governance and promote women’s leadership and contributions in the economic, social, and political development of Africa. (Graça Michel)

     

    In an effort to transform the narrative and negative perceptions of African women and children, Graça Machel, the former first lady of two African nations, recently established a first of its kind Pan African Women in Media Network (WIMN).

    The network of women journalists will work in conjunction with the Graça Machel Trust.

    “The Graça Machel Trust’s Women Rights program is based on our aim to multiply the faces and amplify the voices of women, especially in areas where they are underrepresented,” said Machel, who’s also the founder of the Foundation for Community Development in Mozambique. “Through our women’s networks in agribusiness, finance and ‘Women Creating Wealth,’ we foster links and build a critical mass of highly-qualified and active women across sectors and professions who can work collectively to influence, shape and drive the socio-economic policies to ensure that they achieve economic prosperity and social change.”

    The Graça Machel Trust works across the African continent to amplify women’s movements, influence governance, and advocate for the protection of children’s rights and dignity.

    The Trust consolidates the work of Machel and seeks to build on her legacy by inspiring the younger generation to take up new challenges and create societies that value and care about social justice.

    Machel noted that the primary mission is to amplify the voices of women’s movements, influence governance and promote women’s leadership and contributions in the economic, social, and political development of Africa. The Trust also advocates for the protection of children’s rights and dignity.

    Recognizing the crucial role that media plays in shaping societal attitudes, Machel said it’s important that women are at the center of transformation within the media landscape.

    The new network has also gained the support of the National Newspaper Publishers Association (NNPA), the Black Press that’s comprised of approximately 208 African-American owned newspapers across the United States.

    “The National Newspaper Publishers Association supports and salutes the Graça Machel Trust that effectively empowers African women. When African women are empowered, it results in advancing all African people throughout the world,” said Dr. Benjamin Chavis, the president and CEO of the NNPA.
    “The Diamond Empowerment Fund, co-founded by Russell Simmons, me and others also recognizes the extraordinary global leadership of Graca Machel and the Graca Machel Trust. I vividly remember meeting Graça Machel at her home in Maputo, Mozambique along with her husband South Africa President Nelson Mandela and my colleague Russell Simmons in 2006.” Chavis continued: “We discussed the ongoing struggle and movement to transform Africa for progress and the liberation of all who stand for freedom and equality.”

    Prior to her marriage to Mandela, Machel was the wife of Mozambique President Samora Machel. She also served for more than a decade as that country’s minister of education and culture.

    Machel said that WIMN will drive coordinated messaging and build awareness on issues related to health, education, and women’s economic empowerment, which will have a positive effect on women and children.

    “Given the influential role that media plays in shaping societal attitudes, the network seeks to change the present narrative of women that presents them as powerless victims and ignores the many positive stories and successes,” Machel added. “When economically empowered, women take control of their lives, set their own agendas, provide solutions to their problems and challenges, and develop self-reliance.”

    Machal added: “To build a strong and equitable future for all Africans, we acknowledge the fundamental contribution of women and ensure that we create a supportive and enabling environment where they are able to fully participate and benefit.”

    The network will also create an inter-generational platform to allow young talented female journalists to participate and work alongside the continent’s more seasoned veterans. WIMN will comprise an initial group of about 30 to 40 women journalists, bloggers and influencers, officials said in a statement.

    “Women and children’s issues have tended to make headlines more as victims that are helpless, abused and exploited yet women and children have, over time, been capable of so much more, having overcome many obstacles and excelled in many sectors of the economy and society,” said WIMN board co-chair Susan Makore. “The amazing stories need to find more expression in our media. Therefore, I hope to do my part in ensuring that key stories that highlight and celebrate the various facets of children and women’s activities across all sectors are given prominence in the media by working with my colleagues that run media houses, especially in Zimbabwe where I hail from.”

    Bronwyn Nielsen, the co-chair of the WIMN advisory board, said that Africa’s youth and female dividends are at the core of the continent’s future and, with the right support. “It is a fact the women and children who can positively impact the future from an economic growth and development perspective,” said Nielsen. “I look forward to working with my fellow board members and all the members of this privileged network to jointly leverage our circles of influence under the esteemed guidance of Mrs. Machel to drive this agenda deep across the continent with both speed and passion.”

     

  • Trump International Hotel spray-painted with ‘Black Lives Matter’ message

    By Joe Heim , Washington Post

    graffitti-at-trump-hotel  Message painted on entrance to Trump hotel in Washington, D. C.

     

    D.C. Police are searching for the man who spray-painted the walls in front of a side entrance to the new Trump International Hotel in downtown Washington with political messages late Saturday afternoon.

    The messages – “Black Lives Matter” and “No Justice” (and the word Peace with a line through it) were spray-painted in black. The word “Van” was spray-painted in red below Black Lives Matter.

    A video of a man spray-painting the message spread on social media. In the video, the man can be seen spray-painting the Black Lives Matter message and then trotting down the hotel’s steps and walking across 12th Street, NW.

    A picture of a police officer photographing the graffiti was also widely shared.

    Police were called at 4:03 p.m. Saturday to investigate a report of destruction of private and public property, according to  MPD spokeswoman Aquita Brown. She said police are looking for a male suspect. They are not releasing any other information at this time.

    A spokeswoman for Trump International Hotel declined to comment. By Sunday afternoon, sheets of plywood had been placed in front of the messages and a security guard stood at the top of the steps.

    The $212 million 263-room hotel, located on Pennsylvania Avenue just a few blocks from the White House, opened with much fanfare on Sept. 12. Rooms at the luxury hotel begin at $895 a night. During his presidential campaign, Donald Trump has often remarked that he will run the country the same way that he has run the building of this hotel: ahead of schedule and under budget.

    At a March news conference in the hotel’s lobby, Trump said, “It’s a great thing for the country, it’s a great thing for Washington.”

    Trump’s new Washington monument is a luxury hotel his blue-collar supporters can’t afford.

     

  • With Flint victory, African American lawmakers increase their clout in Congress

     

    By Karoun Demirjian and Mike DeBonis , Washington Post

    black-congressional-caucusMembers of the Black Congressional Caucus speak out on issues, from left are: Rep. Barbara Lee, D-Calif., Rep. Marcia L. Fudge, D-Ohio, Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga., Rep. Frederica Wilson, D-Fla., and Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee, D-Texas. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

    As the country’s first Black president prepares to leave the White House, African-American members of Congress are exerting increasing influence on Capitol Hill.

    The Congressional Black Caucus has emerged as the driving force behind several dramatic standoffs in Washington this year – most recently spurring successful efforts to secure funding for the water crisis in Flint, Mich. as part of a budget deal that sent lawmakers home for the elections.

    “Our minority caucuses do not want to vote for a bill that does not have Flint in it,” House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) told reporters, just hours before striking the deal to secure at least $170 million in Flint funding. “I don’t think our black caucus will vote for it…without Flint.”

    The CBC has always been an influential faction of House Democrats, but its power is rising as Congress struggles to respond to a series of racially charged police shootings of African-Americans around the country.  The 43-member caucus — which includes only one Republican, Utah Rep. Mia Love — now intends to capitalize on that influence to force action on issues of importance to black Americans.

    In addition to pushing the budget to the brink over Flint funding, CBC leaders like Rep. John Lewis (D-Ga.) helped organize a nationally televised sit-in in June demanding votes on gun control legislation.

                “The extent to which you get agreement on Flint essentially means that we are educating our caucus” of House Democrats, said Rep. Jim Clyburn (S.C.), the House’s No. 3 Democrat. “I will use that success, to show we have not just zeroed in on this, in the next Congress.”

    Clyburn said that despite the incidents playing out across the country, and the racially-charged language that has taken over the debate surrounding it, the country is better off than it was when Obama took office.

    “President Obama took the baton from us, and now he’s about to give it back,” Clyburn said. “He’s handing the baton to us with the country in a much better place than it was when we handed it to him.”

    Black lawmakers trace the current upswing in influence to a bitter debate over allowing Confederate flags on federal grounds forced Republicans to yank a spending bill off the House floor.

    New York Democrat Hakeem Jeffries called that episode, and the 25-hour sit-in over gun control, “probably the two most dramatic moments that we’ve had in the House since the government shutdown” in 2013.

                Rep. Emanuel Cleaver (D-Mo.), a former CBC chair, said that the House leadership is taking notice of the group’s increased clout.

    “The leadership is far more sensitive on the issue of inclusion and making sure that everybody’s voice counts than in previous times here in Congress,” Cleaver said. “So it’s not like ‘Oh, here they come again.’ It was like: ‘We know you guys are interested and we want you to come up and talk.’”

    Black lawmakers are also responding to a political atmosphere in which GOP presidential nominee Donald Trump charged that Black Lives Matter protests are driving the killings by police and said that black communities are “in the worst shape they’ve ever been.”

    And they’ve spoken out, loudly, when some of their colleagues — most recently North Carolina Republican Rep. Robert Pittenger — have made racially inept remarks. In televised comments to the BBC, Pittenger said that black protesters “hate white people” — comments that CBC members called “ignorant” and “beyond the pale.”

    CBC Chairman G.K. Butterfield (D-N.C.) said last week that Pittenger had personally and sincerely “apologized multiple times” for what he said, and that the CBC is “ready to move on.”

                But the episode, as well as the legislative muscle the CBC has been flexing, illustrate a key element of the group’s strategy.

    “When we are united we are a force to be reckoned with,” said Butterfield said.

    Members say being in the House minority has made it easier for Democrats to band together. “We don’t control either body here, and we’ve been forced to work better together,” Clyburn said. “As a result, I think you’ve seen some better results.”

    Black lawmakers said they now intend to focus on economic solutions in other majority-black cities. They said their next fights will be for resources to expand access to housing, education, and the sort of community revitalization programs that attract business, tax dollars, and better water, sewage, roads and bridges as a result.

    Clyburn expressed optimism that such changes were within reach, pointing to recent bipartisan support for a CBC-championed anti-poverty plan, which Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton and House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) have both endorsed.

    But in order to expand their influence, Clyburn and other CBC members are acutely aware that their challenge is to convince their colleagues that the issues that matter to African-Americans should matter to all Americans.

    Poverty, they believe, is an area where that should be an easy sell. “We have had the kind of experiences like the people in Flint, so we can personalize this stuff in a way that a lot of other members can’t,” Clyburn said. “But it’s time for us to get beyond this color business…this is not about black communities, this is about needy communities.”

    White communities in places like Kentucky and West Virginia are just as economically bad if not worse off than many poor black communities, Clyburn pointed out. Two-thirds of poor counties in America are represented by Republicans, he added, expressing frustration that “the moment you start talking about poverty, the face of poverty’s always black.”

     

  • Harry Belafonte is really concerned about Trump supporters

    By: Brennan Williams Pop Culture Editor, The Huffington Post

    harry-belafonte-on-trump Harry Belafonte on CNN

     

    During Saturday’s episode of “CNN Newsroom with Fredricka Whitfield,” the legendary entertainer shared his latest thoughts on this year’s election.

    Harry Belafonte, who initially endorsed Bernie Sanders during the primary season, has shifted his support to Hillary Clinton.

    The legendary entertainer appeared on Saturday’s episode of “CNN Newsroom with Fredricka Whitfield” and shared his thoughts on the election season, including his concern over Donald Trump’s number of supporters.

    “I think America sits at its most critical space I’ve every known our country to be,” he said to Whitfield. “I think it’s one thing to flippantly dismiss Donald Trump as some phenomena or some peculiar phenomena. I think Americans think of him very seriously. I’m not as concerned about him and the distortions of his character, as I have about the fact that obviously 13 million people have declared themselves committed to his ideology, and committed to his philosophy. That’s a big number.”

    When asked what impact he thinks the election will have on the current climate, Belafonte summed it up when he said there’s no “ambivalence” between the ideologies of the two candidates.

    Well. He’s right about that.