but the more he goes to the center, the more he s going to alienate that trump base that he would need to cut into, the more he goes toward the base. and we have already seen this with him. he alienates the big donors he needs to make himself viable and alienates the moderates that you were talking about, the people who were anti trump voters who wanted to go to him and now think that he has been too extreme. so, we are watching this in realtime, but there is not a lot of oxygen on the republican side if you are not donald trump. you know what else there isn t a lot of? time. reed, you have worked on campaigns. what in the world is a going to be like for trump and his team to manage all of these court dates and a campaign? well, you see it s a good question, stephanie, because here s the thing. these campaigns have always been a disaster. his 2016 campaign, though he won, was probably the worst managed campaign in living memory. 2020 was bad. remember, they were basically out o
more he goes toward the base. and we have already seen this with him. he alienates the big donors he needs to make himself viable and alienates the moderates that you were talking about, the people who were anti trump voters who wanted to go to him and now think that he has been too extreme. so, we are watching this in realtime, but there is not a lot of oxygen on the republican side if you are not donald trump. you know what else there isn t a lot of? time. reed, you have worked on campaigns. what in the world is a going to be like for trump and his team to manage all of these court dates and a campaign? well, you see it s a good question, stephanie, because here s the thing. these campaigns have always been a disaster. his 2016 campaign, though he won, was probably the worst managed campaign in living memory. 2020 was bad. remember, they were basically out of money by october. and this one will be just as bad. now, you ve got people like chris loss of eta and susie wildes who
what is happening here. black people in the south, they didn t want us to go to school because they knew that education was a path to freedom and change. they lost that battle, thank goodness. now, they don t want education to include our stories, which is, in some ways, a more frightening form of erasure. the dial that happens is dangerous. it is a regression. we know well that denying the abject massive scale tragedy what happened in the ghettos, cattle cars and toxic chambers of germany and poland in the 1930s and 40s in living memory, and emmett till s would be living memory, would be dangerous for democracy and for humanity. denying the abject massive tragedy of what happened in the delays of middle passage both in the fields and barnes and lynching trees of the southern united states in the middle of the last century, it is, in my
past. we have to keep a record of what is happening here. black people in the south, they didn t want us to go to school because they knew that education was a path to freedom and change. they lost that battle, thank goodness. now, they don t want education to include our stories, which is, in some ways, a more frightening form of erasure. the denial that happens is dangerous. it is a regression. we know well that denying the abject massive scale tragedy of what happened in the ghettos, cattle cars and toxic chambers of germany and poland in the 1930s and 40s in living memory, and emmett till s would be living memory, is ugly and dangerous for democracy and for humanity. denying the abject massive tragedy of what