here s what i find fascinating. all the language you guys are using grows from a vocabulary built up over time but is quite specialized as vocab. people learn new terms like intersectional. it seems like there s an organizing challenge of someone like i don t like donald trump, i don t know what intersectional means, i don t know the history of this struggle but i m feeling like i need to be on the streets but you re judging me because i don t know the vocabulary. does that make sense? we re in what we call the woke olympics, right? what is the most radical woke politics? so we have to start speaking in language supporting donald trump, if you go all the way around, that s the most woke. absolutely not. i will fight you. but that is that strikes me as a challenge. i think it s about having personal conversations. you don t have to engage on a gender studies level to talk to
this is privilege that you cannot go to work. and it was an ahistorical critique because this comes out of labor strikes from the early 1900s, from immigrant women across the country but it comes out of black women s history of critiquing capitalism. here s what i find fascinating. all the language you guys are using grows from a vocabulary built up over time but is quite specialized as vocab. people learn new terms like intersectional. it seems like there s an organizing challenge of someone like i don t like donald trump, i don t know what intersectional means, i don t know the history of this struggle but i m feeling like i need to be on the streets but you re judging me because i don t know the vocabulary. does that make sense? we re in what we call the woke olympics, right? what is the most radical woke politics? so we have to start speaking in language supporting donald trump, if you go all the way around,
sorts of the democratic party? i don t think it s a rebranding, but i think it s taking a series of messages we ve had directly to individuals and tying them together. dr. martin luther king s doctor just spoke and she talked about a hole in the boat. i think that s the sort of thing we re talking a lot about. i campaigned a lot in wisconsin. there are a lot of people tied to the auto industry. there are certainly more in michigan. we didn t do a good enough job of talking about the fact that when the auto industry was collapsing, the republican party fought the saving of the auto industry. there are 20 million people in this country who have health care who may lose it right now, but they ve primarily, many of them voted for trump. that s a communications and organizing challenge. we didn t do that well enough. i also think, you know, there s a lot wrong with donald trump, but the key is you vote for people and the democrats have been doing i think the right things, but i think we n