I’m not sure what you blue dots in red seas want to do with this, but judging from what you’re saying on our blog today, it at least seems like you all had ought to meet each other. Personally, I’m hoping you’ll keep sending us news and pictures and stuff from where you live. Tell us what you’re working on and what you’re seeing, and we can keep blogging it.
For now, some of your comments on the blog:
I’m a dem in Tarrant county as well! I wrote a DailyKos diary last week that got a bunch of eyeballs, to my surprise: Stop & Think Before You Tell Texas to Leave.
What we need is SUPPORT. I am advocating for a “No Seat Unchallenged” drive for 2014. There’s no reason we can’t start challenging ensconced tea partiers and gerrymanderers. In my old town, we were stuck with an incredibly mediocre tea party dude and we *never* challenged him, despite that our town went blue for Obama.
Dems not only need a 50 state strategy for winning; they also need a 50 state strategy for governing. It does no good, in the long-run, to accept our time and money, but then throw us under the bus when it’s convenient.
Try living in Kansas, surrounded on all sides by ultra conservatives, and being a progressive or liberal. We even have a town named Liberal, how ironic is that? It is extremely frustrating and irritating to be completely overrun with right wing extremists and bible thumpers. Then there is the national disgrace of Westboro Baptist pitching their tent in Kansas. The electoral college is no help either, because it assures us that liberals are completely disenfranchised. Kansas marches unimpeded into the 18th century.
Despite the same-sex marriage defeat this year, and the state government being firmly Republican now, I’m still hopeful for North Carolina. The blue dots are more like ink blots, and growing, since they congregate in urban, university-heavy areas. And the coalitions forged during the Amendment 1 fight are holding and becoming stronger. Don’t write off North Carolina as just another redneck holdout. There is much more to this state than old stereotypes can describe.








