Simon Greer

Here are 9 simple ways to practice 'radical neighboring' while maintaining social distance

As we create “social distance” to protect ourselves and our loved ones and “flatten the curve,” we are also facing fear.

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'Trump’s divisiveness will soon be over': How Biden converts progressive values into mainstream support

Former Vice President Joe Biden’s stunning Super Tuesday victory, in which he swept at least nine of 14 states, has been attributed mostly to a variety of important tactical developments. These include South Carolina Congressman Jim Clyburn’s endorsement, leading to the momentum producing a blowout victory in South Carolina, and the consolidation of moderate candidates such as Pete Buttigieg and Amy Klobuchar behind Biden.

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Many progressives have a conservative belief system — can we all come together?

It’s part of my regular commute, but I continue to draw inspiration as I drive into Manhattan’s Midtown tunnel and read the words E Pluribus Unum minted on the giant golden door of the newly renovated tunnel. To me, it means that through our individual uniqueness and our diverse, different traditions, a whole cloth can be made—but the distinctiveness of each (individual and group) thread is allowed to flourish. By stitching these fabrics together, the beauty of each particular tradition is more visible.

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This key element is missing from progressive politics

When George W. Bush coined the term “compassionate conservatism,” it sounded like an oxymoron to many of us who had lived through the harsh and unforgiving conservatism of the ’80s and ’90s. It sounded disingenuous. Ideas like compassion, forgiveness and redemption were more typically associated with progressives and liberals. Their rhetoric was very much influenced and informed by the faithful inspiration of the civil rights movement, and these ideas were abundant.

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Why it matters that the spirit of love is missing from progressive politics

When George W. Bush coined the term “compassionate conservatism,” it sounded like an oxymoron to many of us who had lived through the harsh and unforgiving conservatism of the ’80s and ’90s. It sounded disingenuous. Ideas like compassion, forgiveness and redemption were more typically associated with progressives and liberals. Their rhetoric was very much influenced and informed by the faithful inspiration of the civil rights movement, and these ideas were abundant.

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Is there common ground on the immigration debate between conservatives and progressives?

The divides in America aren’t just a media creation, or expressions at the ballot box. They exist at the values level—and they can be hard to swallow if the values aren’t yours. But understanding others’ values is a key to breaking through our divided politics.

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The surprising stereotype is actually an obstacle to reforming America’s incarceration crisis

The American criminal justice system is broken. On this, most Americans agree, regardless of their political leanings. President Trump’s announcement that he supports a moderate bipartisan incarceration reform bill moving through Congress, called the First Step Act, was met with Van Jones’ enthusiastic applause.

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Here's How We Can Create a Common-Good Politics

Way back in 2004, I was in Ohio in the run-up to that year’s presidential election. I had a chance to talk to a woman who was one of the undecided “values voters” who would become folklore among political strategists and pundits in the ensuing years.

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Should Progressives Demonize or Try to Find Common Ground With 60 Million People Dealing With Economic Anxiety Who Vote for Racist Politicians?

In a recent conversation with a friend, I yet again found myself grappling with an opinion shared by many liberals: that Trump supporters are motivated not by “economic anxiety,” but by sheer racism. This notion is now quite widespread, having been passed around and repeated until it’s treated like received wisdom. The reality is, while race is always at play in the United States, it’s simply inaccurate to reduce 60 million Americans to racist voters. Treating them as such will prove ineffective in advancing Democrats’ electoral goals, and is also dangerous to the entire project of turning our country around.

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The Democratic Party Should Adopt These 4 Priorities to Win Back Blue-Collar Voters

Recent coverage of Ohio’s leading Democrats, Sherrod Brown and Richard Cordray, has shown a pattern of Democrats trying to return to their blue-collar roots and talking about bread-and-butter economics—issues like retirement security—as a way to gain traction in the run-up to the 2018 elections. By juxtaposing truly populist ideas against a number of the economic policies that the Trump administration is advancing, these and other Democrats hope to gain ground with white working-class voters, among others.

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Here's Why Florida’s Possible Next Governor Andrew Gillum Has a Winning Message for Democrats

Andrew Gillum’s campaign for governor of Florida and his recent victory in that state’s Democratic primary have gained national attention, but not always the right kind. Gillum, who is African-American, is being heralded by President Obama, national Democratic Party donors and leaders, and thousands of inspired supporters as a true progressive who can re-activate the Obama coalition. His progressive views on climate change, gun violence prevention and abuses by ICE are held up as evidence that he is the kind of Democrat who can excite the base and lead us into the future.

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The Subtleties of Donald Trump's Demagoguery

In reflecting on last week’s State of the Union it is important to remember that there were calls, going into it, for Trump to be presidential and the script was written, on the surface, to provide exactly that. He delivered a common ground, bi-partisan, coming together veneer that his advisers believe might take some wind out of the sails of the resistance and also appeal to the independents who have been abandoning the Trump ship over the last year.

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The Stain of Anti-Semitism at the White House Isn't Going Away

What is it with President Trump and anti-Semitism? He kicked off his inauguration with a sermon by pastor Robert Jeffress, who has declared that Jews are going to hell. Just one week in, the administration marked Holocaust Remembrance Day without once mentioning Jews. He is harboring Sebastian Gorka – a frequent associate of Hungary’s anti-Semitic far right – on his national security staff. And who could forget Sean Spicer's claim – during Passover no less – that Hitler never used "gas on his own people" like Syrian President Assad had?

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Union and Conservative, Better Together

In the current New York Times Saturday Review piece, The Decline of Unions and the Rise of Trump, author Neil Gross begins to explore some important questions about the white working class and unions. He points out that unions have lost the presence they once had in our society and names the political implications of that change. Yet it is also true that what still happens inside the life of a union is vital for forging the politics of our future and countering the worst elements of what is afoot today.

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10 Political Wonders of the World

When you search “wonders of the world,” there is no shortage of lists that come up. There are natural wonders, scientific wonders and man-made wonders; lists of seven, lists of ten and lists of 100. When you search “political wonders of the world,” however, there is nothing but a chaotic mess of images: pyramids of presidents and greetings from people in faraway places.

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What Americans Can Learn From the British About Setting a Religious Vision For Change

(RNS) Nearly three months before the U.K.’s general election, the bishops of the Church of England are trying to frame the vision and values that should guide their country.

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Channeling Our National Fascination with 'Hunger Games' Into America's Real Rampant Economic and Social Inequality

Last week, AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka and a dozen other labor leaders shared selfies showing themselves giving a three-finger salute. If you’re asking yourself what a three-finger salute is, you probably weren’t one of the millions of people who packed theaters this weekend to see The Hunger Games: Catching Fire.

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Watch This Video and You May Have Some of Your Beliefs About Religion Challenged

Editor's Note: An Evangelical leader who found his calling in the Civil Rights movement? A Pentecostal pastor organizing against mass incarceration?  Far from the monolith the media portrays, Evangelicals aren’t all right-wingers and fundamentalists. They are diverse, complex, and undergoing change. Many are fighting for justice. 

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What Government Does for You

“Government, keep your hands off my Medicare!”

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D'oh! What We Don't Know About the White Working-Class

Remember Archie Bunker, the bigot everyone could relate to? He created and conformed to our expectations.

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