From The Progressive <[email protected]>
Subject Watching approaching events, standing on the past
Date January 18, 2025 5:12 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
View this email in your browser ([link removed])

Dear Progressive Reader,

As I watch the preparations for Monday’s second Inauguration of Donald Trump as President, I can’t help but think of the images, shown repeatedly on the news last March, of the container ship MW Dali as it lost power and slowly drifted toward the Francis Scott Key bridge in Baltimore, Maryland. While it was clear that something awful was about to happen, it had really become inevitable and the only thing possible was to try and get as many people as possible off the bridge before they were injured or killed. Today it seems that everyone can see the inevitability of bad things occurring during the incoming Trump Administration (he has been telling us about his plans for months), but the slowly moving, heavily laden ship cannot be halted in the short term.

The Inauguration ceremony has now been moved indoors due to cold weather forecast for Washington, D.C., on Monday. In someways the change will benefit Trump, who is ever-concerned about crowd size. Even though Barack Obama’s 2008 Inauguration featured similar temperatures ([link removed]) , it garnered crowds much larger ([link removed]) than Trump’s 2016 event. This year, the comparisons will more likely be focussed on Ronald Reagan’s second Inauguration in 1985 (the last time an Inauguration ceremony was moved indoors due to weather). Like Reagan, Trump has been described ([link removed]) as one of the most influential political figures of his century. And similar to Reagan ([link removed]) in 1981 ([link removed]) , it appears that Trump is
anxiously hoping for television images of the release of hostages (this time Israeli hostages) to coincide with his acceptance speech (during which he is sure to claim credit for the just-agreed ceasefire deal ([link removed]) in the war against Gaza).

The final agreement for this ceasefire (actually an initial six-week truce ([link removed]) ) has raised further questions about why President Joe Biden was unable to push this deal through last May when the same terms ([link removed]) were first put on the table. Since that time, more than seven months ago, thousands ([link removed]) (perhaps tens of thousands ([link removed]) ) of additional lives have been lost. This discontinuity is fueling ([link removed]) anger and frustration with the outgoing President who is working hard to secure his legacy
([link removed]) in his final days in office.

I and others ([link removed]) have compared Biden to President Lyndon Johnson, whose very significant domestic policy achievements were significantly obscured by his foreign policy actions in the increase of the U.S. war in Vietnam. Like Johnson, Biden stepped aside from the presidential campaign in 2024, handing the role to his sitting Vice President, Kamala Harris, who would ultimately lose to a Republican challenger. Stephen Zunes this week makes another comparison. “Both administrations,” he writes ([link removed]) , “supported unconditional military aid to far rightwing governments engaging in major war crimes while denying and downplaying major human rights abuses. Both administrations vetoed otherwise-unanimous U.N. Security Council resolutions seeking to end deadly conflicts. Both administrations
attacked the credibility of reputable human rights organizations and the International Court of Justice when they tried to uphold international humanitarian law. Both administrations refused to condition military aid to the recipients’ adherence to these principles. Both of their foreign affairs policies were opposed by most U.S. allies as well as a majority of the American people.”

Elsewhere on our website this week, Nourdine Shnino reports ([link removed]) from Gaza that “Despite the recent ceasefire agreement, hunger and malnutrition remain acute for thousands of families in Gaza;” Melinda Tuhus describes ([link removed]) the preparations to defend immigrants in one Connecticut city for Trump’s anticipated deportation efforts; and Dave Zirin talks about ([link removed]) his recent trip to Puerto Rico where the current power outages form a backdrop to memories of the humanitarian icon Roberto Clemente. Plus, Emma Lucía Llano provides an update ([link removed]) on union organizing by Amazon
workers; Glenn Sacks shares his own personal story ([link removed]) about the health care giant UnitedHealth; and John Thompson raises the curtain ([link removed]) on an “education reform” group founded by the former Florida Governor Jeb Bush that is seeking to influence education policy in the new Trump Administration. Also, Karen Dolan of the Institute for Policy Studies pens an op-ed ([link removed]) on the ways Trump’s promises will become betrayals; David Helvarg opines on ([link removed]) how rising ocean temperatures have fueled the California fires; and James Hassett explains
([link removed]) that improvements to the power grid are key to a clean energy transition.

Monday is the national holiday honoring the birth of the Reverend Martin Luther King Jr. As I wrote ([link removed]) in 2018, the road to that holiday was a long one. King wrote numerous ([link removed]) times ([link removed]) for The Progressive over the years of his short life (he was assassinated at the age of thirty-nine), but it was his work in his final year that was most provocative and often least remembered. As Rann Miller wrote last year ([link removed]) , the “ongoing attempts by conservatives to remold King’s legacy are rooted in cognitive dissonance. They feign a reverence for King’s words and mission as they labor to enact inhumane immigration policies, roll back health care protections, undermine Black history and the teaching of it,
and erode the Voting Rights Act, which King was instrumental in pushing for.” An important book published in 2019 by Sylvie Laurent examines ([link removed]) King’s final year and his radical economic agenda. “King’s interracial Poor People’s Campaign offered an alternative to the facile dichotomy between social and economic justice,” Laurent concludes. “It was an attempt to anchor poverty in the realm of universalism and a demand for cultural recognition. It was race- and ethnic-conscious as well as class-conscious. It refused to choose between economic equality and specific anti-discrimination demands.”

Finally, with sadness we note the passing ([link removed]) of Chicago activist José "Cha Cha" Jiménez. Jiménez was the founder of the Young Lords organization, modeled on the Black Panthers. Jiménez was also a key figure in the development of the first “rainbow coalition” in Chicago that brought together Black, Latinx, and Appalachian white activists in a coalition of unity around social and political issues in their community. The story of Jiménez and Black Panther Party leader Fred Hampton is depicted ([link removed]) in the 2021 film Judas and the Black Messiah ([link removed]) and told in greater depth in the excellent 2019 independent film
The First Rainbow Coalition ([link removed]) by Ray Santisteban which aired on PBS ([link removed]) five years ago this coming week.

Please keep reading, and we will keep bringing you important articles on these and other issues of our time.

Sincerely,
Norman Stockwell
Publisher

P.S. - The new 2025 Hidden History of the United States calendar is now available. You can order one online and have it mailed to you. Don’t miss a minute of the “hidden history” of 2025. Just go to indiepublishers.shop ([link removed]) , and while you are there, checkout some of our other great offerings as well. There is still time to get your items delivered for the holidays.

P.P.S. – If you like this newsletter, please consider forwarding it to a friend. If you know someone who would like to subscribe to this free weekly email, please share this link: [link removed].

P.P.P.S. – If you don’t already subscribe to The Progressive in print or digital form, please consider doing so today ([link removed]) . Also, if you have a friend or relative who you feel should hear from the many voices for progressive change within our pages, please consider giving a gift subscription ([link removed]) .

P.P.P.P.S. – Thank you so much to everyone who has already donated to support The Progressive! We need you now more than ever. If you have not done so already, please take a moment to support hard-hitting, independent reporting on issues that matter to you. Your donation today will keep us on solid ground and will help us continue to grow in the coming years. You can use the wallet envelope in the current issue of the magazine, or click on the “Donate” button below to join your fellow progressives in sustaining The Progressive as a voice for peace, social justice, and the common good.
Donate ([link removed])

============================================================
** Twitter ([link removed])
** Facebook ([link removed])
** Website ([link removed])
Copyright © 2025 The Progressive, Inc.

P.O. Box 1021 • Madison, Wisconsin 53701 • (608) 257-4626

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can ** update your preferences ([link removed])
or ** unsubscribe from this list ([link removed])
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis