Radio Blue Heart is on the air!

Nov 27

twistcmyk:

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fuckyeahguns-ig:
“@archangel7.62
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#zastava
https://www.instagram.com/p/CMAoInUF0Bq/?igshid=1c8rloos707z0
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fuckyeahguns-ig:

@archangel7.62
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#zastava

https://www.instagram.com/p/CMAoInUF0Bq/?igshid=1c8rloos707z0

commiemania:

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A Red Army soldier smashes a poster with the image of Adolf Hitler in liberated Gatchina with a rifle butt.

January, 1944.

commiemania:

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Alexandra Samusenko, participant in the Battle of Kursk, commander of a platoon of T-34 tanks.

By Anatolii Pavlovich Morozov, 1943.

Opinion | A Personal Apology to Young Americans for Failing to Stop Ronald Reagan -

contemplatingoutlander:

ms-cellanies:

THIS IS WORTH READING for those of you who missed it the 1st time I posted it.  Once again Thom Hartmann calls it like it is.  

REAGAN & HIS ADMINISTRATION BEGAN THE CHRISTOFASCIST REPUBLIKKKAN PARTY’S INTENTION TO ANNIHILATE DEMOCRACY.  The treasonous policies have continued to escalate since Ronnie Raygun was elected.  

Great article by Thom Hartmann (whose articles are always worth reading). Hartmann argues that Reagan’s deregulatory, uber-free market, pro-corporate, anti-labor, anti-higher education, and/or low taxation for the rich policies ultimately contributed to: 

  1. Greater generational income inequality. “Boomers in their 30s [in  1990] owned 21.3 [%] of the nation’s wealth,” whereas “Millennials in their 30s today own 4.6% of the nation’s wealth.” 
  2. Wage stagnation. This occurred because of “right to work” anti-union laws enacted in Republican controlled states. Of the 27 states that have passed these laws, 23 are below the mean U.S. household income, 8 are in the poorest national quintile (state rankings of 41-50), 6 are in the second poorest national quintile (state rankings of 31-40), and 9 are in the third poorest national quintile (state rankings of 21-30). 
  3. Increased student loan debt and inability to wipe out debt via bankruptcy. Reagan led the way as governor of California in cutting aid to public higher education and in putting an end to “free tuition” at the University of California. “As president, [Reagan] began the methodical process of eliminating federal and state support for [college] tuition.”  Furthermore, in a massive GOP “gift” to banking, people can no longer “discharge student loans through bankruptcy.”
  4. Price gouging (which contributes to inflation). “In 1983, President Reagan ordered the federal government to stop enforcing the anti-trust laws,” resulting in “merger mania,” which allowed for the growth of huge monopolies that “crushed” small businesses, including startups, and allowed for price gouging with impunity.
  5. Increased individual medical debt (and bankruptcies), increased spending on healthcare, and lower life expectancy in the U.S. compared with other developed nations. This all occurred because the “Reagan Revolution” encouraged the end of state “nonprofit requirements” for “health insurance companies and hospitals,” to be replaced by “free market principles.” 
  6. Excessive pharmaceutical prices. Because of the “Reagan Revolution,” drug companies were allowed to become “monopolistic monoliths” that could charge whatever they wanted for drugs.
  7. Excessive housing costs. The GOP Congress under New Gingrich “’deregulated’ the financial industry.” That’s why today “trillion-dollar hedge funds and investment groups are purchasing as many as half…of the available-for-sale housing, so they can turn them into rentals and then, when they’ve cornered the market, jack up the prices.”
  8. A large “transfer of real wealth” to the “top 1%.” “Reagan dropped the top income tax rate on the morbidly rich from 74% down to 27%, and cut corporate tax rates from 50% to functionally nothing […] This 42-year-long process, with Reagan’s original massive tax cuts amplified by trillions more in tax cuts for the morbidly rich from the George W. Bush and Donald Trump administrations, has produced a $50 trillion transfer of real wealth from the middle class to the top 1%.”

Hartmann also describes other ways that Republicans since Reagan have continued to destroy our nation (and in terms of climate change, potentially the planet):

Still, Hartmann tried to end this depressing narrative  of the “Reagan Revolution” legacy on a positive note. 

The good news, however, is that, increasingly, [Boomers and Millennials] are working together to throw Republicans out of office and elect progressive Democrats who understand these issues and know how to do something about it.

From the 80-year-old Senator Bernie Sanders to 19-year-old progressive candidate for the Ohio House Sam Lawrence… progressives are growing in political power at the same time America is waking up from the fog of bullshit Republicans have been crop-dusting over us since 1981.

All is not lost; change is in the air.

Get out there. Get active. Tag, we’re it!

________________________

[My only objection to this article is that Hartmann doesn’t tell the full story about Boomers and Reagan. He neglects to point out that a large percentage of Boomers (like myself) never voted for Reagan in 1980 or in 1984. Reagan was more popular in 1980 with the older Silent and Greatest generations. In fact, in the 1980 election, most Boomers (unlike the two older generations) were evenly divided between Carter and Reagan. Furthermore, the youngest Boomers weren’t yet old enough to vote in 1980. However, that changed in the 1984 election, when a majority of Boomers voted for Reagan. Still, about 41% of us (including myself) voted for Mondale. Many of us Boomers realized that Reagan was bad news. So please don’t blame all the Boomers for Reagan’s awful legacy.

(via vomitpinata)

(via leatherfaceologist)

videoreligion:
“Hitch-Hike (1977)
”

videoreligion:

Hitch-Hike (1977)

rick6919:

rick6919:

rick6919: