It's been a few days since I made my last post. The last thing I wrote on here was my Juneteenth post, so three days ago. That was my eighth day in a row writing a blog post, and for the past few days I haven't been writing because I haven't really had much to write about. I've been stressed out a lot recently, both with the world issues like the pandemic, the crisis in Yemen, the continued white supremacy and oppression in America, etc. It's hard to think of a blog post, political or not, when your brain is just focusing on stuff like that. I can't even write about that stuff because it feels too heavy for me to come here every other day with a post about how the world's on fire and you should be scared. It's funny that I'm writing this at all, because I know people aren't going to read it, and it's not like anybody was waiting, wondering why I haven't updated my blog. In a lot of ways, this is just something for me to do, like a journal where I can store my thoughts or express them in a way that is helpful to me or to others. It's kind of like screaming into the void. Of course, I appreciate it when people do read this, and I frequently check my blogger stats, thrilled when there's a higher number of readers than I expected and disappointed when the number's low, but if nobody reads this, I still need to post here for myself. Writing is therapeutic to me, and it's the thing that has always sort of come naturally to me, (sorry if that sounds arrogant) but sometimes the world is so messed up and my brain is so twisted into knots that writing makes the knots even tighter, and I need to relax. So here I am, trying to squeeze content out of the fact that I haven't been producing content. Genius. Anyways, I have ideas for more blog posts coming soon, including a review of a Netflix show I just finished, and I needed to write something just to prove to myself that I could.
Recently, high-profile Democrats have come out against the slogan of "Defund the Police". Obama recently said that it's a bad slogan because it caused the Democrats to lose support and it's "divisive". I've been seeing a lot of Democrats complaining that the slogan is somehow "unclear" or could easily be misconstrued. I've seen other slogans be floated, most commonly "Reform the Police". The idea is that a slogan like that is more honest, more easily attainable, and less divisive. However, the criticisms from prominent liberals aren't backed by anything of value. First off, Obama doesn't like "Defund the Police", not because he's worried about it being divisive, but because he is against the idea. Barack Obama, and the Democrats as a whole, are pro-police. They are pro-cop and they are pro giving the cops more money. Biden even ran on increasing police budgets, showing that it isn't an issue of messagin...
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