Chadwick Moore:
“…In 2014, America’s progressives got a wake-up call. That year, the midterm elections returned the largest Republican majority to the House of Representatives since 1928. President Barack Obama had, by the middle of his second term, proved an ineffective or unwilling conduit for the radical transformation they’d been promised. The hope and change president, whose rhetoric breathed life into the decaying Marxism in America’s cultural institutions, had been a failure. With a new Republican Congress, any last hopes that Obama would accomplish anything significant were dashed.
In the brownstone-lined streets of Park Slope, Brooklyn, however, the progressive flame burned on. Brad Lander, the New York City councilman who succeeded Bill de Blasio to represent Park Slope, had long before realized that Democratic domination in Washington would never lead to radical transformation. On the federal level, there would always be pushback from moderates and red America. So, in 2012, he began mobilizing progressive city leaders across the country to explore what might be accomplished at the local level.
That year Local Progress was born, a national network of far-left activists that today operates in hundreds of locations in 46 states under the umbrella of the Center for Popular Democracy. It has been a model for dozens of similar groups with shadowy funding protected by the rules of a 501(c)(4) nonprofit. Its mission is to scout, fund and insert progressive activists into municipal governments, and it is very good at it…
…The result has been a shift of power into the hands of city leaders who behave more like aloof 17th-century monarchs or smarmy jetsetting televangelists than the 21st-century CEOs their cities desperately need. In a few short years, this new class of leadership has wreaked immense havoc. The gap between the priorities of municipal chiefs and the people they represent couldn’t be starker. The consequence is that America’s once-great cities are dying, their alabaster gleam replaced by a Third World patina…
…Progressive local leaders busy themselves with PC abstractions as their cities fall apart. As San Francisco drowns in human feces, city government pushes through a law to change the term ‘convicted felon’ to ‘justice-involved person’. In Seattle, a city councilman is raising alarm that the pressure washers used to clean human feces from the courthouse steps are reminiscent of water cannons deployed against Civil Rights marchers, and therefore racist. As New York’s subways transform into mobile homeless shelters, the city overhauls the network’s PA system, ordering the gender-neutral greeting ‘Hello, everyone’ to replace ‘Attention ladies and gentlemen’. Dallas law enforcement will no longer prosecute theft of ‘necessary items’, claiming it ‘criminalizes poverty’. Meanwhile, violent crime continues to explode in Chicago, St Louis and Baltimore…
…I’ve spent many years living in poor, mostly black areas of New York City, and my neighbors have always been more open minded about the GOP than your average conservative in Kansas might expect. They do not think you’re irredeemably evil if you’re a Republican. That’s because they don’t listen to white liberals, as no one should. Many of my neighbors today even seem, dare I say it, Trump-curious.
If there were ever a time to shake up the left’s union of socialist city-states, it is the 2020 campaign. No one should expect Los Angeles or Chicago to be painted red anytime soon. But the Democratic platform is shaping up to be so repulsive and the effects of its urban tyranny becoming so clear that the Republican party ought to make city reform central to its message next year…”