Though there is much in this exchange to discuss, I'll limit myself to a 
correction on a peripheral point: it wasn't Mao that sent in the army. It was 
Deng. As long as we're on the issue of how the US is perceived, how homogenous 
or heterogeneous it is, &ct, I think it's not such a small thing to correctly 
note a detail about an event (the '89 social movement) that fundamentally shook 
a country with almost twice the population of the US and the EU combined, and 
produced world-changing economic and ecological repercussions.

With you in the political fever,

Dan w.


-- 

Resident Artist, 18th Street Arts Center
IG: type_rounds_1968
danswang.xyz

‐‐‐‐‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐‐‐‐‐
On Tuesday, October 6, 2020 9:30 PM, Keith Sanborn <[email protected]> wrote:

We have even seen those actions in the street here, though more as provocation 
than as dissent. Mao, Lukashenko, Andrew Jackson, and Trump sent in the Army. 
Putin perfers poison. The point is: we, as citizens of the United States, have 
a responsibility to cut off the link between Trump and the Army and the Supreme 
Court as soon as possible and the most direct route at the moment is the 
election in a month. Maybe Covid will help in its own special way, if roid-rage 
doesn't buoy Trump up until the election.
>


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