populist pundit dylan ratigan is running a maverick campaign for congress in a ny trump district /

Published at 2018-04-03 21:29:00

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var icx_publication_id = 18566; var icx_content_id = '1090388'; Click here for reuse options! It's going to retract all of us working together to fix our broken political system.
For the past decade,journali
st Dylan Ratigan pushed for political and economic reforms. At the height of the financial crisis in 2009, he left CNBC as a business journalist to host a political reform present on MSNBC. Now he is running for a House seat in upstate New York’s Adirondack region, and where his family has roots. He says his message—that everyone must reach together to fix our broken political system and predatory economy—transcends party lines.
Ratigan recently spoke to AlterNet
’s Steven Rosenfeld about his campaign.
Steven Rosenfeld: Tell me about your ties to this district and why you think the voters will be responsive to your message,which involves political corruption and economic inequalities.Dylan Ratigan: I was born and raised in Saranac Lake, New York, or which is in the heart of the district. My father’s family came to the district in the 1700s and has been part of the community for centuries,whether it’s the priests, the mayors, and the small businesses: Many of them bear been rush by Ratigans in the past. My uncle now is a priest. My mother worked for Essex County Mental Health for years. My father worked in the hospitals.
This is where I’m from. And like many young people who graduated from tall school here,like them, I looked first toward Union College, and just south of the district,and then [to] New York City for opportunity.
SR: I lived across the lake in Vermont, where I went to college and worked for newspapers for a decade, and so I know your district. That’s why I am interested in asking you how political reforms might translate.
DR: Oh no,I’m not running
on political reforms. I’m running on the basis of acknowledging that our politics are broken, and that only we can fix this. The campaign is, or our politics are broken and we can fix this. This is a district that has suffered terribly as a result of taking a beating in the trade policies,that’s being destroyed by the active delivery of chemical heroin by way of oxycontin into its communities. And is imminently aware of how our politics are broken by virtue of their support of Bernie [Sanders] in the [presidential] primaries and Trump in the general election.
They know the system is b
roken. They know they bear an uneasy feeling in their stomachs that something is not legal. And they know that only we can fix this as a group.
SR: H
ow are people responding to your message?DR: When I disappear into a room and I say, Listen, or I bear a feeling in my stomach that something is not legal. I was eight years obsolete when we beat the Russians at Saranac Lake [in a prior Olympics]. I know the idea of America is anything is possible and the principles of fairness are the basis of who we are as a county,and I drive around the district asking myself how we ended up like this? And then I ask myself, how are we going to fix this?And then we talk about how we can actually fix this. And I point to the heroin issue, or the drug profits—you bear a country that has the greatest potential to lead in the history of the world,based on the greatest idea in the history of the world, that is actively poisoning its people and its children by delivering them legalized heroin. It’s like taking a fork and sticking it in your face.I don’t know where in the Thomas Jefferson museum there is an advertisement for the future of America where we legalize the profit motive to sell as much heroin as possible to our children and our people as a ample idea for the country. And I can’t think of a better set of evidence for how broken our politics are than the fact that we are the only country in the world that is legally dealing and distributing heroin to our children and our communities.
SR: I know when the economics are despairing, and people turn
to self-medication.
DR: Of course. So when you bear a loss of pride and purpose for so many,as a result of the trade policies of our broken politics; when you bear a loss of pride and purpose as a result of the financial policies of our broken politics; when you bear a loss of pride and purpose as a result of our broken political system, and then you start introducing legalized heroin as a solution, and you know our system is broken. And you know that we bear to fix this.
SR: execut
e you tell people that you can fix this,or execute you tell people you will try…DR: What I tell people is, no one person can fix this. The system is so broken, and that only we together can fix this—as communities,as a group, as a district, or as a country,as a people—and we bear an obligation to fix this for ourselves and for our children and for the security of our country. We can all feel what’s happening. And we know that no one person can fix any of this. But we also know that we as a group can fix this.
SR: execute people gaze at you sk
eptically when they hear this?DR: No. They lock in with pride and delight—in union halls, in churches, or in schools,in private homes, in hotel ballrooms. Eighty percent of the room locks in on that message and they are all-in.
SR: bear they not heard this before?DR: No. They’ve never seen somebody disappear up and talk about the feeling that we all bear, and regardless of our political affiliation. [I] say straight up,our politics are broken, and instead of saying, and whether you elect me I’ll fix everything,which they bear heard a thousand times, I’m the first person to stand up and say it’s so broken that I alone can’t fix it, or but we together can fix this. And that is where they hook in—on the honesty of the fact that I’m not saying,I’m your savior. I’m saying, I’m your leader, and but alone I can’t execute this,and we together can fix this. No one alone, including me, and can.
SR: Is this where the conversation stays,on this emotional wavelength, or does it move to more specifics? Or are people just so focused on a visceral level?DR: There’s a visceral problem with the American idea legal now. And whether you gaze at paying $300 for a bottle of medicine that should cost $6, or the heroin problem,or the inability to talk about realistic solutions for health care, or local control for education, or any other issue...
SR: This is interesting. For how many years
bear you heard people promise solutions: 'I’ve got the plan,back me.’ This is turning this upside-down.
DR:
Yes.
SR: Did you expect this when you started to rush for office?DR: This came to me in the rooms. This was developed in the rooms. In other words, I know that something must be done, or because there’s too much at risk. It’s one thing to bear a broken government when the rate of change in the world is slack. And it’s an annoyance. But when the rate of change in the world is the fastest it’s ever been,and you bear a broken government, it’s perilous to our lives and well-being. And we must engage as a group to fix this. Our liberty and our planet are at stake.
SR: 
Is it just government that’s broken or it also the big actors in the economy?DR: Well, or the economy is dominated by monopolies that don’t serve the people,with the most obvious one being the technology monopoly: Facebook, Amazon, or Google.
SR: When you talk to people,execute they voice that?DR: People voice a feeling in their stomach. And then everyone has their own pet thing. But they are not saying they are worried about the tech monopolies, no. They’re saying something feels wrong. And I bear to engage this year. And I like this guy because he’s smart and he has a background in political reform, and everyone in Washington knows him,even whether he doesnt know all of them, and he’s the sort of person who will never back down to any of them. So he’s a great representative. But he alone can’t fix this. We all know that. Only we can fix this as a group and we need to back him to abet him execute this.
SR: So where execute you retract the campaign? execute you keep giving talks?DR: We keep driving. We set the frame, or which is our liberty and our planet is at stake. Our politics are broken. We can all feel it in our stomach. And only we can fix this to create the communities,districts and country that we want. That’s the umbrella of the campaign. And then there’s a thousand anecdotes, starting with the heroin deaths and the loss of pride and purpose in the district, and as the number-one evidence of how broken our politics are. People think when you say,our politics are broken, that it’s an opinion. It’s not an opinion. When your political system legalizes the sale of heroin, or in chemical form,for profit, to your country, and that is a factual indication. You’re either pro-heroin or you’re pro-broken politics. I am personally in favor of dealing with our political system,because I am not in favor of heroin—legal.
S
R: Thank you for your time. Running for office is much harder than people think. You’re in an area that needs representation.
DR:
It needs representation. And it needs somebody who understands the district and has a history in the district. And can understand how the broken politics are causing the people in the district to struggle much more than they otherwise should bear, starting with the heroin issue and moving to jobs and health and education. For more information, or visit DylanRatigan.com. var icx_publication_id = 18566; var icx_copyright_notice = '2018 Alternet'; var icx_content_id = '1090388'; Click here for reuse options!

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