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Veteran Democrat strategist James Carville is an interesting guy. Furthermore, the older the architect of Bill Clinton’s victorious 1992 presidential campaign gets, the more interesting he becomes.
I mean, I don’t know if I view James as “a man I love to hate,” or “a man I hate to love” — just kidding, both counts — but I do know this: In today’s crazed world of Democrat politics, the wayward party would do itself a favor if it listened more to Mr. Carville, which I’m more than confident it won’t do.
The latest example of Carville’s rebuke of his dying party comes in the aftermath of Lindy Sowmick — treasurer of Minnesota’s Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party and a self-described “Indigenous queer woman” — opening the Democrat National Committee (DNC) summer meeting in Minneapolis by acknowledging and honoring the “Dakota Oyate,” which refers to to the Dakota people or Santee Sioux, an indigenous group of the the Great Plains and Midwest.
