Hear Hear Lisa, the problem is that all of the detractors want you to "pay no 
attention to the man behind the curtain as it were" and obfuscate the true issues with 
political sound bytes.  

Wizard raised an interesting argument except for one thing...no printer was selected 
prior to the convention.  It wasn't until after the convention that the Samuels 
campaign began looking at the printers, ergo her argument is moot.  In fact none of 
the unions have even bothered to invite Don to screen with them, yet the campaign is 
chastised and accused of union busting because in a special election it decided to 
support economic and minority business development within its ward boundaries. Yet no 
issue was raised when the Moore camp took their dollars not only out of the ward but 
out of the City.  Since this is such a pressing issue to the Moore camp, why didn't 
they utilize a printer in the 3rd ward?

This campaign has been rife not only with inane questions, but with attacks and 
threats of legal action against the campaign for daring to "not know its place" by 
utilizing a local printer or daring to call Don a "DFL candidate".  In fact, I have 
even been told I should resign my position as a director of the CD and co-chair of the 
Affirmative Action Commission by 5th CD DFL Leadership because it is "insulting" and 
"disrespectful" that I would be 'uppity' enough to have chosen to support an African 
American man running as a DFler over the endorsed candidate who is a White man.   All 
of this while we celebrate the life of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., a man who stood 
for justice, civil rights and freedom.  And because of that, it brings to my mind 
several questions:

-How appropriate it is to tell the Affirmative Action Commission co-chair that for 
promoting a DFL candidate who is a person of color, that they should resign?

-Why is it that there is not a single originally endorsed DFL Council member of color?

-Why is it that the DFL tries to railroad out of the party people that disagree with 
them?

-Or how inappropriate it is for African Americans and other people of color to be told 
that their time has not yet come?

-Or how inappropriate it is that close-minded party-centric hacks continue to drive 
the DFL toward minority status?

-Why is it okay for the 32 year old white DFL-endorsed candidate with no platform to 
continue to appropriate the positions, words and record of the 53 year old African 
American candidate and call them his own and the party still calls him the better 
candidate and continues to lambaste the other for principled decisions? 

There are no answers to these questions forthcoming and every time they're asked you 
get a deflection faster than Vice President Cheney on business ethics.   But I guess 
if these questions were to be considered, someone would have to take a good look at 
the inconsistencies in practices.

I have posted sections of the platform with little response – and nothing 
forthcoming from Olin’s campaign on where he stands other than the message of 
“Olin agree with everything Don says –but he's not a black man from North 
Minneapolis”

Lets get this back to issues: How about this:

RACE RELATIONS
"Minneapolis is strongest when we all work together. Embracing our differences makes 
us better."
- Expect that issues of race will be part of public policy decisions in meaningful, 
open, and honest way.
- Work with other governmental jurisdictions to eliminate racial disparities in our 
criminal justice, public health, economic development and education systems.
- Work together. We can talk about building bridges or we can roll up our sleeves and 
solve common problems together.

Jonathan Palmer
in Victory

"Nothing in the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious 
stupidity.
-Martin Luther King, Jr.
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