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Charles Douglas and David Domke discuss this pivotal shift in the 2024 elections and what it means for our work across the nation. CP-3D stands for Common Power - Douglas, Domke, Daily. With all that's happening this week, we'll be sharing daily updates!
Common Powers Executive Director, Charles Douglass and Director Dr. David Domke review the first '24 Presidential Debate! The With CP Podcast analyzes the state of democracy from our perspective as civic leaders facilitating canvassing, civic education, and community-building nationwide! Learn more at commonpower.org You can find this podcast on all major podcast platforms and through video on YouTube.
Join Julia Ge and David Domke as they meet the moment with the 2022 midterms.
Join Julia Ge and David Domke as they unpack what's been going on with the United States Supreme Court recently. Is the Supreme Court really pulling a “political coup”? Why do people want Clarence Thomas to be impeached? What can we do as individuals to create change? Find out all the answers to these questions and more in this podcast episode!
Join Julia Ge and David Domke as they analyze and discuss the current political climate of 2022.
Join Julia Ge and David Domke as they discuss the successes and challenges that Common Power faced in 2021.
Join Julia Ge and David Domke in this episode as they sit down to discuss Common Power and COVID-19.
Dr. Kiana Scott joins David Domke to discuss the US Supreme Court's decision to allow a Texas law banning abortions after 6 months to go into effect. It's devastating, and we are angry, frustrated, and scared. We also have clarity about the road ahead. Our work has never mattered more.
Join Julia Ge as she embarks on her With CP podcast journey in her first ever episode diving deep with one of Common Power's co-founders, David Domke.
This live episode on election night March 10 2020, when results from the Democratic Party presidential primary rolled in from Michigan, Missouri, Mississippi, Idaho, North Dakota, and Washington. Hosted by David Domke and Maria Abando. Interviews with Drs. Christopher Parker and Kiana Scott. This episode was originally lost and now has been found.
Mount Zion Enrichment Center in Sumter, South Carolina, filled up with a lot of press and a crowd excited for Joe Biden. David Domke talked to a Biden voter and set the scene.
David Domke and Kylie Knowles talk to two students at the Sargent Memorial Student Union at Bob Jones University in Greenville, South Carolina who have organized a voter registration drive.
Walking the Capitol grounds, grappling with US history.David Domke, David Levenson, Kathy Ehrenberg, Julia Anderson, Kevin Coe, Steve Scher, Peter Capell. PS. Strom Thurmond never acknowledged Essie Mae Washington-Williams as his daughter. After his death in 2003, she came forward and acknowledged it publicly. The monument was changed in 2004.
We are on the road from Columbia to Charleston for a day of campaign events. Among the pines and palmettos, co-authors of a book on religion and politics in America, David Domke and Kevin Coe, talk about religion and politics in South Carolina and the 2020 campaign. Also in the car, Steve Scher and David Levenson.
David Domke is back in Seattle. Charles Douglas is in Washington D.C. working with the Congressional Black Caucus on a response to President Trump's State of the Union. Together they unpack their Iowa experience, the debacle in the Caucuses and plan what happens next.
We gathered in the Holiday Inn Express common space. While we waited for the Superbowl to start and the pizza to arrive, we chatted, told jokes and reflected on what we learned and what comes next. Ellen Ferguson, Ani Black, Andrea Lieberman, Mary Figel, Frida Kumar, Nancy Miller-Juhos, Steve Romein, Ty Cramer, Steve Scher, Troy Bonnes, David Domke, Diane Baer, Jean Loup Baer, Emily Carmichael, Mimi Gan, Lulu Gargiulo, Charles Douglas, Maria Abando, Will Mari, Jason Gilmore, Chuck Rowling, Tim Jones, Kimberly Watson, Haeryung Shin.
The fight for the Senate and the presidency is going to be fought in swing states across the country, and if you're one of those people who's looking to do some traveling as you volunteer in 2020, the Seattle-based organization Common Purpose can help you do it. (They also do a ton of work on the ground here in Washington) We speak this week with the founder of Common Purpose, David Domke, a professor of communications at the University of Washington. Then, Seattle-based singer-songwriter Tae Phoenix joins us from Washington DC to updates us on her work with the #SwarmtheSenate, a collective of activist groups who are converging each day on the Senate and Senate office buildings to demand the removal of Donald Trump. All that, plus our weekly call to action. Links: COMMON PURPOSE: Sign up to do field work across the country with Common Purpose: https://commonpurposenow.org/2020fieldworksignups Common Purpose Primary State Tour of South Carolina: https://commonpurposenow.org/tours Introductory workshops for Common Purpose: https://commonpurposenow.org/events TAE PHOENIX/#SWARMTHESENATE: If you'd like to join Tae Phoenix at the #SwarmtheSenate protests in DC… Tae's email: taephoenix@gmail.com If you can't make it to DC, find a Remove Trump mobilization near you: https://actionnetwork.org/event_campaigns/remove-trump-mobilizations To help Tae with her expenses in DC… PayPal: tsv02001@gmail.com Venmo: @TaeTaeTVK Tae singing in the Senate Rotunda: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wI9J67kIXO8&feature=youtu.be&mc_cid=aec26e13c6 ADAM SMITH TOWN HALL: Congressman Adam Smith's Town Hall: Saturday, 1/25 from 11AM-1PM @ the Teamsters, 14675 Interurban Ave S #307, Tukwila, WA 98168. Register for free tickets here: https://www.facebook.com/events/633148097225891/?ti=ia Indivisible leaders are asking members to show up to push for a National Defense Authorization Act bill with the following provisions: 1. No use of funds for border wall 2. No US involvement in Yemen 3. Overturn transgender ban 4. Repeal the AUMF HUMANE PET SALES BILL: Humane Pet Sales Bill text and info: https://app.leg.wa.gov/billsummary?BillNumber=2344&Initiative=false&Year=2019 Theme music from https://filmmusic.io "Pure Joy" by Otis Galloway License: CC BY (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
The Seattle Public Library - Author Readings and Library Events
The Seattle Public Library - Author Readings and Library Events
This fall, David Domke will once again lead a pilgrimage into the Deep South to the landmarks where critical events happened during the Civil Rights Movement in the 50s and 60s. Domke, chair of the University Of Washington Department Of Communication, says this nine-day pilgrimage is not a vacation for the more than 50 participants. It is meant to be a journey where those involved will learn, grow and change in profound ways. Domke talks about how this pilgrimage came about, its impact on the students and community members who have participated on the trip and its significance in this time when racial divisions are widening in America.
On The Bus UW Civil Rights Pilgrimage - The House of Podcasts
The Equal Justice Initiative seeks to get the innocent out of prison and share some grace with even the guilty.
On The Bus UW Civil Rights Pilgrimage - The House of Podcasts
Prologue: Kane Hall February 23rd- Anticipation, Trepidation, Empowerment and SongMonday, February 23rd, at the UW's Kane Hall, where David Domke and friends deliver the last of 5 lectures on the Civil Rights era and Selma Alabama. 52 strong, we are getting ready to travel on a bus from Atlanta to Montgomery and points in between. Hundreds strong this evening, we are gathered to think about the history of the movement. But we are also gathered to be challenged to think about the movement today, because the battles are still being fought and the outcome is far from certain. The bus is warming up. We mingle in an integrated waiting room.Black and white, young and old, we are joined by our hopes and fears, but we are together. In a not too distant past, we would not have been together. We would have waited apart, whites in one room, blacks in another. This unnatural division, built on fear and hate, shaped the culture and shaped the souls of the people who lived in that culture. It isn't hard to imagine the emotions that built the society. Even now, that fear and hate seems palpable, though better disguised.I have avoided the south. I fear the hatred will infect me. I fear it will get on the tips of my fingers, curl itself around my ears, snake its ways up my nostril and suck the air from my lungs. But I am already stained. it is unavoidable.I can taste it still and see it still. It yet reveals itself in the slight sneer around the corner of a mouth, in the flicker of an eye, the arch of an eyebrow, an odd comment.The bus is ready and we will ride out together on the pilgrimage, with lingering ghosts to haunt our journey.
On The Bus UW Civil Rights Pilgrimage - The House of Podcasts
The Legacy of Selma still drives America. 50 years ago, American citizens were being killed in the fight for the right to vote. During three marches in March of 1965, civil rights activists seeking the right to register in Alabama were met by tear gas and Billy clubs. Local police and State troopers beat the non-violent protestors on the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma. The televised violence galvanized the nation and Congress. President Johnson pushed through the 1965 voting rights act, one of the most significant pieces of legislation in the countries history.But the battle for freedom is ongoing. Today, the courts have removed pieces of that legislation and some states are restricting access to the ballot box. The streets of the nation are filled with protestors challenging the police shootings of young black men. Over 5 lectures delivered in January and February 2015, the University of Washington’s Chair of the Communication Department, David Domke examined that history and it’s importance today in a series of lectures, Marching to Selma: How MLK, LBJ & The Civil Rights Movement Changed The World. We met in late December to discuss the legacy of Selma at the NE Branch of the Seattle Public Library. (Hence the slightly hushed tones.) David Domke says his meetings with the still living foot soldiers of those marches have profoundly changed him. He has traveled to the south three times with groups from the northwest. In March, he is taking another group of adults and college students to follow the path from Atlanta, through Memphis and on to Selma. I will be on that journey and sharing stories with you about the legacy of the civil rights era and the emergence of a new activism.
David Domke is professor and chair for the Department of Communication at the University of Washington and author of "God Willing? Political Fundamentalism in the White House, the War on Terror, and the Echoing Press," as well as the award-winning book "The God Strategy: How Religion Became a Political Weapon in America." Prior to academia, Professor Domke worked as a journalist for the Orange County Register and Atlanta Journal-Constitution. He is presenting a five-part lecture series on "Marching to Selma: How MLK, LBJ & the Civil Rights Movement Changed the World," presented by the UW Department of Communication and the University Bookstore. Catch the second part Monday, January 19th at UW's Kane Hall.
50 years ago, American citizens were being killed in the fight for the right to vote. During three marches in March of 1965, civil rights activists seeking the right to register in Alabama were met by tear gas and Billy clubs. Local police and State troopers beat the non-violent protestors on the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma. The televised violence galvanized the nation and Congress. President Johnson pushed through the 1965 voting rights act, one of the most significant pieces of legislation in the countries history. Today, the courts have removed pieces of that legislation and some states are restricting access to the ballot box. The streets of the nation are filled with protestors challenging the police shootings of young black men. Over the next few weeks, the University of Washington’s Chair of the Communication Department, David Domke, will examine the history and it’s importance today in a series of lectures, Marching to Selma: How MLK, LBJ & The Civil Rights Movement Changed The World. We met to discuss the legacy of Selma at the NE Branch of the Seattle Public Library. (Hence the slightly hushed tones.) David Domke says his meetings with the still living foot soldiers of those marches have profoundly changed him. He has traveled to the south three times with groups from the northwest. In March, he is taking another group of adults and college students to follow the path from Atlanta, through Memphis and on to Selma. I will be on that journey and sharing stories with you about the legacy of the civil rights era and the emergence of a new activism.