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Bernie Sanders’s Little-known Time as a Filmmaker
Hyper Allergenic ^

Posted on 02/26/2020 10:41:18 AM PST by TigerClaws

During the ’70s and ’80s, Sanders produced educational materials about labor issues and history. In 1979, he directed a short documentary about his political hero, which is available on YouTube.

In between his early forays into electoral politics and his eventual tenure as mayor of Burlington, Vermont, Bernie Sanders was still very politically active — but not as a politician. During the late ’70s, he was something of a filmmaker. A year after his last attempt to run for governor of Vermont as the Liberty Union Party candidate, he founded essentially an independent production company, the American People’s Historical Society. If he continues to hold on as the Democratic frontrunner for this year’s presidential election, Sanders just might end up being the US’s first Documentarian-In-Chief.

Out of his own home, Sanders produced simple filmstrips and slideshows intended for educational distribution and exhibition in the region’s schools, focusing on issues and individuals usually overlooked — or intentionally ignored — by the American education system. In a pamphlet from the time, Sanders described his outfit as “a newly formed nonprofit organization producing audio-visual from an alternative point of view.”

The Historical Society’s productions were rather rudimentary. There would be a slideshow of images related to the topic, with a recording to play along; a beep recorded from Sanders’s son’s walkie-talkie signaled when the teacher should move on to the next slide. Sanders voiced all the male roles, while artist Nancy Barnett, his neighbor, recorded the female parts. In a Mother Jones profile on Sanders’s Burlington years, Barnett describes Sanders’s frugal existence at the time as something like the life of a struggling independent filmmaker: “He was living in the back of an old brick building, and when he couldn’t pay the [electric bill], he would take extension cords and run down to the basement and plug them into the landlord’s outlet.” Sanders logged hundreds of miles schlepping across the state, visiting schools and attempting to convince educators to screen his materials.

The APHS made filmstrips on a variety of topics. Their largest-scale production was a half-hour documentary about Sanders’s lifelong political hero, socialist organizer and perennial presidential candidate Eugene V. Debs. Though the original slideshow hasn’t made it to the digital age, the audio recording is available on YouTube, accompanied by a slideshow related to the subject.

In addition to its run on the classroom circuit, Eugene V. Debs: Trade Unionist, Socialist, Revolutionary broadcast on WCAX-TV, Burlington’s CBS affiliate, and eventually on ETV, Vermont’s public television station. Sanders has long been a fierce critic of corporate television; in 1979, he authored an op-ed criticizing commercial television for “attempting to brainwash people into submission and helplessness.” But he also recognized the medium’s revolutionary capabilities: “The potential of television, democratically owned and controlled by the people, is literally beyond comprehension because it is such a relatively new medium and we have no experience with it under democratic control.” Ending corporate control of mass media has been a central tenet of his political platform for decades. In 1994, decades before Disney’s recent spate of cannibalistic acquisitions, he spoke before Congress about his fears concerning the “growing concentration of ownership of mass media.”

Eugene V. Debs is addressed to younger listeners for whom Debs would only be a footnote in a textbook, if that. It frames him as a lost prophet before explaining how he ended up where he did ideologically. It opens with Debs’s final presidential campaign, conducted in 1920 from prison. If a million people voted for this man while he was behind bars, if more people went to hear him speak than President Taft, then how could history have forgotten him? Sanders contextualizes Debs within the Industrial Revolution and Jim Crow era, explaining his socialism as a response to issues which still resonate today: the exploitation of working people, segregation and violent racism, voting rights, and the suppression of free speech and dissent during World War I.

Sanders had originally contracted Howard Da Silva — an accomplished Broadway star with a long history of playing historical figures onscreen, from Benjamin Franklin in the film version of 1776 to FDR in Larry Cohen’s The Private Files of J. Edgar Hoover — to read for Debs, but the arrangement fell through. Instead, Sanders himself reads the words of Debs, reciting the Midwestern revolutionary’s speeches in his distinctive but anachronistic Brooklyn accent. That lack of star power might have hurt the documentary’s prospects at the time, but it’s more interesting in retrospect, given the momentum of the current movement behind Sanders. Aligning himself so literally with the labor movement’s past constructs a kind of solidarity across time and history.

Eugene V. Debs: Trade Unionist, Socialist, Revolutionary is very much an educational film, stuffed with information about its subject and overflowing with an impassioned perspective, though a little on the dry side. Even then, it clearly expresses what drew Sanders to the words and vision of Debs. It doesn’t just focus on Debs’s struggle, but also emphasizes the positivity and hopefulness of his worldview. For both Debs and Sanders, their vision of a better world is as much defined by good feeling — “beauty, joy, and cooperation” in a quote from Debs — as material necessity.


TOPICS: Politics
KEYWORDS: eugenevdebs
A film by Comrade Bernie about his Marxist hero. Amateur hour production. Sanders casts himself as Debbs. Download it while you can.
1 posted on 02/26/2020 10:41:18 AM PST by TigerClaws
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To: TigerClaws

Thanks, interesting.
Didn’t see a youtube link at a quick glance, so adding it here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z4i054Ylips&feature=emb_title


2 posted on 02/26/2020 10:45:27 AM PST by LouieFisk
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To: TigerClaws

Bernie’s hero.....

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eugene_V._Debs


3 posted on 02/26/2020 10:49:47 AM PST by Responsibility2nd (Click my screen name for an analysis on how HIllary wins next November.)
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To: TigerClaws
and when he couldn’t pay the [electric bill], he would take extension cords and run down to the basement and plug them into the landlord’s outlet.”

Thieving bastard.
4 posted on 02/26/2020 10:56:11 AM PST by irishjuggler
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To: irishjuggler

and when he couldn’t pay the [electric bill], he would take extension cords and run down to the basement and plug them into the landlord’s outlet.”

Thieving bastard.


For some reason, I would not have expected any less from Comrade Bernie


5 posted on 02/26/2020 10:57:56 AM PST by Trump.Deplorable
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To: Responsibility2nd
"The overthrow of capitalism is the object of the Socialist party. It will not fuse with any other party and it would rather die than compromise."

Eugene V. Debs, Founder of the American Socialist Party Opening Speech Delivered as Candidate of the Socialist Party for the President at Indianapolis, Ind., September 1, 1904

 

Sounds like Bernie to me. Except Bernie is doing an admirable job at fusing the Socialist Party with the Democrat Party.

6 posted on 02/26/2020 10:58:06 AM PST by Responsibility2nd (Click my screen name for an analysis on how HIllary wins next November.)
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To: All
A Mother Jones' profile on Sanders’s Burlington years, describes Sanders’s frugal existence: “He was living in the
back of an old brick building, and when he couldn’t pay the [electric bill], he would take extension cords and run
down to the basement and plug them into the landlord’s outlet.”

My, my how things have changed for the Sanders once Bernie got his hands on REAL money....in politics.

Sanders Defends Castro, Praises China for Lifting ‘People Out of Extreme Poverty---just like Bernie raised his family out of poverty.

=================================

Swamp Report: Peter Schweizer Reveals How Bernie Sanders Enriches His Family with Campaign Funds (emphasis added)
by ROBERT KRAYCHIK , 13 Feb 2020

Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) has repeatedly used his political position to steer money — both contributions to his campaign

Schweizer stated: [In] 2000, Bernie was in Washington D.C, serving in Congress.

<><>Throughout his congressional career in the House and Senate, Bernie Sanders has used campaign funds to procure media-buying services from a consulting company founded and operated by his wife and her children.

<><>Jane and her children formed a new LLC called Sanders and Driscoll. The new firm was a for-profit consulting company, and was run by Jane, daughter Carina, and son David. The family ran this new business out of the Sanders family home. Because of the way it was structured, it’s impossible to know just how much money Bernie’s wife and children made from his congressional campaign. But critics would claim that Sanders doled out more than $150,000 to his family through the new company.

<><> Jane set up a media buying company; she would get paid every time candidate Bernie Sanders bought television advertising for his Congressional campaigns.

<><>Then, during his 2016 presidential run, the Sanders campaign would funnel $82 million dollars through a mysterious media buying company run by Jane’s former colleagues. That company, known as Olde Towne Media, was located in private home in a cul de sac in Virginia.

<><>As mayor of Burlington, VT, Bernie Sanders appointed his wife to an initially unpaid position in his municipal administration. Against the city council’s objections, he later put her on the payroll at local taxpayers’ expense.

<><>Schweizer recalled Jane Sanders’ previous role as head of Burlington College, a private school with fewer than 200 students. One of the college’s board members admitted that hiring Jane Sanders was a function of her marriage to Bernie Sanders — then a member of House of Representatives from Vermont — believing it would help the school’s fundraising endeavors.

<><>Despite its financial difficulties at the time, in 2009, Burlington College contracted with an unaccredited woodworking school run by Jane Sanders’ daughter, Carina Driscoll. Over $500,000 was funneled to from Burlington College to the woodworking school.

<><>“Carina Sanders' Driscoll school also received at least one federal grant from the US Department of Agriculture,” added Schweizer, noting that Bernie Sanders had oversight over the USDA’s funding at the time as a member of the Senate Budget Committee.

<><> “I don’t believe in Charity,” said Bernie Sanders while mayor of Burlington. Schweizer concluded, “While Sanders may not be a fan of charity, he seems to have no problem awarding jobs and contracts to those closest to him.” “The biggest charity in Bernie’s life is Bernie,” said Schweizer in January.

Read the full video report’s transcript here (link at web site).

https://www.breitbart.com/politics/2020/02/13/swamp-report-peter-schweizer-reveals-how-bernie-sanders-enriches-his-family-with-campaign-funds/

7 posted on 02/26/2020 10:59:12 AM PST by Liz (Our side has 8 trillion bullets; the other side doesn't know which bathroom to use.)
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To: TigerClaws

I knew Sanders as a filthy bum sleeping on park benches in Burlington. When he was elected mayor, winning by 10 votes thanks to two ‘independents’ who split the vote, one of his first acts was removing the American Flag that flew over City Hall. I detest this Brooklyn jackass.


8 posted on 02/26/2020 10:59:12 AM PST by GreyHoundSailor
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To: LouieFisk

You can hear young Burnie at the 8:10 mark, as the voice of his socialist hero Debs.


9 posted on 02/26/2020 10:59:55 AM PST by polymuser (It's discouraging to think how many people are shocked by honesty and so few by deceit. Noel Coward)
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To: Liz

Con man, con family.


10 posted on 02/26/2020 11:01:27 AM PST by polymuser (It's discouraging to think how many people are shocked by honesty and so few by deceit. Noel Coward)
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To: polymuser

That’d be good audio to insert in a campaign ad against Bernie...


11 posted on 02/26/2020 11:12:57 AM PST by TigerClaws
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To: LouieFisk
... describes Sanders’s frugal existence at the time as something like the life of a struggling independent filmmaker: “He was living in the back of an old brick building, and when he couldn’t pay the [electric bill], he would take extension cords and run down to the basement and plug them into the landlord’s outlet.”

Any links to the house OR comments from the landlord?

12 posted on 02/26/2020 11:31:52 AM PST by GOPJ ( http://www.tinyurl.com/cvirusmap https://www.cdc.gov/flu/weekly/usmap.htm)
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