It Takes a Village Politics Podcast
“We rise together, louder than fear.” That’s how we open. And this episode lived up to it. This week on It Takes a Village, we sat down with Bernard Taylor, firefighter, EMT, community organizer, and candidate for Congress in Florida’s 21st District — and we didn’t just talk politics. We talked about what it looks like when policy failure shows up in the back of an ambulance. We talked about seniors rationing insulin.Moms working two or three jobs just to keep the lights on.Families debating whether to call 911 because they can’t afford the bill. That’s not theoretical.That’s not a talking point.That’s lived experience. Bernard’s “camel moment” wasn’t a headline — it was watching real people suffer inside a system built for profit instead of people. And here’s what hit hardest: He’s not running because it’s glamorous.He’s running because he’s already doing the work. * Feeding 100 families at Thanksgiving. * Showing up at protests. * Knocking doors instead of dialing for dollars. * Building name recognition the old-fashioned way: by being present. In a political moment obsessed with consultants, PAC money, and insider strategy, this campaign is a reminder that grassroots still means something. We also had the hard conversation. About party pressure.About “the machine.”About what happens when progressive candidates are expected to fall in line. And here’s what mattered: Bernard didn’t dodge.He didn’t sugarcoat.He didn’t pretend the system isn’t stacked. But he also didn’t give up. He talked universal healthcare.Trade pathways for high school grads.Breaking corporate control over housing.Cutting waste where it exists and funding what actually helps people. Not ideology for ideology’s sake. Relief.Real relief.Tangible relief. And maybe the most powerful thread of the night? Hope. Not the fluffy, passive kind.The organized kind. The kind that feeds families.The kind that shows up at city council meetings.The kind that registers neighbors to vote block by block. This episode is for anyone who thinks: * “I care, but I’m not political.” * “I don’t have money to give.” * “I don’t know where to start.” Start small.Start local.Start where you live. Because democracy isn’t a spectator sport — and it was never designed to be convenient. Village, if this conversation lit something in you, don’t let it burn out.Grab the merch.Support the candidates who actually show up. And then? Knock on a door.Register a neighbor.Host a vote party.Become a poll worker.Call your precinct chair. This is how power is built. Not by waiting.Not by hoping someone else fixes it. But by rising together — louder than fear. Get full access to It Takes a Village Politics at ittakesavillagepolitics.substack.com/subscribe [https://ittakesavillagepolitics.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]
42 episodes
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