That last part has our attention.
If there's one thing we respect at The Dissent, it's someone willing to call out the machine when taxpayer dollars are being torched. The defense industry is one of the most bloated, unaccountable spending pipelines in the federal government, and anyone who's actually put their career on the line to flag waste deserves a serious listen — regardless of where they land on the political spectrum.
Dang is pledging to take zero corporate PAC money, which is a nice line on a campaign page. The real question is whether he can stay independent once the machinery of Washington gets its hooks in. He's running on healthcare as a human right, cracking down on corporate housing ownership, and government accountability. Some of that resonates strongly — especially the accountability piece. Some of it raises harder fiscal questions he'll need to answer.
One local commenter cut right to it: "What's your stance on AI, renewable energy, fiscal policy, and healthcare costs?" Fair enough. The vibes are compelling, but Bay Area voters — especially in a district that includes some of the most economically literate communities in the country — are going to need specifics. How do you fund universal healthcare without exploding the deficit? What does "housing owned by people, not corporations" look like in practice — and does it actually increase supply?
Dang is hosting a public Q&A on May 21st to field exactly these kinds of questions. We'd encourage anyone in CA-15 to show up and press him. Whistleblower credibility is a strong opening hand, but Congress isn't won on biography alone. Show us the math.

