4/28/2016 4:46:00 PM
4/28/2016 5:17:37 PM
I think our biggest difference here is that I value Bernie a little differently than you do. I think it's great that Bernie has had incredibly consistent views, seems extremely honest (by politician standards), and seems to genuinely want to serve and help the average American. In the end though, for me, all I care about is that he has policies that are in the direction I'd like to see the country move.- Eugene McCarthy, Gary Hart, Walter Mondale, Bill Bradley, George McGovern, Howard Dean (ok that ones a stretch). All ran much further to the left of the conventional Democrat wisdom and all had a good history of consistently supporting progressive causes. All had significant support from the young. There may never be anyone that lives up to Bernie's "above politics" persona, but I can guarantee we will consistently get candidates running to the left of the conventional wisdom in the coming years.-politicians pick winners, but don't think that a lot of politicians aren't taking notice of how well Bernie did. They follow votes and anyone can see the progressive movement growing.-again, I could care less about motives so long as they fight to move the country in a progressive direction. Just enact good policy and I'm happy.-same as previous quote- I agree that progressives haven't been good enough at calling Obama out (partly the media fault IMO). That's why it needs to be different with Hillary. Vote for her, watch her walk the Third-way tightrope, and when she ultimately falls into "republican lite" territory call her out and agitate for someone that is actually liberal. In 4 years plenty of old conservadems will be dead and The millenial voting block will have grown significantly. The politicians can read between those lines.Somewhat progressive to progressive Dems that will be up to bat in the next 4 years: Martin O'malley, John Hickenlooper, Elizabeth Warren, Brian Schweitzer, that lady governor from Oregon, Bill Deblasio, Barbara Lee, Jan schawlosky(sic), etc. This movement to the left is not a flash in the pan and it's not gonna happen over night either. This is why I'll vote for Hillary in November, in the end I think it will give the left more influence.
4/28/2016 7:38:49 PM
I'm sorry dude but that list of "progressives" is garbage. First of all, as a Coloradan, fuck John Hickenlooper. He opposes marijuana legalization as well as our single payer ballot initiative, both of which are endorsed in the state Dem platform. He supported the Denver camping ban targeting homeless people. He's also a Hillary superdelegate, despite Bernie defeating her by nearly 20 points, and held fundraisers for her at the governor's mansion. The ones where white noise machines were deployed. Fuck that guy, please don't ever consider him progressive O'Malley is similarly hated by his own state, but I don't know enough about him. He sounds like a southern baptist preacher.DiBlasio is another Hillary crony and is currently under investigation for campaign finance fraud.[Edited on April 28, 2016 at 7:55 PM. Reason : .]
4/28/2016 7:51:21 PM
Even rats abandon a sinking ship. In 4 years every single one of those will be testing the waters to run well to the left of Hillary.[Edited on April 28, 2016 at 7:57 PM. Reason : I qualified with "somewhat progressive" lol]
4/28/2016 7:57:02 PM
Hickenlooper is establishment as it gets, idgaf how progressive he pretends to be in 4 or 8 years.
4/28/2016 8:11:01 PM
4/29/2016 8:45:21 AM
false
4/29/2016 10:11:32 AM
prove it
5/2/2016 9:40:47 AM
teachout[Edited on May 2, 2016 at 10:18 AM. Reason : but the entire way his grassroots movement supports other progressives is really the bigger thing]
5/2/2016 10:15:26 AM
so is a contested convention pretty much guaranteed at this point?
5/2/2016 11:37:53 AM
Nope.Hillary will have enough pledged + super, and it doesn't matter how Bernie deems/considers the convention to be. I think it's BS too, but it is the system in which he's operating.]
5/2/2016 11:40:32 AM
doesn't the fact that she won't have enough pledged delegates and Sanders won't concede make it a contested convention?[Edited on May 2, 2016 at 12:56 PM. Reason : .]
5/2/2016 12:54:49 PM
Lol i know its not happening but imagine if all the superdelegates were closet bernie bros and decided to pledge clinton so the power behind the establishment had no time to counteract their influence. Bernie knows this and is just playing along till he suddenly steals the convention.
5/2/2016 1:44:46 PM
It will be contested in the sense that it won't be locked up before the convention starts, but Hillary will win on the first ballot if superdelegate loyalties don't change.Unless Elizabeth Warren and Joe Biden are both just waiting to jump in, force the supers to hold off, then we have a clusterfuck on the second ballot.[Edited on May 2, 2016 at 4:22 PM. Reason : -]
5/2/2016 4:20:57 PM
5/3/2016 10:17:01 PM
http://m.huffpost.com/us/entry/democrats-rally-sanders-before-clinton-espionage-act-indictments_b_9819600.html
5/4/2016 8:15:01 PM
HuffPo is deranged (and poorly written)
5/5/2016 9:35:03 AM
^yeah everybody knows it will be Biden who gets her delegates
5/5/2016 9:42:14 AM
Haha more wet dreams. Funny to see you and Earl on the same side.
5/5/2016 9:50:37 AM
Biden has clearly stated he doesn't want to run. More than once. Why do people keep bringing him up?
5/5/2016 10:07:02 AM
Didn't click but I'm guessing it's HA Goodman. He might actually be an alias for Bernie himself.
5/5/2016 10:07:48 AM
5/5/2016 10:11:33 AM
Bernie, the guy who is actually running, is more realistic about his chances than HA Goodman
5/5/2016 10:12:01 AM
Ive given up but bernies campaign chairman just went on cnn and said hes confident bernie will win the nomination so either you are wrong,or bernie needs to fire his campaign manager.
5/5/2016 11:05:24 AM
"Confident he will win" vs "Hillary should drop out"
5/5/2016 11:09:32 AM
Obviously she should drop out, hard to be commander in chief when you can't be trusted with classified info
5/5/2016 11:25:47 AM
5/5/2016 11:43:20 AM
5/5/2016 12:22:11 PM
Is @HillaryClinton trying to steal the nomination from @BernieSanders? Our panel weighs in NEXT on #Hannity.
5/5/2016 1:52:23 PM
5/6/2016 10:58:48 AM
https://theintercept.com/2016/05/06/hillary-super-pac-draft-oped/
5/6/2016 12:33:14 PM
Maine is getting rid of their superdelegate assignments which forces all delegates to vote according to the state vote. Hopefully other states will follow.http://usuncut.com/politics/maine-democratic-party-just-got-rid-superdelegate-system/
5/7/2016 4:07:33 PM
For this cycle? Isn't changing the rules as we go absolutely something Sanders should/would be against?
5/7/2016 5:59:18 PM
Bernie has nothing to do with it. The Maine Democratic convention decided on their own that ALL delegates should follow the will of the people and not get to decide for themselves.If other states do the same (I don't know which have or haven't had their conventions yet), it could energize Bernie voters in the final states, since a lot of them were assuming Hillary had this locked up with the super votes.
5/7/2016 6:37:14 PM
^^It's non-binding for 2016 but beginning in 2020 all delegates will be proportional and bound in Maine.
5/8/2016 7:52:11 AM
Superdelegates are not a mechanism of the state parties, they are a mechanism of the national party. So no rule passed by the Maine Democratic Party affects them unless the Democratic National Committee itself passes such a rule.[Edited on May 9, 2016 at 6:08 PM. Reason : /]
5/9/2016 6:07:08 PM
I'm against proportional representation for delegates. The parties should retain executive control over who represents them, as they always have, and if voters don't like who the parties pick, they should be free to find a different party.
5/9/2016 7:21:11 PM
Except the two parties control the government and make it nearly impossible for third parties to gain representation. So basically you're saying you don't mind that our leaders essentially choose our leaders.
5/9/2016 7:25:38 PM
^ inside the mind of a Trump voter...
5/10/2016 12:36:15 PM
wat
5/10/2016 12:41:34 PM
if superdelegates weren't a thing, Hillary would have a 342 pledged delegate lead on Bernie at this point. which would mean Bernie would have to win 68.85 of the remaining delegates to beat clinton. so basically nothing would change.
5/10/2016 12:58:25 PM
^^ you're parroting him
5/10/2016 1:02:52 PM
lol what? im not voting for trump. and what I said is true
5/10/2016 1:07:45 PM
5/10/2016 1:10:15 PM
^And that will never happen if we allow the two parties to choose their own candidates.
5/10/2016 1:25:24 PM
Here then, I'll dumb it down. Your statement would not be out of place in a Trump speech. I like it how somehow being against Trotskyist-style entryism as Trump and Sanders have done or attempted to do this election means you think only the leaders of the parties should pick the leaders. Trump is not a Republican and Sanders is not a Democrat. [Edited on May 10, 2016 at 3:04 PM. Reason : .]
5/10/2016 3:01:21 PM
Read the comment I was replying to. He was saying that parties should literally be able to choose their candidate, essentially giving the public two viable choices for any given election.And sure, there are things Trump has said that I agree with.
5/10/2016 3:10:33 PM
Members of parties should choose their candidates. People that say "I'm not a Republican" have no right to choose the Republican nominee. Ditto Democrats. If God help us Trump wins in November, do you think I should have a right to vote in a Democratic primary for president come 2020 even though I'm not a member and don't agree with a lot of the party's platform? That way stands political parties being meaningless organizations that stand for nothing except they have ballot access and issues-based politics suffers due to the lack of identity.[Edited on May 10, 2016 at 3:45 PM. Reason : .]
5/10/2016 3:41:57 PM
That's a completely different discussion. The point I was replying to was that party executives should choose their candidates.
5/10/2016 3:45:12 PM