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portlander23

(2,078 posts)
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 10:27 AM Jan 2017

Bernie Sanders Says Trump Won Because Democrats Are Out Of Touch

Last edited Sun Jan 8, 2017, 09:53 PM - Edit history (1)

Bernie Sanders Says Trump Won Because Democrats Are Out Of Touch
Meg Anderson
NPR

"Look, you can't simply go around to wealthy people's homes raising money and expect to win elections," the Vermont senator, who gave Clinton a surprisingly strong run for the Democratic nomination, told NPR's David Greene in an interview airing on Morning Edition. "You've got to go out and mix it up and be with ordinary people."

"One of the reasons that Mr. Trump won is that we have millions of people who have given up on the political process, who don't believe that Congress is listening to their pain," Sanders said. "What the Democratic Party has got to do is start listening."

Trump promised repeatedly throughout the campaign that he would not cut Medicare, Medicaid or Social Security if elected. Sanders wants to hold Trump accountable for that promise, regardless of what Republicans in Congress want to do.

Sanders says Trump has a choice: "Either he can have the courage and get up in front of the American people, or do it through a tweet, and say, 'You know what? Hey, I was just kidding. I was really lying.'"



Are you going to show up on January 15th to protect healthcare?


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Bernie Sanders Says Trump Won Because Democrats Are Out Of Touch (Original Post) portlander23 Jan 2017 OP
I'm getting really tired of this meme. blue cat Jan 2017 #1
now you know. WhiteTara Jan 2017 #17
So am I DFW Jan 2017 #33
it is like we don't have the house or the Senate or the Presidency. It is like the reason we have a JCanete Jan 2017 #43
OLIGARCHY!! George II Jan 2017 #49
What?? DFW Jan 2017 #62
is it actually a joke though? Would Republicans be able to steal elections without the help of the JCanete Jan 2017 #66
Did he miss Hillary going to diners, schools, retirement centers, job sites? LisaM Jan 2017 #61
If Sanders was so brilliant why couldn't he win the primary? Cary Jan 2017 #123
Well the Dems ARE out of touch...hey, we lost everything ..states and fed government MaeScott Jan 2017 #158
Exactly. tecelote Jan 2017 #177
Trump won because racist Rust Belt voters... SidDithers Jan 2017 #2
this Grey Lemercier Jan 2017 #7
Or because of the FBI, Putin, Assange WhiteTara Jan 2017 #18
It couldnt have had anything to do with Separation Jan 2017 #26
And they've admitted it in quite a few interviews mcar Jan 2017 #39
Exactly!!! The Trump win was based on Racism and Bigotry!!! I don't get why so many back off RKP5637 Jan 2017 #52
trump only won MI by 10K votes. There were more votes than that not even counted in Detroit putitinD Jan 2017 #53
DEM voters in the primary, not the racist repugs. Quite a difference. brush Jan 2017 #59
Hillary most likely WON MI, had they counted all the votes. Detroit is a democratic stronghold. putitinD Jan 2017 #69
Yup, 75,000 votes in Detroit and Flint weren't counted. And you know most were Hillary votes brush Jan 2017 #71
Yeah, I mean all those visits Clinton made to Wisconsin Goblinmonger Jan 2017 #54
It's easy to take potshots from the cheap seats after the fact SFnomad Jan 2017 #116
Goblinmonger makes a valid point. golfguru Jan 2017 #127
It doesn't matter if the point is valid or not SFnomad Jan 2017 #139
In hind sight, she ignored Wisconsin, golfguru Jan 2017 #169
Re: She should have focused ... SFnomad Jan 2017 #170
Why did the same "racist" rust belters voted for Obama twice? golfguru Jan 2017 #126
most of them didn't . JI7 Jan 2017 #147
Wait a minute, Obama won PA twice. golfguru Jan 2017 #168
it was more due to non voters and trump getting racists that thought JI7 Jan 2017 #171
It's good that Sanders will keep after Trump. TheCowsCameHome Jan 2017 #3
He certainly didn't this morning when they counted electoral votes. George II Jan 2017 #51
Sanders did not object to the electoral college results Gothmog Jan 2017 #101
My point. That would have been a perfect opportunity to "keep after Trump". He didn't. George II Jan 2017 #106
We are in complete and total agreement as to that Gothmog Jan 2017 #111
No he won't. Tavarious Jackson Jan 2017 #109
Obama said pretty much the same thing. Dustlawyer Jan 2017 #4
Really? Do show us where.... nt MADem Jan 2017 #21
It wouldn't do any good. Google his statement about how he won Iowa he made Dustlawyer Jan 2017 #41
Extraordinary claims like those you make demand solid proof, not "go google." nt MADem Jan 2017 #79
I am pretty sure you looked it up but won't admit it. Dustlawyer Jan 2017 #129
I am pretty sure I didn't. But since you can't come up with a citation, I'll MADem Jan 2017 #131
Washington Post by Aaron Blake on 11/17. Dustlawyer Jan 2017 #136
You cut out the url and post it--it's easy. MADem Jan 2017 #149
Thanks for the tip. Dustlawyer Jan 2017 #150
You've got to give me a link in order for me to watch a video. MADem Jan 2017 #153
Back Cary Jan 2017 #125
Biden too: jonno99 Jan 2017 #60
Message auto-removed Name removed Jan 2017 #143
Bernie, Bernie, Bernie Zoonart Jan 2017 #5
it is NOT "Bernie hate" whatsoever when I now call him out for aiding in the minimisation Grey Lemercier Jan 2017 #6
Good post. Why is "broken record Bernie" ignoring all the real reasons that you stated? brush Jan 2017 #63
If Bernie is a Democrat, then he has just admitted that he is out of touch with the voters. TexasTowelie Jan 2017 #8
He is not a Democrat--he has said this. He is an independent who caucuses with the Democrats. MADem Jan 2017 #22
I'm aware of his independent status TexasTowelie Jan 2017 #35
I agree with your assessment. nt MADem Jan 2017 #154
Oh Geeze otohara Jan 2017 #137
You keep fighting that primary. nt Dr Hobbitstein Jan 2017 #9
Correct Me. Jan 2017 #65
Why did you lose the primary, oh most wise one? randome Jan 2017 #10
Maybe to give TheCowsCameHome Jan 2017 #14
Check with Debbie for your answer on this one. ciaobaby Jan 2017 #103
People here are in denial... Whiskeytide Jan 2017 #11
I think she lost because we are all tired of politicians from the 1990s. randome Jan 2017 #13
Unless it is HRC or EW. TheCowsCameHome Jan 2017 #32
I'm 58, close enough, and I don't want anyone my age or older telling us what to do. randome Jan 2017 #47
As for your first paragraph. NCTraveler Jan 2017 #15
The popular vote ... Whiskeytide Jan 2017 #27
This crazycatlady Jan 2017 #16
Bank account? His voters averaged 70k and are "seething" about money only because they despise bettyellen Jan 2017 #23
I didn't necessarily say ... Whiskeytide Jan 2017 #28
Live in California, make 70k for a family of four, and see how far that gets you. SlimJimmy Jan 2017 #95
Racism and sexism were the biggest predictors of a Trump vote. I'll grant you it overlaps with bettyellen Jan 2017 #99
I absolutely, but respecfully, disagree with your assessment. SlimJimmy Jan 2017 #130
As long as this chasing WWC idea does not include "setting aside" the rights and justice bettyellen Jan 2017 #132
Here's the problem. YOU and other progressives keep focusing SlimJimmy Jan 2017 #134
No, I am complaining about the media's focus on the WWC - did you miss all the round tables bettyellen Jan 2017 #138
I gave you the last word, you didn't do much wth it. Want to expand your answer? SlimJimmy Jan 2017 #141
actually the working class minorities voted for Clinton in the primaries JI7 Jan 2017 #156
They didn't seem to vote for her in the general. What happened? SlimJimmy Jan 2017 #166
they did vote for her in the general. only reason it's ignored us because some think only white JI7 Jan 2017 #173
And therein lies the problem. Many non-white working class in this country have also SlimJimmy Jan 2017 #178
lol. Buden is very pro big banks and credit card companies JI7 Jan 2017 #180
Well, we just disagree on this one. Clearly, I'm not going to change your view. SlimJimmy Jan 2017 #184
most families in california make much less than that . JI7 Jan 2017 #148
My brother lives and works in California and makes about 60k a year. To be honest, he is SlimJimmy Jan 2017 #167
it's not too difficult but you have limited options for type of housing JI7 Jan 2017 #172
With the price of housing in meropolitan areas of California, that's easy to understand. SlimJimmy Jan 2017 #175
That really depends on where in California you live SFnomad Jan 2017 #174
He lives in the Fresno area and housing there is quite expensive compared to the rest of the SlimJimmy Jan 2017 #176
and he lost california JI7 Jan 2017 #181
Yes he did. Badly. But did you really think the "Donald" was ever going to win there? SlimJimmy Jan 2017 #185
Navin R. Johnson was a jerk! George II Jan 2017 #88
You are 100% Correct ciaobaby Jan 2017 #105
Good post, but denial is too powerful for many here realmirage Jan 2017 #135
Bernie has become a songbird with an incoherent message. Nt NCTraveler Jan 2017 #12
Bernie is correct, of course. earthside Jan 2017 #19
While I think Sanders is right, Democrats were right to champion transgender bathroom rights. JCanete Jan 2017 #50
That may be the most succinct statement ... Whiskeytide Jan 2017 #120
He's just wrong. Trump won because Putin helped him and we've got a shitload of racists in USA. MADem Jan 2017 #20
Bingo. I think sexism was actually THE factor in Hilary's defeat. stopbush Jan 2017 #24
Correct. greatauntoftriplets Jan 2017 #144
That UPSHOT was a BRIGHT SPOT for you--who needs hating racists cluttering up your MADem Jan 2017 #146
Still I wonder what made her so hateful. greatauntoftriplets Jan 2017 #159
Fear, maybe? MADem Jan 2017 #160
I just don't know. greatauntoftriplets Jan 2017 #161
I don't really know, either. MADem Jan 2017 #164
Apparently so. greatauntoftriplets Jan 2017 #165
Bad time for a book tour, Sanders. Put the country first for fucks sake. bettyellen Jan 2017 #25
He does put the country first. TheCowsCameHome Jan 2017 #34
He talks the talk, fitting his square peg in every round hole out there... bettyellen Jan 2017 #36
How does he walk the walk? BainsBane Jan 2017 #85
Unless there's a book deal in the offing. lapucelle Jan 2017 #183
He needs the money. Trying to flog that book, but it's not working too well. MADem Jan 2017 #155
He's still out there taking on Trump, Wall St., and the deplorables. TheCowsCameHome Jan 2017 #186
Sanders lost because he failed utterly to appeal to voters beyond a narrow base of white voters Gothmog Jan 2017 #29
And money BainsBane Jan 2017 #93
Sanders was running for media coverage and got it Gothmog Jan 2017 #94
More Sunday show appearances than any other candidate by far bettyellen Jan 2017 #162
Twice as many as the next person Gothmog Jan 2017 #163
Post removed Post removed Jan 2017 #30
Sure, but Republican leaders are even further out of touch. Orsino Jan 2017 #31
Bernie only gives credit to Bernie and denigrates other Dems who've worked hard for us. bettyellen Jan 2017 #37
Some, obviously, will never forgive him for primarying Clinton... Orsino Jan 2017 #38
No, The Systems Not Totally Rigged. But That Idea Sure Helped Donald Trump. Gothmog Jan 2017 #46
I did not think his run was any more of an ego trip than it was for Hillary- bettyellen Jan 2017 #56
I hope this guy is not seeking a comeback. nt oasis Jan 2017 #40
Take your whining and go piss up a rope, Bernie. Enough, already. (nt) Paladin Jan 2017 #42
The Russians and 65M Americans would disagree. GeorgeGist Jan 2017 #44
Sanders ran solely for media coverage and the latest comments continue this pattern Gothmog Jan 2017 #45
Again today? Do you read DU, particularly this? George II Jan 2017 #48
I think the fact that Hillary made millions on speeches to Wall Street really hurt her. jalan48 Jan 2017 #55
Trump did not win. Hillary did with almost 3 million more votes. onecaliberal Jan 2017 #57
Huh? Mike Nelson Jan 2017 #58
Trump is a billionaire who wants to do away with the minimum wage Nick Otean Jan 2017 #64
Sanders has had nothing nice to say about Trump. This is the problem with comments being taken JCanete Jan 2017 #70
He's had very little nice to say about Clinton or Democrats in general. George II Jan 2017 #74
You have a problem with Jehovah's Witnesses? George II Jan 2017 #75
hahaha! just pamphlet covers with carnivores being ridden by children...like what do they eat now?nt JCanete Jan 2017 #80
Double down. George II Jan 2017 #82
I don't like opportunists who use my party when they need something lapucelle Jan 2017 #67
I couldn't care less what Sanders says NastyRiffraff Jan 2017 #68
Democrats need to advance candidates well versed in making speeches oasis Jan 2017 #72
Are you referring to Obama ? Cause that is what was said when he was running ciaobaby Jan 2017 #107
"One of the reasons that Mr. Trump won is that we have millions of people.... George II Jan 2017 #73
Just saying more votes were cast does not mean a higher percentage of the voting public was involved JCanete Jan 2017 #78
Guess what? None those people born since 2012 voted. George II Jan 2017 #92
But the article does go on to say that there was a downtick of eligible voters who voted per capita. JCanete Jan 2017 #100
The complaints were that the DNC wasn't setting up registration tables at Sanders rallies.... George II Jan 2017 #104
Sanders seriously want to hold Trump to his nebulous campaign "promises"? Blue_Tires Jan 2017 #76
he's doing it to make Trump into a liar and hypocrite, and to continue to hammer that home for the JCanete Jan 2017 #81
Because Trump was already proven beyond all doubt to be a liar and hypocrite Blue_Tires Jan 2017 #89
Last I checked almost three million more Americans preferred the Dem candidate Blue_Tires Jan 2017 #77
That's helpful. TheCowsCameHome Jan 2017 #84
Or maybe... Blue_Tires Jan 2017 #90
PLEASE LISTEN TO THE ACTUAL INTERVIEW yodermon Jan 2017 #83
We've heard it all a million times BainsBane Jan 2017 #91
DC consultants. pansypoo53219 Jan 2017 #86
It's unfortunate that Sanders spends so much time attacking Democrats BainsBane Jan 2017 #87
Be prepared to lose again next time around. TheCowsCameHome Jan 2017 #96
To listen to him BainsBane Jan 2017 #98
Ok, go down the same path again. TheCowsCameHome Jan 2017 #108
I don't go down a path BainsBane Jan 2017 #113
This group seems incapable of coming together. ciaobaby Jan 2017 #102
Did you read the OP? BainsBane Jan 2017 #112
I sure did. ciaobaby Jan 2017 #114
There must be some mistake TheCowsCameHome Jan 2017 #115
Here's the thing BainsBane Jan 2017 #117
I am also a democratic. ciaobaby Jan 2017 #118
I find the Bernie bashing very sad womanofthehills Jan 2017 #152
Dear leader has never accomplished anything of note Dream Girl Jan 2017 #97
She lost. Get over it. (nt) PotatoChip Jan 2017 #142
Bernie who?? Lil Missy Jan 2017 #110
In other news... bonemachine Jan 2017 #119
Why is Sanders peddling RW talking points? baldguy Jan 2017 #121
Because he has no skin in the game La Lioness Priyanka Jan 2017 #122
Plus he's too old Cary Jan 2017 #124
And it sells books. George II Jan 2017 #128
bernie seems to fight the Democrats treestar Jan 2017 #133
This message was self-deleted by its author jalan48 Jan 2017 #140
Horse shit, Bernie. Adrahil Jan 2017 #145
And Bernie Sanders lost the primaries ... NanceGreggs Jan 2017 #151
Delusional Bullshit. DetlefK Jan 2017 #157
I disagree Bettie Jan 2017 #179
What a useless fucking thread this is redstateblues Jan 2017 #182

blue cat

(2,415 posts)
1. I'm getting really tired of this meme.
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 10:29 AM
Jan 2017

Whatever dude. He is beginning to sound out of touch. And I voted for him even though he wasn't a party person and I am.

DFW

(54,341 posts)
33. So am I
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 12:59 PM
Jan 2017

Enough already. It's not like our candidate got 5% less votes or lost key states by a huge margin--and it's not like the results are free of any doubt or manipulation.

This is one broken record of which I have heard more than enough right about now. Anyone want to add anything about millionayahs and billionayahs while we're at it? I mean, as long as we're tossing out clichés and all.........

 

JCanete

(5,272 posts)
43. it is like we don't have the house or the Senate or the Presidency. It is like the reason we have a
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 02:40 PM
Jan 2017

shitty election system is because we have a horrible media in this country, yes, owned by the millionayahs and billionayas, who have a vested interest in not covering election fraud, voter suppression, voting machines, real news...etc.


It is like we keep trying to work with those same millonayahs and billionayas who are destroying us in the media anyway and seating the likes of Donald Trump in the White House.
 

JCanete

(5,272 posts)
66. is it actually a joke though? Would Republicans be able to steal elections without the help of the
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 03:47 PM
Jan 2017

Oligarchy?

LisaM

(27,801 posts)
61. Did he miss Hillary going to diners, schools, retirement centers, job sites?
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 03:33 PM
Jan 2017

Because she did all those things. Frequently. Unfortunately, the news outlets were all covering Trump's appearances.

Cary

(11,746 posts)
123. If Sanders was so brilliant why couldn't he win the primary?
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 11:20 PM
Jan 2017

Yes, I'm tired of the unrebutted answers to the stupid meme too.

SidDithers

(44,228 posts)
2. Trump won because racist Rust Belt voters...
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 10:33 AM
Jan 2017

decided that Democrats' inclusive economic plan benefited too many workers with skin darker than their own.

Sid

WhiteTara

(29,703 posts)
18. Or because of the FBI, Putin, Assange
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 11:36 AM
Jan 2017

voter suppression, CrossCheck and the vilification of our nominee by Sanders.

Separation

(1,975 posts)
26. It couldnt have had anything to do with
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 12:14 PM
Jan 2017

Hillary all but ignoring it? Keep blaming the other side and not looking inwards. The pubs will love you for it.

mcar

(42,301 posts)
39. And they've admitted it in quite a few interviews
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 02:06 PM
Jan 2017

I guess BS isn't paying attention to the "needs" of Trump voters.

RKP5637

(67,104 posts)
52. Exactly!!! The Trump win was based on Racism and Bigotry!!! I don't get why so many back off
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 03:22 PM
Jan 2017

from calling it for what it was. FFS, it was clearly evident at Trump rally after Trump rally after Trump rally!

putitinD

(1,551 posts)
53. trump only won MI by 10K votes. There were more votes than that not even counted in Detroit
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 03:24 PM
Jan 2017

(likely almost all for Hillary). The rust belt went heavily for Bernie in the primary. So I wouldn't say they were racist.

putitinD

(1,551 posts)
69. Hillary most likely WON MI, had they counted all the votes. Detroit is a democratic stronghold.
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 03:55 PM
Jan 2017

that usually goes about 97% for the democrat. Broken machines, and just bad oversight handed a victory to Drumpf. Not the voters.

brush

(53,764 posts)
71. Yup, 75,000 votes in Detroit and Flint weren't counted. And you know most were Hillary votes
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 04:01 PM
Jan 2017

Repugs purposely didn't fix all the broken voting machines so the votes couldn't be counted.

Typical of them and their dirty tricks yet so many here on DU keep moaning how flawed a candidate Hillary was instead, HEY THE REPUGS CHEATED US OUT OF THIS ELECTION WIN. LET'S MAKE DOING SOMETHING ABOUT IT OUR PRIORITY SO IT DOESN'T HAPPEN AGAIN.

Do you hear that, Bernie?

 

Goblinmonger

(22,340 posts)
54. Yeah, I mean all those visits Clinton made to Wisconsin
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 03:26 PM
Jan 2017

surely made sure that Wisconsin would be hers. Oh, wait.

 

golfguru

(4,987 posts)
127. Goblinmonger makes a valid point.
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 11:43 PM
Jan 2017

Last edited Sat Jan 7, 2017, 12:57 AM - Edit history (1)

Trump held 30 rallies in swing states, in 10 days prior to election day.
Hillary held how many? She acted over-confident based on polls.

 

SFnomad

(3,473 posts)
139. It doesn't matter if the point is valid or not
Sat Jan 7, 2017, 03:27 PM
Jan 2017

With the aid of hindsight, vision is 20/20 ... and Goblinmonger's snarky attitude is a load of crap.

I don't know what tRump or Clinton's count of swing state rallies was in the final 10 days. In the final week, I do know that Clinton was in Pennsylvania several times, Florida, North Carolina, Ohio and others. If you want to pretend that she was ignoring swing states, you can ... but facts would say otherwise.

 

golfguru

(4,987 posts)
169. In hind sight, she ignored Wisconsin,
Sun Jan 8, 2017, 02:36 PM
Jan 2017

and she lurched into MI only at the last minute.
She should have focused on WI, IA, MI, PA and ignored AZ, OH & FL.

If Trump loses WI/MI or PA he was toast.

 

SFnomad

(3,473 posts)
170. Re: She should have focused ...
Sun Jan 8, 2017, 03:03 PM
Jan 2017

Again, hindsight is 20/20 .. it's easy to play armchair quarterback after the fact.

If Trump lost WI/MI, he still would have won .... 286 to 252
If Trump lost PA, he still would have won ... 280 to 258
Those EC totals are not taking into account faithless electors

So FFS, if you're going to continue to beat up on Clinton, at least get your math right. Looking at the states that were close, she couldn't win it by flipping only one state. And the only way should could have won it flipping just two states is if one of those states she took was Florida.

 

golfguru

(4,987 posts)
126. Why did the same "racist" rust belters voted for Obama twice?
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 11:40 PM
Jan 2017

Last edited Sat Jan 7, 2017, 12:55 AM - Edit history (1)

Your POV makes no sense. Trump held 30 rallies in 10 days before election.
How many rallies Hillary bothered with, leading to election day?
Hillary rested, based on polls.

 

golfguru

(4,987 posts)
168. Wait a minute, Obama won PA twice.
Sun Jan 8, 2017, 02:32 PM
Jan 2017

And how come Trump won so many counties previously won by president Obama? Did those people suddenly become more racist?

JI7

(89,247 posts)
171. it was more due to non voters and trump getting racists that thought
Sun Jan 8, 2017, 04:38 PM
Jan 2017

Mccain and Romney were liberal

Dustlawyer

(10,495 posts)
129. I am pretty sure you looked it up but won't admit it.
Sat Jan 7, 2017, 12:58 AM
Jan 2017

If you didn't you don't want to know, either way it won't change your opinion. i gave you the reference to find it so there goes your proof. My guess is you will throw another negative comment and put your head back in the sand with your fingers in your ears. DU had it posted and you may have even commented about the betrayal. It was less than a month ago!

MADem

(135,425 posts)
131. I am pretty sure I didn't. But since you can't come up with a citation, I'll
Sat Jan 7, 2017, 01:56 AM
Jan 2017

take that to mean that you couldn't find one, and instead are trying to snark at me to deflect from your inability to produce proof of your extraordinary claim.

You gave me NO "reference." You made an assertion and you did not back it up.

You still can, you know. I'll be interested in seeing it if you can come up with it.

Seems to me, had you done that in the first place, you might have avoided all this pointless back-and-forth. It's what people do when they make claims, ordinarily--they provide the proof.

Dustlawyer

(10,495 posts)
136. Washington Post by Aaron Blake on 11/17.
Sat Jan 7, 2017, 11:52 AM
Jan 2017

Not tech savvy to post link from phone. Yesterday didn't have time. Do not know where/how to check DU archives. I will spend time figuring out for future because several posts were placed over this. Many Hillary fans were upset over his comments though he didn't mention her by name. It was clear he felt she didn't go to the people and instead attended small fundraisers instead. She was out of touch with the people. I agree with this criticism, it is a common failure of corporate Dems who grow to dependant on Donor money.

MADem

(135,425 posts)
149. You cut out the url and post it--it's easy.
Sun Jan 8, 2017, 01:11 AM
Jan 2017
http://www.androidcentral.com/how-use-copy-and-paste-android





You should also cut/paste the salient paragraph where your alleged point is made.

He didn't "mention her by name," eh?

That rather obviates your claim upthread. Further, SANDERS is the one griping that -- not Clinton (she has not been in "Congress" for quite a while, she's been a member of the Executive Branch and then, a private citizen) -- but CONGRESS is out of touch.

Cut/pasted from the OP to which you responded:

"One of the reasons that Mr. Trump won is that we have millions of people who have given up on the political process, who don't believe that Congress is listening to their pain," Sanders said. "What the Democratic Party has got to do is start listening."

Dustlawyer

(10,495 posts)
150. Thanks for the tip.
Sun Jan 8, 2017, 01:18 AM
Jan 2017

As for the Obama said it is clear from the context, especially if you watch the video, he was referring to Clinton.

MADem

(135,425 posts)
153. You've got to give me a link in order for me to watch a video.
Sun Jan 8, 2017, 03:30 AM
Jan 2017

Besides, the OP gripes about CONGRESS, as I said.

I rather doubt Obama trashed Clinton. Just not buying it.

Response to Dustlawyer (Reply #4)

Zoonart

(11,849 posts)
5. Bernie, Bernie, Bernie
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 10:43 AM
Jan 2017

Don't get me wrong... I voted for Bernie, but where are the young Democrats? Let's let them step up to the mike.

 

Grey Lemercier

(1,429 posts)
6. it is NOT "Bernie hate" whatsoever when I now call him out for aiding in the minimisation
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 10:45 AM
Jan 2017

of the Comey ratfuck, systemic Rethuglican-led voter suppression of PoC, pervasive racism, misogyny, homophobia, and Russian OVERT interference in our electoral process. These factors are FAR, FAR more germane to why Shitgibbon won than what Bernie's hectoring tries to pinpoint about the so-called failings of our party, a party he is not even a member of yet again.

He rails on and on about our failure to appeal some long-lost WWC, a group who not only aids, but now (and has for decades) actively votes/works to achieve all of those bad things that are now utterly foundational to the Republican worldview of American political life.

brush

(53,764 posts)
63. Good post. Why is "broken record Bernie" ignoring all the real reasons that you stated?
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 03:38 PM
Jan 2017

There's a huge elephant in the room with Putin, Comey, Assange, Crosscheck, vote suppression, and other repug dirty tricks written all over it but Bernie pretends not to see it.

Why? So the complicit media will continue to feature him trashing the Dems like he did in the primaries?

God, Bernie. Time to retire the canned, anti-establishment talking points and see what really happened.

TexasTowelie

(112,111 posts)
8. If Bernie is a Democrat, then he has just admitted that he is out of touch with the voters.
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 11:04 AM
Jan 2017

I'm not at either extreme as far as being a liberal Democrat or a conservative Democrat and from what I gather I'm somewhere in the middle. I'm also 20+ years closer to being the median age of American voters than Bernie. I find it insulting to be told that I am out of touch when I voted for the candidate that won the popular vote.

MADem

(135,425 posts)
22. He is not a Democrat--he has said this. He is an independent who caucuses with the Democrats.
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 11:55 AM
Jan 2017

He is not bound to vote with us on anything except procedural issues. That's where his loyalty ends, and for that he got a couple of committee seats.

Here's the link for those who think this truth is a 'bash:'


http://www.politico.com/story/2016/11/independent-bernie-sanders-democratic-leadership-231486


Bernie Sanders was just appointed to the Senate Democratic leadership team. But the Vermont senator still isn't becoming an official member of the party.

After new Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer on Wednesday added the 2016 presidential candidate to his leadership slate as outreach director, Sanders waved off a question from POLITICO about whether he is now a full-fledged Democrat. An aide later confirmed that the Vermont senator would remain an independent who caucuses with Democrats.

Sanders' decision to run for president as a Democrat after touting his status as an independent during 26 years in Congress sparked frustration among supporters of Hillary Clinton during their bitter primary battle. The Vermonter said during the Democratic National Convention in July that he would be leaving the party after Clinton defeated him to serve the remaining two years of his Senate term as an independent.

TexasTowelie

(112,111 posts)
35. I'm aware of his independent status
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 01:25 PM
Jan 2017

which is why I consider his remarks to be an insult. I could see it as an insult regardless of whether someone supported Clinton, O'Malley or Sanders in the primary and frankly I consider Bernie to be out of touch by being so tone-deaf. I would consider anyone that makes similar remarks about Democrats to be tone-deaf also.

 

otohara

(24,135 posts)
137. Oh Geeze
Sat Jan 7, 2017, 12:33 PM
Jan 2017

if he had won the primary how long would it have taken him to go back to I status so he could continue to trash Democrats?
He's not happy unless he's blaming Democrats for one thing or another

At least Trump stayed with the R status.

 

randome

(34,845 posts)
10. Why did you lose the primary, oh most wise one?
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 11:11 AM
Jan 2017

[hr][font color="blue"][center]Don't underestimate the long-term effects of a good night's sleep.[/center][/font][hr]

Whiskeytide

(4,461 posts)
11. People here are in denial...
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 11:11 AM
Jan 2017

..., I'm sorry, but it's true ... and Sanders is dead on balls right about this. There are multiple reasons people voted for Trump instead of Clinton - and the nasty, racist, bigoted, misogynist views of the "deplorables" - while certainly a large part of his base - was only the "was never going to vote for anyone else anyway" portion of it.

Many Obama voters switched or stayed home. That is simply a fact. They did that because they believe the American political system has not spoken to them in decades - and they are frustrated. And because the media in this country has done a piss poor job of identifying WHY the political system has left them high and dry. To truly understand why middle America has deteriorated over the last several decades, you have to follow politics closely, and learn to ignore most of the media bullshit out there. We - Americans - don't do that very well.

I'm in a deep red state - and the Trump voters here that I know personally (I don't often hang with your typical "deplorable", so while they are certainly around, they're not who I'm speaking of) voted for him because he represented something "anti" business as usual in DC. They are not policy wonks the way most of us here are - they didn't consider policy issues in casting their vote (I know that for most of us that is sacrilegious, but that is the reality for the average voter in the US). Instead they voted for someone who would shake things up - or possibly even tear things down in DC - because they're pissed off at DC, and they WANT to hit back at it. And it's a non-partisan hatred ... Trump fucked with establishment republicans as much as he did the Dems. They LOVED him for that! New voter registration was up highest in conservative counties in Alabama in the weeks before the GE - meaning that people who had been so disconnected to politics because they hated everything about it decided in 2016 to register and vote for the "anti-politician". And I know - I KNOW - he's not really what they think he is... but most of them don't know that. He staked out the anti-establishment ground in their averagely informed minds, and they flocked to it.

To us, Trump seemed to be courting the deplorables - and he was, no doubt - and that should not be minimized. But he was also courting this seething frustration and anger that crossed over deeply into the independent vote. We didn't see that , or didn't think it would work, or thought his negatives would overshadow it. Clinton grossly underestimated this frustration ... and the fact that, at the end of the day, the condition of the average voter's bank account generally plays the dominant role in their ballot choice.

Clinton is probably not the 1% shill they make her out to be - but she didn't do enough to distance herself from that image for the average voter. In fact, she did things that played directly into that narrative - or at least were used by her opponents to link her to it. And that is Sander' point. The average, run of the mill Navin R. Johnsons of the world saw her as established DC politics as usual, and more of the same crap they have endured for 30 years. They voted - in large numbers - against that.


 

randome

(34,845 posts)
13. I think she lost because we are all tired of politicians from the 1990s.
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 11:20 AM
Jan 2017

Out with the old and in with the new. NMS (No More Septuagenarians) !
[hr][font color="blue"][center]Don't underestimate the long-term effects of a good night's sleep.[/center][/font][hr]

TheCowsCameHome

(40,168 posts)
32. Unless it is HRC or EW.
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 12:52 PM
Jan 2017

Then I suppose it would be OK.

PS - Wait until YOU are one. Then tell me you don't like them.

 

randome

(34,845 posts)
47. I'm 58, close enough, and I don't want anyone my age or older telling us what to do.
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 02:59 PM
Jan 2017

Obama is close to my age but he's the exception rather than the rule. We are not likely to see someone of his caliber again.
[hr][font color="blue"][center]Don't underestimate the long-term effects of a good night's sleep.[/center][/font][hr]

 

NCTraveler

(30,481 posts)
15. As for your first paragraph.
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 11:23 AM
Jan 2017

Why do you think millions more voted for Clinton over Trump?

I love what you call a "fact". You can't back up one of your "facts" because it cant conceptually be defined as a fact. That is how far you have gone here. Bernie is doing the same thing on his book tour.

Whiskeytide

(4,461 posts)
27. The popular vote ...
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 12:30 PM
Jan 2017

... is significant, but it's not how a candidate is elected in the GE. Don't tell me Clinton and her team - and the DNC - didn't know this. Trump sure as Hell did.

You're right. Most of my post is my opinion. But it's pretty clear that several states that voted for Obama went for Trump this time. You can google the two maps for comparison.

Why is that? Do you think it's because voters who cast a vote for Obama in 2008 and 2012 suddenly realized he was black? Do you think Obama voters decided they were ok with a black president, but couldn't accept a woman as president? Some switched, and a lot of them stayed home. What's your theory on that? Fake news, voter fraud, machine tampering, Comey, gerrymandering? A role? Maybe. Not likely enough to sway the vote, IMO.

... I think Trump represented change to these people. Obama had that angle in 2008. Clinton, on the other hand, reminded everyone of the '90s - and if they haven't been happy with the political landscape over the last 24 years, she took the blame for that. That may be unfair to her, but in my opinion it was a big part of the problem.


crazycatlady

(4,492 posts)
16. This
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 11:34 AM
Jan 2017

I have family in a district that flipped in 2016 (it's the one district that's electoral vote went against its state in 2016) and going to the district, I see years of structural economic decline. Kids often get out as soon as they can and never return. Even though they all voted for Trump, they're not racist deplorables. They're just ready for change and for someone to finally pay attention to them (a Manhattan billionaire is the last person that typically would). They also didn't think that Hillary understood the challenges that rural America faces (Bernie does as he represents a rural state).

This is a scene that could be repeated throughout rural America.

Say what you want to about hacking, Comey, gerrymandering, etc, but until the Democrats understand districts like this (this particular district voted Democratic from 1992-2012) they can't win national elections. We won't win every district like this, but moving the needle a few percentage points in rural areas would make a difference in a statewide race.

Yes Hillary won the popular vote, but (as of right now) the presidency is not decided by the popular vote. Winning Chicago, NYC, and LA by large margins only helps get electoral votes in IL, NY, and CA. There's more to the United States than major cities.

 

bettyellen

(47,209 posts)
23. Bank account? His voters averaged 70k and are "seething" about money only because they despise
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 11:58 AM
Jan 2017

A black president redistributing that money to brown people. And voters in Alabama aren't noticing color all of a sudden? LOL, okay...

Whiskeytide

(4,461 posts)
28. I didn't necessarily say ...
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 12:36 PM
Jan 2017

... that their reasoning was well founded. But it is what it is. Clinton did not get their votes while Obama in many cases did. That at least raises an inference that, for many, it wasn't about race or sex.

And average income means little when the billionaires and millionaires are in the calculation. People pissed at DC voted for Trump. Period. Why did they prefer Trump over Clinton?

SlimJimmy

(3,180 posts)
95. Live in California, make 70k for a family of four, and see how far that gets you.
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 05:09 PM
Jan 2017

The line "A black president redistributing money to brown people" is just a cop out. Those folks in the rust belt and in states that had voted overwhelmingly for President Obama twice, had lost hope that it would get better, and voted with their pocketbooks. I've been a Democrat for almost 40 years. Listen to me when I tell you that we've lost our way, and need to get back to representing ALL of the people, and not just select groups. If we happen to learn this lesson, we might just start winning some elections again.

But feel free to keep feeding into the line that only white racist folks voted for Trump.

 

bettyellen

(47,209 posts)
99. Racism and sexism were the biggest predictors of a Trump vote. I'll grant you it overlaps with
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 05:17 PM
Jan 2017

The overal attitude of Dems is that they're a "tax and spenders" but they also seem to think urban people are freeloaders and they're the only ones who actually work. 70k is a good salary in the rust belt, which is where that figure comes from. Self segregating whites who earn a good salary were Trumps bread and butter. They stupidly think it's only (liberal) environmental and trade policies that have hurt them. They are misinformed and in more of a bubble than we are. They think the moron is going to rain dollars down on them any day now.

SlimJimmy

(3,180 posts)
130. I absolutely, but respecfully, disagree with your assessment.
Sat Jan 7, 2017, 01:42 AM
Jan 2017

As I stated, I've been a Democrat for nearly 40 years. I've seen major changes in how my party approaches elections. Splitting people into little groups has been the biggest downfall for us. We used to be the big tent party, but that's no longer true. I'll say it again. We lost (and have been losing) because we abandoned a large segment of the blue collar Democrats of all colors and stripes across this country. Until we get back to that model (a 50 state model and not a coastal model) we will continue on a path to irrelevance.

I understand that these are harsh words. I also understand that many progressives will not want to hear this. But until we realize that we are truly on the wrong path, nothing will change.

 

bettyellen

(47,209 posts)
132. As long as this chasing WWC idea does not include "setting aside" the rights and justice
Sat Jan 7, 2017, 02:14 AM
Jan 2017

Deserved but denied to women and POC... I'm good.
But I've found this focus one them to be a preamble to asking us to STFU. Not happening.

SlimJimmy

(3,180 posts)
134. Here's the problem. YOU and other progressives keep focusing
Sat Jan 7, 2017, 02:56 AM
Jan 2017

on the WWC instead of the actual working class (of all stripes) that have been ignored by the Democratic party ... MY party. And I'm damn sick of it. I've been sick of it for a long time now. We have literally ignored WC African Americans, Hispanics, and Asians for way too long, and we do it at our own peril. And that's all I have to say on the matter. Keep spinning around yelling WWC for as long as it takes to make you feel better. But if that's the case, then get used to losing. I for one, am also sick of LOSING.

I'll give you the last word.

 

bettyellen

(47,209 posts)
138. No, I am complaining about the media's focus on the WWC - did you miss all the round tables
Sat Jan 7, 2017, 01:37 PM
Jan 2017

And the town hall sanders had? People were obsessed with this segment of voters.

JI7

(89,247 posts)
156. actually the working class minorities voted for Clinton in the primaries
Sun Jan 8, 2017, 05:05 AM
Jan 2017

clinton did not ignore the working class.

JI7

(89,247 posts)
173. they did vote for her in the general. only reason it's ignored us because some think only white
Sun Jan 8, 2017, 04:41 PM
Jan 2017

People can be working class.

SlimJimmy

(3,180 posts)
178. And therein lies the problem. Many non-white working class in this country have also
Sun Jan 8, 2017, 05:47 PM
Jan 2017

been ignored by our party to a large extent. If, for example, you are an African American or Hispanic small business owner, the party has not been all that interested in your plight. You tend to get lumped in with all other small business owners who are struggling to keep businesses afloat and bills paid. I heard her rhetoric, but I failed to see any concrete plans from Hillary that addressed these issues. Saying we need more fairness, to tax the rich more, and offer free college did not cut it for many. Including myself. I voted for her, but only as a lesser of two evils choice. We could have done so much better. Joe Biden comes to mind when I think of this.

Say what you want. But the truth is that her campaign missed the mark when it came to this demographic.

JI7

(89,247 posts)
180. lol. Buden is very pro big banks and credit card companies
Sun Jan 8, 2017, 05:55 PM
Jan 2017

Hillary went into many details amd media didn't report it.

No she did not miss the mark as she did win working class people who are minorities.

And she even won among whites whose top concern were economy.

SlimJimmy

(3,180 posts)
167. My brother lives and works in California and makes about 60k a year. To be honest, he is
Sun Jan 8, 2017, 02:04 PM
Jan 2017

struggling to make ends meet.

 

SFnomad

(3,473 posts)
174. That really depends on where in California you live
Sun Jan 8, 2017, 04:55 PM
Jan 2017

And mostly the difficulty is just housing and associated costs. Anyplace near the coast from just north of San Francisco all the way to Mexico would be difficult. Also, along the I-80 corridor from San Francisco to Reno / Lake Tahoe.

But most of the rest of California is really no different than the rest of the country and there are large areas where average housing prices are no more than $100k. Of course, the closer you get to even the smaller "large cities", like Fresno and Bakersfield, the prices do shoot up, but nothing like SF.

SlimJimmy

(3,180 posts)
176. He lives in the Fresno area and housing there is quite expensive compared to the rest of the
Sun Jan 8, 2017, 05:38 PM
Jan 2017

country (outside of the cities)

 

ciaobaby

(1,000 posts)
105. You are 100% Correct
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 05:43 PM
Jan 2017

Thanks for putting it out there but yeah, people here are in denial and consumed with finding someone else to blame for Hillary's loss.
And we know it will eventually end up with Bernie being the one big reason Hillary lost even though it was "her turn".

 

realmirage

(2,117 posts)
135. Good post, but denial is too powerful for many here
Sat Jan 7, 2017, 11:19 AM
Jan 2017

to truly absorb the reality. Populist candidates beat establishment in the general. I'm sick of centrist candidates

earthside

(6,960 posts)
19. Bernie is correct, of course.
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 11:37 AM
Jan 2017

And not just on the double standard of big money.

It is politics.

But a party and its candidates that have become more identified with transgender-bathroom rights than the fact that working class Americans haven't had a raise in eight years is a party out-of-touch.

 

JCanete

(5,272 posts)
50. While I think Sanders is right, Democrats were right to champion transgender bathroom rights.
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 03:17 PM
Jan 2017

We are right to combat human rights violations. We're just stupid (or cynical) to not effectively support class warfare as well, and in the process, to give rural communities a far more compelling boogey man.

Whiskeytide

(4,461 posts)
120. That may be the most succinct statement ...
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 07:50 PM
Jan 2017

... of the problem I've seen. Thank you.

We're just stupid (or cynical) to not effectively support class warfare as well, and in the process, to give rural communities a far more compelling boogey man.


We HAVE let the boogey man identify us - progressives - as the boogey man. I think a strong effort to better educate voters - pointing out examples of how republican policy has hurt Americans time and time again - is at least a start. That's something Sanders did, and it drew a lot of support from people who weren't really expected to support him. I don't know whether he might have won the primary if the landscape had been different - but the fact that his message drew such crowds and resonated outside the Dem party should have been a sign for someone, I think!

And you're right. Dems WERE right to champion TG rights and other civil/human rights causes. But the core of the party needs to be class warfare - 99% of the votes are THERE! It's a no-brainer.

MADem

(135,425 posts)
20. He's just wrong. Trump won because Putin helped him and we've got a shitload of racists in USA.
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 11:49 AM
Jan 2017

To say nothing of sexists.

Trump would have beaten Sanders by an even wider margin, AND his reputation would have been thoroughly destroyed in the process. His family would have encountered searing and unrelenting negative attention that would have highlighted every unfortunate aspect of their lives.

He and they wouldn't have been able to bear the scrutiny.

greatauntoftriplets

(175,731 posts)
144. Correct.
Sat Jan 7, 2017, 07:18 PM
Jan 2017

Every Trump supporter I know says incredibly racist crap against POC or Muslims.

As an example: the other day I posted Chuck Schumer's great line about the ACA -- Make America Sick Again -- on Facebook. Several Democratic friends responded. The a cousin I haven't seen for years chimed in saying

Sounds like the Democrats just continue to complain and whine when they don't get their way. It will take the republicans a LONG time to clean up the mess that the monkey, I mean so called President made during the last 8 years. Never heard the whining then. hmm!


I responded "monkey"??? The friends who had commented previously tore into her racism (and one used the word).

What gets to me is that we both grew up on Chicago's North Side and went to the same high school during the 1960s. I wonder where she went wrong. Never knew her parents' politics, though my grandfather/her greatuncle became a Democrat once he was a citizen. Fortunately, I haven't seen her in dogs' years since she lives in Texas.

The upshot is that she unfriended me. The hell with her.

MADem

(135,425 posts)
146. That UPSHOT was a BRIGHT SPOT for you--who needs hating racists cluttering up your
Sun Jan 8, 2017, 12:52 AM
Jan 2017

life?

Shitbird did you a favor-LOL!

MADem

(135,425 posts)
160. Fear, maybe?
Sun Jan 8, 2017, 10:43 AM
Jan 2017

People hate when they're afraid that those they've been taught to disparage might do better than they are doing.

It's definitely a learned behavior....

greatauntoftriplets

(175,731 posts)
161. I just don't know.
Sun Jan 8, 2017, 10:49 AM
Jan 2017

Guess it's good that I haven't seen her in so many years (can't remember how long). Sad.

 

bettyellen

(47,209 posts)
36. He talks the talk, fitting his square peg in every round hole out there...
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 01:40 PM
Jan 2017

Sorry but he's had this crap on endless loop for a year now, and evidence proves him wrong. He was a "tax and spend" liberal and that is not what his beloved "WWC" wanted this year.

lapucelle

(18,249 posts)
183. Unless there's a book deal in the offing.
Sun Jan 8, 2017, 08:23 PM
Jan 2017

After he signed with St. Martin's Press in mid July, he was working on a tight deadline to get the book ready for the market by the week after election day in order to maximize publicity during the post election scrum. It explains why he was largely absent from the general election campaign.

http://macmillan.supadu.com/images/ckfinder/704/images/Thomas-Dunne/Sanders%20Announcement.pdf

MADem

(135,425 posts)
155. He needs the money. Trying to flog that book, but it's not working too well.
Sun Jan 8, 2017, 03:46 AM
Jan 2017

He thought he'd be beating up the (winning) Dems from the left, energizing his base to push the party further left.

Instead, he's standing on the sidewalk with half of (shocked) America, watching the jackbooted thugs metaphorically goose-step down Pennsylvania Avenue.

He's out of touch and out of time.

Frankly, if the Dems had won back the Senate, and had a comfortable margin, they wouldn't give him the time of day.

Gothmog

(145,129 posts)
29. Sanders lost because he failed utterly to appeal to voters beyond a narrow base of white voters
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 12:40 PM
Jan 2017

Sanders was rejected by Jewish, African American and Latino voters and got less than 43% of the vote in the primaries The DNC had nothing to do with the fact that Jewish, African American and Latino voters rejected him. Sanders was rejected by Jewish, African American and Latino votes. Sanders did not come close to getting enough votes.
http://pleasecutthecrap.com/a-message-for-hardcore-bernie-stans/

Hillary Cinton won the nomination because of democracy. She received more than 57% of Democratic votes cast. Bernie Sanders virtually only won caucuses, which are the least democratic aspect of the primary process. And most of those he won only because she decided to save her money for the General election. He won very few primaries, except for his “home states” and Michigan and his clock was cleaned in virtually every other state that mattered. Demographically, he only won white liberals. The fact that YOU think he made it close, or only lost because of “Super Delegates” is a hallmark of your delusion. Bernie Stans largely didn’t seem to notice that she reached out to you repeatedly and you bit her hand off, making you more like Republicans than you should be comfortable with.

Sanders could not win the popular vote and was in the process only due to caucuses

BainsBane

(53,031 posts)
93. And money
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 05:07 PM
Jan 2017

He raised and spent unprecedented amounts of money for a primary, and that money enabled him to stay in the race three months after it was clear he couldn't win.

Besides, he spent a fair bit of time with rich people, some of whom he relied on as surrogates. Clinton wasn't the only one with high profile Hollywood supporters.

Response to portlander23 (Original post)

Orsino

(37,428 posts)
31. Sure, but Republican leaders are even further out of touch.
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 12:48 PM
Jan 2017

That they pander to the worst impulses of white, straight, male Christian America doesn't make them any more aware of the concrete needs of ordinary citizens.

There's just too much goddamned money in our politics for many successful politicians to be able to read and identify with people who work for a living (or who need to). Only a few big political names are even partially in touch, and none of them are Republicans.

 

bettyellen

(47,209 posts)
37. Bernie only gives credit to Bernie and denigrates other Dems who've worked hard for us.
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 01:44 PM
Jan 2017

He's the choice of the spoiler vote, out selling books instead of talking about the horrid cabinet picks and Trumps dangerous conflicts of interests and foreign debts.

But the MSM wants him to attack Dems, so he complies to get face time.

Orsino

(37,428 posts)
38. Some, obviously, will never forgive him for primarying Clinton...
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 02:02 PM
Jan 2017

...and will have persuaded themselves that his long-shot presidential run was just some sort of ego trip.

Gothmog

(145,129 posts)
46. No, The Systems Not Totally Rigged. But That Idea Sure Helped Donald Trump.
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 02:45 PM
Jan 2017

Sanders had no chance of being the nominee after Super Tuesday but continued his campaign which hurt Clinton. Here is a good example Sanders really hurt Clinton I am still mad at the number of times that trump used Sanders' claims against Clinton. Sanders' baseless charges that the system was fixed and rigged were used by trump to great effect and hurt Clinton http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/rigged-system-donald-trump_us_5855cb44e4b08debb7898607?section=us_politics

And if Sanders’ rhetoric during the primaries started that stew simmering with his talk about the system only working for the rich, Trump brought it to a full boil with his remarks blaming undocumented immigrants and trade agreements that he claimed were forged as the result of open corruption.

I think he was able to thread a certain toxic needle. But he did win, and we’re all going to pay the price.
John Weaver, aide to Ohio Gov. John Kasich’s presidential campaign

The underlying irony for those who sought to end what they perceived as corruption is that they may well have elected a president whose record through the years and whose actions since the election signal it could be the most openly corrupt administration in generations.....

And if Sanders’ rhetoric during the primaries started that stew simmering with his talk about the system only working for the rich, Trump brought it to a full boil with his remarks blaming undocumented immigrants and trade agreements that he claimed were forged as the result of open corruption.

Sanders' bogus rigged process claim hurt a great deal
 

bettyellen

(47,209 posts)
56. I did not think his run was any more of an ego trip than it was for Hillary-
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 03:28 PM
Jan 2017

But I think he is being harmful now. The media uses him to bash Dems from the "inside". It works to promote his book. And I think he's promoting a false analysis as to what went wrong in the election, and it's not helpful.

I wish the country was as liberal or appreciated the safety net enough not to hate "tax and spend" Dems, but they now have less trust in government than ever. They just wanted someone to "show them the money" and weren't going for populism at all. His tax hikes and environmental regulations would have buried him with those voters.

GeorgeGist

(25,319 posts)
44. The Russians and 65M Americans would disagree.
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 02:40 PM
Jan 2017

Sorry Bernie, but the immediate problem is Donald Trump
becoming President.

Gothmog

(145,129 posts)
45. Sanders ran solely for media coverage and the latest comments continue this pattern
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 02:42 PM
Jan 2017

Sanders was never really running to win. After Super Tuesday, it was clear that Sanders would not be the nominee. Hillary Clinton had a delegate lead that Sanders could not over come. Sanders was not really running to be the nominee but to get attention

Second, even Sanders admitted that he was running for media coverage and money http://www.politico.com/blogs/2016-dem-primary-live-updates-and-results/2016/03/bernie-sanders-independent-media-coverage-220747

Bernie Sanders on Monday told NBC’s Chuck Todd that he ran as a Democrat to get more media coverage.

During a town hall-style event in Columbus, Ohio, the independent Vermont senator said, “In terms of media coverage, you have to run within the Democratic Party.” He then took a dig at MNSBC, telling Todd, the network “would not have me on his program” if he ran as an independent.

Money also played a role in his decision to run as a Democrat, Sanders added.

“To run as an independent, you need — you could be a billionaire," he said. "If you're a billionaire, you can do that. I'm not a billionaire. So the structure of American politics today is such that I thought the right ethic was to run within the Democratic Party.”

The latest comments are all part of a pattern of Sanders continuing to seek media coverage

jalan48

(13,859 posts)
55. I think the fact that Hillary made millions on speeches to Wall Street really hurt her.
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 03:26 PM
Jan 2017

That's not something we normally associate with a Democrat.

Mike Nelson

(9,951 posts)
58. Huh?
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 03:31 PM
Jan 2017

...Hillary Clinton won the vote; it was not even close. We need to focus on how they suppress votes and use the media (and the Russians).

 

JCanete

(5,272 posts)
70. Sanders has had nothing nice to say about Trump. This is the problem with comments being taken
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 03:56 PM
Jan 2017

out of the context of the greater whole, I guess. The issue with democrats not waging a class war is that we aren't clearly defining ourselves as the antithesis of the Republicans and their crony capitalism, and we aren't steadfastly, and as a unit, standing up against corporate media either, which means the media has all the power in the world to falsely equivocate our sins to those greater ones of our opponents. We need to give them no fuel that can be used to undercut a populist message...hell, we need to take up a populist message....not one of compromise and everybody working together...banks and poor people and rich moguls hugging it out like some Jehovah's Witness pamphlet cover.

 

JCanete

(5,272 posts)
80. hahaha! just pamphlet covers with carnivores being ridden by children...like what do they eat now?nt
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 04:27 PM
Jan 2017

lapucelle

(18,249 posts)
67. I don't like opportunists who use my party when they need something
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 03:54 PM
Jan 2017

And then badmouth it after. What kind of person does that?

NastyRiffraff

(12,448 posts)
68. I couldn't care less what Sanders says
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 03:55 PM
Jan 2017

I mean, for Chrissakes! He's "schooling" real Democrats? Give me a fucking break! He just loves the publicity, doesn't he? I'd hate to get in between Sanders and a TV camera..I'd be knocked over and trampled to death.

oasis

(49,376 posts)
72. Democrats need to advance candidates well versed in making speeches
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 04:06 PM
Jan 2017

with grandiose visions of pie in the sky. That's the ticket.

 

ciaobaby

(1,000 posts)
107. Are you referring to Obama ? Cause that is what was said when he was running
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 05:54 PM
Jan 2017

and Hillary was all over it. Short memory ?

George II

(67,782 posts)
73. "One of the reasons that Mr. Trump won is that we have millions of people....
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 04:11 PM
Jan 2017

....who have given up on the political process".

Is he for real? Two million MORE people voted in 2016 than in 2012. And THREE million more people voted for Clinton than for Trump. Does he just make this stuff up as he goes along?

 

JCanete

(5,272 posts)
78. Just saying more votes were cast does not mean a higher percentage of the voting public was involved
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 04:25 PM
Jan 2017
?tid=a_inl

www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-fix/wp/2016/11/15/more-votes-were-cast-in-2016-than-in-2012-but-that-doesnt-mean-turnout-was-great/?utm_term=.39bbd2c0c2a5

I'm not taking this at total face value as a refutation of what you just said, because saying the population has increased by 18 million in 8 years isn't the same as saying the voting population has, but its worth being less effusive about the uptake in actual votes.


weird, I didn't expect it to actually post the chart rather than the link.

George II

(67,782 posts)
92. Guess what? None those people born since 2012 voted.
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 05:05 PM
Jan 2017

And if you were following the primary campaigns, the Clinton campaign was actively registering tens of thousands of new voters, or even more. On the other hand the Sanders campaign was complaining that the DNC wasn't registering voters at HIS rallies.

So he can complain as long as he wants about low voter turnout, but he did little or nothing to help that, even when his candidacy was involved.

 

JCanete

(5,272 posts)
100. But the article does go on to say that there was a downtick of eligible voters who voted per capita.
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 05:31 PM
Jan 2017

Last edited Fri Jan 6, 2017, 06:34 PM - Edit history (1)

Still, I agree about your point, that those newborns weren't voters, thus me pointing out the silliness of the article using that metric. I should have skipped that myself, but I thought it illustrated that eligible voter total does change from election to election, just as the population does(not as a direct corollary).

As to Sanders complaining that the DNC wasn't registering voters at his rallies, I don't have enough information on either Clinton or Sanders or the DNC's operating procedure to comment, but I'll look into it.

George II

(67,782 posts)
104. The complaints were that the DNC wasn't setting up registration tables at Sanders rallies....
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 05:43 PM
Jan 2017

....not realizing that the candidates in primary races set up registration tables at their events.

The Sanders campaign never thought of doing that, whereas the Clinton campaign was actively registering new voters throughout the primary campaign (and into the general election campaign)

Blue_Tires

(55,445 posts)
76. Sanders seriously want to hold Trump to his nebulous campaign "promises"?
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 04:24 PM
Jan 2017

*NOW* who's the one that's out of fucking touch, Bern?

 

JCanete

(5,272 posts)
81. he's doing it to make Trump into a liar and hypocrite, and to continue to hammer that home for the
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 04:30 PM
Jan 2017

public while tapping into issues that affect them directly. Why are you trying to read it as something else?

Blue_Tires

(55,445 posts)
89. Because Trump was already proven beyond all doubt to be a liar and hypocrite
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 04:51 PM
Jan 2017

years before he ever got involved in politics...

People.do.not.care... Because if they did, then he wouldn't have gotten elected in the first place because all this info is well know to the public.

There isn't going to be some mythical "emperor has no clothes" moment because this goddamned country voted him in knowing full well the whole time that he was already butt naked! The country isn't going to "wake up" all of a sudden and "discover" Trump's real nature. So Sanders is wasting his time thinking Trump's boorish ineptitude will be exposed, and he damn well knows that.

What I want from Sanders is a full, 100% campaign of unrelenting obstructionism in the Senate, assuming of course that he's as big an enemy of Trump as he claims to be... He can do no less at this point, since he's supposedly the savior of the Democratic party now... And now that he is the de facto leading voice of a party he spent the entire past year shitting on, he should know better than to entertain bullshit post-election narratives about the mythical white working class, Dems supposedly being out of touch, and so-called "identity politics" because that only plays further into the GOP's hands...

Blue_Tires

(55,445 posts)
77. Last I checked almost three million more Americans preferred the Dem candidate
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 04:25 PM
Jan 2017

so we can't be that far out of touch...

Blue_Tires

(55,445 posts)
90. Or maybe...
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 04:55 PM
Jan 2017

...the time for recrimination, Monday Morning Quarterbacking, and finger-pointing is over and we should finally look ahead to the pivotal races in '17 and '18... Because loosening the GOP stranglehold on state capitals and winning back one house of congress has to be the top priority...

yodermon

(6,143 posts)
83. PLEASE LISTEN TO THE ACTUAL INTERVIEW
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 04:32 PM
Jan 2017

That headline is NPR's spin, and David Greene was an asshole of an interviewer.

Bernie's POINT is to hold Trump's feet to the fire, which DUH, all Democrats should be doing right now, in spades.

BainsBane

(53,031 posts)
91. We've heard it all a million times
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 05:05 PM
Jan 2017

if Bernie's point were to hold Trump's feet to the fire, he wouldn't continually take aim at the Democratic Party. You are angry that NPR "spun" what Bernie says every chance he gets. The way to avoid a certain kind of headline is to refrain from making those comments.
The claim that a billionaire cleptocrat was elected because Clinton spent time with rich people defies any semblance of logic.

Bernie has made this same statement repeatedly since the election, not as a result of actual data on voter decision making but because the election defeat is an opportunity to repeat what he's been saying for decadess.

BainsBane

(53,031 posts)
87. It's unfortunate that Sanders spends so much time attacking Democrats
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 04:49 PM
Jan 2017

i disagree that the Democratic Party is America's greatest problem. I think Trump threatens to plunge the country into fascism, yet Sanders remains focused on dividing and undermining the opposition party.

TheCowsCameHome

(40,168 posts)
96. Be prepared to lose again next time around.
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 05:10 PM
Jan 2017

If we don't learn from our mistakes, we are destined to make them again.

Listen to the man and learn.

BainsBane

(53,031 posts)
98. To listen to him
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 05:16 PM
Jan 2017

He is the only answer. What's to learn from that? Also he has made those same comments about the Democratic Party for decades. It's not like he is drawing from data from this election. In fact most of his comments directly contradict exit poll data.

And if I'm a voter that is annoyed with rich people, why would I choose a billionaire cleptocrat for president?

And why are the rich people Clinton hung out with so much worse than the rich people Sanders hung out with and used as campaign surrogates?

TheCowsCameHome

(40,168 posts)
108. Ok, go down the same path again.
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 05:55 PM
Jan 2017

Don't change a thing and let's see how it works out next time around.

I give up.

BainsBane

(53,031 posts)
113. I don't go down a path
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 06:22 PM
Jan 2017

I cast one vote, and as make that choice base on the qualifications and ideas of the candidates in a given election. That simple fact seems to escape most of those talking about the party as a whole or even worse comments like yours to me imaging that each of us controls the other 30 million Democratic primary voters. My path includes researching the candidates, their voting records and gauging their competence and capacity to get things done. You don't have to share my concerns, but you nor anyone else determines my vote.

And the notion that a guy who lost a primary by 3.8 million votes has some unique insight into winning elections strains logic. If he knows so much, why couldn't he win? The CTs that the DNC somehow rigged the vote is a cop out and frankly idiotic.



BainsBane

(53,031 posts)
117. Here's the thing
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 06:38 PM
Jan 2017

Last edited Fri Jan 6, 2017, 07:23 PM - Edit history (1)

I'm a Democrat. I consider the party and the country more important than Bernie. He is one politician. That's all. Some have decided it's necessary to idolize him and expect everyone to bow before his every word. I don't do that to anyone, much less a politician. You would seem to fall into the camp that believes Bernie too important to be criticized. I disagree. That you make your point in response to an OP where he once again trashes the party tells me you think he is the one who should do the criticizing but receive none in return. Bernie seems to believes the same thing. I find that notion that he, or any public figure, is more important than mere citizens wholly offensively and antithetical to democracy. And people just get fucking sick of having him shoved down our throats 24/7. It's unfortunate his " revolution" didn't motivate his supporters to galvanize around particular issues rather than him. Then we could be having very different and far more productive discussions.

 

ciaobaby

(1,000 posts)
118. I am also a democratic.
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 06:59 PM
Jan 2017

And so sorry to hear that you are "fucking sick" of having someone (?) shoving Bernie down your throat. Feel better soon.
The key to having a different and more productive discussion is to take a breath and stop blaming everything on Bernie.
The Democratic party is a mess, out of touch, full of hate, and I for one an tired of hearing that Bernie is some demon.
He cares more about this country than most.

womanofthehills

(8,697 posts)
152. I find the Bernie bashing very sad
Sun Jan 8, 2017, 02:02 AM
Jan 2017

Bernie is one of only a few senators who spoke up against the atrocities at Standing Rock. Hell, he came out against fracking and stood up against Monsanto. Lots of Tom Hartman and Cenk bashing on here too. Hello, we need to all stick together people. I believe we are all fighting Trump and should be united.

 

La Lioness Priyanka

(53,866 posts)
122. Because he has no skin in the game
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 10:04 PM
Jan 2017

When the Democratic image gets tarnished, he not being one, does not have to suffer. But it does help him get media attention. So really he wins on all sides

treestar

(82,383 posts)
133. bernie seems to fight the Democrats
Sat Jan 7, 2017, 02:32 AM
Jan 2017

more than he does the Republicans.

Here is he saying the Republicans are the ones "in touch?"

Response to portlander23 (Original post)

 

Adrahil

(13,340 posts)
145. Horse shit, Bernie.
Sat Jan 7, 2017, 07:54 PM
Jan 2017

Trump is packing his cabinet with wealthy people. His supporters don;t give a shit about that.

And if Democrats stayed home because they perceived Clinton as a bad as Trump some how, they they are fucking idiots. End of story.

People have to stop this incredibly stupid argument. It will destroy us. We will be condemned to permanent minority status if the "more progressive than thou" faction keeps this up.

NanceGreggs

(27,813 posts)
151. And Bernie Sanders lost the primaries ...
Sun Jan 8, 2017, 01:28 AM
Jan 2017

... because he's out of touch with Democrats.

But somehow that doesn't stop him from thinking he should dictate to Democrats what they need to do in order to win - which he himself obviously couldn't do.

DetlefK

(16,423 posts)
157. Delusional Bullshit.
Sun Jan 8, 2017, 09:13 AM
Jan 2017

The Trump-voters were driven by republican indoctrination. There is NOTHING the Democrats could have promised them to make them vote democratic.

Bettie

(16,089 posts)
179. I disagree
Sun Jan 8, 2017, 05:52 PM
Jan 2017

I supported Sanders in the primary. I think he has a good message overall.

However, on this he is not correct.

The Out of Touch thing is probably true to some extent, but in the end, it was a very tiny piece of a whole lot of things that were problematic.

Cross Check did more damage this election.

Voter Suppression of other sorts (ID laws, broken machines, etc.) did more damage

Propaganda did much more damage

Comey, coming out at the 11th hour when it was looking like the aforementioned items weren't working.

Even with all of this, she still won the popular vote and nearly won the EC. That is not a message that is out of touch, except to people who will not listen to the message because it is being delivered by a woman who has had a 25+ year campaign against her delivered non-stop.

Orange Groper ran on racism and hate. Sadly, there's way more of that out there than I thought and you can not reach people for whom this is the primary motivation, unless you are willing to throw all of the people they hate and fear under the bus.

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