Bernie Sanders Surges to First Place in New Hampshire Primary Polling

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Inuhanyou

Believes Dragon Quest is a franchise managed by Sony
There's no real need to speculate. She won a Senate seat twice and had a liberal voting record. Whether or not that's liberal enough for you, well, YMMV. She's too hawkish for me to support in the primary. But it's not like I feel like I'm selling my soul or honor voting for her.

I already stated, she can say what she wants. But i already spelled out over 10 things she suddenly 'evolved' on or refuses to elaborate on since the campaign started.


Its ridiculous how people think that kind of thing is not as disingenuous as it gets. Saying "she had a liberal voting record" is all well and good, but liberal at that time period and liberal now, according to whatever standards liberal is decided by what organization still not what i subscribe to from what we know of her history.
 
I already stated, she can say what she wants. But i already spelled out over 10 things she suddenly 'evolved' on or refuses to elaborate on since the campaign started.


Its ridiculous how people think that kind of thing is not as disingenuous as it gets. Saying "she had a liberal voting record" is all well and good, but liberal at that time period and liberal now, according to whatever standards liberal is decided by what organization still not what i subscribe to from what we know of her history.

Showing me records of her past won't help me get over the records of her past!
 

NeoXChaos

Member
I already stated, she can say what she wants. But i already spelled out over 10 things she suddenly 'evolved' on or refuses to elaborate on since the campaign started.


Its ridiculous how people think that kind of thing is not as disingenuous as it gets. Saying "she had a liberal voting record" is all well and good, but liberal at that time period and liberal now, according to whatever standards liberal is decided by what organization still not what i subscribe to from what we know of her history.

I am sorry you feel that way. I just want to win and Hillary offers the best chance for the party to achieve it since the Republicans in 1989 and FDR in 1940.
 

besada

Banned
Vote for who you believe in during the primaries, and for who you have to during the general.

And let's stop accusing people of wanting a Republican President because they don't support your candidate of choice. It's dumb, obnoxious, and turns every political thread into a huge derail.
 

dramatis

Member
Bernie has raised his entire campaign funding(last i heard at 15 million) from grassroots supporters averaging 35 dollars and 22 cents a donation. This is not a battle for winning the Presidency. This is a battle for whether or not the citizen actually controls their elected leaders or not and whether those leaders are even for the citizen and not the people who fund their campaigns.
Funny thing about that. Hillary raised about $40 million for her 2016 campaign, limited to $2700 per individual contribution. In other words, amongst 'grassroots supporters', she's doing better than Sanders in terms of fundraising. The supposed 'high amounts of corporate donors'? It's the weird reality of how majority of Hillary's campaign money comes from individuals, whereas most of Bernie's campaign money comes from PACs.

Even if you look at OpenSecrets, this is how Hillary's source of funds looks over the course of her career:
Individual Contributions $336,944,622 (90%)
PAC Contributions $5,007,243 (1%)
Candidate self-financing $13,453,821 (4%)
Other $20,903,972 (6%)

Here's Bernie's career in funds, according to OpenSecrets:
Individual Contributions $33,930,672 (87%)
PAC Contributions $2,897,915 (7%)
Candidate self-financing $941,382 (2%)
Other $1,232,843 (3%)

I suppose "Individuals" don't count as 'grassroots supporters'? There seems to be a misunderstanding of what individual contributions are, what a PAC is, and what a SuperPAC is. Official campaigns can't accept money from SuperPACs, and that's where the majority of the huge bucks are swimming. That means it's money that Hillary isn't actually raising. So in terms of the purported 'grassroots supporters' only campaign funding, Hillary is more successful. Moreover, from the technical perspective you can say she is the citizen's choice candidate. lol
 

werks

Banned
Funny thing about that. Hillary raised about $40 million for her 2016 campaign, limited to $2700 per individual contribution. In other words, amongst 'grassroots supporters', she's doing better than Sanders in terms of fundraising. The supposed 'high amounts of corporate donors'? It's the weird reality of how majority of Hillary's campaign money comes from individuals, whereas most of Bernie's campaign money comes from PACs.

Even if you look at OpenSecrets, this is how Hillary's source of funds looks over the course of her career:
Individual Contributions $336,944,622 (90%)
PAC Contributions $5,007,243 (1%)
Candidate self-financing $13,453,821 (4%)
Other $20,903,972 (6%)

Here's Bernie's career in funds, according to OpenSecrets:
Individual Contributions $33,930,672 (87%)
PAC Contributions $2,897,915 (7%)
Candidate self-financing $941,382 (2%)
Other $1,232,843 (3%)

I suppose "Individuals" don't count as 'grassroots supporters'? There seems to be a misunderstanding of what individual contributions are, what a PAC is, and what a SuperPAC is. Official campaigns can't accept money from SuperPACs, and that's where the majority of the huge bucks are swimming. That means it's money that Hillary isn't actually raising. So in terms of the purported 'grassroots supporters' only campaign funding, Hillary is more successful. Moreover, from the technical perspective you can say she is the citizen's choice candidate. lol

So you want to compare all the money both candidates have raised in their lifetime even though this is Hilary's second presidential campaign to increase Hilary's individual contribution. While at the same time ignoring the elephant in the room that is Hilary's giant super pac. Let me guess, your argument is going to be that Hillary has nothing to do with the super pac, I wonder why giant corporate contributions roll into if they in no way influences the candidate.
 

werks

Banned
Hillary raised 47M and her super pac raised 20M this election cycle. 30% of her money is coming from the super pac.

Sanders raised 15M and doesn't have a super pac. 0% unaccountable money.

Why does Hillary need to raise 30% of her money from super pacs if her funding is so transparent and clean.

We know exactly how Bernie is getting funded. Voters can look at it and decide for themselves. You can't claim the same for Hillary when almost 1/3 of her financing is unaccountable.

Is her funding better than bush's. Yes. She is and always will be a better candidate than any republican and the vast majority of Bernie supporters will coalesce around her if she wins the primary, but let's not try to twist the facts to make your candidate look better than she is.
 

Inuhanyou

Believes Dragon Quest is a franchise managed by Sony
I was going to debate dramatis's misleading statistics he/she got from a random dailykos poster, but i see werks already took care of it. Thanks.

Fact of the matter is, Bernie has never been paid by large corporations and wall street to secure their support, neither has he pandered to them through private fundraisers. Hillary has, and is in this very race, while Bernie isn't.

Its unfortunate that people try to twist logic into pretzels to make it look like she's somehow more respectable than he is, but that's literally impossible.
 
I was going to debate dramatis's misleading statistics he/she got from a random dailykos poster, but i see werks already took care of it. Thanks.

Fact of the matter is, Bernie has never been paid by large corporations and wall street to secure their support, neither has he pandered to them through private fundraisers. Hillary has, and is in this very race, while Bernie isn't.

Its unfortunate that people try to twist logic into pretzels to make it look like she's somehow more respectable than he is, but that's literally impossible.

Politics is the art of the possible. Respect is for people who like watching from the sidelines. What Weber said about progress wasn't wrong and the States along with the rest of the Anglosphere has a long way to go to roll back the damage of the neo liberals and their offspring.

Vote your conscience but don't take the moral high ground over it. It doesn't actually accomplish anything.
 
I strongly believe the Bernie supporters are misguided. Y'all need to focus on getting more left wing politicians into key positions like the senate and the house. Only then will a true left wing candidate will be able to accomplish much.
 

lednerg

Member
I strongly believe the Bernie supporters are misguided. Y'all need to focus on getting more left wing politicians into key positions like the senate and the house. Only then will a true left wing candidate will be able to accomplish much.

Bernie's rallying the base, getting them excited and involved in the coming elections, and focusing them on the key factors we need to address. That's a good thing for Democrats in general - even Hillary. He's not going third party, and would throw his support behind Clinton when/if she gets the nom, expressing to his supporters just how important it is that we block the GOP in not just the national but the local elections as well. He's also not going negative on her.
 
Even under the premise that Sanders wins the nomination, he would then subsequently need to tack to the centre (as will whoever makes it out alive of the Republican clown car will need to) in a general election scenario and accept the support of the well-heeled Democratic donor-base directly into his campaign, into the DNC's fundraising and probably a SuperPAC, as Obama did previously, in order to seriously contend. So the moralizing over from where the candidates are currently or have previously received funds and in what proportions seems relatively moot.
 

dabig2

Member
I strongly believe the Bernie supporters are misguided. Y'all need to focus on getting more left wing politicians into key positions like the senate and the house. Only then will a true left wing candidate will be able to accomplish much.

Competition is good, especially in politics and especially for Democrats who have a tendency towards running away from the egalitarian ideals the party was famous for post FDR. I myself am a little tired of this neoliberal phase that has been strangling the party ever since after Reagan and Thatcher.
 
Obama's a Socialist, according to people who give a shit about that. He still won. Hell, he was also a Muslim and a Communist.

Republicans can parrot that as much as they want; I doubt many people believed them especially most democrats.

Sanders from what I know called himself that and I would think most people will believe him.
 
Even under the premise that Sanders wins the nomination, he would then subsequently need to tack to the centre (as will whoever makes it out alive of the Republican clown car will need to) in a general election scenario and accept the support of the well-heeled Democratic donor-base directly into his campaign, into the DNC's fundraising and probably a SuperPAC, as Obama did previously, in order to seriously contend. So the moralizing over from where the candidates are currently or have previously received funds and in what proportions seems relatively moot.

This is the correct answer.
 

Flo_Evans

Member
Even under the premise that Sanders wins the nomination, he would then subsequently need to tack to the centre (as will whoever makes it out alive of the Republican clown car will need to) in a general election scenario and accept the support of the well-heeled Democratic donor-base directly into his campaign, into the DNC's fundraising and probably a SuperPAC, as Obama did previously, in order to seriously contend. So the moralizing over from where the candidates are currently or have previously received funds and in what proportions seems relatively moot.

Tack to the center on what? Social issues? It's the republicans out of step here. Gun control? He already seems in the middle. Economics? Maybe but IMHO most people support the things he is proposing.

I'm not sure what he would do about money, one of his goals is to overturn citizens United and get rid of superpacs.
 

dramatis

Member
So you want to compare all the money both candidates have raised in their lifetime even though this is Hilary's second presidential campaign to increase Hilary's individual contribution. While at the same time ignoring the elephant in the room that is Hilary's giant super pac. Let me guess, your argument is going to be that Hillary has nothing to do with the super pac, I wonder why giant corporate contributions roll into if they in no way influences the candidate.

I was going to debate dramatis's misleading statistics he/she got from a random dailykos poster, but i see werks already took care of it. Thanks.

Fact of the matter is, Bernie has never been paid by large corporations and wall street to secure their support, neither has he pandered to them through private fundraisers. Hillary has, and is in this very race, while Bernie isn't.

Its unfortunate that people try to twist logic into pretzels to make it look like she's somehow more respectable than he is, but that's literally impossible.
Lol. It doesn't matter if Hillary is in her second presidential campaign or not. You don't have to look at raw numbers; you can look at percentages. On OpenSecrets, it specifies that they have roughly similar-looking percentages when it comes to campaign contributions: majority from individuals, a percentage from PACs, some self-finance. In fact, if you account that this is Hillary's second presidential campaign and individuals still remain the highest percentage of donors, it looks even better considering that she's had two chances to eat a lot of corporate money. That's quite against the "she's a corporate puppet" narrative you shill.

This is the truth: Hillary's official campaign fundraising is better than Bernie's official campaign fundraising. In terms of raw numbers, Hillary has raised more than Bernie—and that is how she is better. There is no twisted logic. The maximum individual contribution for official campaigns is $2700. She can't break that, so if she's raising more money then either more of her donors are willing to shell out the max amount or she has a lot of donors shelling out various amounts. If Hillary's overall fundraising is greater than Bernie's, it means that she raised more out of individuals.

So dailykos is overwhelmingly in favor of Bernie until it apparently posts 'misleading statistics' from the Federal Election Commission? Then let's not use that link, and let's use the graphic that Bernie Sanders supporters find great and popular:
tumblr_nr34o0D74Y1qzmj5ro1_1280.png
This is data from OpenSecrets covering the whole of their careers, so it's not specific to the 2016 election cycle. Everyone who crows about this image is essentially crowing about the 'Contributor' column. Yet the numbers columns show something interesting: majority of Hillary's donations from those 'Contributors' come largely from individuals, presumably capped at a certain amount for each election. Those individuals are listed by employer or association.

From Bernie's side, the individuals column looks paltry; the majority of his donations come from PACs.

So the dailykos post was not wrong, even according to the graphic so lauded by Bernie supporters. Is it a wonder that someone trying to make the charts look a little more in favor of Bernie would make another graphic that chops the pesky "Individuals" and "PACs" columns out, because it doesn't fit the narrative of Hillary being a corporate puppet?

There is no attack on Bernie here. PACs have been around for ages and are allowed to donate properly to campaigns. But those who clamber on about 'corporate agenda' seemingly ignore how Bernie could be influenced by agenda too, given that majority of his donations over his career come from union PACs.

I didn't discount that there are SuperPACs out there that support Hillary. I also won't discount that there is probably 'cooperation' between campaigns and SuperPACs that support those campaigns' causes. I stated bluntly that official campaign funding, PACs, and SuperPACs are three different things; are you saying that's wrong, werks?

Here is what you said, Inuhanyou:
Bernie has raised his entire campaign funding(last i heard at 15 million) from grassroots supporters averaging 35 dollars and 22 cents a donation. This is not a battle for winning the Presidency. This is a battle for whether or not the citizen actually controls their elected leaders or not and whether those leaders are even for the citizen and not the people who fund their campaigns.
Ironically, if we go by the OpenSecrets graphic, Bernie has raised much of his entire campaign funding not from grassroots supporters but from PACs. So can a citizen actually control him if he's elected leader, or is it the unions?

Overall I don't consider the OpenSecret numbers entirely accurate. I think what OpenSecrets probably gets closest to right is the ratio of individual/PAC/other donations for the campaigns. With the majority coming from individuals, for both candidates.

This is what I posit: contrary to any narrative, neither Hillary nor Bernie are as beholden to money as we assume. Trump could give a Hillary SuperPAC 5 million dollars and then tell her to go on tv and say that women should go back to the kitchen, but Hillary would never do that. Unions can give a Bernie SuperPAC 5 million dollars, and then tell him to make minimum wage legislation that exempts union workers from the higher minimum wage, but I don't think Bernie would do that. There's a money influence, but humans are weird individuals that don't always operate by dollar signs. A Democrat can donate millions to Rick Perry now, but that doesn't mean the Democrat has changed Rick Perry's heart. Obama raised a lot of money from corporate donors, but are Bernie supporters calling him a corporate puppet?

You're welcome to stand on principle and crow your moral and supposed logical superiority. But the best candidate is not only 'best' determined solely but his issues. The best candidate is the one that has the stances for a broad base, the strategy, and the skill to navigate the primaries and the general election. And if you need corporate money to do it, so what? Obama was the best candidate in 2008 because he ran a tight ship, he sold his appeal to a diverse electorate, he gathered a lot of resources, and those resources included corporate money. Obama got into office, and he's been able to do quite a lot even if some things were possibly contrary to the interests of his donors.

'The battle for whether or not the citizen actually controls their elected leaders' is lost from the start; representative democracy means you are picking another person to represent your views, but you are not picking a person to control them. There will never be another person who matches you 1 for 1. You are not picking Bernie because you can control him; you're picking him because you trust he is the candidate who best espouses your views and will likely act in the interests of those views. But he may differ from you on gun control or immigration reform. And you can't control him on that, regardless of whether or not you as a citizen donated or if a corporation donated.
 

soleil

Banned
LMAO dramatis. Do you have any idea how unions work? Union members are not employees of unions, so their contributions won't appear under "Individual" for the union. They do, however, donate to the PAC and let the PAC donate to a candidate so that their donations are... (gasp) UNIFIED. Which is the purpose of the union.

Seriously, dramatis. Between telling people "Where were you when I was..." like you're some martyr, not learning from Occupy Wall Street and making it obvious with your suggestion that we (for whatever reason you can't articulate) should not take Bernie's leadership when we demonstrate and march for liberal causes, and now showing that you have no fucking clue how Union PACs and Union individuals work... you're embarrassing yourself.
 

Valhelm

contribute something
I strongly believe the Bernie supporters are misguided. Y'all need to focus on getting more left wing politicians into key positions like the senate and the house. Only then will a true left wing candidate will be able to accomplish much.

That's very important, but I don't see how this is misguided. Bernie Sanders is rallying the true American left in a way that is rarely seen. Hopefully, after conceding the nomination he can direct his legions of supporters toward congressional politics.
 

lednerg

Member
If you're just looking at private contributions sheerly in terms of percentage of total money, then you're not counting the amount of individual contributions. Bernie's way ahead of Hillary in terms of the number of private individuals. That's the whole point.
 

soleil

Banned
If you're just looking at private contributions sheerly in terms of percentage of total money, then you're not counting the amount of individual contributions. Bernie's way ahead of Hillary in terms of the number of private individuals. That's the whole point.
Not only that, but if you're proud that your candidate is getting support from individuals working for Goldman Sachs, Merrill Lynch, etc, then you're out of touch.
 

Zornack

Member
Not only that, but if you're proud that your candidate is getting support from individuals working for Goldman Sachs, Merrill Lynch, etc, then you're out of touch.

Wow, what a crazy sentiment. 100,000 people demonized because they dared to be employed by a bank.
 

soleil

Banned
Wow, what a crazy sentiment. 100,000 people demonized because they dared to be employed by a bank.
It's not the people themselves I'm demonizing, it's the attitude that you should be proud that your biggest groups of donors are individuals working at Wall Street. I don't fault people for donating to the candidate that best serves their interests. If you're a Goldman Sachs suit and you donate to Hillary because she best serves Wall Street? You're not individually at fault IMO. But if people are touting Hillary as a champion of the middle class based on the fact that she's getting donations from you, then those people are out of touch.
 

Inuhanyou

Believes Dragon Quest is a franchise managed by Sony
Even under the premise that Sanders wins the nomination, he would then subsequently need to tack to the centre (as will whoever makes it out alive of the Republican clown car will need to) in a general election scenario and accept the support of the well-heeled Democratic donor-base directly into his campaign, into the DNC's fundraising and probably a SuperPAC, as Obama did previously, in order to seriously contend. So the moralizing over from where the candidates are currently or have previously received funds and in what proportions seems relatively moot.

That's a whole bunch of nonsense. That's exactly the opposite thing Bernie has been trying to do, run with his message and not his money. If he won the nomination, you think all those democrats are just going to vote republican unless Bernie has money the corporate way? Yeah right. They are cowards are going to run whatever way the winning team goes.

And "tack to the center"? I can see the riots from people hearing Bernie Sanders current message already.

"We don't want Wall Street accountability from the ones who destroyed our economy, climate change reform or garbage like "workers rights" and "paid vacation time"!

Yeah, i think your view is very strange.
 

benjipwns

Banned
There's no good historical evidence that you have to "tack to the center" in the general or that it's even possible or useful.

There's far stronger evidence that the important thing is keeping your party coalition together and turning out.
 
If you think elections can be won without adequate financing, against opponents with adequate financing, that's a very naive worldview.
There's no good historical evidence that you have to "tack to the center" in the general or that it's even possible or useful.

There's far stronger evidence that the important thing is keeping your party coalition together and turning out.
I think that presents a false dichotomy, in that assuredly maintaining the party's core voting base is essential, but that without the addition of the central voter one would typically be unable to achieve a majority. I.e. it isn't an either or, but a both. There are presumably scenarios where variables such as relative turnout and voter apathy are so lopsided that this isn't the case I suppose.

And defining where the centre is exactly at any given time obviously may be a difficult proposition. But I don't think it's particularly controversial to suggest that elections are won in the centre, not the fringe.

I'd probably also note that the parties, so far as I can tell, have generally tended to put forward candidates that are sufficiently palatable to the median voter to begin with I suppose.
 

benjipwns

Banned
Most voters treat the American electoral system as a binary one, and 90% of them are already a zero or one. Those 10% of voters are not necessarily in the center (there's as much chance they're fringe) and are even less likely to vote than partisans. Chasing those voters doesn't gain you as much as the cost. If you lose 10% of your base for every 1 point of the nebulous center you gain, you've already lost the election.

Also, the "center" inherently becomes the position between the two nominees, so one candidate can "start" with the "true center" at the "center" of his coalition. Something both parties claim.

And you don't need a majority, only a plurality in enough states to get 270+ EVs. 58% and 51% of voters voted against Bill Clinton in 1992 and 1996 for example. Both Bush and Gore had 52% of voters vote against them. Etc.
 

jtb

Banned
Most voters treat the American electoral system as a binary one, and 90% of them are already a zero or one. Those 10% of voters are not necessarily in the center (there's as much chance they're fringe) and are even less likely to vote than partisans. Chasing those voters doesn't gain you as much as the cost. If you lose 10% of your base for every 1 point of the nebulous center you gain, you've already lost the election.

Also, the "center" inherently becomes the position between the two nominees, so one candidate can "start" with the "true center" at the "center" of his coalition. Something both parties claim.

And you don't need a majority, only a plurality in enough states to get 270+ EVs. 58% and 51% of voters voted against Bill Clinton in 1992 and 1996 for example. Both Bush and Gore had 52% of voters vote against them. Etc.

Appealing to people who vote is always a more reliable and effective strategy than appealing to people who don't. I don't think I need to explain the logic behind that.
 
If I'm to understand correctly, you're essentially asserting that turnout of each party's predetermined and entirely locked-in voting base, which accounts for the majority of the electorate, is the sole determinant of the electoral outcome?

And, to further clarify, under that premise, asserting that the candidate need not appeal to and/or have appeal to the portions of that base that tend less towards any particular ideology because they will turn out for the candidate regardless?

(Is there a basis for any of these numbers being thrown out, 90% being entirely locked-in, 10% of the base being lost for every 1% outside the base gained?)
 

benjipwns

Banned
No, not at all, I was talking cost/benefit ratio. Anyone who studies and practices politics will tell you that the undecided voter is by and large a myth to the point where spending money chasing them is doing less for your campaign than spending money on hookers and cocaine.

Detailed ideology is almost entirely irrelevant to binary elections, your goal is to maximize your turnout while minimizing your opponents. And that's it. If that means stealing voters from your opponent, or depressing them into staying home, or posting police and turning them away from polling stations, that, not ideological arguments are what you spend your resources on.

Indeed, when it comes to money specifically, once you hit critical mass of awareness, each dollar spent accomplishes less and may even be negative. Saturating the airwaves can both depress and fire up your opponents and your supporters. It's unlikely to buy you votes though.

A lot of this can easily be seen in vote per dollar ratios. And also primary vs. general polling.

Sanders supporters should worry more about Hillary supporters fleeing temporarily to the GOP (either through sitting on their hands or becoming PUMAs) than independents fleeing Sanders because he wins the nomination. This is one of the factors (along with LBJ's campaign that Goldwater wasn't conservative but instead a literally insane (as proven by psychiatrists who never met him) dangerous radical who will get us into an unnecessary Southeast Asian war with Communists) that made the Goldwater landslide into a landslide. (Same deal in 1972 but in reverse.) The Rockefeller wing assisted kneecapping it so there was no chance Goldwater was even competitive and they'd have to deal with loss of party control. Which happened anyway because they were idiots.

I mention this because Hillary cut her teeth in politics with Goldwater.
 
Okay, I see more where you're coming from now.

But at the same time, it sounds somewhat like you concur that Sanders would essentially need to appeal to and broaden his coalition of voters to encompass (and subsequently mobilise) the more moderate segments of the base (which Clinton is currently capturing) in a general electorate scenario.
 

Arkam

Member
Glad to see Sanders polling well and would likely vote for him. Though I really hope he doesn't have to sell out any further. (running as a democrat is disgusting seeing how they are just as warmongering and wall-street coddling as republicans)

I am not affiliated with any political party and dont care for either the DNC or the RNC because they dont care about me or my well being

What did Howard Zinn say? something like "The difference between a republican and a democrat is that for a fund raising dinner the RNC charges $400k a plate.... while the DNC only charges $300k a plate."
 

benjipwns

Banned
Okay, I see more where you're coming from now.

But at the same time, it sounds somewhat like you concur that Sanders would essentially need to appeal to and broaden his coalition of voters to encompass (and subsequently mobilise) the more moderate segments of the base (which Clinton is currently capturing) in a general electorate scenario.
Well, he obviously needs to broaden his coalition since it's not very large currently, but he would just by getting the nomination automatically gain the essential part of the Democratic base.

His getting the nomination could enliven the base across the board much like Reagan in 1980. The projected exodus onto John Anderson never happened because beating the other party was still more important. (And Anderson was neurosis personified while Reagan was sunny optimism personified.) Something I think is more ingrained now than for most of the 20th Century.

Glad to see Sanders polling well and would likely vote for him. Though I really hope he doesn't have to sell out any further. (running as a democrat is disgusting seeing how they are just as warmongering and wall-street coddling as republicans)

I am not affiliated with any political party and dont care for either the DNC or the RNC because they dont care about me or my well being
my man
 

Muzy72

Banned
Yeah perception plays such a big role in these popularity contests.

People don't want to vote for someone who they think is going to lose. People want to feel good when who they voted for wins.

It's not that I want to "feel good" that I voted for the winner, I want to ensure the GOP doesn't control the White House. They've already fucked up Congress, who knows what would happen if they had both houses of Congress, the presidency, and put more conservatives in the Supreme Court. A self proclaimed socialist can't win a general election, and I'm not going to risk all three branches of the government being controlled by that batshit insane party.
 

benjipwns

Banned
It's not that I want to "feel good" that I voted for the winner, I want to ensure the GOP doesn't control the White House. They've already fucked up Congress, who knows what would happen if they had both houses of Congress, the presidency, and put more conservatives in the Supreme Court. A self proclaimed socialist can't win a general election, and I'm not going to risk all three branches of the government being controlled by that batshit insane party.
Don't worry, your vote, especially in a primary, won't decide any of that.
 

Inuhanyou

Believes Dragon Quest is a franchise managed by Sony
From the way some people speak, Bernie winning the nomination on actual common sense policy instead of appearances means a Republican presidency that they want to avoid at all costs to the point of voting for Hillary in the primaries

That mindset, makes no sense.
 
From the way some people speak, Bernie winning the nomination on actual common sense policy instead of appearances means a Republican presidency that they want to avoid at all costs to the point of voting for Hillary in the primaries

That mindset, makes no sense.

Some of us were around for the aftermath of the 2000 Election. When the Left decided Al Gore and George W. Bush were the exact same.
 

benjipwns

Banned
People say they want change but really are too afraid of uncertainty and would rather have more of the same.
Hey, she's an INSTRUMENT AND AGENT OF CHANGE!
COOPER: What do you have that Senator Clinton and Senator Obama do not have?

REP. DENNIS KUCINICH: Well, first of all, a clear record as having not only opposed the war from the very beginning -- the only one of the stage that actually voted against the war, and also the only one on the stage who voted against funding the war 100 percent of the time.

You know, we're here at The Citadel. I want the people of The Citadel to know that I mourn the passing of those people who gave their lives, but I also would not hesitate to call upon you to defend this country, but I'll never send you in pursuit of a political agenda or a lie.

Just like my father before me, who served in the Marines, and my brother who served in the Marines in Vietnam, and my nephew who served in Iraq, I believed in duty and honor and I think it's important to have those commitments to this country.

And so I say we achieve strength through peace. That's the new doctrine that I'm going to promote throughout this campaign; that we'll use the science of human relations and diplomacy; that we pursue an approach which says that you can use international agreements and treaties; and that you can work to settle your differences without committing the young men and women to war, unless it's absolutely necessary.

COOPER: Senator Clinton, you were involved in that question. I want to give you a chance to respond, 30 seconds.

(APPLAUSE)

SEN. HILLARY CLINTON: Well, I think the Democrats are united, as Davis said, and we are united for change. We cannot take another four or eight years of Republican leadership that has been so disastrous for our country.

The issue is: Which of us is ready to lead on day one? I have 35 years of being an instrument and agent of change, before I was ever a public official. And during the time that I've been privileged to serve as first lady and now as senator, I've worked to bring people together, to find common ground where we can, and then to stand our ground where we can't.
 

gogosox82

Member
Some of us were around for the aftermath of the 2000 Election. When the Left decided Al Gore and George W. Bush were the exact same.

1) Al Gore won the election.

2) Bernie would actually excite the base and get them to vote while Hilary will make some say "what's the difference?" if its Hilary/Bush or Hilary/Walker. So your argument makes no sense.
 
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