I'm not going to lie, that's how I feel right now. Hillary Clinton is just another 90s centrist who actively supported DOMA and NAFTA and only within the last five years has pushed for more progressive measures. I'll give her points for pushing for a single payer system but now that she's the highest donated candidate from pharmaceutical and insurance companies I don't see her doing much to push that forward if she became president.
If Hillary wins the nomination, I honestly don't know if I'll come out to vote. I don't want another centrist president that vaguely pushes the status quo that Reagan set in 1980. I'd rather watch the Republicans burn everything to the ground to prove that they're legitimately crazy than to have another term of stagnant progress.
I understand the feeling of being an optimistic voter hoping to change the world in one fell swoop (I was there once), but that's just not how it happens 99% of the time. This is especially true in America, where the system is set up to block change that may come about from "flavor of the moment" national issues.
It's why people are saying Bernie, if elected, wouldn't be able to pass any of the far left things he's promising. The Republican Congress would stop him. And even if he somehow got a Democratic majority in the House and Senate, he'd still never pass most of his pet issues. The ACA, which Sanders supporters now rally against as "watered down healthcare," literally passed by the slimmest of slim margins in a Congress held by Democrats. Sanders' proposals would fall on deaf ears unless literally every seat in Congress was deep, deep blue.
As much as Sanders supporters want to demonize 90s politicians (meaning Bill Clinton), what occurred there--while imperfect-- laid the groundwork for much of the progress we see today and will continue to see. DADT in the military normalized the idea of gay people serving, which led to homosexuality being viewed as completely normal by a majority of Americans. It wasn't like that in the 90s. Bill Clinton never would've gotten elected if he'd come out in support of homosexuality back then. It took time. It took work. And it took comprise.
I know that's a dirty word to many millennials, but compromise is what makes up the
vast majority of politics. We all want change. We all want it right now. But in time, you learn that change takes work. Not because people don't know how to push things through, but because they literally can't. Our system of government doesn't allow it.
If you want the country to continue moving forward, bite the bullet. Otherwise, we lose all of the progress we've made recently. You say you want the Republicans to burn it down, but with so much on the line (including the Supreme Court, where decisions made in the next four years as to who sits on the bench will last for decades), it's not worth it.
If you're a liberal and you care about your fellow citizens (particularly the marginalized), vote Democrat.