PdotMichael
Banned
math is a whore for Clinton
bring down math, if it wasn't for math Bernie would be winning!!!!
How is that math related?
math is a whore for Clinton
bring down math, if it wasn't for math Bernie would be winning!!!!
You would have to cross the 57% number to earn the 8th delegate, not just get close to it.Not fueling the fire, but honest question.
If there are 14 delegates to win in Wyoming, and Sanders got 55.7% while Clinton got 44.3%, doesn't that correspond closer to an 8-6 delegate distribution than a 7-7?
7-7 = 50% - 50%
8-6 = 57% - 43%
You would have to cross the 57% number to earn the 8th delegate, not just get close to it.
It's quite similar to what the Sanders campaign does. If Bernie screws up, blame the media, blame Clinton, blame others but never ever take responsibility.Yeah. Blame Hillary supporters for the behavior of Bernie supporters.
Nonsensical.
Not fueling the fire, but honest question.
If there are 14 delegates to win in Wyoming, and Sanders got 55.7% while Clinton got 44.3%, doesn't that correspond closer to an 8-6 delegate distribution than a 7-7?
7-7 = 50% - 50%
8-6 = 57% - 43%
You would have to cross the 57% number to earn the 8th delegate, not just get close to it.
People use the same argument for southerners voting republican
And there is a big difference in reason between the two that you'd have to be dumb as rocks to ignore/avoid.
But continue
It's not going to work without a) cutting military spending, and b) greatly increasing personal tax rate.
Neither a) nor b) are going to happen anytime soon in the US.
Also, the relationship between the federal government and the states complicates the logistics of these programs, so while it's true, none of us know how to implement these systems, it's also true that many of us know it's unrealistic because we're actually familiar with how difficult it is to implement policy in the US.
There's not much point in talking in absolute numbers. There are countries that spend more or around the same amount in defense as a percentage of their GDP and total federal spending that are somehow able to afford universal healthcare and other social safety net programs.Not understanding the unique role the United States plays in the world makes it an idiotic world view.
Great, a bunch of nations that get away spending next to nothing on defense, that are routinely handed substantial technological advancements from the U.S., and who's governments literally looted the world within the last ~100 years can afford expansive social services. That's nice.
As long as the rest of the western world wants to have their cake and eat it too, relying on the U.S. to carry their water on defense and responding to human crises it is incredibly naive and childish to compare what the U.S. deals with to what western and northern Europe are faced with as nations.
That doesn't stem from any notion of American exceptionalism either. It is entirely a product of those European nations wanting, requesting, and encouraging U.S. protectionism when it is to their benefit and then decrying the military industrial complex that is spawned from their needs being met.
Not being able to see this, one of the most basic truths of global politics, is aptly described as having an "idiotic world view".
You know you open yourself up to be misinterpreted when all you make is an over-arching, off-the-cuff, snide remark about Sanders' supporters and their "idiotic vision of the world". It's not me being dense; you're just bad at relaying what you actually want to say, as evidenced by the fact that somebody else who replied to your comment also thought it was a reference to policy.Holy crap you are absurdly dense.
We're in a thread where Sanders supporters shows a total disregard for the democratic process and you rant about Sanders policies?
I'll say it again, they do not know how democracy work.
I said nothing about American exceptionalism, I actually do not even believe there is a country that is "special" beyond the circumstances of its economy, population, etc.
A country like Denmark cannot be run the same way Germany, Luxemburg, New Zeland or Spain is for various reason. Why you think that position is somehow trying to paint the US has exceptional I have no idea.
That's why I said "free or affordable"... I fail to see the relation between the economics of higher education and Primary/Secondary Education reform that would make the idea of free College "all sorts of hilarious" or what sorts of hoops in logic you had to jump through to conclude that wanting free College means you don't want education reform overall. Bernie's platform does talk about K-12 education reform. The merits of his proposals in that front are another matter entirely, but that suffices to show that his platform isn't singularly about free higher education as you disingenuously tried to claim. It seems you're just trying to be snide and arrogant for the sake of it.Sanders policy ISN'T Universal health coverage, it's a specific single player plan.
It isn't affordable higher education, it's free college (which is all kind of hilarious when there are more issues with education than "college" but hey if you don't want to reform one of the worst pre higher education system in the world...).
Their inspiration comes from a guy who are selling them an ideal vision of the world that is absolutely not based on reality, it's a made up view of the world that doesn't even care about the population's opinion on various issues.
You know you open yourself up to be misinterpreted when all you make is an over-arching, off-the-cuff, snide remark about Sanders' supporters and their "idiotic vision of the world". It's not me being dense; you're just bad at relaying what you actually want to say, as evidenced by the fact that somebody else who replied to your comment also thought it was a reference to policy.
But sure, if what you really wanted to say is that Bernie supporters who complain about superdelegates have an idiotic, stupid vision of the US democratic process, then you're right about that, at least.
That's why I said "free or affordable"... I fail to see the relation between the economics of higher education and Primary/Secondary Education reform that would make the idea of free College "all sorts of hilarious" or what sorts of hoops in logic you had to jump through to conclude that wanting free College means you don't want education reform overall. Bernie's platform does talk about K-12 education reform. The merits of his proposals in that front are another matter entirely, but that suffices to show that his platform isn't singularly about free higher education as you disingenuously tried to claim. It seems you're just trying to be snide and arrogant for the sake of it.
The Super Delegate bullshit is what's frustrating. Even if Hillary wins, we could do without them.math is a whore for Clinton
bring down math, if it wasn't for math Bernie would be winning!!!!
No, it's really not. It's fine, it is only a real issue in the minds of conspiracy theorists.The Super Delegate bullshit is what's frustrating. Even if Hillary wins, we could do without them.
No, it's really not. It's fine, it is only a real issue in the minds of conspiracy theorists.
Then you remove the entire point of political parties.
No elected official should have ANY say in any election unless absolutely necessary. They should of course get their own vote as a citizen, but nothing more.
(IMO of course)
But...this isn't a government election. It's a private organization picking their own representative.No elected official should have ANY say in any election unless absolutely necessary. They should of course get their own vote as a citizen, but nothing more.
No elected official should have ANY say in any election unless absolutely necessary. They should of course get their own vote as a citizen, but nothing more.
(IMO of course)
Also a good thing IMO
I'm not sure why you related GDP to military spending. Do you mind explaining why you did this? I'm having a tough time understanding why I would want to think about budgets as based on national GDP.
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& sure, I don't disagree with your second paragraph, but... I'm not seeing how Sanders is unique in this regard. The Democratic Party generally pushes for these ideals.
Why should we support Sanders when any of the Democratic nominees do the same thing anyway?
Ooh this is really interesting.
No, it's really not. It's fine, it is only a real issue in the minds of conspiracy theorists.
It's fine to you. It's fine in your opinion.
Think about the Caucuses. They can be a complete joke and yet there is only a small uproar over them right now. And that's because they're working in Bernie Sanders favor, but he's the losing candidate anyway so it doesn't matter as much to people. If they were working in Clintons favor, or if Bernie Sanders were winning because of them, there would be a much bigger uproar.
What I'm saying is if you really think there's no issue with SDs fine. That's your opinion. Others should feel free to disagree with that opinion though without you having to resort to calling them conspiracy theorists. I can see you're smarter than that.
The fact and the bottom line to me is there are a very few (the SDs) who make up a disproportionately large amount of the vote. In my opinion that's a problem when they can vote against the people they are supposed to represent.
No elected official should have ANY say in any election unless absolutely necessary. They should of course get their own vote as a citizen, but nothing more.
(IMO of course)
Also a good thing IMO
It's fine to you. It's fine in your opinion.
What I'm saying is if you really think there's no issue with SDs fine. That's your opinion. Others should feel free to disagree with that opinion though without you having to resort to calling them conspiracy theorists. I can see you're smarter than that.
The fact and the bottom line to me is there are a very few (the SDs) who make up a disproportionately large amount of the vote. In my opinion that's a problem when they can vote against the people they are supposed to represent.
He actually has said exactly how he intends to pass his plans. Whether it's realistic (it isn't) is another story.
"What we do is you put an issue before Congress, lets just use free tuition at public colleges and universities, and that vote is going to take place on November 8 ... whatever it may be. We tell millions and millions of people, young people and their parents, there is going to be a vote ... half the people dont know whats going on ... but we tell them when the vote is, maybe we welcome a million young people to Washington, D.C. to say hello to their members of Congress. Maybe we have the telephones and the e-mails flying all over the place so that everybody in America will know how their representative is voting. [...]
And then Republicans are going to have to make a decision. Then theyre going to have to make a decision. You know, when thousands of young people in their district are saying, You vote against this, youre out of your job, because we know whats going on. So this gets back to what a political revolution is about, is bringing people in touch with the Congress, not having that huge wall. Thats how you bring about change."