It's not just that, Kasich is easily the strongest candidate for the Republicans, why would you vote for him.
Because they honestly believe that he wouldn't be that bad as President.
It's not just that, Kasich is easily the strongest candidate for the Republicans, why would you vote for him.
439 likes to 499 dislikes. Since I doubt Republicans are watching Sam Bee episodes, I wonder who could be disliking it? hmmmmmmmmmm
"Are you a Rubio supporter?" I asked the 60-something gentleman.
"No. I'm just here to see the train wreck."
bruh...
TYT will be Emmy level tonight if that happens.
More like wack job author.
Well, the margin will be 50%.That's my fetish!
This guy from MSNBC believes that Hillary will get all the delegates in MS because she'll get above 50% of the vote. That's not how any of this works.
I know the whole "lol Reddit Bernie" thing is getting played out but I have to. They're now linking to shit some random guy says and getting 500+ upvotes.
Listen, everyone knew that tonight was going to be a terrible night for Bernie. We all knew that. Nobody knew who Bernie was when he announced his campaign, and tonight he held Clinton to just 65% in Michigan. What an achievement. Hillary won bigger in Mississippi, but keep in mind that Mississippi has only 1/4 as many delegates as in Michigan, and her victory there just proves that she's a regional southern candidate who hasn't been able to succeed around the country.
Look, nobody is surprised that Hillary did well tonight. But it's not over yet. Only 30% of delegates have been awarded and the Sanders campaign has the Clintonistas running scared? Know why? Because now that voting in the south is over, Bernie has the momentum, and the map is HUGELY favorable to Bernie going forward. Next Tuesday, Hillary's going to have to find a way to compete in Florida, Missouri, North Carolina, Illinois, and Ohio. The Sanders campaign is flush with cash and has been waiting for this moment.
People might say "oh but delegates" First of all, the mainstream media is in the tank for Clinton and busy hyping so called "super" delegates which are undemocratic and will inevitable shift towards Sanders once the tour of dixie ends and Sanders shows that he's winning everywhere. Once you get rid of them, Clinton loses almost half of her total delegates. When you consider the fact that true blue states like California and New York haven't yet had a chance to vote for Bernie, you begin to realize that this isn't over. Not by a long shot.
That's not me talking. That's just the math. The mainstream media can try to hype Hillary as much as they want. They're part of the establishment, they're afraid of Bernie's message, and they're trying to bury it with fake stories about inevitability. But you know who can't be ignored? The american people. Get out there, keep donating, and keep fighting. The revolution is just getting started.
Upvotes notwithstanding, a lot of the comments seem pretty realistic about it all. I mean, there are still a hell of a lot of people in denial, but there are way more people admitting the end is near than I had expected, given the talk about /r/politics.
More like wack job author.
That's not me talking. That's just the math. The mainstream media can try to hype Hillary as much as they want. They're part of the establishment, they're afraid of Bernie's message, and they're trying to bury it with fake stories about inevitability. But you know who can't be ignored? The american people. Get out there, keep donating, and keep fighting. The revolution is just getting started.
I don't understand this.I take this as a pretty good indicator that Cruz is winning Idaho:
I haven't seen that filter through to my facebook page yet, sadly. But hopefully if not by tomorrow, by the 16th. Then they can all stop obsessing over the tiny differences between Sanders and Clinton and instead start comparing her to Ted Cruz and Donald Trump.
Listen, everyone knew that tonight was going to be a terrible night for Bernie. We all knew that. Nobody knew who Bernie was when he announced his campaign, and tonight he held Clinton to just 65% in Michigan. What an achievement. Hillary won bigger in Mississippi, but keep in mind that Mississippi has only 1/4 as many delegates as in Michigan, and her victory there just proves that she's a regional southern candidate who hasn't been able to succeed around the country.
Look, nobody is surprised that Hillary did well tonight. But it's not over yet. Only 30% of delegates have been awarded and the Sanders campaign has the Clintonistas running scared. Know why? Because now that voting in the south is over, Bernie has the momentum, and the map is HUGELY favorable to Bernie going forward. Next Tuesday, Hillary's going to have to find a way to compete in Florida, Missouri, North Carolina, Illinois, and Ohio. The Sanders campaign is flush with cash and has been waiting for this moment.
People might say "oh but delegates." First of all, the mainstream media is in the tank for Clinton and busy hyping so called "super" delegates which are undemocratic and will inevitably shift towards Sanders once the tour of dixie ends and Sanders shows that he's winning everywhere. Once you get rid of them, Clinton loses almost half of her total delegates. When you consider the fact that true blue states like California and New York haven't yet had a chance to vote for Bernie, you begin to realize that this isn't over. Not by a long shot.
That's not me talking. That's just the math. The mainstream media can try to hype Hillary as much as they want. They're part of the establishment, they're afraid of Bernie's message, and they're trying to bury it with fake stories about inevitability. But you know who can't be ignored? The american people. Get out there, keep donating, and keep fighting. The revolution is just getting started.
The #1 thing to be taken away from this article is that the word "firebrand" needs to fuck off in political writing
Listen, everyone knew that tonight was going to be a terrible night for Bernie. We all knew that. Nobody knew who Bernie was when he announced his campaign, and tonight he held Clinton to just 65% in Michigan. What an achievement. Hillary won bigger in Mississippi, but keep in mind that Mississippi has only 1/4 as many delegates as in Michigan, and her victory there just proves that she's a regional southern candidate who hasn't been able to succeed around the country.
Look, nobody is surprised that Hillary did well tonight. But it's not over yet. Only 30% of delegates have been awarded and the Sanders campaign has the Clintonistas running scared. Know why? Because now that voting in the south is over, Bernie has the momentum, and the map is HUGELY favorable to Bernie going forward. Next Tuesday, Hillary's going to have to find a way to compete in Florida, Missouri, North Carolina, Illinois, and Ohio. The Sanders campaign is flush with cash and has been waiting for this moment.
People might say "oh but delegates." First of all, the mainstream media is in the tank for Clinton and busy hyping so called "super" delegates which are undemocratic and will inevitably shift towards Sanders once the tour of dixie ends and Sanders shows that he's winning everywhere. Once you get rid of them, Clinton loses almost half of her total delegates. When you consider the fact that true blue states like California and New York haven't yet had a chance to vote for Bernie, you begin to realize that this isn't over. Not by a long shot.
That's not me talking. That's just the math. The mainstream media can try to hype Hillary as much as they want. They're part of the establishment, they're afraid of Bernie's message, and they're trying to bury it with fake stories about inevitability. But you know who can't be ignored? The american people. Get out there, keep donating, and keep fighting. The revolution is just getting started.
So.. Bernie is Scott Steiner?You know, they say all candidates are created equal, but you look at Sanders and you look at Hillary, and you can see that statement is not true! See, normally if you go one-on-one with another candidate, you got a 50-50 chance of winnin.
But Sanders is a genetic freak,and he's not normal, so you got a 25% at best at beatin him! And then you add Wall Street to the mix? Your chances of winnin drasticy go down. See the three-way, at NY, you got a 33 1/3 chance of winnin. But Sanders, Sanders got a 66 2/3 chance of winning, cause Wall Street KNOWS it cant beat him, and its not even gonna try!
So, Hillary, you take your 33 1/3 chance, minus my 25 percent chance, and you got an 8 1/3 chance of winnin at NY! But then you take Sanders's 75 perchance chance at winnin, if they was to go one-on-one, and to add 66 2/3 ch percents, he's got a 141 2/3 chance of winnin at NY! See, McShill; the numbers dont like, and they spell disaster for you at NY!
Listen, everyone knew that tonight was going to be a terrible night for Bernie. We all knew that. Nobody knew who Bernie was when he announced his campaign, and tonight he held Clinton to just 65% in Michigan. What an achievement. Hillary won bigger in Mississippi, but keep in mind that Mississippi has only 1/4 as many delegates as in Michigan, and her victory there just proves that she's a regional southern candidate who hasn't been able to succeed around the country.
Look, nobody is surprised that Hillary did well tonight. But it's not over yet. Only 30% of delegates have been awarded and the Sanders campaign has the Clintonistas running scared. Know why? Because now that voting in the south is over, Bernie has the momentum, and the map is HUGELY favorable to Bernie going forward. Next Tuesday, Hillary's going to have to find a way to compete in Florida, Missouri, North Carolina, Illinois, and Ohio. The Sanders campaign is flush with cash and has been waiting for this moment.
People might say "oh but delegates." First of all, the mainstream media is in the tank for Clinton and busy hyping so called "super" delegates which are undemocratic and will inevitably shift towards Sanders once the tour of dixie ends and Sanders shows that he's winning everywhere. Once you get rid of them, Clinton loses almost half of her total delegates. When you consider the fact that true blue states like California and New York haven't yet had a chance to vote for Bernie, you begin to realize that this isn't over. Not by a long shot.
That's not me talking. That's just the math. The mainstream media can try to hype Hillary as much as they want. They're part of the establishment, they're afraid of Bernie's message, and they're trying to bury it with fake stories about inevitability. But you know who can't be ignored? The american people. Get out there, keep donating, and keep fighting. The revolution is just getting started.
So.. Bernie is Scott Steiner?
I wish that someone had him campaigning for him now. I want this so badly.
Listen, everyone knew that tonight was going to be a terrible night for Bernie. We all knew that. Nobody knew who Bernie was when he announced his campaign, and tonight he held Clinton to just 65% in Michigan. What an achievement. Hillary won bigger in Mississippi, but keep in mind that Mississippi has only 1/4 as many delegates as in Michigan, and her victory there just proves that she's a regional southern candidate who hasn't been able to succeed around the country.
Look, nobody is surprised that Hillary did well tonight. But it's not over yet. Only 30% of delegates have been awarded and the Sanders campaign has the Clintonistas running scared. Know why? Because now that voting in the south is over, Bernie has the momentum, and the map is HUGELY favorable to Bernie going forward. Next Tuesday, Hillary's going to have to find a way to compete in Florida, Missouri, North Carolina, Illinois, and Ohio. The Sanders campaign is flush with cash and has been waiting for this moment.
People might say "oh but delegates." First of all, the mainstream media is in the tank for Clinton and busy hyping so called "super" delegates which are undemocratic and will inevitably shift towards Sanders once the tour of dixie ends and Sanders shows that he's winning everywhere. Once you get rid of them, Clinton loses almost half of her total delegates. When you consider the fact that true blue states like California and New York haven't yet had a chance to vote for Bernie, you begin to realize that this isn't over. Not by a long shot.
That's not me talking. That's just the math. The mainstream media can try to hype Hillary as much as they want. They're part of the establishment, they're afraid of Bernie's message, and they're trying to bury it with fake stories about inevitability. But you know who can't be ignored? The american people. Get out there, keep donating, and keep fighting. The revolution is just getting started.
I take this as a pretty good indicator that Cruz is winning Idaho:
I don't understand this.
If this is Cenk it needs a lot MORE SCREAMING, shitty soundbites, and Ana chuckling.Listen, everyone knew that tonight was going to be a terrible night for Bernie. We all knew that. Nobody knew who Bernie was when he announced his campaign, and tonight he held Clinton to just 65% in Michigan. What an achievement. Hillary won bigger in Mississippi, but keep in mind that Mississippi has only 1/4 as many delegates as in Michigan, and her victory there just proves that she's a regional southern candidate who hasn't been able to succeed around the country.
Look, nobody is surprised that Hillary did well tonight. But it's not over yet. Only 30% of delegates have been awarded and the Sanders campaign has the Clintonistas running scared. Know why? Because now that voting in the south is over, Bernie has the momentum, and the map is HUGELY favorable to Bernie going forward. Next Tuesday, Hillary's going to have to find a way to compete in Florida, Missouri, North Carolina, Illinois, and Ohio. The Sanders campaign is flush with cash and has been waiting for this moment.
People might say "oh but delegates." First of all, the mainstream media is in the tank for Clinton and busy hyping so called "super" delegates which are undemocratic and will inevitably shift towards Sanders once the tour of dixie ends and Sanders shows that he's winning everywhere. Once you get rid of them, Clinton loses almost half of her total delegates. When you consider the fact that true blue states like California and New York haven't yet had a chance to vote for Bernie, you begin to realize that this isn't over. Not by a long shot.
That's not me talking. That's just the math. The mainstream media can try to hype Hillary as much as they want. They're part of the establishment, they're afraid of Bernie's message, and they're trying to bury it with fake stories about inevitability. But you know who can't be ignored? The american people. Get out there, keep donating, and keep fighting. The revolution is just getting started.
Listen, everyone knew that tonight was going to be a terrible night for Bernie. We all knew that. Nobody knew who Bernie was when he announced his campaign, and tonight he held Clinton to just 65% in Michigan. What an achievement. Hillary won bigger in Mississippi, but keep in mind that Mississippi has only 1/4 as many delegates as in Michigan, and her victory there just proves that she's a regional southern candidate who hasn't been able to succeed around the country.
Look, nobody is surprised that Hillary did well tonight. But it's not over yet. Only 30% of delegates have been awarded and the Sanders campaign has the Clintonistas running scared. Know why? Because now that voting in the south is over, Bernie has the momentum, and the map is HUGELY favorable to Bernie going forward. Next Tuesday, Hillary's going to have to find a way to compete in Florida, Missouri, North Carolina, Illinois, and Ohio. The Sanders campaign is flush with cash and has been waiting for this moment.
People might say "oh but delegates." First of all, the mainstream media is in the tank for Clinton and busy hyping so called "super" delegates which are undemocratic and will inevitably shift towards Sanders once the tour of dixie ends and Sanders shows that he's winning everywhere. Once you get rid of them, Clinton loses almost half of her total delegates. When you consider the fact that true blue states like California and New York haven't yet had a chance to vote for Bernie, you begin to realize that this isn't over. Not by a long shot.
That's not me talking. That's just the math. The mainstream media can try to hype Hillary as much as they want. They're part of the establishment, they're afraid of Bernie's message, and they're trying to bury it with fake stories about inevitability. But you know who can't be ignored? The american people. Get out there, keep donating, and keep fighting. The revolution is just getting started.
Should be Freakzilla.Nah Trump would steal the name Big Papa Pump
You know, they say all candidates are created equal, but you look at Sanders and you look at Hillary, and you can see that statement is not true! See, normally if you go one-on-one with another candidate, you got a 50-50 chance of winnin.
But Sanders is a genetic freak, and he's not normal, so you got a 25% at best at beatin him! And then you add Wall Street to the mix? Your chances of winnin drasticy go down. See the three-way, at NY, you got a 33 1/3 chance of winnin. But Sanders, Sanders got a 66 2/3 chance of winning, cause Wall Street KNOWS it cant beat him, and its not even gonna try!
So, Hillary, you take your 33 1/3 chance, minus my 25 percent chance, and you got an 8 1/3 chance of winnin at NY! But then you take Sanders's 75 perchance chance at winnin, if they was to go one-on-one, and to add 66 2/3 ch percents, he's got a 141 2/3 chance of winnin at NY! See, McShill; the numbers dont lie, and they spell disaster for you at NY!
Listen, everyone knew that tonight was going to be a terrible night for Bernie. We all knew that. Nobody knew who Bernie was when he announced his campaign, and tonight he held Clinton to just 65% in Michigan. What an achievement. Hillary won bigger in Mississippi, but keep in mind that Mississippi has only 1/4 as many delegates as in Michigan, and her victory there just proves that she's a regional southern candidate who hasn't been able to succeed around the country.
Look, nobody is surprised that Hillary did well tonight. But it's not over yet. Only 30% of delegates have been awarded and the Sanders campaign has the Clintonistas running scared. Know why? Because now that voting in the south is over, Bernie has the momentum, and the map is HUGELY favorable to Bernie going forward. Next Tuesday, Hillary's going to have to find a way to compete in Florida, Missouri, North Carolina, Illinois, and Ohio. The Sanders campaign is flush with cash and has been waiting for this moment.
People might say "oh but delegates." First of all, the mainstream media is in the tank for Clinton and busy hyping so called "super" delegates which are undemocratic and will inevitably shift towards Sanders once the tour of dixie ends and Sanders shows that he's winning everywhere. Once you get rid of them, Clinton loses almost half of her total delegates. When you consider the fact that true blue states like California and New York haven't yet had a chance to vote for Bernie, you begin to realize that this isn't over. Not by a long shot.
That's not me talking. That's just the math. The mainstream media can try to hype Hillary as much as they want. They're part of the establishment, they're afraid of Bernie's message, and they're trying to bury it with fake stories about inevitability. But you know who can't be ignored? The american people. Get out there, keep donating, and keep fighting. The revolution is just getting started.
Just voted for Queen.
YASSSS
Am I doin it right?
This is definitely a parody, but what's it referencing again?You know, they say all candidates are created equal, but you look at Sanders and you look at Hillary, and you can see that statement is not true! See, normally if you go one-on-one with another candidate, you got a 50-50 chance of winnin.
But Sanders is a genetic freak, and he's not normal, so you got a 25% at best at beatin him! And then you add Wall Street to the mix? Your chances of winnin drasticy go down. See the three-way, at NY, you got a 33 1/3 chance of winnin. But Sanders, Sanders got a 66 2/3 chance of winning, cause Wall Street KNOWS it cant beat him, and its not even gonna try!
So, Hillary, you take your 33 1/3 chance, minus my 25 percent chance, and you got an 8 1/3 chance of winnin at NY! But then you take Sanders's 75 perchance chance at winnin, if they was to go one-on-one, and to add 66 2/3 ch percents, he's got a 141 2/3 chance of winnin at NY! See, McShill; the numbers dont lie, and they spell disaster for you at NY!
This is definitely a parody, but what's it referencing again?
Yas bitch slay the voting booth!Just voted for Queen.
YASSSS
Am I doin it right?
damn that some good shit your smokingListen, everyone knew that tonight was going to be a terrible night for Bernie. We all knew that. Nobody knew who Bernie was when he announced his campaign, and tonight he held Clinton to just 65% in Michigan. What an achievement. Hillary won bigger in Mississippi, but keep in mind that Mississippi has only 1/4 as many delegates as in Michigan, and her victory there just proves that she's a regional southern candidate who hasn't been able to succeed around the country.
Look, nobody is surprised that Hillary did well tonight. But it's not over yet. Only 30% of delegates have been awarded and the Sanders campaign has the Clintonistas running scared. Know why? Because now that voting in the south is over, Bernie has the momentum, and the map is HUGELY favorable to Bernie going forward. Next Tuesday, Hillary's going to have to find a way to compete in Florida, Missouri, North Carolina, Illinois, and Ohio. The Sanders campaign is flush with cash and has been waiting for this moment.
People might say "oh but delegates." First of all, the mainstream media is in the tank for Clinton and busy hyping so called "super" delegates which are undemocratic and will inevitably shift towards Sanders once the tour of dixie ends and Sanders shows that he's winning everywhere. Once you get rid of them, Clinton loses almost half of her total delegates. When you consider the fact that true blue states like California and New York haven't yet had a chance to vote for Bernie, you begin to realize that this isn't over. Not by a long shot.
That's not me talking. That's just the math. The mainstream media can try to hype Hillary as much as they want. They're part of the establishment, they're afraid of Bernie's message, and they're trying to bury it with fake stories about inevitability. But you know who can't be ignored? The american people. Get out there, keep donating, and keep fighting. The revolution is just getting started.
I don't understand this.
Listen, everyone knew that tonight was going to be a terrible night for Bernie. We all knew that. Nobody knew who Bernie was when he announced his campaign, and tonight he held Clinton to just 65% in Michigan. What an achievement. Hillary won bigger in Mississippi, but keep in mind that Mississippi has only 1/4 as many delegates as in Michigan, and her victory there just proves that she's a regional southern candidate who hasn't been able to succeed around the country.
Look, nobody is surprised that Hillary did well tonight. But it's not over yet. Only 30% of delegates have been awarded and the Sanders campaign has the Clintonistas running scared. Know why? Because now that voting in the south is over, Bernie has the momentum, and the map is HUGELY favorable to Bernie going forward. Next Tuesday, Hillary's going to have to find a way to compete in Florida, Missouri, North Carolina, Illinois, and Ohio. The Sanders campaign is flush with cash and has been waiting for this moment.
People might say "oh but delegates." First of all, the mainstream media is in the tank for Clinton and busy hyping so called "super" delegates which are undemocratic and will inevitably shift towards Sanders once the tour of dixie ends and Sanders shows that he's winning everywhere. Once you get rid of them, Clinton loses almost half of her total delegates. When you consider the fact that true blue states like California and New York haven't yet had a chance to vote for Bernie, you begin to realize that this isn't over. Not by a long shot.
That's not me talking. That's just the math. The mainstream media can try to hype Hillary as much as they want. They're part of the establishment, they're afraid of Bernie's message, and they're trying to bury it with fake stories about inevitability. But you know who can't be ignored? The american people. Get out there, keep donating, and keep fighting. The revolution is just getting started.
You know, they say all candidates are created equal, but you look at Sanders and you look at Hillary, and you can see that statement is not true! See, normally if you go one-on-one with another candidate, you got a 50-50 chance of winnin.
But Sanders is a genetic freak, and he's not normal, so you got a 25% at best at beatin him! And then you add Wall Street to the mix? Your chances of winnin drasticy go down. See the three-way, at NY, you got a 33 1/3 chance of winnin. But Sanders, Sanders got a 66 2/3 chance of winning, cause Wall Street KNOWS it cant beat him, and its not even gonna try!
So, Hillary, you take your 33 1/3 chance, minus his 25 percent chance, and you got an 8 1/3 chance of winnin at NY! But then you take Sanders's 75 perchance chance at winnin, if they was to go one-on-one, and to add 66 2/3 ch percents, he's got a 141 2/3 chance of winnin at NY! See, McShill; the numbers dont lie, and they spell disaster for you at NY!
Or dems vote kasich 😆Big Poppa Trump needs to win Michigan and Mississippi tonight. As long as the freaks come out to vote he should be good.
Trump is #1 across the board in states he wins. He has a direct advantage going in all the time. That he's dipping some and Cruz is rising shows me Cruz is probably winning.
Trump is #1 across the board in states he wins. He has a direct advantage going in all the time. That he's dipping some and Cruz is rising shows me Cruz is probably winning.