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2016 Postmortem
In reply to the discussion: A word of advice about controlling the Democratic Party message [View all]JCanete
(5,272 posts)50. Well that's not exactly fair. He's a Presidential Candidate. He could have said "this is the only
way this can get done with me or without me" versus, "we can make this happen together," but no candidate in history has ever said, "I will not take you there! We will not make it!" I disagree with you that his loss spoke to the popularity of his message rather than lack of sufficient exposure of it in a timely enough fashion, but I don't see much reason in either of us wasting oxygen going back and forth on that.
As to the qualities you prize highest versus those I do, I accept a difference of opinion on that as well, but understand your reverence for wonkishness. I have no objections to that level of involvement on a bill, I'd just prefer the end product doesn't have a shit-load of concessions to big money.
But I keep pointing out to you that there isn't anything honest about saying you can get things passed by reaching across the aisle, simply by working with the other side. That is the canard. Saying "If we want the other side to comply, we have to all apply pressure to them in the streets," is not a lie. Whether Sanders could get enough of a movement going to do that is beyond the point. It is needed. Period.
Also, you are mixing apples and oranges. Sanders isn't an absolutist. Where there are no other options, he's never been one to outright refuse compromise. On the democratic ticket, there were options. He was giving people an option. There is no contradiction here. Saying during the passage of ACA that single payer was a non-starter is not working in the same realms of possibility that running as president on a populist message open up when it comes to energizing people and their imaginations for the nation's future. Nothing starts without demanding it. In 2009 Sanders didn't have the kind of public presence that he had while running in the GE. He didn't have a megaphone or any kind of populist movement behind him. What gave him a movement was telling people that they can demand these things. That they don't have to be the impossible dreams that they were back in 2009. Maybe next time, those dreams will be even less impossible, even less foreign to voters.
Commitment is awesome, but we just keep pushing that boulder up the hill and it keeps rolling back down, and that's because we are pushing against the gravity of the mainstream media, and instead of saying fuck this mountain, and boring a tunnel through it, we just keep trying to push it up the hill and expecting a different result the next time. How do you fight against the mainstream media if you can't expose them, and without let-up, roast them for their corporate interests? Or do you truly believe that they don't operate according to those? Its all just a ratings game and they just get wagged by the likes of the Donald?
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"Clearly you don't sit down with those you disagree with." Are you referencing the poster?
Eleanors38
Dec 2016
#9
Unfortunately some want to control the Democratic Party message from the outside.
George II
Dec 2016
#7
That is not an accurate gauge of whether a message can resonate with people. Just running and tyring
JCanete
Dec 2016
#10
Winning with our current party is fan-fiction that our leaders keep regurgitating and fawning over.
JCanete
Dec 2016
#23
How can you disagree with my analysis and then say if your campaign resonates, donors will
JCanete
Dec 2016
#21
So, the premise I was responding to was basically "if your ideas are so hot prove it
JCanete
Dec 2016
#40
sad and wrong... your words are the things I was saying were reinforcing my argument. Not that I
JCanete
Dec 2016
#46
now you're basically saying that in the "real world" donors don't give a shit about policy, just
JCanete
Dec 2016
#55
Where I agree with you is that refighting the primary is pointless, and that energy spent
JCanete
Dec 2016
#27
That recurring theme about rhetoric versus policy--excuse me for being cute--is rhetoric.
JCanete
Dec 2016
#41
but that is nothing compared to the megaphone that went out over the corporate media from
JCanete
Dec 2016
#47
okay, I see, you're not responding to what I'm posting, just to a preconceived notion you already
JCanete
Dec 2016
#54
Except that I didn't say populist rhetoric was good just cuz it feels good to hear it.
JCanete
Dec 2016
#48
Well that's not exactly fair. He's a Presidential Candidate. He could have said "this is the only
JCanete
Dec 2016
#50
Another way is for everyone to call their Democratic congressmen, lots of them, and OFTEN
mtnsnake
Dec 2016
#20
Do you honestly think that tons of people here are going to follow your advice
mtnsnake
Dec 2016
#30
I would encourage those that aren't the type to run to still get involved and proactively seek good
think
Dec 2016
#25
A grad student I talked with today told me my generation was at fault.
redstatebluegirl
Dec 2016
#29