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Gothmog

(154,485 posts)
80. So in your world, people who support President Obama would have ignored Sanders attacks on the POTUS
Thu Dec 29, 2016, 04:00 PM
Dec 2016

Your analysis ignores that there were good and valid reasons for voters to reject and vote against Sanders. A large percentage of the Democratic base rejected Sanders in part because his policies were unrealistic and due to Sanders attacks on President Obama. . Sanders proposals are not realistic and would have no chance in the real world where the GOP would block such pie in the sky proposals. Sanders justify his platform by promising a revolution where millions and millions of voters would show up and force the GOP to be reasonable. That revolution exists only in a fantasy world and has not been evident in the real world http://www.usnews.com/opinion/blogs/robert-schlesinger/articles/2016-04-15/bernie-sanders-bad-delegate-math-and-fantasy-revolution

He went on to argue that he's going to win because he'll pile up votes now that the contest has moved out of the Deep South. This is a shorthand version of an argument that Sanders and his allies have been deploying recently in an attempt to downplay Clinton's lead in pledged delegates – "having so many Southern states go first kind of distorts reality" he told Larry Wilmore, host of "The Nightly Show," earlier this week.

There's a lot wrong with this formulation, as Paul Krugman wrote in The New York Times this morning. It suggests a world view redolent of former half-term Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin's toxic pandering to "real America." In Sanders' case, he's saying that red-state Democrats should be discounted because they're too conservative. But that's simply wrong, Krugman notes: Clinton isn't "riding a wave of support from old-fashioned Confederate-flag-waving Dixiecrats," she ran up the score by scoring lopsided victories among black voters ("let's be blunt, the descendants of slaves," he writes).

And the fact that the Deep South is conservative should be irrelevant, given that Sanders argues the principle obstacle to his super progressive agenda is campaign finance corruption rather than, say, ideology. Either he's leading a national movement, as he claims, or he's not.

Thus more broadly, his attempt to delegitimize a swath of voters lays bare a fundamental inconsistency of the Sanders campaign: One of his basic answers about how he's going to accomplish his aims – whether winning the Democratic nod, winning the general election or enacting his agenda – is the forthcoming revolution. His super-ambitious agenda will prove to be achievable substance rather than unicorns-and-rainbows fantasy, he said Thursday night, "when millions of people stand up, fight back and create a government that works for all of us, not just the 1 percent. That is what the political revolution is about. That is what this campaign is about."

And that's fine: If he can summon the revolution, then more power to him, literally and figuratively. But the Sanders revolution is breaking on the hard realities of math. The revolution will not be televised, the old song goes; but it can be fantasized – and it can be measured, in votes and delegates. And in every calculable respect, it's coming up short. That leaves Sanders to bank on an anti-democratic sleight of hand to secure the nomination. That's not a broad-based revolution; that's a palace coup.

Here's why: Despite Sanders' recent string of victories, there is no sense in which he is winning this race. As The Washington Post's Philip Bump wrote earlier this week:

In fact, by every possible democratic measure, Clinton is winning. She's winning in states (and territories) won, which isn't a meaningful margin of victory anyway. She's winning in the popular vote by 2.4 million votes – more than a third more than Sanders has in total. In part that's because Sanders is winning lower-turnout caucuses, but it's mostly because he's winning smaller states. And she's winning with both types of delegates.

Sanders' revolution was not real which is why he lost the race in the real world. I and many other Democratic voters never took Sanders seriously because I never accepted the premise of his so-called revolution. There was simply no way for Sanders to come close to delivering on his promises in the real world. Sanders never generated his promised revolution and could not deliver on his promises in the real world
And if you offend a large kcdoug1 Dec 2016 #1
Really? Trump did just fine with that strategy mythology Dec 2016 #2
And yet SHE LOST kcdoug1 Dec 2016 #5
Oh, right. She lost by having 2,864,974 more votes than the cheeto-faced shitgibbon. baldguy Dec 2016 #7
You don't win the Super Bowl by having more fans. Exilednight Dec 2016 #9
No, but you do win elections by having MORE VOTES baldguy Dec 2016 #11
You don't win the presidency that way. It takes 270 EVs. Popular vote doesn't matter. Exilednight Dec 2016 #19
So, you admit that you're a Clinton hater. baldguy Dec 2016 #21
No, I never said I hated Hillary. You said I did when you responded to my post. Exilednight Dec 2016 #23
And now you're trying to deflect & walk it back. baldguy Dec 2016 #25
If you're going to make accusations, then post links where I said such a thing. Exilednight Dec 2016 #26
I can't get over all these liberal EC fans that continue to sprout up all over the place. kcr Dec 2016 #34
Just because I understand how something works does not mean Exilednight Dec 2016 #35
There is meaning to it. Which you choose to ignore. boston bean Dec 2016 #38
Who is being g sworn in Jan 20th? Exilednight Dec 2016 #44
He won because of a corrupt system that disenfranchised millions of black voters boston bean Dec 2016 #46
This is the EXACT same argument that RWers on Twitter tweet me. I never thought I'd see BlueCaliDem Dec 2016 #51
bullshit. Exilednight Dec 2016 #54
You're not on Twitter, are you? Or maybe you are, but under a different disguise? BlueCaliDem Dec 2016 #56
Twitter is for people with no retention skills and need their news broken Exilednight Dec 2016 #57
Not necessarily true. It takes real skill to get your point across in 140 characters or less. BlueCaliDem Dec 2016 #58
I agree, but no one is making a point on Twitter. It's just people Exilednight Dec 2016 #60
How would you know? You're not on Twitter, are you? BlueCaliDem Dec 2016 #61
I've been on Twitter, and discovered it was cestpool. Exilednight Dec 2016 #63
When? Five years ago? I'm on Twitter and BLOCK asswipes who come in with BlueCaliDem Dec 2016 #65
If she was so terrible, what does that say about mythology Dec 2016 #17
There's an argument to be made that Hillary didn't tap into anything. Exilednight Dec 2016 #22
He gave her those states... Wow.. boston bean Dec 2016 #39
+1 oasis Dec 2016 #78
+1 uponit7771 Jan 2017 #103
So she didn't win because she was a good candidate but because Sanders screwed up? uponit7771 Jan 2017 #102
If she were such a good candidate, then why did she lose the GE? Exilednight Jan 2017 #107
BULL FUCKIN SHIT !!! Comey, Voter suppression and Russia all the rest of the postmortems are guessin uponit7771 Jan 2017 #101
I could counter your premise, but that's been done in plenty of threads already. Garrett78 Dec 2016 #4
Not much you can do when a "large part" (lol no) of the party is offended... SaschaHM Dec 2016 #6
Who did that? mcar Dec 2016 #45
I agree. The DLC takes progressives AND people of color for granted except at election time yurbud Dec 2016 #92
And the so called base that does not vote for the nominee will endure Demsrule86 Jan 2017 #108
Well, it all depends on how you define the "base," The Velveteen Ocelot Dec 2016 #3
Unions have been decimated and membership has declined immensely. Garrett78 Dec 2016 #8
You mean the "white working class"? seeing there are plenty of working class folk (I dare say most uponit7771 Dec 2016 #13
The "base" fluctuates from decade to decade. The Velveteen Ocelot Dec 2016 #14
No, the base doesn't... the peripherals do but black women, single women, Hispanics and other... uponit7771 Jan 2017 #104
We need to broaden the base MadCrow Dec 2016 #10
Bernie's ideas broadened the base and Schumer has as much as said so. JudyM Dec 2016 #15
Broadened the base with votes for third parties. boston bean Dec 2016 #40
Do you have any numbers at all to support that claim? The Green Party got its typical % of votes, JudyM Dec 2016 #43
Surely you haven't forgotten the Bernie or Bust "movement" and the R B Garr Dec 2016 #91
The problem is, many states turned away new Dem supporters by preventing late registration. TheBlackAdder Dec 2016 #41
So true! 6month advance registration requirement! Let's hope that's one of the improvements JudyM Dec 2016 #42
Big +1 nt riderinthestorm Jan 2017 #116
Who votes in a primary if not "the base", generally speaking? TCJ70 Dec 2016 #12
I think the big corporate donors are more important than "The Base" in determining the nominee. jalan48 Dec 2016 #16
Money's influence on election results has been vastly overstated. Garrett78 Dec 2016 #29
We're Bernie supporters not Democratic base, too? aikoaiko Dec 2016 #18
Not necessarily SharonClark Dec 2016 #47
Sure, some. But most were party supporters. aikoaiko Dec 2016 #48
Maybe radical noodle Dec 2016 #55
"Some Sanders supporters have no use for the Democratic Party except to exploit it." TonyPDX Dec 2016 #52
this, plus 1000 Grey Lemercier Jan 2017 #99
The base is solid. NCTraveler Dec 2016 #20
No one here can define "the base". It's fluid. Exilednight Dec 2016 #24
The Obama coalition is, for the most part, what got Clinton nominated. Garrett78 Dec 2016 #28
Exit polling says otherwise. Exilednight Dec 2016 #30
First, we're talking about the primary and not the general election. Garrett78 Dec 2016 #31
Actually, those slim margins are the Obama coalition. Exilednight Dec 2016 #32
The base of the party is predominantly POC, women and urbanites. Garrett78 Dec 2016 #33
The base is whomever the next leader of the party draws Exilednight Dec 2016 #62
The base isn't nearly as fluid as you claim. Garrett78 Dec 2016 #64
Sanders got less than 43% of the vote in the primaries Gothmog Dec 2016 #27
how much of her support was because of "elictability"? BuddyCa Dec 2016 #36
I think it played a role. Those who are most oppressed can't take a chance on someone like Sanders. Garrett78 Dec 2016 #66
Had Sanders won the nomination, we'd be living on a different planet... Orsino Dec 2016 #37
Sanders would have lost the popular vote by a huge margin Gothmog Dec 2016 #49
No one can know that... TCJ70 Dec 2016 #50
Sanders was on the ballot in 2016 and under performed Clinton Gothmog Dec 2016 #59
Not to mention the delegate count wouldn't have been remotely close without caucuses. Garrett78 Dec 2016 #67
There was so much good material to use on Sanders that it was not even funny Gothmog Dec 2016 #70
Faulty premise. Orsino Dec 2016 #68
First Sanders never had a chance of being the nominee and second, the oppo would have killed him Gothmog Dec 2016 #69
Of course he had a chance. So did primary voters. Orsino Dec 2016 #71
Sanders was rejected by Jewish, African American and Latino voters Gothmog Dec 2016 #73
You're still addressing a different question. Orsino Dec 2016 #74
I live in the real world where facts are important Gothmog Dec 2016 #75
They were busy supporting a different candidate... Orsino Dec 2016 #76
A significant portion of the Democratic base rejected Sanders for some valid reasons Gothmog Dec 2016 #77
"Rejected"? That's a silly-ass framing. Orsino Dec 2016 #79
So in your world, people who support President Obama would have ignored Sanders attacks on the POTUS Gothmog Dec 2016 #80
The cold hard fact is that neither Sanders nor O'Malley DID get nominated..... George II Dec 2016 #82
I don't see anyone denying that. n/t Orsino Dec 2016 #83
Some of the more hardcore Hillary supporters need to rub in the fact... TCJ70 Dec 2016 #84
You're claiming that someone rejected the possibility that either.... George II Dec 2016 #86
You are claiming a position that no one is disputing. n/t Orsino Dec 2016 #87
It seems few want to actually address the issue at hand. Garrett78 Dec 2016 #53
Apparently, it's gonna take a celebrity. Orsino Dec 2016 #72
Sanders ran not to win but for the media coverage Gothmog Dec 2016 #81
A celebrity? That's silly. Orsino Dec 2016 #85
Denial is not just a river in Africa Gothmog Dec 2016 #88
Uh-huh. Orsino Dec 2016 #89
You are totally wrong yet again Gothmog Dec 2016 #90
Nope. You've cherry-picked Sanders' statements... Orsino Dec 2016 #94
Just because you disagree with facts do not mean that these facts are false Gothmog Jan 2017 #98
Every candidate ran for media coverage. Orsino Jan 2017 #100
No every normal candidate were members of the party and cared about the party Gothmog Jan 2017 #105
You're claiming to read minds... Orsino Jan 2017 #106
Sanders tops list for most appearances on 2016 Sunday shows Gothmog Jan 2017 #95
This does not make him a celebrity. Orsino Jan 2017 #96
Sanders had more than double the appearances on the Sunday talk shows compared to the next person Gothmog Jan 2017 #97
That's a fantasy. n/t Orsino Jan 2017 #111
Again, it is called math Gothmog Jan 2017 #112
Minus the rest of the math, it's just cherry-picking. Orsino Jan 2017 #113
The math is the math Gothmog Jan 2017 #114
I'm not the one ignoring math. Orsino Jan 2017 #115
You are wrong yet again Gothmog Jan 2017 #117
Clinton had more of the 'base' than Bernie but she certainly didn't have all of it... Kuhl Dec 2016 #93
Text book Kennedyesque election...had Bernie behaved in a civil fashion Demsrule86 Jan 2017 #109
They both got plenty of support, get off it Wabbajack_ Jan 2017 #110
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