BNR: 'Bernie Is Enormously Optimistic About The Future Of Our Country' & 'Sanders Soldiers On'

"I Am Enormously Optomistic About The Future Of Our Country"

Sen. Bernie Sanders is not dropping out of the presidential race, he told supporters at a rally Tuesday night, following Hillary Clinton's projected primary wins in New Jersey, New Mexico, and South Dakota.

He said of next week's primary in the District of Columbia, "We are going to fight hard. We are going to fight hard to win the primary in Washington D.C. And then we take our fight for social, economic, racial, and environmental justice to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania!"

The Vermont Senator was introduced as "the next president of the United States" by his staff moments before he took the stage in Santa Monica, California. The crowd, between 2,000 and 3,000 people, cheered for over a minute before Sanders spoke.

He thanked the room for "being part of the political revolution" and being ready to "fight for real change." He acknowledged how far his long-shot campaign had come since the beginning of the primary season.

"All of you know that when we began this campaign a little bit over a year ago, we were considered to be a fringe campaign," said Sanders. "But over the last year I think that has changed just a little bit. By the end of tonight we'll have won, I believe, 22 state primaries and caucuses. We will have received well over ten million votes."

He grew sentimental as he mentioned how "enormously optimistic [he was] about future of [the] country."

"It has been one of the most moving moments of my life to be out throughout this state in beautiful evenings and seeing thousands and thousands of people coming out. People who are prepared to stand up and fight for real change in this country," Sanders said.

[video:https://youtu.be/WH7sPmBNKHI]

Bernie's Full Speech

Thank you. Thank you, LA! Thank you all.

Thank you. Let me … Let me thank … Let me thank … Let me thank [laughs].

Let me thank all of you for being here tonight. And let me thank all of you for being part of the political revolution. I especially want to thank the tens of thousands of volunteers here in the state of California. And I want to thank the people of California for their incredible hospitality. It has been one of the most moving moments of my life to be out throughout this state in beautiful evenings and seeing thousands and thousands of people coming out. People who are prepared to stand up and fight for real change in this country.

All of you know, all of you know, that when we began this campaign a little over a year ago we were considered to be a fringe campaign. But over the last year, I think that has changed, just a little bit. By the end of tonight, we’ll have won, I believe 22 state primaries and caucuses. We will have received well over 10 million votes. And what is most extraordinary to me is that in virtually every single state, we have won in big numbers, the votes of young people. Young people understand that they are the future of America, and they intend to help shape that future. And I am enormously optimistic about the future of our country when so many young people have come on board and understand that our vision, a vision of social justice, economic justice, racial justice, and environmental justice, must be the future of America. Our vision will be the future of America.

Our campaign from Day 1 has understood some very basic points, and that is first, we will not allow right-wing Republicans to control our government. And that is especially true with Donald Trump as the Republican candidate. The American people in my view will never support a candidate whose major theme is bigotry. Who insults Mexicans, who insults Muslims and women and African Americans. We will not allow Donald Trump to become president of the United States.

But we understand that our mission is more than just defeating Trump, it is transforming our country. The vast majority of the American people know that it is not acceptable that the top tenth of 1 percent owns as much wealth as the bottom 90 percent; we’re going to change that.

[video:https://youtu.be/Bqd1O2-UkXY]

Sanders Is Set To Let Some
Staff Go

Senator Bernie Sanders plans to lay off at least half of his campaign staff Wednesday as his battered presidential bid continues despite Hillary Clinton’s being declared the presumptive Democratic nominee, two people close to the campaign said Tuesday.

Many of those being laid off are advance staff members who often help with campaign logistics, as well as field staff members who have been working to garner votes for the senator, according to a campaign official and a former campaign staff member, both of whom spoke on condition of anonymity. Some campaign workers may move into jobs at Mr. Sanders’s Senate office, but others will be terminated, they said.

Word of the layoffs came on a night that Mrs. Clinton declared that she had captured the majority of pledged delegates needed to capture the Democratic nomination, despite a spirited fight from Mr. Sanders, who has showed no signs of ending his campaign.

Mr. Sanders insists that he is prepared to challenge Mrs. Clinton at the Democratic National Convention in July, holding out hope that his lobbying of superdelegates — party officials and state leaders who cast their final votes at the convention — will siphon support from Mrs. Clinton as he makes his case that he is a stronger candidate against Donald J. Trump, the presumptive Republican nominee.

Mr. Sanders’s spokesman, Michael Briggs, said Tuesday that Mr. Sanders planned to travel to his home in Vermont on Wednesday and then head to Washington on Thursday. Campaign aides say he plans to hold rallies in Washington, which holds the last nominating contest on June 14.

[video:https://youtu.be/5Yqx8OqDrGk]

Sanders To Meet With Obama Thursday

President Barack Obama will meet with Bernie Sanders on Thursday, the White House announced late Tuesday night.

The meeting was announced following Sanders' projected wins by The AP in the North Dakota Democratic caucuses and the Montana Democratic primary, and after Hillary Clinton's projected wins in New Jersey, New Mexico and South Dakota. The winner of the California primary had not yet been projected.

The White House statement appeared to ratify Hillary Clinton's claim to the nomination: "The President congratulated Secretary Clinton for securing the delegates necessary to clinch the Democratic Nomination for President," the statement, issued by the White House press secretary, read.

According to the statement, President Obama called both Clinton and Sanders, and "congratulated both candidates for running inspiring campaigns that have energized Democrats, brought a new generation of Americans into the political process, and shined a spotlight on important policy ideas aimed at making sure our economy and our politics work for everybody, not just those with wealth and power."

Obama "thanked Senator Sanders for energizing millions of Americans with his commitment to issues like fighting economic inequality and special interests' influence on our politics."

[video:https://youtu.be/cffyasVPd_Q]

The Revenge Of The Wrinkly Radicals

There was something fitting about the one of the last acts of defiance in Bernie Sanders’ campaign for the White House taking place in California, the state in which many ageing radicals cut their teeth.

On both sides of the Atlantic the swing to the Left has reawakened the political appetite of a generation who probably thought that their days of activism were a distant memory filed away along with their collection of Grateful Dead albums.

But these old rockers are refusing to enter their dotage quietly and have been making the most of what is likely to be their farewell tour.

There was something fitting about the one of the last acts of defiance in Bernie Sanders’ campaign for the White House taking place in California, the state in which many ageing radicals cut their teeth.

On both sides of the Atlantic the swing to the Left has reawakened the political appetite of a generation who probably thought that their days of activism were a distant memory filed away along with their collection of Grateful Dead albums.

But these old rockers are refusing to enter their dotage quietly and have been making the most of what is likely to be their farewell tour.

There were rather a lot of chaps with pony tails – grey pony tails. I am sure I saw the odd tie-dye t-shirt. Added to that there was the odd sprinkling of women who looked as if they had just emerged from the Woodstock rock festival. Mention Eugene McCarthy – the radical democrat whose ’68 campaign did for LBJ – and they seemed to get rather misty eyed.

It may have been more than four decades ago, but the flame of the 1968 election had been reignited by Bernie Sanders, who they clearly regard as one of their own.

[video:https://youtu.be/Z8Lo9kkx6bQ]

How Sanders Change THe 2016 Electons

Sanders proved that a campaign built on genuine outrage about the growing gap between the haves and the have-nots in America can draw millions of acolytes without a dollar’s worth of corporate money. He won at least 21 Democratic primaries. Perhaps most importantly, he helped identify issues fed-up voters identify with most, forcing Clinton to change her own stance on some of those issues. Here are four areas where Sanders had the largest impact:

Trade. Sanders wants to reverse free-trade agreements such as NAFTA, arguing that they push down American wages and destroy US jobs. Not long ago, Clinton was a strong proponent of free trade and a backer of the Trans-Pacific Partnership that’s now awaiting a vote in the Senate. She now says she’s opposed to the TPP, and the support Sanders received for his own opposition to free-trade deals is one likely reason why. This could have a real effect on the U.S. economy if the next president is a general opponent of free-trade deals, in contrast with the policies of every other president since at least the 1960s.

Income inequality. Sanders delivered a dour message about all the ways ordinary people get a raw deal these days – and voters lapped it up. Especially young voters. Donald Trump has a similar message, but that mostly seems to resonate with older men who feel economically disenfranchised. Sanders demonstrated that many young people feel similar anxiety, and they are now Clinton’s to grab. The obvious question is whether Clinton has the charisma to get their attention the way Sanders did in the primaries.

The big banks. Sanders’ plan to “break up the banks” was somewhat incoherent, since he never explained how, exactly, he would turn big banks into smaller ones. And some analysts think the new rules for financial institutions are so severe that too-big-to-fail banks aren’t even a problem anymore. By railing on the banks, however, Sanders showed that many Americans still seek a villain to blame for declining career prospects and dwindling quality of life. The message for Clinton: Your pals on Wall Street remain persona non grata in much of America.

[video:https://youtu.be/IYHbTMMKfCI]

4 Reasons Sanders Could Fight On

Below are four reasons why a Kumbaya moment will remain elusive, and why the Democratic convention may well be contested until the final votes of the superdelegates are recorded in July.

This isn't 2008

In her call for unity, Clinton referenced her disagreements with Obama. "No matter what differences we had in our long campaign," Clinton said, "they paled in comparison to the differences we had with the Republicans."

But, looking back on the 2008 campaign, the substantive differences on policy were vanishingly small. There were big fights over judgment (the Iraq War) and the claim to history (the first African-American versus the first woman nominee). But on policy grounds, Clinton and Obama were all but the same candidate.

Their most salient disagreement was whether the Democratic plan for universal health care ought to include a mandate to buy coverage. Clinton insisted the mandate was essential; Obama opposed as a matter of principle. They debated it ad nauseum. But in the end, this squabble was much ado about nothing. When Obama became president, Clinton's top health-policy adviser was tapped by the White House to run point reform — and the individual mandate became a bedrock principle of Obamacare.

This is relevant today, because falling in line behind Obama in 2008 required Clinton to swallow little more than personal pride. It did not require sacrifice of any dearly held principle or policy stance — only surrender of the idea that she would have made a better president.

In 2016, the contested terrain is not symbolic. Consider Sanders' call to break up the big banks against Clinton's proposal to better regulate Wall Street.

This is a difference of orientation, not degree. And it is but one of many such differences.

[video: https://youtu.be/6idnb-Bbk7Q]

How Sanders Changed Democratic Fundraising

By the time Clinton announced her candidacy, she was already the probable nominee; now she’s the presumptive nominee. But while the intervening months did little to change that calculus, they did change the party. Democratic fundraising, in particular, may never be the same.

Bernie Sanders’ fundraising machine generated more than $200 million for the candidate over the past year, with the vast majority of that sum coming from small donors. By making those small donors the core of his fundraising strategy, Sanders bypassed the traditional gatekeepers who typically pick the survivors of the so-called money primary.

“It’s great fundraising. It’s the purest kind of fundraising you can have, because nobody’s buying you,” Elaine Kamarck, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and a pro-Clinton superdelegate, told International Business Times. “It’s terrific.”

Clinton has pursued a more traditional revenue-generating strategy, which meant relying on money raised from the hundreds of fundraisers her supporters hosted on her behalf (and on behalf of pro-Clinton super PACs). Such fundraisers can sometimes require a commitment of $1,000 or more just to get past security, but this year those sums were matched by the truckloads of small-denomination cash being provided to the Sanders campaign.

Though Sanders eschewed fundraisers, he was nonetheless a match for Clinton in fundraising throughout the campaign. In several months, disclosure forms show that he trounced her in the race for cash.The most recent Federal Election Commission data shows he has raised slightly more than she did over the course of the campaign, though the total does not include money raised for super PACs favoring one candidate or the other.

As a result, Sanders was able to race further and harder than any comparable left-wing challenger in recent memory. Twelve years ago, one of the Sanders campaign's direct ancestors — the presidential candidacy of anti-war Vermont Gov. Howard Dean — came to an abrupt end after a disappointing showing in the February Wisconsin primary. In contrast, Sanders marshaled the financial resources to withstand any one isolated setback.

[video:https://youtu.be/aoAWpCHJBBU]

The Political Revolution Is Just Getting Started

f there’s anything we’ve learned in this bizarre election year, it’s that political institutions are not too big to fail.

Despite jarring demographic splits, horrifying defeats at the state and congressional level over the past decade and unpopular tactics by its equally unpopular chairwoman Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, the DNC has clung to its out-dated ‘80s era “fundraise or bust” strategy. Perhaps they did this out of fear of change or fear of the unknown or frankly, out of fear of losing their lucrative Beltway consulting contracts.

Bernie Sanders’ campaign -- crowd-sourced and unapologetically liberal -- has shown the Democratic Party something very important:

No, a Democratic presidential candidate does not need to be a corporate puppet.
No, a Democratic presidential candidate does not need to out-raise Republicans.
No, a Democratic presidential candidate does not need to distance himself from the grassroots.

Just remember, the only candidate in this race who consistently beat Republicans -- across the board -- all while mobilizing new voters was Bernie Sanders.

Democrats can no longer keep their blinders on. Despite having raised record amounts of money, the DNC’s strategies are flawed and ineffective -- as evidenced by the loss of over 1,000 seats from the local to the national level since 2008.

At a time when the country is becoming more open to liberal policies and when the Democratic Party membership is 70 percent more progressive than it was 10 years ago, more and more progressives are still leaving the party. That means it’s time for reform.

[video:https://youtu.be/VfwQcxfyYb8]

The Moment The Left-Wing Got Its Mojo Back

It's been hard to grasp what is actually happening in this primary. I don't think hardly anyone in the media class has much idea of what ordinary people are thinking and feeling, myself included. However, I am certain of one thing: The media coverage of the Democratic primary has been largely trash, dominated by endless petty bickering on websites and social media between rival factions of pundits and writers.

I must admit I've been part of that at a few points. But looking past all the hot takes and flame wars, it's pretty clear what Bernie Sanders represents: the moment when the American left wing got its mojo back.

The most obviously shocking part of the primary is the fact that it was close at all. Hillary Clinton had a greater head start than any non-incumbent presidential candidate in generations. She nearly won the nomination eight years ago, her husband is a popular former two-term president, and she's been a high-profile public figure for decades. That gave her the name recognition and party connections to lock up the endorsement of the vast majority of party elites — including the governor of Sanders' home state — before the primary even got started.

Sanders, by contrast, was basically a nobody a year ago. Committed liberals and political junkies knew who he was, of course: the most left-wing senator in the country from the second-smallest state in the union; a stubborn, wild-haired independent who was always mounting the doomed left resistance to atrocious Republican disasters or milquetoast Democratic compromises. For nine years in the Senate, and for nearly two decades before that in the House, he was largely restricted to trumpeting message bills and sneaking through tons of little amendments wherever he could.

..

Sanders has even destroyed the conventional wisdom on campaign contributions, which holds that politicos must spend several hours per day bowing and scraping before rich people to get enough money to run a serious campaign. He raised over $207 million, almost all of it from small donations.

The left will continue to be somewhat in the wilderness during a Clinton presidency. But the writing is on the wall for milquetoast liberalism. The future of the Democratic Party will not much look like Bernie Sanders, but it will sure sound like him.

[video:https://youtu.be/71iNdCxRM50]

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Comments

Hey Berners,

THere is a DC rally on the 9th. I am in DC this week and will try to make it. Anyone else?

Thank you LP for your significant labor of love!

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One of these days I really ,really want to go to DC! Wish it could be to see Sanders!

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mimi's picture

to eat and have fun somewhere. I so respect your work so much and am glad you post here now as well. Thanks of everything. Just caucus-mail me.

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thank you! Will google, and/or do you have a webpage to point me at?

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Euterpe2

TrueBlueinWDC's picture

Thanks, LD, for the BNR. I will continue to support liberal causes here and developing a progressive wing at TPW to balance out the right and center parties. But I am going to check my voter reg and make sure it is still Indie (or change it back, think I switched to Dem in 2008) and vote Green in November.

But for now, I have 10 min to SSS and get on the road or I will be late for work!

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"Intelligence is the ability to adapt to change." Stephen Hawking

NEW: http://www.twitter.com/trueblueinwdc

DesertRose's picture

Let's plan a specific day or week for you to change your registration. Possibly the week before the convention. See my essay from yesterday.
http://caucus99percent.com/content/first-essay-here-leaving-dem-party
Let's make those registrations have an impact. I've been a Dem for 45 yrs. No more. They don't represent me.

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I plan to re-register but would like to make more than a tiny splash. If we coordinated a re-register day, the message would be heard, if not heeded.

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skod's picture

along with a number of other folks here in Douglas County, CO. I'll stay in until then, in case Her Holiness gets indicted, or something else happens that allows Bernie to top the D ticket. But if that doesn't happen, I'll be out- after 40 years. Not before the convention, but immediately after. Looking forward to making an impact on the county offices as one of a group.

Good essay, though.

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is going to the convention and plans to re-register the day after the convention. I will see about the folks in my small rural county who might re-register.

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PriceRip's picture

          Can we get a very large segment of Millennials to do this?

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one of the things I like about Texas is that you walk in and request a ballot... you need to declare party preference months ahead of time before you even know who the candidates are. I think most 'progressives' with a real sense of meaning of the word are actually 'independent', though of course there are some good progressive Democrats...(Shenna Bellows) they do not get the support or attention deserved by the dem party itself.

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I hope these will continue: especially news of Bernie!
And I'm grateful for this website and the Progressive Wing.
Onward!

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TrueBlueinWDC's picture

Yeah, she is the sane alternative for Republicans. Enough said. PS Can't find the link right because my iPad logs me out every time I move to a different tab. Now, I really gotta go! Work beckons.

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"Intelligence is the ability to adapt to change." Stephen Hawking

NEW: http://www.twitter.com/trueblueinwdc

keep all of her paid internet trolls working until after November...

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Look up at the stars and not down at your feet. Try to make sense of what you see, and wonder about what makes the universe exist. Be curious. Stephen Hawking

The first woman president will be Nina Turner in 2020. If the Clintons win the Oligarchy will rule for another 25 year cycle. When Hillary loses we will win the presidency in 2020, if we hang together and put up another dynamic candidate. Nina Turner is dynamic, a true Berner, from Ohio, black, and a woman. How could she lose in a Dem primary? The battleground states in the Dem primary is the midwest. We need more women and the AA vote to expand the movement. Nina can do this. Or we can find someone else. The battle continues until we win.

if-we-lose.jpg

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Lookout's picture

You have a talent for being positive in the midst of disappointment. That is a gift which I admire. There is still hope, if Comey will let the evidence out of the bag before the convention. If not, I'm afraid it comes out during the general election and the party will get what it deserves.

There's still the people's summit and the people's convention prior to the DNC.

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

kharma's picture

We will continue until we prevail--the future of our children demands it.

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There is nothing which I dread so much as a division of the republic into two great parties.. This...is to be dreaded as the greatest political evil under our Constitution.--John Adams

Raggedy Ann's picture

I can't go to TOP any longer I'm also TPW.

On with the fight. In solidarity.

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"The “jumpers” reminded us that one day we will all face only one choice and that is how we will die, not how we will live." Chris Hedges on 9/11

Having trouble keeping up with the new abbreviations. Got TOP and GOS, but TPW?

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Raggedy Ann's picture

It's a lot to type!

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"The “jumpers” reminded us that one day we will all face only one choice and that is how we will die, not how we will live." Chris Hedges on 9/11

TPW, that's us!

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for all your work over these many months. You were just so fantastic to do this. I appreciate it enormously.

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Last night was pretty much a bummer. I didn't know he was going to do rallies in DC, but then knowing Bernie, of course he will. I wonder what the meeting with Obama is all about.

Until we can hurt them, we will never have any power.

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"Religion is what keeps the poor from murdering the rich."--Napoleon

mimi's picture

and will endorse him. I mean that would be a convincing method to save a sliver of credibility and enhance his legacy tremendously, don't you think /s

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I've been wondering all morning how I would get thru my day without my BNR because I don't intend to go back to TOP. I'm so glad Bernie isn't giving up so I wont either. I'm a septuagenarian and me and my octogenarian friend here in Georgia have been huddled at my house on the phone to Cali for the last 5 days and the responses were so positive, I can't believe she won.

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and they are stunned as well.

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It is a pleasure to read your blogs outside of the fun house. The party is happening here.

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Look up at the stars and not down at your feet. Try to make sense of what you see, and wonder about what makes the universe exist. Be curious. Stephen Hawking

did you live blog at your blog or dkos last night? I didn't even look. Alpha runs a live blog here, which is where I spent my time until I went to bed. Everytime I woke up through the night, I'd check the vote.

Good to be surrounded by so many people that want to improve humanity instead of profit off it.

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"Religion is what keeps the poor from murdering the rich."--Napoleon

and did a little post at TPW, but was battling some issues on the home front for the most part so I wasnt as involved in coverage as I would of liked! (My ac went out, which in june in TX... leaves you feeling the Bern, fiancee was not a happy camper!)

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Cassiodorus's picture

Will this be a regular event?

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"The war on Gaza, backed by the West, is a demonstration that the West is willing to cross all lines. That it will discard any nuance of humanity. That it is willing to commit genocide" -- Moon of Alabama

for as long as we go! (to the convention and beyond!)

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Euterpe2

was 2M votes short of 2008. Something smells to high heaven in the state of CA.

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CambridgePulsar1919's picture

That's the kind of enthusiasm that guarantees $$Hillary the win v Trump, right? Wink

We'll never know what the actual totals are, obviously.

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elenacarlena's picture

the right to vote at the polls. See http://www.gregpalast.com/california-stolen-sanders-right-nowspecial-bul...

More arcane and confusing rules, some of the worst I've seen actually. Give the magic incantation or, if you're an independent, your vote doesn't count! How many were turned away or had their ballots thrown away?

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Please check out Pet Vet Help, consider joining us to help pets, and follow me @ElenaCarlena on Twitter! Thank you.

ThoughtfulVoter's picture

There are an estimated 1.3M provisional ballots yet to counted, and projected several million mail in yet to be received/counted. Check out other threads here for more info on that.

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is not finished yet. I'm not making any changes regarding registration yet. Bernie deserves to be supported until he says it is the end. Just listen to his speech and then the TYT clip above. It's absolutely fascinating. This man does not give up.

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I like that, and I'm with you,

  • TO THE CONVENTION AND BEYOND
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It affects people differently. Some are more determined to vote, but many think "why bother". I'm guessing a lot of Bernie supporters gave up.

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to be so easily led around by the nose by the MSM. Call out the lies and manipulations every time.

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The Clinton Party and the media have worked hard for months to demoralize Sanders supporters. Declaring her the nominee the day before the voting apparently worked.

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Twain Disciple

PriceRip's picture

          We need a Coherent (Cohesive) action with a catchy monicker in order to make this work!!
          If we all, individually, "do our own thing" it won't make one iota of difference. Let's stop fucking around and get our shit together. If it's going to be leaving the democrats to wallow in the sewer, fine! But, let's do it for some effect!

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I'm good with any date people pick to leave the Clinton Party. It's not only political, it's personal. I never thought I'd live to be so grossly insulted by the party to which I've belonged all my life. Those jerks have told me I'm a "Berno Bro" (63 year old woman, here), a racist, a sexist, a person who hasn't done my homework and just doesn't "understand" how helpful those labor-destroying trade deals are, a bum who wants "free stuff," a person who wants the poor to lose their healthcare (reconcile those two; I dare you), and last but not least, a "f'ing retard." Hell, Republicans have been more polite to me than the Clinton Party has. I'll never vote for any of the jackasses who endorsed her, and I sure as hell don't belong in their party.

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Twain Disciple

featheredsprite's picture

Truth.

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Life is strong. I'm weak, but Life is strong.

Sadly, that's not really new, in my opinion. While the Republican leadership on average is worse than Democrat leadership, I've found the average rank-and-file Democrats to be much more mean-spirited. Now maybe it's because I have a soft spot for the rubes who continue to support the Republicans, due to most of my family being conservative, but I've always experienced far more vitriol from Ds than Rs.

Sorry to hear you've gotten such treatment from people who claim to be on your side. Hopefully Bernie and those like him can continue to work on turning the tide of politics in this country from messages of hate and supporting lesser-evil to the politics of love for all humankind.

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WindDancer13's picture

give them a "sexist" angle that the "her" would surely start to marginalize us.

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We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act, but a habit.--Aristotle
If there is no struggle there is no progress.--Frederick Douglass

ThoughtfulVoter's picture

I am another female that will NEVER vote for HRC...no way, no how. I also believe being a woman means you work just as hard as a man to achieve your goals, but you don't CHEAT to get there.

We WILL have a woman president in our great country, but it will be an ethical and morally uncompromised leader with a vision for all of us, not just her family/friends.

I'm willing to hold my vote for the first woman in the white house until that time!

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WindDancer13's picture

the HRC horde just cannot allow anything nice to exist. The #ThankyouBernie feed is full of them spewing hatefulness...showing how much they want unity.

Thanks LD for the BNR.

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We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act, but a habit.--Aristotle
If there is no struggle there is no progress.--Frederick Douglass

TrueBlueinWDC's picture

Some of them will cheer you up a bit.

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"Intelligence is the ability to adapt to change." Stephen Hawking

NEW: http://www.twitter.com/trueblueinwdc

WindDancer13's picture

The HRC horde are just loving and believing in it though. Apparently Sanders' supporters have no principles and will switch in less than 24 hours of a phony announcement. *sigh*

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We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act, but a habit.--Aristotle
If there is no struggle there is no progress.--Frederick Douglass

BSanders2016's picture

Thanks for bringing the BNR to Caucus 99! Now I don't have to go to that OTHER place Smile

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"YOU must be the change you wish to see in the world." ~ Mahatma Gandhi

You've got to realize that the Clintons own everybody, except Berners. It is all out WAR. They and their money bag oligarchs will not let any pissant, ragtag, rabble-rousing band of socialists get a piece of THEIR action. They tolerated us as long as Bernie was playing along, not criticizing HER, giving HER campaign legitimacy in the blind eyes of voters. But after Bern started winning, he became a threat. When he refused to quit after the Southern Firewall strategy, all hell broke loose and Bern and his supporters had to be demonized. Dirty tricks appeared. The media piled it on. And here we are.

Some, many, want to leave the Dem party and "send a message". Dems don't care. They don't need us because they figure they can hoover up moderate Repubs fleeing Trump. Rumor has it that it was Bill, Trump's golf buddy, who convinced him to run for prez. They figured that Hill's politics and past actions/scandals wouldn't be an issue if the spectacle of wacko Trump versus sane, experienced, female Hillary was in play. They don't call Bill the "big dog" for nothing. They're (Harry Reid) working on getting Elizabeth Warren as VP, which will be a coup and allow them to capture Bern's progressives. They've got the media, the entire Dem national and local political apparatus, celebrities, pundits, and all that money. SHE is inevitable because the whole damn enchilada is corrupted.

So, what do we do? That's the question. It looks like Bern's big idea to get superdels to switch to him at the convention won't fly because it was based on Bern getting Big Wins in remaining states. The Clintons and captured media shut that plan down with their preemptive strike of voter suppression on Monday night and chaos at the polls on Tuesday. Lesson learned. David will never win against Goliath if he plays by Goliath's rules.

To prevail against a virtually invincible enemy, we need numbers; mass coalitions of like-minded people and organizations. We need political savvy and power, not what the Green's inept organization and leaders have. We need ways to get our message out to voters without having it be corrupted and demonized by the Ministry of Truth media. We need to stop running in place and making declarations about "sending a message" to people who don't care about messages from the little people.

I say, let's wait a while and see what Bernie comes up with. We certainly owe him that. We need a coordinated, powerful, asymmetric plan to defeat this all-powerful enemy. It might take five or ten years to achieve. But, bit by bit, we can prevail. Demographics are with us. But we need a plan.

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ThoughtfulVoter's picture

Nathan Francis thinks Bernie will now go back to Washington as the most powerful man there:

but despite the loss, his campaign may have found something that turns out to be even more valuable [than the nomination] — the roadmap for the future of the Democratic Party.

Read more at http://www.inquisitr.com/3185706/bernie-sanders-may-have-lost-the-race-b...

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