Hillary’s Outpacing of Endorsements Signals the Game May Be Rigged in Her Favor

Discussion in 'Politics' started by Deleted member 472633, Nov 13, 2015.

  1. http://observer.com/2015/11/hillarys-outpacing-of-endorsements-signals-the-game-may-be-rigged-in-her-favor/




    Although Senator Bernie Sanders has caucused with the Democrats, he
    is still seen as an outsider-one free of the hierarchy and drama within
    the party itself. Given this history, and the dictator-like leadership
    of Democratic National Committee Chair Debbie Wasserman Schultz, it is
    no surprise that very few endorsements have gone in favor of
    Mr. Sanders over Hillary Clinton. Ms. Clinton also led
    in endorsements when initially running against Barrack Obama, with many
    defecting once primary polls began favoring the current president.

    Ms. Wasserman Schultz was the chair of Ms. Clinton's campaign during
    her 2008 presidential election. Her decision to limit the number of
    debates to six, and penalizing any candidate who tries to debate outside
    of the sanctioned ones, clearly demonstrates favoritism for
    Ms. Clinton. Mr. Obama, widely unknown going into the 2008 Democratic
    primaries, gained most of his traction during the 26 debates that
    took place. This rule, enacted by Ms. Wasserman Schultz, prevents
    this from happening again. The DNC Chair and many Democrats with
    corporate ties or moderate views want Hillary Clinton to win the
    nomination, because they think Mr. Sanders is too liberal to win.

    Nearly every Clinton supporter, from New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio to Delaware Senator Tom Carper is getting significant media attention. In 2014, Hillary already had 60 Democrats endorse her in 2014 in a poll conducted by The Hill, before she even announced she was running for president. That's nearly twenty percent of the Democratic Party in office.

    Bernie Sanders' political revolution isn't about winning more congressional endorsements than any other candidate.

    Bernie Sanders knows pandering for endorsements is pointless. The
    game was rigged for Hillary before Mr. Sanders even joined, and as a
    politician deemed too liberal by many Democrats, the lack of embrace his
    campaign has received from the Democratic Party is no surprise.
    Mr. Sanders didn't expect it, and the media should stop acting like
    every endorsement from a congressman or senator that Hillary gets is
    some sort of revelation, or will have any bearing on the actual polling
    results of the primaries. All of these endorsement announcements for
    Hillary Clinton aren't good for anything but their headlines.

    Mr. Sanders came into the presidential election as an outsider. He
    still remains an outsider whose campaign is focused on everyday people,
    not on office politics or pandering for votes.

    The Democratic Party seems to have decided, before the election race even began, that Hillary Clinton would be their nominee.

    Several news outlets reported that progressive Ohio Senator Sherrod
    Brown's recent endorsement for Hillary Clinton spelled trouble for
    Mr. Sanders, who counts Mr. Brown as an alleged close ally, even though
    Senator Brown admitted Mr. Sanders never asked him for his endorsement-most likely because Mr. Sanders knows they are just a distraction.

    Bernie Sanders isn't running to gain clout within the Democratic
    Party. He's running to help the American people who are frustrated,
    disengaged and, disenchanted with the status quo of American politics.
    It's worked more successfully than Hillary Clinton, both political
    parties, and the media ever anticipated. He raised more donations faster than
    Barrack Obama's 2008 and 2012 campaign at the same point in the
    election cycle, and reached one million individual donations faster than
    any other presidential candidate in history. He is running as a
    Democrat on many anti-establishment principles so that his grassroots
    efforts will put pressure on the establishment of the Democratic Party
    to adopt more progressive stances in their party's platform, and to
    address the issues most important to voters, not to corporations.

    Bernie Sanders' political revolution isn't about winning more
    congressional endorsements than any other candidate. It's about
    transforming the country economically in the face of a scourge of income
    inequality, politically to make elections more about voter
    participation than raising campaign funds through Super PACs,
    environmentally through enacting policies on climate change that will
    ensure the ill effects of global warming are mitigated to the best of
    our abilities, and socially so the safety nets that build America's
    middle class are repaired from the policies that have deconstructed them
    over the past few decades. Bernie can still win without winning the
    race for the most congressional endorsements, but its an uphill battle.
    The Democratic Party seems to have decided, before the election race
    even began, that Hillary Clinton would be their nominee."



    I have no reason why its blue I tried to undo the font color and it didn't work, block quote hasn't been working either. Anyways essentially this article from a prog newspaper talks about the very real possibility that due to all the delegates that in the Democratic Party system are not tied into elections Hillary Clinton has essentially already won the race. She would only need to a few states and have the nomination. So is the Democratic Party democratic? Is the system hopelessly corrupt and rigged to the point Sanders doesn't even have a chance before the people even have a say?


     
  2. Maybe if all the folks that are tired of this bullshit system we're saddled with would get out and vote Sanders would have a better shot at it.[​IMG]
     
  3. It's all rigged. Even the CBS debate now with a revamped format.
     
  4. Yes, sir James. You're a smart man, you know it's rigged. As fucked as it is, there is a kind of peace when you know that this kind of shit doesn't matter.
    Meet the new boss...
     
  5. Sanders needs Warren as his VP
     
  6. Man, and I thought Canadian elections were bad lol


    Honestly Bernie is a little too left for my taste, but I'd way rather see him win the D nomination than Hillary.


    But if Hillary gets it I hope Donald gets the R for the sheer hilarity factor.




     
  7. get your Bernie bot copy pasta out of here. this isn't a facebook comments section. a spammy lot you guys are
     
  8. I'm definitely not a Bernie Sanders supporter if you are referring to me.
     
  9. Go on you Commie you are fooling nobody.

    McCarthy was right, there under our beds. :0
     
  10. I repeat better dead then red a hundred times before I go to sleep every night.


    I then kiss my picture of American Jesus before I go to bed.


    [​IMG]
     
  11. American Jesus I fucking love it. :)

    Oh I am going to have so much fun with that pic on some other forums i frequent, James you have made my year. Thank you....
     
  12. yes

    -Yuri
     
  13. The system is not broken. It is working perfectly, exactly as it was deigned to work.
     

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