Gullible Jones wrote:@vendic
Hate to say it, but I think you are missing the point of the article. Sanders is beside the point. He could, quite possibly, also turn out unexpectedly weak against Trump.
Actually I haven't missed the point. Sanders is consistently polling better than Hillary when lined up against the opposition.
The article is about not letting Trump win.
If you're going to write an article about winning something and ignoring what currently seems your best weapon, you're not really being honest. Which is my point.
For the record, many republicans would rather vote for Sanders than Trump.
Many Democrats would rather vote for Trump than Hillary.
What does that tell you?
This is what it tells me. Democrats will vote for Bernie if they can't vote for Hillary, but it doesn't work that way the other way around. So you're going to lose democrat votes if Hillary is elected. You know, people that don't vote double some other guys vote. I hear that all the time (not that I agree with it in any practical sense).
Some Republicans that won't vote for Trump have stated they'd rather vote for Sanders. No Republican's I've heard of anywhere would vote for Hillary over Trump. That means if Hillary is a candidate, you lose a bit of the Republican base. If not voting is doubling the oppositions vote, then what exactly is voting for the opposition worth?
Lastly, independents are highly likely to vote for Sanders. Not so likely to vote for Hillary.
There are some that say they will never vote for a socialist. Typically it's people that are Republicans and wouldn't vote for a "libtard" anyway. Those that have any clue know he isn't socialist.
Nope. Not sure I see how it's going to affect much.
Trump has how many failed marriages, failed businesses, is an asshole and an arrogant self righteous prick.
Hillary has a big issue with lying and with trust, not supporting sexually abused women (she basically slut shamed the women Bill screwed and the women say she encouraged him), takes more money in from special interests than anyone by far, she is establishment through and through and the reason Trump is popular is because people are sick of establishment politicians on both sides.
I don't see how Sanders almost quiet private life comes close to any of that. Don't forget that he is respected on both sides of the fence.
Here's the real problem as I see it. The DNC has hedged their bets already that Hillary is going to be the one.
When you prepare to dig in and fight, you want to make sure you have the best chance.
You choose your best weapon, not the one that you've pre-selected before you even knew the enemy, simply because you believe it's her turn.
Two stories I can relate to from Australian politics that seem pretty valid here.
The Oz public hated the Liberal party (conservative party, don't even bother asking) and were desperate to get the Labour party in.
Everyone know it, except for the idiot Labour politicians who put in Kim Beasley, a person that Australians really didn't like. They expected people to vote the party line. It was said that the Labour party could put up a drovers dog and it would win against the Liberals.
The election that year wasn't won by the Liberal party. It was lost by the Labour party.
IMHO that is what will happen if Hillary is put up.
Similarly for Trump but he seems to have people that like him.
Last but not least, I remember the Australian elections and how we were so happy to get a female Prime Minister in.
Till she got in. Julia Gillard was a mess. We couldn't wait to get her out. The lesson there is don't vote for a vagina because that's not who the person is. Vote for the person, not their gender.
Thanks for all the fish.