southernhybrid
Contributor
The more I hear about Bernie and his hardcore supporters, the more he reminds me of Trump. He may not be as horrible as Trump, but he seems to be similar in that he resembles a cult leader to me. And, lately, even some of the most well respected liberals are beginning to criticize him. He is the only candidate that I would have a very hard time voting for, although considering the alternative, I might be able to hold my nose and do it. I just hope the Bernie supporters have enough sense to realize they need to support the Democratic nominee in the general, but I digress.
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/01/20/opinion/biden-sanders-social-security.html?action=click&module=Opinion&pgtype=Homepage
Paul Krugman has been respected for years as a very liberal economist, and even he can see that Sanders is potentially hurting the Democratic Party. Imo, he helped Hillary lose, even though he gave her tepid support in the end. I have had a few friends who voted third party because they didn't get Bernie as the nominee. I hope they have learned a valuable lesson.
I don't care about some of the nutty things that Bernie or any candidate did in the distant past. It's what they are doing and supporting now that concerns me. And such blatant lies and criticism about one of your fellow Democratic opponents is exactly how you help the other party. The Republicans already take things out of context when they criticize opponents. We don't need the Democrats to do the same thing, especially not to each other.
And, while I stay away from FB, a friend of mine went to a Bernie FB site and was mercilessly attacked by some Bernie bros because she doesn't support Bernie. This is why he and his supporters remind me of Trump and his supporters. They don't care about what anyone else wants. They don't seem to be able to have intelligent discussions because everything is my way or nothing.
Sanders has always been a critic of the Dems and only calls himself one when it's convenient. He has never accomplished much during his long career in Congress, but somehow he's been put on a pedestal by his supporters. I would say this reminds me of the Nixon v. McGovern race, but McGovern was a much smarter, better progressive than Sanders will ever be. Still, during a period of time when the country was further to the left than it is currently, McGovern, who I supported, lost in a landslide. Okay. I'm ranting. Sorry. I don't know for sure who I will support in the primaries, but I know it won't be Sanders. Any of the other candidates would be much better than him.
For one thing, the things that Sanders promises will never be passed, at least not in the foreseeable future. He rants and raves, but never once has he explained a realistic plan as to how any of his pie in the sky ideas will become law. Plus, I can't imagine Sanders negotiating with our allies, if we have any left when Trump is gone. What foreign policy work has he ever done? I don't get why people support him, anymore than I get why people support Trump. My criticism isn't meant to be personal. I have friends who support Trump. I don't judge people simply based on who they support politically.
If you support Sanders, please tell me why. I don't want to judge or criticize anyone personally. I just want to know how you think Sanders would ever be able to get enough cooperation from moderates and conservatives to have any of his ideals become law. Despite being harshly criticized by a former poster here because I don't support Sanders, I consider myself a center left progressive, but I'm also an extremely pragmatic realist.
Of course, if you come back and tell me how awful I am for not supporting Sanders, you've proven my point.
I'm hoping we can simply discuss the appeal of Sanders without any personal attacks. Is that wishful thinking on my part? 
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/01/20/opinion/biden-sanders-social-security.html?action=click&module=Opinion&pgtype=Homepage
While the news media has been focused on the “spat” between Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders, something much more serious has been taking place between the Sanders campaign and Joe Biden. Not to sugarcoat it: The Sanders campaign has flat-out lied about things Biden said in 2018 about Social Security, and it has refused to admit the falsehood.
This is bad; it is, indeed, almost Trumpian. The last thing we need is another president who demonizes and lies about anyone who disagrees with him, and can’t admit ever being wrong. Biden deserves an apology, now, and Sanders probably needs to find better aides.
That said — and this is no excuse for the Sanders camp — it would be good to have Biden explain why, in the more distant past, he went along with the Beltway consensus that Social Security needed to be pared back.
Paul Krugman has been respected for years as a very liberal economist, and even he can see that Sanders is potentially hurting the Democratic Party. Imo, he helped Hillary lose, even though he gave her tepid support in the end. I have had a few friends who voted third party because they didn't get Bernie as the nominee. I hope they have learned a valuable lesson.
I don't care about some of the nutty things that Bernie or any candidate did in the distant past. It's what they are doing and supporting now that concerns me. And such blatant lies and criticism about one of your fellow Democratic opponents is exactly how you help the other party. The Republicans already take things out of context when they criticize opponents. We don't need the Democrats to do the same thing, especially not to each other.
And, while I stay away from FB, a friend of mine went to a Bernie FB site and was mercilessly attacked by some Bernie bros because she doesn't support Bernie. This is why he and his supporters remind me of Trump and his supporters. They don't care about what anyone else wants. They don't seem to be able to have intelligent discussions because everything is my way or nothing.
Sanders has always been a critic of the Dems and only calls himself one when it's convenient. He has never accomplished much during his long career in Congress, but somehow he's been put on a pedestal by his supporters. I would say this reminds me of the Nixon v. McGovern race, but McGovern was a much smarter, better progressive than Sanders will ever be. Still, during a period of time when the country was further to the left than it is currently, McGovern, who I supported, lost in a landslide. Okay. I'm ranting. Sorry. I don't know for sure who I will support in the primaries, but I know it won't be Sanders. Any of the other candidates would be much better than him.
For one thing, the things that Sanders promises will never be passed, at least not in the foreseeable future. He rants and raves, but never once has he explained a realistic plan as to how any of his pie in the sky ideas will become law. Plus, I can't imagine Sanders negotiating with our allies, if we have any left when Trump is gone. What foreign policy work has he ever done? I don't get why people support him, anymore than I get why people support Trump. My criticism isn't meant to be personal. I have friends who support Trump. I don't judge people simply based on who they support politically.
If you support Sanders, please tell me why. I don't want to judge or criticize anyone personally. I just want to know how you think Sanders would ever be able to get enough cooperation from moderates and conservatives to have any of his ideals become law. Despite being harshly criticized by a former poster here because I don't support Sanders, I consider myself a center left progressive, but I'm also an extremely pragmatic realist.
Of course, if you come back and tell me how awful I am for not supporting Sanders, you've proven my point.