Nice Squirrel
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- Only the Nice Squirrel can save us.
http://www.cnn.com/2016/02/10/opinions/sanders-views-are-mainstream-zelizer/index.html
So what do you, the internet commentator-tots say? Is Bernie mainstream? Out of touch? Or worse than three Obamas, two Hilters, sixty-seven Al Sharptons times fifty-four?
Part of what has given Sanders his strength is how mainstream many of his standard political arguments are. If one listens to what he has been saying, it is possible to see that Sanders is not that radical at all. In many respects, his campaign directly addresses fundamental concerns that a wide range of Americans have about their future.
Corrupt political system
The best known issue in Sanders' arsenal is the claim that there is too much money in politics. The government is constantly unable to respond to the concerns of many Americans, not because the parties don't like each other or because the mainstream media creates a destructive environment, but because big interest groups and lobbyists have disproportionate power in Washington as a result of their donations.
Middle class striving for security
Sanders also speaks to many middle-class Americans who don't feel that their future is secure and who are struggling every day to make sure that they don't fall on the wrong side of the growing economic divide.
For many years now, social scientists have demonstrated how middle-class Americans have become much less secure as a result of cuts to the social safety net and the exodus of good, secure jobs overseas while the separation between the rich and poor becomes more extreme.
A liberal, not a radical...
For too long, the conventional wisdom has argued mistakenly that Americans reject government. We are children of Ronald Reagan, they say, seeing government as a problem not the solution. Many Democrats have agreed and have worked hard to push the party to the center. Bill Clinton famously said in 1996 that the era of big government was over. But the Sanders campaign is on to something. Polls have consistently shown that Americans like government much more than the pundits suspect.
The long tail of Iraq
Even on foreign policy, Sanders makes arguments that really resonate in the Democratic Party. Most important there is Iraq. Nothing looms larger in recent years that the decision to go into Iraq....
Sanders decided at the most difficult moment to vote against the war. This decision will have considerable appeal when discussions turn to foreign policy, an area Hillary Clinton has believed to be one of her strengths. This is not just the left, but a large portion of the electorate who see this as a fundamental turning point, and mistake, after 9/11.
So what do you, the internet commentator-tots say? Is Bernie mainstream? Out of touch? Or worse than three Obamas, two Hilters, sixty-seven Al Sharptons times fifty-four?
