Bypassing a few posts of lies about Bernie supporters (but oh no it's the Bernie supporters who are bad people, not the perfect angelic Biden supporters who keep lying about them!) to get to a presumably honest question about us...
What "lies" are being told?
A poll showed that a significant number of Sanders supporters (~15%) would be quite happy voting for a bigot who's activities will see millions of people lose health coverage and a supreme court that will act to both increase voter suppression and allow more abuses of basic rights. What about that is a lie?
Re: Sanders and his supporters...
I'd be curious about how they would react if he won the Democratic nomination but lost the general election.
...would they try to argue that it was still somehow the fault of mainstream/establishment democrats?
Well, it would be, in the sense that any election loss is always partially the "fault" of people who might have been expected to vote for that candidate but didn't...
I used the term "establishment democrats" to refer not to the rank and file voters, but those at the top... the Democrat politicians, the party leaders, high-level volunteers, etc.
In other words, would the BernieBros claim "We could have won, but those other party leaders/volunteers/etc. weren't committed enough to the cause!"
Rather than admitting those "lost tribes" of left-wing voters never existed...
Really, we're back to the "lost tribes" mantra now?
Sanders lost the 2016 Democratic primaries.
The Democrats.. the people that would supposedly be the most receptive to Sander's message. And he couldn't even convince the majority of
them to give him a chance. Yet BernieBros somehow think he would have been able to convince enoughy of the general electorate (which has plenty of right wing and, you know, non-left-wing voters) to make him president.
Yup... certainly looks like they were expecting those lost tribes to show up.
Bernie's not extreme. He's the only actual centrist.
Without him, we'll get a contest between two right-wingers...
Jesus christ on a pogo-stick. What a friggin idiotic argument.
Its amazing how someone expects to be taken seriously when they can't tell the difference between a politician who wants to expand health care to millions of Americans and one who is trying to gut health care. Or the difference between a politician who wants to reduce carbon emissions and one who wants to is doing everything he can to promote fossil fuel usage.
But again, the thing about there not being enough voters is kind of built in to the premise of a loss in the first place; it's true no matter who loses or what kind of campaign they lost with. Are you trying to get at the issue of why more people don't vote our way? Again it's a pretty generic idea; one could wonder why more people don't vote any particular way, so again, I'm not getting why you would expect it to be more noteworthy regarding any one candidate in particular than any other, unless it's because Bernie is much closer to what the people want than Biden or Trump.
Actually no, he's not.
His signature "Medicare for all" plan is actually one of the least popular options.... more people want a universal plan (with public options) but which allows private options to exist. Which, by the way, is actually closer to what Biden is proposing.
So, you lose that one.
What about increased taxes on the rich? Yeah, people like that. But then, Sanders isn't the only one who wants to increase those taxes... Biden does too. He may have
different ideas about just what should be increased, but I doubt many people care about the issue to that level of detail.
What about his "free college" plan? Well, that's not quite as popular as you might think.... Some polls may show people support the idea, both other polls show people opposed.
https://thehill.com/blogs/blog-brie...s-support-wealth-tax-oppose-free-college-poll
Tuesday's Quinnipiac poll shows less public support for free college than for a wealth tax, with 52 percent of respondents saying they oppose free college and 45 percent saying they support it.
I imagine that the answer is a complex list of answers...
No, I think the answer is pretty simple...
BernieBros are looking at data and taking it out of context to mean something that it doesn't.