If Sanders is a True Progressive, He Has One Winnable Option Left
Bernie Sanders has played all his cards and has nothing to
show except for a frustrated generation of populists trying to figure out what
they should do. Sanders argued he would
fight the Democratic bureaucracy at the convention, but his fight is already
over. Last week the Democrats held their
Platform Committee meeting in DC, and while Sanders had nominated five great
populists and progressives, they were steamrolled by the stacked delegates of
the corporatists candidate Hillary Clinton. The results of the meeting received
very little corporate media attention in a usual attempt to cover for Hillary
Clinton. All of the Sanders’ proposals were voted down by Clintonites, including:
a ban on fracking, a proposal to oppose TPP, the $15 per hour minimum wage
proposal, a call for single-payer health care, and a statement of opposition to
the illegal Israeli occupation. All were defeated by the Clinton team of
delegates. Despite Clinton’s ambiguous
rhetoric on the issues, her platform is much clearer, denying anything that
smacks of progressive change. So we are at a crossroads. What cards does
Sanders have left? None. So he is
done. He capitulated by showing his hand
and gave away his leverage by agreeing to support the eventual candidate, so he
is now finished with nothing else to do.
The important question is, what do the Bernie followers do
now? First, one would hope they have learned
a very bitter lesson, that the duopoly is thoroughly corrupt and cannot be reformed. It is too far gone and controlled by the war
party, financial interests, and the corporatists. They have a vice-grip like
stranglehold over the party, and they will never surrender power. They hold all the cards. Some Sanders supporters may have figured this
out on the campaign trail, with masses of people being deprived of a vote by
election rules set up by the established leaders of the party. Sanders supporters should have seen they had
no chance when Clinton started the race with an insurmountable lead in “superdelegates,”
before one popular vote was even cast. The Democratic deck was rigged from the git-go,
and hopefully some Sanders’ followers now see the ruse of giving voters the
illusion of voting. The real decision was never to be made by voters, for they
might select the wrong candidate. Party
leaders stacked the deck so they would always have the ultimate say and let the
people be dammed.
There is no realistic hope of reforming the Democratic party,
so the only alternative, if the populist movement is to survive, is to bolt the
party. An outside or third party is the
only hope of reforming this nation. Sanders is correct in saying Wall Street,
corporations, health care industries, and the military industrial complex, have
total and complete control of both major parties. In actuality there is little philosophical
difference between the two major parties.
Can a third party buck the tide and break the corruption of
the other two? Yes, in this particular
political environment it could easily win the election because no one is
enamored with the choice of candidates put forth by the of the leadership of
the two parties. Both Clinton and Trump
have the highest unfavorable ratings in the history of US politics. People will vote for Clinton because they
hate Trump, and people will vote for Trump because they hate Clinton. It is a bizarre
election which clearly demonstrates just how out of touch the leadership of
both parties are with the people. If
these two candidates represent the best two people in this country to run for
the president, then throw in the towel, for the country is doomed.
Meanwhile, beneath the radar, kept a secret by corporate
media, are candidates such as Jill Stein.
You might never get the chance to hear her, due to the corporate black
out of her campaign, but if by chance you do, you might be astounded. She is bright, she is reasoned, she is
rational, she is articulate, and she he is presidential. She is everything the two
major candidates are not.
Jill Stein has reached out to Sanders and offered him the
position of president on the Green Party ticket, with she as the VP, but so far
Sanders has not taken the bait because it looks like he may be beholden to the
Democratic party leadership. If Sanders
is a true Progressive populist he only has one option left, and that is to join
a third party. Joining with Jill Stein would could very well mean a third party
victory, in light of the resentment of the masses towards both duopoly candidates.
Sanders and Stein only need 34% to insure victory, and that should not be
difficult as most voters are thirsting for an alternative that is sane, rational,
reasoned and civil. Will Sanders prove
himself to be a true populist progressive, or will he cave to the democratic
leadership, fold up his hot air filled progressive tent and go home?
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