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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsCharlie Pierce on Bernie Sanders: The Last Bull Moose Campaign
"The challenges facing our country are enormous. It's not just that, for 40 years, the middle class has been disappearing. It's that 99 percent of all new income is going to the top 1 percent, and the grotesque level of wealth and income inequality today is worse than at any time since the late 1920s. The people at the top are grabbing all the new wealth and income for themselves, and the rest of America is being squeezed and left behind. The disastrous decision of the Supreme Court in the Citizens United case and in other related decisions is undermining the very foundations of American democracy, as billionaires rig the system by using their Super PACS to buy politicians and elections. And the peril of global climate change, with catastrophic consequences, is the central challenge of our times and our planet. The middle class in America is at a tipping point. It will not last another generation if we don't boldly change course now."
Lyndon Johnson could have said that. John Kennedy could have said that. Certainly, it's milder than FDR's attacks on the "malefactors of great wealth." In 1912, while running for president in a superheated four-way campaign, Debs accepted the nomination of the Socialist party with a thwacking acceptance speech that makes what Sanders is saying sound like it was written by Evan Bayh.
The world's workers have always been and still are the world's slaves. They have borne all the burdens of the race and built all the monuments along the track of civilization; they have produced all the world's wealth and supported all the world's governments. They have conquered all things but their own freedom. They are still the subject class in every nation on earth and the chief function of every government is to keep them at the mercy of their masters. The workers in the mills and factories, in the mines and on the farms and railways never had a party of their own until the Socialist party was organized. They divided their votes between the parties of their masters. They did not realize that they were using their ballots to forge their own fetters.
...
What is Bernie Sanders asking of the country as he begins his presidential campaign? A fairer economic system pried loose from the people who nearly wrecked it all four years ago. Legitimately progressive taxation. That the country acknowledge, with its money, that we all need bridges and roads and water systems. Honest elections. Recognition that environmental crises are national crises. Theodore Roosevelt could have run on those issues, and once did.
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A long time ago, I met a guy named Frank P. Zeidler. He was a Socialist and once he was the mayor of Milwaukee, the last Socialist to be elected mayor of a major American city. (Milwaukee elected three of them, as Alice Cooper once informed Wayne Campbell.) Zeidler won his first election, as Milwaukee County Surveyor, on the Progressive Party line, as a Bull Moose liberal. Once, I heard him say that, when he was coming up, what made you a Socialist was the fact that you believed your city should fix potholes and that it should have a fire department. As Bernie Sanders begins his run for president in an era in which people scream "Socialist!" as a kind of conjuring word to make moderate reforms vanish, it's probably important to remember that being a Socialist once meant that you shouldn't have to put out your own fires. That's Bernie Sanders's campaign -- he's the last Bull Moose in the forest.
http://www.esquire.com/news-politics/politics/news/a34711/there-is-now-a-sanders-campaign/
hifiguy
(33,688 posts)like FDR, Harry Truman, JFK, RFK, Hubert Humphrey and Lyndon Johnson haven't said. Yet Bernie is an "extremist." Bullshit.
Novara
(6,115 posts)it does sound extreme. True Democratic ideals sound extreme compared to what we've become accustomed to.
And it's very welcome. I'd like to get used to it.
AZ Progressive
(3,411 posts)I'm tired of people insisting that we have to accept living in Reagan's world.
Scootaloo
(25,699 posts)ewagner
(18,967 posts)How many MYTHS do we have to destroy before the electorate starts to understand that there is a better alternative?
Reagan was NOT the GREATEST PRESIDENT EVER!
America is NOT A CHRISTIAN NATION
TRICKLE DOWN is a fraud...a joke...a sick scam played on us by a con artist...and 20 Mule Team Borax Sales Rep!
COWBOYS are NOT THE EPITOME OF AMERICAN CULTURE!
I'm getting to wound up...and depressed.
I like Bernie...I would like to see him become President....but the road is long and steep.
Gregorian
(23,867 posts)I love the comments in this thread so far.
I also love how this presidential election has included sanity and truth and reality so far. This is a refreshing and welcomed switch from the past half century, with the exception of a few.
cali
(114,904 posts)Beyond Pierce and Taibbi, John Cassidy and Andy Borowitz at the New Yorker, as well as others.
BrotherIvan
(9,126 posts)He is the modern political poet of his time. He can put together words that will shoot straight into people's hearts. His voice could go a long way.
salib
(2,116 posts)He has been an independent in a state with a thriving Progressive (Bull Moose) Party. He could have gone with that label if that is what he is. No, he did not.
Instead, and we should be proud of this fact, he has become a Democrat. This raises the authenticity and veracity of our party magnificently.
cascadiance
(19,537 posts)As a foil for Sanders to say, "Hey, He's the communist! I believe in DEMOCRATIC socialism, the way our nation and so many others have practiced it before we got obsessed with unregulated capitalism that has recently tried to destroy our middle class and the rest of America."
After all, FDR was pushed to the left by communists running against him in his day. He looked to be the reasonable person in the middle.
Major Hogwash
(17,656 posts)And Kerry was so popular at DU in 2004 that many of the snivelers called us Kerryokies for supporting John Kerry.