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In reply to the discussion: Bernie isn't even a Democrat [View all]LWolf
(46,179 posts)12. And he somehow manages to be
better on every issue than his Democratic opponent.
He, and his record, represent the best the Democratic Party has ever offered.
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What about Bernie would make HIM 'not a Democrat' compared to say, someone like Joe Lieberman
sabrina 1
May 2015
#158
What's your point, that the question can't be asked just because of the website?
yellowcanine
May 2015
#65
"The party says he is a party member." Oh, excuse me. “War is peace. Freedom is slavery.
yellowcanine
May 2015
#89
Well, she wasn't a voter then--she was fifteen. And back then, you had to be 21 to vote.
MADem
May 2015
#57
As someone else pointed out, she was still the leader of some young republicans group
Erich Bloodaxe BSN
May 2015
#142
In 1964 Hillary was 16/17 and in high school. Bernie's choice was to live in a
Thinkingabout
May 2015
#155
How did a center-right Democrat consistently receive a > 90% ADA score every year she was in the Sen
DemocratSinceBirth
May 2015
#30
Exactly - if you want a center right leader who will ignore the fundamental economic problems
el_bryanto
May 2015
#48
I read posts like yours and wonder why people like you even bother being Democrats.
Scootaloo
May 2015
#127
I've had similar results whenever I've sent anyone to politicalcompass.org:
truebluegreen
May 2015
#99
Goldwater advocated using nuclear weapons against the Vietnamese in the
KingCharlemagne
May 2015
#27
You are making a point that at 17 HRC picked a Political side and is therefore always with that side
Sheepshank
May 2015
#62
The obvious? You mean Hillary's direct quote about her political affiliations?
truebrit71
May 2015
#67
46. She says she "started voting for Democrats in 1995." She was born in 1949.
yellowcanine
May 2015
#97
She was still a registered Repuke in 1996. Nixon, Reagan, Bush I. Was it Bush that tipped her over?
Tarheel_Dem
May 2015
#105
Yup, nothing like having the candidates actual words being used in a discussion...
truebrit71
May 2015
#22
Email blast went out alright..que the attack pac talking points & links
misterhighwasted
May 2015
#32
And the argument is that Bernie has been a better 'Democrat', advocating for Democratic positions...
truebrit71
May 2015
#76
good question. Maybe it has to do with the Demand critic party on a national level, because
still_one
May 2015
#17
Would you please tell the gentleman above that every vote she cast was presumably for a Democrat?
DemocratSinceBirth
May 2015
#49
He clearly said he will not be a spoiler, and running as a third party he would be
still_one
May 2015
#23
My only concern is will he do party building for more moderate members of the party.
hrmjustin
May 2015
#15
Well i will grant you if Hillary doesn't get the nomination there will be some pissed off fans.
hrmjustin
May 2015
#66
Do you think actual voters in a Presidential election would not vote for a Democratic candidate...
Tom Rinaldo
May 2015
#20
Hmm. Last I looked, one had to get the nomination first. If that is crazy, so be it.
yellowcanine
May 2015
#79
Because his platform looks out for their interests rather than Hillary's platform?
truebrit71
May 2015
#78
Okay - here is an answer - because Bernie represents what the Democratic Party SHOULD stand
djean111
May 2015
#80
In WA state we had two state Senators who were elected as Dems, then enabled a Repub coup
suffragette
May 2015
#85
he would enter office at age 74 or 75 if elected. that would be the focus of the election
Liberal_in_LA
May 2015
#140
life·long ˈ(adjective) lasting or REMAINING in a particular state THROUGHOUT a person's life.
cherokeeprogressive
May 2015
#132
A bunch of people already said it. Just stupid flame bait and highly unoriginal.
HERVEPA
May 2015
#153