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Ken Burch

(50,254 posts)
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 02:09 AM Jan 2017

Who we should or shouldn't have nominated NO LONGER MATTERS.

Some of us supported one candidate. Some of us supported someone else. Some didn't really like any of 'em.

What matters now is finding some way of uniting for the future.

We need Clinton people. We need Sanders people. We need O'Malley people.

We need people who care about social justice first. We need people who care about economic justice first. We need people who cared about both with equal passion(as we all should).

The primaries are over. The election is over. We now need to put ALL of that aside and build, first, a culture of resistance and then a culture of resurgence.

We all need each other for that.

It's time to let 2016 go and work on saving the country.

We owe that to ourselves and the generations to follow.

41 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
Who we should or shouldn't have nominated NO LONGER MATTERS. (Original Post) Ken Burch Jan 2017 OP
Amen brother n/t blue cat Jan 2017 #1
until what you suggest happens, we aren't going anywhere still_one Jan 2017 #2
"I'll stop if they'll stop!" nt JCanete Jan 2017 #3
Exactly. tecelote Jan 2017 #4
The lost art of coalition-building- it means work together on what you agree upon - and Kashkakat v.2.0 Jan 2017 #5
Until you figure out this is actually antithetical NCTraveler Jan 2017 #6
No I'm not. Ken Burch Jan 2017 #9
We also need to learn from our mistakes mtnsnake Jan 2017 #7
+ 1 red dog 1 Jan 2017 #11
In what direction? zipplewrath Jan 2017 #8
We need to make changes. Ken Burch Jan 2017 #10
We "probably" need to make changes? red dog 1 Jan 2017 #12
Ok, change "probably" to "clearly" Ken Burch Jan 2017 #13
"The tone here is hopelessly toxic at this point"? red dog 1 Jan 2017 #16
Actually, I'm amazed zipplewrath Jan 2017 #17
+++++++ uppityperson Jan 2017 #41
How do you know that Warren or Sanders even wanted the VP job? NobodyHere Jan 2017 #19
If not for caucuses, it wouldn't have been even remotely close. Garrett78 Jan 2017 #20
"I want Warren in the Senate"? red dog 1 Jan 2017 #21
I don't accept the premise that Sanders being on the ticket would have helped. Garrett78 Jan 2017 #22
Well, you're entitled to your opinion. red dog 1 Jan 2017 #23
Future aspiring nominees must recognize that... Garrett78 Jan 2017 #14
No one called for such an approach. Ken Burch Jan 2017 #25
It wasn't what he said it was what he did or didn't do dsc Jan 2017 #38
And neither he nor Hillary is going to run for president again. Ken Burch Jan 2017 #39
Hear, hear! nt DLevine Jan 2017 #15
More than anything, people need to realize that voting AGAINST something awful... NoGoodNamesLeft Jan 2017 #18
we nominated the person who won 4 million more votes La Lioness Priyanka Jan 2017 #24
And what I'm saying is we shouldn't even be talking about that anymore. Ken Burch Jan 2017 #26
I am not the one relitigating a primary blowout La Lioness Priyanka Jan 2017 #27
I'm not either. Ken Burch Jan 2017 #30
Again, this is not even a debate to be had La Lioness Priyanka Jan 2017 #34
The whole point of this thread is that our conversation shouldn't be about who we nominated at all. Ken Burch Jan 2017 #35
AMEN! Fighting for best spot on the beach ignoring the January 20th tsunami. IADEMO2004 Jan 2017 #29
Well said!!! If we don't all pull together as ONE, divide and conquer will take us ALL down. n/t RKP5637 Jan 2017 #28
100% True. Snackshack Jan 2017 #31
Ken...this we can agree on! Trump is dangerous...all hands on deck. nt Demsrule86 Jan 2017 #32
That's what I'm saying. Thank you. Ken Burch Jan 2017 #36
We need an uprising. Lint Head Jan 2017 #33
Agree! MarvinGardens Jan 2017 #37
K&R uppityperson Jan 2017 #40

tecelote

(5,141 posts)
4. Exactly.
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 05:08 AM
Jan 2017

Republicans will believe anything Fox tells then and act like sheep. We think and have opinions which many times divide us. Right now, we need to look at the common good and put our differences aside.

We've never faced such a destructive force before. This fight is for the survival of the planet.

Kashkakat v.2.0

(1,873 posts)
5. The lost art of coalition-building- it means work together on what you agree upon - and
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 10:11 AM
Jan 2017

set aside the rest for now. (Or work separately on it without expecting everyone else to see things exactly as you do. )

Ill even go out on a limb and say some not all R voters can and should be included in this appeal. What Ive been saying to my idiot Trump voting sibs: if you want to keep medicare/ss, if you want your kid to remain on your insurance, workplace protections incl no sexual harassment of your daughters, you want to keep national parks & forests pristine, you want air quality standards to remain the law so we're not choking and dying from the air (as people currently are in China and India). you want birth control remaining available and accessible (SO that there aren't so many abortions), if you want .... any number of things that are best done as a group effort vs left up to private enterprise, then its up to YOU to make that happen. And btw my dear religious sibs - you need to do a lot more than just PRAY about it.

Otherwise - they've got us EXACTLY where they want us: divided and conquered.

 

NCTraveler

(30,481 posts)
6. Until you figure out this is actually antithetical
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 10:35 AM
Jan 2017

To your own argument, it won't happen. You are knowingly more a part of this than you let on.

"We need Clinton people. We need Sanders people. We need O'Malley people."

 

Ken Burch

(50,254 posts)
9. No I'm not.
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 03:10 PM
Jan 2017

I haven't been arguing that we should have had a different nominee.

All I did was to argue that we should have made a few changes in strategy, use of the candidate's time and what should have been in the ads and the stump speech. Nothing I said in those post-convention posts did any harm.

I don't have to repudiate the person I supported in the spring to prove I want unity now.

mtnsnake

(22,236 posts)
7. We also need to learn from our mistakes
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 10:45 AM
Jan 2017

and admit that we made plenty of them in 2016, one of the biggest being that we nominated someone perceived to have so much baggage that it was virtually impossible for us to win....until Trump came along, that is.....yet we still ended up losing. Figure that.

Once we admit to our mistakes and resolve never to make those same mistakes again, then we can do all those warm and fuzzy things you suggested, Ken.

zipplewrath

(16,692 posts)
8. In what direction?
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 10:54 AM
Jan 2017

The arguments are about the mistakes of the past so we don't repeat them in the future.

Or do you believe the democratic party doesn't need to make any changes at all?

 

Ken Burch

(50,254 posts)
10. We need to make changes.
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 03:11 PM
Jan 2017

Last edited Fri Jan 6, 2017, 09:47 PM - Edit history (1)

But the argument on that needs to be framed in a way that takes it out of the debate over who we should have nominated.

It's legitimate to question platform language or strategic choices in the fall campaign.

red dog 1

(29,300 posts)
12. We "probably" need to make changes?
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 03:58 PM
Jan 2017

No, we DEFINITELY need to make changes!

Hillary Clinton had her flaws, but her biggest mistake, imo, was to NOT choose either Bernie Sanders or Elizabeth Warren as her running mate.

HRC got nearly 17 million votes (55%) and won 34 states
Bernie Sanders got more than 13 million votes (43%) and won 23 states
17 million votes to 13 million votes - that's NOT a huge win!
That clearly showed that the Democratic Party was split between the Clinton supporters and Sanders supporters

By choosing the candidate who won 23 states & got more than 43 percent of the vote as her running mate, Clinton would have "united" the Democratic Party, and would have easily defeated the Talking Yam, in spite of:
- Assange's Wikileaks release of HRC's emails
- The unprecedented "hack-attack" on the DNC and the Clinton campaign by a foreign power
- The treasonous letter James Comey sent to Congress 11 days prior to the election, (which was a clear violation of the Hatch Act of 1939)

In spite of all that, Clinton STILL would have defeated Trump, had her lead been 11 + points going into the election, instead of only 4 points.

The Republicans can steal elections only when the race is close.
Obama proved that in 2008 and 2012.

Had Hillary made a wiser choice for her running mate, we'd be talking about President-elect Clinton now.

In 2020, whoever the Democratic nominee turns out to be, he or she needs to remember Clinton's mistake in 2016, and not make that same mistake again.

Imo, If the Democratic Party goes into the 2020 presidential election as a UNITED party, they will defeat Trump or whoever else the GOP nominee is.

 

Ken Burch

(50,254 posts)
13. Ok, change "probably" to "clearly"
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 04:01 PM
Jan 2017

What I meant was we need to take this out of the realm of who should have been nominated or anything in the way of personality politics.

The tone here is hopelessly toxic at this point.

zipplewrath

(16,692 posts)
17. Actually, I'm amazed
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 06:07 PM
Jan 2017

Considering how toxic it was before the election and that we all were so surprised by the outcome, I have been surprised how much more "discussion" is going on than just out and out venom.

 

NobodyHere

(2,810 posts)
19. How do you know that Warren or Sanders even wanted the VP job?
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 06:49 PM
Jan 2017

Not to mention that either pick takes a liberal out of the senate.

Garrett78

(10,721 posts)
20. If not for caucuses, it wouldn't have been even remotely close.
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 06:58 PM
Jan 2017

As is, the race was essentially over by mid-March and arguably after Super Tuesday.

More importantly, though, the opposition research on Sanders was brutal. It's one thing to run for office in Vermont. A national campaign is a whole different story. The socialist and communist charges made against mainstream Democrats are bad enough. The anti-Sanders ads and speeches would have made those look tame.

I want Warren in the Senate.

That said, I didn't like the Kaine selection.

red dog 1

(29,300 posts)
21. "I want Warren in the Senate"?
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 07:30 PM
Jan 2017

Warren IS in the Senate...and soon Twitler will be in the White House.

I'd rather have had President-elect Clinton and Vice-President-elect Warren,
(although I would have preferred Vice President-elect Sanders)

Hillary Clinton essentially said "Screw You" to the 13 million Democrats who voted for Sanders when she chose ConservaDem Kaine for her running mate...(that's my opinion)

Oh, and by the way, if Clinton had picked Sanders as her running mate, Sen. Warren would likely be in a DEMOCRAT-controlled Senate now....since the GOP had 3 times as many Senate seats to defend as did the Dems.

Also, don't forget...in spite of choosing Kaine, Hillary Clinton was ahead of Trump by at least 11 points when FBI Director Comey committed treason and violated the Hatch Act, thereby handing the presidency to that Orange Anti-Christ.

Garrett78

(10,721 posts)
22. I don't accept the premise that Sanders being on the ticket would have helped.
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 08:13 PM
Jan 2017

In a national general election campaign, I think Sanders would have been torn to bits.

red dog 1

(29,300 posts)
23. Well, you're entitled to your opinion.
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 08:26 PM
Jan 2017

My opinion is that Sanders on the ticket:
1) - Would have "energized" the Democratic Party,
2) - Would have "united" the Democratic Party
3) - Would have gotten the votes of millions of millennials, who were, for the most part, not
Hillary Clinton fans
4) - Would have gotten the votes of millions of Independents who weren't Clinton supporters..but who might have voted for a Clinton-Sanders ticket
5) - Would have taken Independent, anti-establishment votes away from Trump

I could go on...but I won't.

 

Ken Burch

(50,254 posts)
25. No one called for such an approach.
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 09:15 PM
Jan 2017

What was said was that race and class BOTH matter-that it's impossible to deal with race without also dealing with class. Martin Luther King was saying the same thing in 1967 and 1968, after seeing the forces of capitalism block the antiracist struggle in the name of their own self-interest.

Neither one of the main primary candidates will seek the nomination in 2020, so can't the false claim that some people wanted the party to stop fighting racism(or even to give it a lower priority than other issues) finally be put to rest?

We should all be united against hatred AND greed...because hatred and greed are united against US.

dsc

(52,631 posts)
38. It wasn't what he said it was what he did or didn't do
Sat Jan 7, 2017, 09:26 AM
Jan 2017

The fact is his record on gay rights was one of nearly complete non action. He was mayor of the largest city and most liberal city in VT and had no pro gay measures (aside from a symbolic pride proclamation to show for it) while VT as a whole legally protected gays in employment and accommodations a few years after he left office. In terms of civil rights we was in the US Senate when the decision gutting the VRA was handed down. He didn't make any public pronouncements about that at all that I can find when it happened. Did sponsor a fix? That is what his problem was. It was made worse by the fact he also rarely talked about either issue in anything other than economic terms but his record was the problem. Conversely, the horrible Kaine literally made his career fighting segregation in housing as a lawyer. On gay rights, to be fair, he was a Johnny come lately but on civil rights he was rock solid with a record of accomplishments and rhetoric for decades.

 

Ken Burch

(50,254 posts)
39. And neither he nor Hillary is going to run for president again.
Sat Jan 7, 2017, 03:31 PM
Jan 2017

So we need to be past attacking either of them-or to be implying that the supporters of either of those people are responsible for what others found lacking in them(obviously there was no difference between Clinton supporters or Sanders supporters in terms of commitment to fighting social oppression-if you are on the left side of the spectrum, you are going to be committed to fighting bigotry).

No one in this party should still be arguing about who should or shouldn't have been nominated, OR repeating primary talking points against one or the other candidate.

What matters is unity for the present and future.

 

NoGoodNamesLeft

(2,056 posts)
18. More than anything, people need to realize that voting AGAINST something awful...
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 06:20 PM
Jan 2017

Is often even MORE important than voting FOR something great.

There is power in unity and weakness in division.

 

La Lioness Priyanka

(53,866 posts)
24. we nominated the person who won 4 million more votes
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 08:38 PM
Jan 2017

Than her opponent

Anyone relitigating that is an absolute moron

 

La Lioness Priyanka

(53,866 posts)
27. I am not the one relitigating a primary blowout
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 09:22 PM
Jan 2017

Because again, I can count. 4 million more is a lot more.

 

La Lioness Priyanka

(53,866 posts)
34. Again, this is not even a debate to be had
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 11:08 PM
Jan 2017

As we nominated the winner, not the loser. Had the loser won more votes we would have nominated him.

People who are claiming we should have nominated the person who lost more votes, are idiots.

 

Ken Burch

(50,254 posts)
35. The whole point of this thread is that our conversation shouldn't be about who we nominated at all.
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 11:44 PM
Jan 2017

Nobody should be making a case for or against either 2016 primary candidate.

I'm not part of the subthread you may be trying to comment on.

Snackshack

(2,541 posts)
31. 100% True.
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 09:50 PM
Jan 2017

Continuing to bemoan this is futile and does nothing but further propagate the fractures in the party.

If Democrats don't get their act together and coalesce in a unified party... trump and the republicans are going to steamroll us for the next four years.

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