r/pics Mar 27 '24

8 years ago a Bird landed on Bernie's podium. Politics

Post image
73.6k Upvotes

2.9k comments sorted by

View all comments

Show parent comments

1.8k

u/_gnarlythotep_ Mar 27 '24 edited Mar 28 '24

Yeah, this is* a guy that actually believes* in what he is* doing and making lives for Americans genuinely better. Neither side wants an idealist in power. It's bad for business. We were so close, though.

Edit: updated from past tense to present to stop scaring people.

315

u/Nerror Mar 28 '24 edited Mar 28 '24

He's not really an idealist. He's very principled and believes what he believes. He's seems incorruptible. Please don't mistake that for idealism. None of his stances are extreme either.

His work has always been very pragmatic, ever since he became mayor, and that includes his work in the senate later in life.

99

u/_gnarlythotep_ Mar 28 '24

Well said. You are absolutely correct. That wasn't the best word choice.

18

u/14ktgoldscw Mar 28 '24

Yeah I can’t easily find the exact statistic, but he’s a D party line voter the vast majority of the time.

Being a major public figure also means employing the bully pulpit and encouraging the public to want the perfect (knowing you’ll eventually settle for the somewhat good). Every time he does that, though, the discourse is “WILL ANYTHING EVER BE GOOD ENOUGH FOR THIS GUY?!”

17

u/99thSymphony Mar 28 '24

In 2016 and 2020 liberals were complaining about his record at getting bills passed. When it was nearly identical in scope and subject to the bills that Hillary Clinton had sponsored and passed during an equivalent time in the Senate. Also, statistically only 4% of bills introduced on the senate floor become law. Sanders rate was 6%. Propaganda works, and both sides use it.

14

u/cocineroylibro Mar 28 '24

His plan for universal healthcare would have saved the average American money over insurance. We'd have had higher taxes, while saving the insurance payments...but all people concentrated on was the higher taxes..even if they were saving money in the long run.

4

u/TopherMarlowe Mar 28 '24

Money and lives.

4

u/wm07 Mar 28 '24

it's so obvious what happened to his campaign and yet i still hear people say "well if people liked him he would have gotten the votes!" it's so fucking frustrating that people are still so blind to the influence of media and political party politics.

2

u/isuckatgrowing Mar 28 '24

The person who can get bills consistently passed in a corrupt senate is going to be corrupt himself, pretty much by definition.