And I'm sorry, I will not believe that Bernie Sanders will ever become president until I see it. The American political system will never let that happen, not in a million years. If I do see it I'll gladly eat my words. — Wayfarer
Bernie getting the nomination is the only hope the Democrats ever really had for beating Trump. Winning elections is not about convincing people to change their minds -- that almost never works -- but about exciting people enough to actually go out and vote. The left half of America have been sorely disappointed with the Democratic party for a long time, and Bernie's loss in 2016 encouraged a bunch of them to vote 3rd party (which is fine in some cases, problematic in others), stay home, or worse, "burn it all down" and vote Trump in protest (which... what, I don't fucking understand that). Mainstream party-line Democrats will still vote for Bernie anyway, mainstream Republicans won't no matter what, there are apparently those wtf voters who prefer Bernie over Trump but Trump over anyone else, and most importantly, the many discouraged progressive youths will actually get excited enough to show up on election day. — Pfhorrest
those of us that still fight will do everything we can to get Sanders nominated and elected. Feel — Xtrix
While there’s no evidence that the tallies were tampered with or intentionally altered, the issues are likely to fuel skepticism in the caucus results and provide fodder for the campaigns to question its final outcome.
One instance of an apparent error in Indianola’s second precinct in Warren County, first noted by The New York Times, shows that billionaire philanthropist Tom Steyer and former Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick received 50 and 41 votes, respectively, in the first round of caucusing on Monday.
But on the second alignment, both candidates received zero support, a result that flies in the face of caucus rules mandating that a candidate considered viable after the first round of voting — usually by notching at least 15 percent support — cannot lose support in the second round.
Conversely, in the same precinct, Sanders and Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) were recorded as receiving zero votes in the first alignment and then picking up 44 and 51 votes in the second, a result that would also violate caucus rules, because candidates that do not have sufficient support in the first round of caucusing are knocked out and cannot win support in the second alignment.
In several precincts, there are cases in which the candidate who got the most votes didn’t end up with the most state delegate equivalents.
Here's how the State Delegate Equivalents, or SDEs, are broken down.:
564.012 for Mayor Pete Buttigieg
562.497 for Sen. Bernie Sanders
387.069 for Sen. Elizabeth Warren
341.172 for Former Vice President Joe Biden
264.204 for Sen. Amy Klobuchar
22.223 for Andrew Yang
Sanders is doing better than I expected, but it looks to me like Biden is still the current best hope to beat Trump. Here's latest polling data for battleground states (each state name is a link to the poll):Except that he polled better than Clinton did in 2016 and continues to beat Trump in polls today and in key states in particular. — Xtrix
But If the country isn't ready for it, is it fine to have another 4 years of Trump? Does the self-satisfaction of having tried make that OK? Our only real difference seems to be one of priorities. My top priority is to get rid of Trump, and that leads me to choose the person who seems most electable.If the country isn't ready for it, fine. At least we tried. — Xtrix
Don't forget social security.Medicare will fall short on funds in 2026, earlier than previously forecast due to the recent Republican tax cut. — frank
Social Security and Medicare together accounted for 45 percent of Federal program expenditures (excluding net interest on the debt) in fiscal year 2018. - Both Social Security and Medicare will experience cost growth substantially in excess of GDP growth through the mid-2030s due to rapid population aging caused by the large baby-boom generation entering retirement and lower-birth-rate generations entering employment. For Medicare, it is also the case that growth in expenditures per beneficiary exceeds growth in per capita GDP over this time period. Social Security’s total cost is projected to exceed its total income (including interest) in 2020 for the first time since 1982. The Trustees project that the combined trust funds will be depleted in 2035, one year later than projected in last year’s report.
Sorry, but this is total nonsense.The entire system would be watered down if everyone had it. — jgill
You think it isn't bad???Excuse my confusion, but doesn’t that graph indicate a higher spending by government on people than other countries? I don’t see what’s so bad about this graph. — Brett
Because of your health care system. — ssu
For those who can pay, definitely.Actually, US healthcare is among the best in the world. — Benkei
Yang perhaps, but he's too unknown. I think looking at the times we live in, at least one candidate, either the the presidential candidate or the vice-presidential candidate has to be a woman. Even with Bernie (which would silence a lot of leftists), having two old white males on the DNC ticket would itself get a lot of flak. Which two old white males are you going to vote, the Republican or Democrat option?I'm starting to like Bloomberg. Anyone else? And there are a lot of folks who would make a great running mate for him. (That is, Biden and Bernie, no - too old - too bad we can't put Bernie in a way-back machine.) — tim wood
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