Dear [PERSON READING THIS],

Tough times.

The American people understand that our economic and political systems are rigged. They know that the very rich get much richer while almost everyone else becomes poorer. They know that we are moving rapidly into an oligarchic form of society.

The Democrats ran a campaign protecting the status quo and tinkering around the edges. Trump and the Republicans campaigned on change and on smashing the existing order.

Not surprisingly, the Republicans won. Unfortunately, the “change” that Republicans will bring about will make a bad situation worse, and a society of gross inequality even more unequal, more unjust and more bigoted.

Will the Democratic leadership learn the lessons of their defeat and create a party that stands with the working class and is prepared to take on the enormously powerful special interests that dominate our economy, our media and our political life? Highly unlikely.

They are much too wedded to the billionaires and corporate interests that fund their campaigns.

Given that reality, where do we go from here? That is the very serious question that needs a lot of discussion in the coming weeks and months.

How do we expand our efforts to build a multi-racial, multi-generational working class movement?

How do we create a 50 state movement, not politics based on the electoral college and “battleground” states?

How do we deal with Citizens United and the ability of billionaires to buy elections?

How do we recruit more working class candidates for office at all levels of government?

Should we be supporting Independent candidates who are prepared to take on both parties?

How do we better support union organizing?

How do we put together listening sessions around the country that intentionally seek input from people who did not vote for Democrats in the last election?

How do we best use social media to build our movement and combat the lies and disinformation coming from the billionaire class and right wing media?

How do we build sustainable and long-term issue-based organizing structures that live beyond individual campaigns?

These are some of the political questions that, together, we need to address. And it is absolutely critical that you make your voice heard during this process.

Not me. Us. That is the only way forward.

In solidarity,

Bernie Sanders

What do we think? Considering all of the selling out he did from 2016 onward, only for none of it to be successful, I think there’s actually a possibility that he recognizes that his “legacy” is in danger. I’m actually so interested in hearing what the Hexbear community has to say about this that I’m legitimately excited to post it lmao

  • merthyr1831@lemmy.ml
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    1 day ago

    don’t trust him. he could’ve worked with existing third parties but he spent his remaining political influence in backing genocide Harris whilst claiming Israel wasn’t exterminating Palestinians until he lost the election.

    He spent the last trump term claiming radicalism and criticising the democratic party but fell in line once elections rolled around. I don’t trust him and I can see why Bookchin hated him tbh.

    EDIT bonus remark: the left doesn’t just have a splitting problem, it has a “maybe I’ll be the founding member of the revolutionary vanguard of the current political crisis” moment.

    Just websearch whatever party you’re trying to start and try that before creating the 14th competing standard to finally combine the previous 13 competing standards.

  • frauddogg [they/them, null/void]@hexbear.net
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    2 days ago

    Nah. 9 of 10 says ‘honeypot that feeds back to the DNC’; he already gave my old contact info to the Clintonites, he’s not getting another chance to do it again. Fuck that old sheepdog-assed cracker afaic.

  • the_post_of_tom_joad [any, any]@hexbear.net
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    3 days ago

    There are political parties currently in existence in the states other than D&R. If Bernie were considering building a movement quickly he’d probably be talking to or about one, rather than nebulously asking these questions.

    While a politician speaking like Bernie used to be refreshing to me, his words now feel stale. He has been a statesman since before Christ, therefore I am unimpressed at broad and simple questions like:

    How do we deal with citizens united?

    Oh indeed, this is a question! I expect an idea. I expect a plan. I expect a lot i guess, but i don’t expect he’s serious. He’s just throwing shit at the wall.

    Finally this guy here.

    Should we be supporting Independent candidates who are prepared to take on both parties?

    Gigantic “duh” aside, while it’s a list of grievances, imma still invoke Betteridge’s law of headlines here. If he’s asking? Then he doesn’t know. If he doesn’t know? He aint leading shit.

    I canvassed for him so the bitterness colors this final salt-stained opinion: if i was somehow convinced he wasn’t just taking up and dissipating all the leftist energy again? I no longer believe the man’s got what it takes.

          • manopor [he/him]@hexbear.net
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            2 days ago

            I think the episode had an interesting/useful take on this. I still have a lot of deprogramming work to do… How bad is Robert from behind the bastards?

            • BelieveRevolt [he/him]@hexbear.net
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              2 days ago

              He works with Bellingcat, which is essentially a CIA op, and has bragged about working with the FBI before (supposedly that was to identify domestic terrorists aka fascists). He also has terrible takes on every AES state, Ukraine, and mostly follows the US state department line despite calling himself an anarchist.

              Doing ad reads for BetterHelp was scummy too, that company is awful from what I’ve heard. Just the amount of alone was enough to get me to stop listening to his show, tbh.

      • eldavi@lemmy.ml
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        2 days ago

        that’s the entire point: grandpa sold out to status quo joe’s ilk because he was the pragmatic choice, like clinton was, and now we’re worse off than before; he should go to bed before he continues gives the democrats an air of progressiveness to help them cover for their diet-republican trajectory.

  • Thorngraff_Ironbeard [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    3 days ago

    His support of Biden and Israel has destroyed most of the good will I had towards him. Maybe he sees his legacy and doesn’t want to die being a lackey of the Empire but IDK I could be giving him more credit than he deserves. I know a lot of us, myself included, wouldn’t be here without him.

    • blobjim [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      3 days ago

      His brother in the UK is already in the Green Party there (he left Labour a while back because they sucked, I think).

  • CyborgMarx [any, any]@hexbear.net
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    3 days ago

    If the last five years have shown anything, it’s that Bernie Sanders is a true believer in the Democratic Party brand, he’s categorically not a radical or someone who’s comfortable rocking the boat and you have to be both of those things if you want to get serious about third parties. He has his little niche inside the party and he’s happy with it, well he was until the party and his “friend” Genocide Joe started to fall apart

    Either way he’s extremely comfortable in DC and no amount of temper tantrum press releases is gonna get people to think he’s the real deal again, he blew his shot, and he squandered the attention the American people gave him, he made his bed long ago

    • CoolerOpposide [none/use name]@hexbear.netOP
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      3 days ago

      I understand what you’re saying, but it just isn’t the same shit he said after the other elections, and it isn’t particularly close either. He’s burned a lot of bridges with the left but I think he probably recognizes that at this point. What im wondering is if he now realizes that the change he was trying to produce from within the Democratic Party has not only not happened, but moved further from reality as the democrats continue to punch left and move right

  • xiaohongshu [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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    3 days ago

    He has to promise that there will be no cooperation with the New Republicans and that he would not do a rug pull at some point and suddenly asks the delegates to fall in line/vote for/with the New Republicans.

    Otherwise there is no point because we already know of this past behavior of his.

  • Bureaucrat [pup/pup's, null/void]@hexbear.net
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    2 days ago

    More sheepdogging if it happens. Gonna be a fed honeypot. At the very best - and this involves assuming dems are capable - it’ll be like the Mexican PRI under Nieto. Just the same shit as always but in a new coat because people had gotten tired of the old coat. If the dems are capable of recognising how tainted their party brand is, then they’ll do this and join the new party to rebrand themselves. changing nothing but aesthetics

  • happybadger [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    3 days ago

    Sanders exemplifies the term ‘social fascist’. I don’t trust him with power and I don’t trust his zionist allies. If he forms a party, it’s just the democrats.