• Hey, guest user. Hope you're enjoying NeoGAF! Have you considered registering for an account? Come join us and add your take to the daily discourse.

May U.S. Primaries |OT| Glory to America

Status
Not open for further replies.

CDX

Member
The votes so far (grabbed the image from Twitter)

4utR9Jo.png


Hillary Clinton: 13.3 million
Donald Trump: 11.2 million
Bernie Sanders: 10.4 million
Ted Cruz: 7.4 million
John Kasich: 3.9 million
Marco Rubio: 3.5 million
 
Every insult towards the Bernie bros drives more to possibly hate-voting trump, imo.

I can't respect anyone who spews this. "Be nice to me or I'll vote Trump!" is a nonsensical bargaining chip that only tells me you're not taking any of this seriously, in which case I wonder why you're pretending to be interested in this election in the first place.

As a member of one of the many minority groups that Trump has targeted, I ask you to exit the election entirely if you're even considering supporting that bag of trash out of spite. The shit he says, the kinds of people he empowers, the magnitude at which he has lowered the level of discourse regarding people like us isn't anything to take lightly. Don't dangle that "threat" over us like parents threatening the Boogeyman on their kids. It's far more condescending than you realize.
 

Phased

Member
The votes so far (grabbed the image from Twitter)

4utR9Jo.png


Hillary Clinton: 13.3 million
Donald Trump: 11.2 million
Bernie Sanders: 10.4 million
Ted Cruz: 7.4 million
John Kasich: 3.9 million
Marco Rubio: 3.5 million

I'll never understand the 'Sanders Is More Electable' crowd. Losing the popular vote (by millions), losing the delegate count (by huge margins) and the only demographic he reliably carries (White people) usually goes Republican in the General anyways.

HOW is he more electable?
 
That's how most of the responses all around everywhere has been. Lots of 'Buts' added to 'violence is bad'

Followed by bullshit paragraphs about how Nevada was stolen and about how the victim of the harassment was a huge part of that.

It's like yeah harassment is bad but she helped steal the election.

I mean shit Sanders' direct statement was yeah violence is bad but people were violent against us too and here's how the Nevada Dems stole the election from me.
 

Malfunky

Member
I can't respect anyone who spews this. "Be nice to me or I'll vote Trump!" is a nonsensical bargaining chip that only tells me you're not taking any of this seriously, in which case I wonder why you're pretending to be interested in this election in the first place.

As a member of one of the many minority groups that Trump has targeted, I ask you to exit the election entirely if you're even considering supporting that bag of trash out of spite. The shit he says, the kinds of people he empowers, the magnitude at which he has lowered the level of discourse regarding people like us isn't anything to take lightly. Don't dangle that "threat" over us like parents threatening the Boogeyman on their kids. It's far more condescending than you realize.

It really is a selfish and petty way to look at things. Especially for something that will effect other people immensely. You absolutely can not claim to want the more progressive candidate in Bernie just to turn around threaten a vote for Trump or any other Republican if you don't get your way. I'll even push further by saying that if you are in a contested state, you support Bernie, he loses the primary, and you either vote against Hillary or abstain completely, you are being immensely selfish, irresponsible, and inconsistent.

I am absolutely of the opinion that the differences between the parties are negligible for reforming our political system, but the differences that do exist in the things we can effect are very apparent. I used to think otherwise, but the pragmatic approach here is very important.
 
It really is a selfish and petty way to look at things. Especially for something that will effect other people immensely. You absolutely can not claim to want the more progressive candidate in Bernie just to turn around threaten a vote for Trump or any other Republican if you don't get your way. I'll even push further by saying that if you are in a contested state, you support Bernie, he loses the primary, and you either vote against Hillary or abstain completely, you are being immensely selfish, irresponsible, and inconsistent.

I am absolutely of the opinion that the differences between the parties are negligible for reforming our political system, but the differences that do exist in the things we can effect are very apparent. I used to think otherwise, but the pragmatic approach here is very important.

Because the people that threaten to do that aren't progressives. They are the same anti-establishment crowd that flocks to one candidate every cycle. They thrive on playing contrarian, they don't actually give a fuck about the country.

Hillary Clinton is going to be president. At this point it's just about how much she wins by.
 
I can't respect anyone who spews this. "Be nice to me or I'll vote Trump!" is a nonsensical bargaining chip that only tells me you're not taking any of this seriously, in which case I wonder why you're pretending to be interested in this election in the first place.

As a member of one of the many minority groups that Trump has targeted, I ask you to exit the election entirely if you're even considering supporting that bag of trash out of spite. The shit he says, the kinds of people he empowers, the magnitude at which he has lowered the level of discourse regarding people like us isn't anything to take lightly. Don't dangle that "threat" over us like parents threatening the Boogeyman on their kids. It's far more condescending than you realize.

Respect them or not but without them I think Hilary loses the general. I'm not one of them, by the way.

To win a presidency you can't get votes only from people you respect, unfortunately.
 

John Dunbar

correct about everything
I'll never understand the 'Sanders Is More Electable' crowd. Losing the popular vote (by millions), losing the delegate count (by huge margins) and the only demographic he reliably carries (White people) usually goes Republican in the General anyways.

HOW is he more electable?

i don't think that winning or losing the popular vote in the primaries has much to do with how electable someone is. trump is certainly not the most electable republican.
 
Well I can understand that. I share the frustration. My Facebook is exploding with a vocal few that are militantly anti-shillary. Though they are still the minority. Annecdotal but most Bernie supporters I know are quite reasonable. I'm a Hillary supporter myself.

Question for Bernie GAF. Even if you slightly empathize with the frustration shared by the ones portrayed in this article, do you condone this behavior? Would you speak out against it?

I don't condone it, and would speak out against it. Death threats aren't okay.

I don't know if I can honestly call myself a Bernie supporter anymore though, I've already accepted that he's going to lose and I'm just waiting for this all to end. Planning on jumping on the Hilary train as soon as she's officially the nominee.
 
Nah that's not what I said. You can't take the actions of a few extreme people in a group and apply it to all. That's how you get people calling to ban Muslims.

I said that throwing insults at the losing side in your own party isn't going to help unify the party to win. Hilary needs bernie supporters to win as well.

You can if the rest of the group doesn't turn around to stamp out and condemn the abhorrent behaviour. I know Bernie supporters hate the Gamergate comparison, but blaming a small minority for throwing shit while doing nothing, and even benefiting from the shit throwing, is a word for word page out the GG playbook.
 
You can if the rest of the group doesn't turn around to stamp out and condemn the abhorrent behaviour. I know Bernie supporters hate the Gamergate comparison, but blaming a small minority for throwing shit while doing nothing, and even benefiting from the shit throwing, is a word for word page out the GG playbook.

So is frankly saying I'm against harassment but that person being harassed did something bad and I get harassed too

Especially when you lie about what bad thing the person being harassed supposedly did.
 

Maxim726X

Member
Because the people that threaten to do that aren't progressives. They are the same anti-establishment crowd that flocks to one candidate every cycle. They thrive on playing contrarian, they don't actually give a fuck about the country.

Hillary Clinton is going to be president. At this point it's just about how much she wins by.

This reminds me of the Ron Paul camp circa 2008... But more divisive because Bernie condones it.
 

boiled goose

good with gravy
I'll never understand the 'Sanders Is More Electable' crowd. Losing the popular vote (by millions), losing the delegate count (by huge margins) and the only demographic he reliably carries (White people) usually goes Republican in the General anyways.

HOW is he more electable?

He does much better with independents and also has better appeal to Republicans under 30. Hillary is popular with the democratic base but not very liked outside the base.

Every head to head national poll has him doing better against trump than Clinton. Polls all the way through May. But many on Gaf will tell you that the polls are wrong because of feelings they have.

Trump has highest unfavorables in history. Hillary is number 2 in history. Bernie has positive favorability. He also has huge leads in trustability and cares for people like me polls. They too are highly predictive of presidential wins.

Now those are the facts...

In my personal opinion, you have to win the primary first to be the nominee.
 
I'll never understand the 'Sanders Is More Electable' crowd. Losing the popular vote (by millions), losing the delegate count (by huge margins) and the only demographic he reliably carries (White people) usually goes Republican in the General anyways.

HOW is he more electable?
He's not. Just a talking point with nothing to substantiate it.
 

Y2Kev

TLG Fan Caretaker Est. 2009
He does much better with independents and also has better appeal to Republicans under 30. Hillary is popular with the democratic base but not very liked outside the base.

Every head to head national poll has him doing better against trump than Clinton. Polls all the way through May. But many on Gaf will tell you that the polls are wrong because of feelings they have.

Trump has highest unfavorables in history. Hillary is number 2 in history. Bernie has positive favorability. He also has huge leads in trustability and cares for people like me polls. They too are highly predictive of presidential wins.

Now those are the facts...

In my personal opinion, you have to win the primary first to be the nominee.

People on GAF have not told you the polls are wrong because of "feelings they have," but OK.

If this election cycle has taught you anything, shouldn't it be that favorability does not translate into votes? Donald Trump's own in-party unfavorability was so great, and he was still able to accelerate his campaign and win with impressive margins as the campaign wore on. I think that as he focused on people like Cruz, Rubio, etc., their high favorabilities dropped and his buoyed a little bit. I don't think there's a lot of precedent for the counterargument.
 

Miles X

Member
I wonder how close Hillary can get to 2384 with Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico and SD's by the time California comes around. She's at 2291 according to the Guardian.
 
Well I can understand that. I share the frustration. My Facebook is exploding with a vocal few that are militantly anti-shillary. Though they are still the minority. Annecdotal but most Bernie supporters I know are quite reasonable. I'm a Hillary supporter myself.

Question for Bernie GAF. Even if you slightly empathize with the frustration shared by the ones portrayed in this article, do you condone this behavior? Would you speak out against it?

From the first day of Bernie's campaign, me and everyone I know who supports Bernie Sanders was of the mindset that "we will vote for Hillary just as well as we'll vote for Bernie, we would just rather vote for Bernie." This was during the time that Sanders stood up and said he wasn't going to smear Hillary, that he likes Hillary, and that he is more interested in selling himself than disparaging her.

You can argue who started taking the first shots. For us, it was the Spanish interview and the "I would put my record up against yours any day of the week" quote, but obviously the original POV that this was supposed to be a classy campaign went out the window. Gradually, my emails from the Bernie campaign became more and more about Hillary, and how we should be angry at Hillary, and how Hillary is unfit for the presidency, etc.

Since that shift, my group of Bernie supporters had grown more timid about professing our support. I live in a state Bernie won, but we all knew that actually winning the presidency was a long shot. We were always prepared to vote for Hillary, and will do so, but at one time we would have preferred to vote for Bernie.

So, no, I don't support or condone BernieBros throwing money at Hillary as she walks into banquets or hurling chairs around. Hillary is not our enemy and never has been. Treating her like one is poor form and bad politics, even if your ideal candidate isn't the one on the final ballot. Even if your ideal candidate doesn't exist.

Edit: I shouldn't say "from the first day" of his campaign. I should say, from the first day of his campaign with the Democratic Party. We were not interested in voting for an independent because splitting the liberal vote between an independent and a democrat was exactly how Paul LePage won Maine Governer with only 39% of the vote.
 

boiled goose

good with gravy
People on GAF have not told you the polls are wrong because of "feelings they have," but OK.

If this election cycle has taught you anything, shouldn't it be that favorability does not translate into votes? Donald Trump's own in-party unfavorability was so great, and he was still able to accelerate his campaign and win with impressive margins as the campaign wore on. I think that as he focused on people like Cruz, Rubio, etc., their high favorabilities dropped and his buoyed a little bit. I don't think there's a lot of precedent for the counterargument.

That as trump attacks you your favorability can go down? I agree.

Trump won for two reasons. Racism and Anti establishment anger. Hillary's strong ties to current government ( Congress has favorability of single digits) is a liability outside of the democratic base. Trump has been trumpeting ( partially lying) about not being influenced by outside money. Unfortunately one of Trump s strenghts is Hillary's aq heel.

I don't think Sanders should be the nominee if he doesn't win the primary which at this point is pretty clear he wont.

That said, polls ( and trends!) Do offer valid insight. His national polling has gone upward as more people hear about him, not down.

Hillary will be the nominee, but the reasons why Sanders could do better in a general matchup against trump are actually pretty transparent and well understood.

Hillary v Trump can still be a landslide, Which i hope is what happens. These debates could be very interesting....

I don't like however her current strategy of merely attacking Trump on personal issues rather than emphasize her policy differences. Push why you are better, not why Trump sucks. It plays into his anti establishment victim hood which he used effectively in the primary.
 
I'll never understand the 'Sanders Is More Electable' crowd. Losing the popular vote (by millions), losing the delegate count (by huge margins) and the only demographic he reliably carries (White people) usually goes Republican in the General anyways.

HOW is he more electable?
Because all he does is win! He let Hilary go in first because he's a gentleman. Now be be straight winning closing that gap of her's down by 2 to 7 points every few weeks. After 56 more states vote he'll be tied before those super delegates wisen up
 

dramatis

Member
For those who are catching up this morning, the summation of yesterday's primaries.

Kentucky
Primary (D) | 5/17 | 55 delegates | Winner: Clinton | Clinton 27 delegates, Sanders 27 delegates
Detailed results

Oregon
Primary (D) | 5/17 | 61 delegates | Winner: Sanders | Sanders 28 delegates, Clinton 24 delegates (tentative)
Primary (R) | 5/17 | 28 delegates | Winner: Trump
Detailed results

Bernie Sanders Wins Oregon; Hillary Clinton Declares Victory in Kentucky [NY Times]
With a lead in delegates that is almost impossible for Mr. Sanders to overcome, Mrs. Clinton is moving closer each week to claiming the Democratic nomination. But her march has been encumbered by Mr. Sanders’s persistence in the race and his success in recent contests, including victories in Indiana’s primary on May 3 and West Virginia’s last week.

His continued strength has put a spotlight on her vulnerabilities as she heads toward a likely general election matchup with Mr. Trump, and on a lack of unity, and even fractiousness, within the Democratic Party.

Unfortunately yesterday's events were trumped (no pun intended) by news regarding Nevada's state convention.

Bernie Sanders Facing Pressure Over Supporters’ Actions in Nevada [NY Times]
Raising the prospect of lasting fissures in the party, Senator Bernie Sanders rebuffed pressure on Tuesday to rein in his supporters after they disrupted a weekend Democratic convention in Nevada, throwing chairs and later threatening the state chairwoman in a fight over delegates. The uproar comes as Hillary Clinton is struggling to turn her and the party’s attention to the fall.

Mr. Sanders’s supporters showed no sign of backing down on Tuesday. In interviews, several threatened to disrupt the party’s convention in Philadelphia in July with protests and nonviolent disobedience over a nominating system that they say has treated Mr. Sanders unfairly. In emails, on social media and on websites, his supporters have traded advice about protest tactics and legal services in case of mass arrests.

But Mr. Sanders showed no sign of backing down, releasing a statement that, while condemning violence, accused the Democratic leadership in Nevada of using “its power to prevent a fair and transparent process from taking place.”

We have one more state to go in May. Washington (state) will be voting next Tuesday.
 
I'll never understand the 'Sanders Is More Electable' crowd. Losing the popular vote (by millions), losing the delegate count (by huge margins) and the only demographic he reliably carries (White people) usually goes Republican in the General anyways.

HOW is he more electable?

polls matter more to them than the actual results
 
I don't like however her current strategy of merely attacking Trump on personal issues rather than emphasize her policy differences. Push why you are better, not why Trump sucks. It plays into his anti establishment victim hood which he used effectively in the primary.

This isn't her strategy. She's letting others do it, her attack on Trump will be trying to pin him down to one view. He moves around so much, that if she can get him attached to one thing, she can hit him on it.

She's going after his lack of experience and his nonexistent policy views.
 

Maxim726X

Member
This isn't her strategy. She's letting others do it, her attack on Trump will be trying to pin him down to one view. He moves around so much, that if she can get him attached to one thing, she can hit him on it.

She's going after his lack of experience and his nonexistent policy views.

I heard yesterday that Trump is going to rely on bringing up the Monica Lewinsky scandal and other similar events from her tenure as the first lady... He's going to focus more on what he perceives to be character flaws.

If you thought it was ugly before, just wait. He's going to bring down political discourse another 10 notches, and hopefully drag her down with him. I hope she has a good strategy going in.
 
Attacking Hillary on Monica Lewinsky is going to be a big misplay by Trump.

It didn't work in the 90s against Bill, himself, when the entire party used it as an attack against him. Why would Trump believe he alone trying to attach Hillary to it, would work? She can easily just paint herself as the victim in the entire thing...
 

Plumbob

Member
I think what Hillary said about Lewinski reflected what she thought at the time, that she was lying for attention. Doesn't make her a sexist IMO, just the primary victim of Bill's dishonesty.
 

dramatis

Member
Attacking Hillary on Monica Lewinsky is going to be a big misplay by Trump.

It didn't work in the 90s against Bill, himself, when the entire party used it as an attack against him. Why would Trump believe he alone trying to attach Hillary to it, would work? She can easily just paint herself as the victim in the entire thing...
I honestly think he shouldn't, not just because of Hillary, but because Monica Lewinsky will also suffer. Trump wouldn't be smearing just one woman in this attack.
 

Kite

Member
lol these hardcore Bernie types are pushing me towards the center, I'd rather try to go after moderates/centrists who are horrified with Trump getting the Repub nomination instead of so-called progressives who are threatening to vote Trump if Bernie loses.
 

ApharmdX

Banned
Nice, Oregon felt the bern, though Bernie won by a slimmer-than-expected margin there (about 9 points).

Are there any other Bernie supporters left on NeoGAF these days?

Am I the last one? :(

I'm still here. There are dozens of us! Well, maybe like half a dozen.
 

johnny956

Member
I don't condone it, and would speak out against it. Death threats aren't okay.

I don't know if I can honestly call myself a Bernie supporter anymore though, I've already accepted that he's going to lose and I'm just waiting for this all to end. Planning on jumping on the Hilary train as soon as she's officially the nominee.


Same here. Voted for him in the primary but throw in the towel already so the party can start backing Hillary
 
From a Clinton supporter's perspective, the concerning aspect about the sex scandal attack route is that I think attitudes about the purported victm have changed since the 90s. Disbelief / dismissal of the purported victim seemed more common back then than it is now. And while I think it is important to be supportive of people who claim to have been the victims of sexual assault or rape and I believe this shift is generally positive, a blind spot has emerged about false rape/abuse accusations. That is, there is a sense among many that every rape claim should be treated as if it were and actually is obviously true.

So I am slightly uneasy about the the consequences of this type of attack. Trump has already led the conversation into the gutter before. With no qualifications of his own, this is his main tactic. Recall that he suggested Ted Cruz's father was involved int he JFK assassination based on a tabloid report despite all evidence to the contrary. So I am a bit worried about someone like Juanita Broaddrick being put on an ad and talking about how Bill Clinton allegedly raped her and Hillary silenced her. Trump has played with the truth before; he doesn't care what the consequences are as long as he wins.

I'm not sure about the Clinton strategy, either. So far, they have mostly refused to comment. Perhaps that is a way of keeping those ideas at the fringe. But there's also a danger that these accusations might define Hillary if Trump is the only one openly discussing the issue.
 

Square2015

Member
With 89% counted in Oregon it's now an 11 pt. gap (55.5 to 44.5).
Every county but one has gone for Sanders.

edit: CNN %ages may be off.
 
I can't believe we've regressed again to discussing GE polling during a primary...

it's half of what sanders talks about these days and thus his base as well. now that all the other pieces have fallen, it's literally all he has left

mention the fact that he hasn't even begun to be placed under scrutiny yet by the republican machine, unlike hillary, and well that somehow becomes irrelevant
 
HOW is he more electable?

Because he's been facing a softball campaign in the primary and the GOP hasn't run attacks against him, either. Meanwhile, the Clintons have been enduring partisan attacks for the last thirty years.

The situation now does not reflect what the situation would be once the general election begins in earnest.
 

TyrantII

Member
Respect them or not but without them I think Hilary loses the general. I'm not one of them, by the way.

To win a presidency you can't get votes only from people you respect, unfortunately.

Eh, Gamergaters and old white males are not demographics she needs. Anti-establishment Green Rainbow / La Rouche derps never vote for the two major parties anyways.

She's going to do better amoung the same demos that Obama won in 2008 and 2012. That's all she needs.
 
Because he's been facing a softball campaign in the primary and the GOP hasn't run attacks against him, either. Meanwhile, the Clintons have been enduring partisan attacks for the last thirty years.

The situation now does not reflect what the situation would be once the general election begins in earnest.

He hasn't been scrutinized in the media like any other candidate, partly because they don't view him seriously. Jeb Bush or Rubio getting caught stealing data would be a big deal, for Sanders, he was somehow the victim. Clinton saying white people don't know what it's like to be poor would be the death of her campaign but for Sanders it was forgotten almost immediately after he said it.
 

Rentahamster

Rodent Whores
Attacking Hillary on Monica Lewinsky is going to be a big misplay by Trump.

It didn't work in the 90s against Bill, himself, when the entire party used it as an attack against him. Why would Trump believe he alone trying to attach Hillary to it, would work? She can easily just paint herself as the victim in the entire thing...

The only thing that I could see being a factor is the difference in attitudes between then and now. Older man in a very high position of power having an affair with a young intern who is pretty powerless. In 2016, a lot more people have a problem with that scenario.
 
The only thing that I could see being a factor is the difference in attitudes between then and now. Older man in a very high position of power having an affair with a young intern who is pretty powerless. In 2016, a lot more people have a problem with that scenario.

And those same people have an even BIGGER problem with the GoP's overall track record on women's right.
 

Rentahamster

Rodent Whores
And those same people have an even BIGGER problem with the GoP's overall track record on women's right.

While that is true, my reading of the current times is that there are now more Republican-leaners who would consider that a bad thing (in the 90s, this seemed to be limited to mostly overly-religious puritan types who gave a shit about this on a personal level). There are also more Democratic-leaners who are turned off more about this, enough that it might consider them to second guess Hillary.

I'm not really thinking about the die-hards. Their minds are already made up. I'm trying to visualize the people who are on the edge of being persuaded either way.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top Bottom