Saturday, September 17, 2016

Bernie is correct, Secretary Clinton needs to stick to the issues. Bernie is out there, anyone listening?

Hillary Clinton doesn't need a teleprompter. She knows her policies and can explain how it all works together to have a functioning USA. Her opponent cannot do that. His primary was laced with personal insults and power plays. He told lies willingly to keep up the enthusiasm to get him over the top, that is not needed by a candidate like Hillary Clinton who speaks competently to the audience and answers questions quickly because she knows the issues and the answers.

Hillary Clinton's opponent cannot speak to issues because he doesn't understand them. He has policy advisors and not insight. Her opponent's economic policy came right out of the "W" book (click here) whereby 4 percent growth is suppose to be the country's goals. The book was written at the Bush Institute. We know what happened under "W" and he never achieved 4 percent growth. Quite the contrary he destroyed growth, used up the government reserves at every turn sending the national debt higher, allowed anything that resembled an economic effort with Wall Street and finally fhen in a Lame Duck period imploded the entire global economy.

Bernie Sanders never stooped to name calling or negative ads. His campaign was upbeat, positive and fueled by Americans seeking a better way forward that embraced generational change. Hillary Clinton has a supporter in Bernie Sanders, don't ignore him.

September 16, 2015
Bernie Sanders (click here) is one of the most electorally successful non-major party candidates in United States political history. And he said Friday that voting for a third-party candidate for president in 2016 would amount to a "protest vote."
"Before you cast a protest vote - because either Clinton or Trump will become president - think hard about it," Sanders said on MSNBC's "Morning Joe." "This is not a governor's race. It's not a state legislative race. This is the presidency of the United States."
Sanders, of course, ran for president as a Democrat this year, shedding decades of working outside the two-party system that dominates American politics. And this is hardly the first time he's shunned a more progressive third-party candidate in favor of electing a Democratic president. As Dave Weigel wrote last year, he introduced Green Party presidential candidate Ralph Nader at a Vermont event in 2000, but he endorsed Al Gore over George W. Bush and then publicly shunned Nader's repeat candidacy in 2004....