Similar Posts

- Advertisement -

11 Comments

  1. Interesting thing about Hillary is her handlers organized two meetings for her on same day but did not leave sufficient travel time. Are we looking at a human version of Dolly The Sheep?

  2. Go Sanders! Get rid of Republican Lite Hillary so people actually have a choice rather than two similar neoliberal corporate presidents to vote for whether democrat or Republican.

    Canada has broken the chains.

  3. Why bother writing tis item? The so-called election is just a staged performance. And it’s not even amusing, so is not worthy of any time or attention.

    Corporate America will ensure that whichever candidate corporate America has chosen will be installed in the White House; Democrat or Republican, it really doesn’t matter. They’re all the same and all are bought-and-paid-for.

    1. Sander does not appear to be bought and paid for, his money is mostly from individuals unlike every other candidate.

  4. I think Bernie is starting to rub off over here. Witness the Labour Party promise of free education. Feel the Bern!!!!!

  5. Spot on article – when Andrew Little announced Labour’s free education policy last week I immediately thought of Sanders and wondered if Sanders success in the US might have helped put some spine into our own left of center politicians.
    It will be incredible if Sanders becomes president in the US but we should temper our optimism with memories of Obama’s astonishing win in 2008. Sanders will need the support of Democrat dominated Senate and House if he is to effect real change.
    But even that may not be enough. Remember that Obama’s initial plans for healthcare reform were opposed by enough Democrats to force reducing reform scope.
    What we can cling to is that – fundamentally – the political landscape is changing because a generation of younger voters is the first to question neo-liberalism in significant numbers.

  6. Spot on article – when Andrew Little announced Labour’s free education policy last week I immediately thought of Sanders and wondered if Sanders success in the US might have helped put some spine into our own left of center politicians.
    It will be incredible if Sanders becomes president in the US but we should temper our optimism with memories of Obama’s astonishing win in 2008. Sanders will need the support of Democrat dominated Senate and House if he is to effect real change.
    But even that may not be enough. Remember that Obama’s initial plans for healthcare reform were opposed by enough Democrats to force reducing reform scope.
    What we can cling to is that – fundamentally – the political landscape is changing because a generation of younger voters is the first to question neo-liberalism in significant numbers.

  7. [Please provide a bona fide email address when submitting comments for publication on this forum. – ScarletMod]

  8. I support Sanders nomination but when he announced that if he lost, he would back Hillary – I lost respect for him. She is now announcing some changes in her policies towards more like Sanders views and I hope that it is not just another con job full of lies and insincerity just to get her nominated.

    I do not trust her at all. Her history shows her devotion and allegiance with the very unethical banksters and Wall St. and criminal corporations that heavily grace her pockets. They and she are mostly responsible for the economic decline that is devastating the world right now.

    Hope the U.S. voters back Bernie and get out in mass to vote him in.
    The U.S. deserves a leader with his head on straight.

Comments are closed.