Does Bernie Sanders Wants To Totally Dismantle America's Business-Generated Economy?

Sanders tries to pin Clinton to the left Politico

“There are some conventional rules of politics that I do not think apply here,” said Jennifer Palmieri, Clinton’s communications director. She said the issues that are front and center in this primary are wildly appealing not just to Democrats. Rather, they’re what “the actual general election’s going to be about too. And on our side, she’s going to have offered solutions for months that people really care about.”
Come November, Clinton’s campaign and allies say, they get to be the ones talking about what another era would have called liberal or lefty ideas, and attack the Republicans, namely Donald Trump, for being the extremists.
“Nothing that they discussed today was unreasonable or so far out there. The folks that are talking about radical proposals are folks like Donald Trump,” said Housing and Urban Development Secretary Julián Castro, who’s endorsed Clinton.

Garry Kasparov: Hey, Bernie, Don't Lecture Me About Socialism. I Lived Through It. The Daily Beast

My goal was to remind people that Americans talking about socialism in the 21st century was a luxury paid for by the successes of capitalism in the 20th. And that while inequality is a huge problem, the best way to increase everyone’s share of pie is to make the pie bigger, not to dismantle the bakery. Much to my surprise, my little rant went viral, as the saying goes. Instead of the usual few hundred Facebook shares, this paragraph quickly reached tens of thousands. By the next morning it had reached several million people, more than any of the day’s political posts by the leading candidates. A week later and it has over 3000 comments, 57,000 shares, and a 9.3 million reach that is in the category usually reserved for photos of pop stars and kitten videos.
My conclusion that “the idea that the solution [to inequality] is more government, more regulation, more debt, and less risk is dangerously absurd” apparently had great resonance, and I think I know why. There is a growing consensus that America has deep troubles, and no one can agree on solutions. Everyone agrees that Washington should change, and some want the government to do much more while others want it to do much less. Many of the traditional economic numbers say that America is doing fine, and yet polls say that Americans—especially Sanders supporters—are angry about the present and fearful about the future.

5 Takeaways from Bernie's Michigan Miracle Politico

Both campaigns Democratic campaigns are working to figure out exactly what the hell happened -- "contrary to the CNN talking heads who confidently blamed Clinton’s loss on her attacking Sanders’ gimmick-y position on the auto bailout". Michigan’s impact is for real: Sanders is alive and potentially dangerous, and Clinton needs to look hard into her campaign (yet again), especially on the topic of white male voters.

Here are five takeaways.

1. Clinton leaned too hard on a black voter strategy.
2. She's probably going to win anyway.
3. Democrats don't want the primary to end.
4. Free trade is Clinton's albatross.
5. Sanders has a big edge in open primaries.

Clinton and Democratic establishment types are always talking about how Bernie Sanders, who switched his affiliation from independent to Democrat last year, isn’t even one of them. Turns out that’s a huge advantage in a state, like Michigan, that allow independents and Republicans to crossover vote on election day. Sanders won roughly three-quarters of independent voters (who tend to be overwhelmingly white and working-class) on Tuesday.

Clinton has scored victories in open-primary states, but with the exception of her impressive Super Tuesday win in Massachusetts, they all came in the deep and upper South. And now comes a string of Michigan-like states with large, monochromatic independent voter bases – Ohio, Illinois, Missouri, Indiana. Clinton has an edge in Illinois – with its highly engaged African-American population and connections to Obama – but her big leads in the polls in other three could turn out to be a Michigan mirage.

Hillary Clinton Headlines March 10, 2016

Chelsea and Ivanka put their friendship on  ice Politico

In debate, Hillary Clinton's known negatives vie with Bernie Sanders' unknown ones LA Times

Bernie Sanders: Biggest Loser Snopes.com

Bernie Sanders's most vitriolic supporters really test the meaning of the word 'progressive' Washington Post

Could A Trump vs HIllary Run Mobilize Voters For Her?

Could Hillary Clinton Ever Have Imagined This? NY Magazine

The good news is that comics today are spending way more time talking about Donald Trump's hair than Hillary's. After that, the high-probability matchup between Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton and Republican renegade candidate Donald Trump promises to be a free-for-all, Trump style. 

Rebecca Traister argues that Donald Trump might be "just the thing to drive actual enthusiasm for Clinton -- not just as the lesser of two evils but as a vanquisher of the clearly more horrifying one." Traister then strike a pov that resonates with me: "Never does Clinton look better than when doing battle with monsters." 

Poll: Trump, Clinton hold wide leads in New York primaries Politico New York

You are forgiven for thinking that Bernie Sanders might take New York in their April 19 primary. The Sanders campaign promises that big states like New York will go against Hillary Clinton. Therefore, they must stay in the race to win it eventually.

A new poll of 800 New Yorkers by the Siena Research Institute puts Clinton with a commanding lead over Sanders 55% to 34%.

In Testy Debate, Clinton Echoes Sanders' Anger, But Not Too Much Bloomberg Politics

The second baillout bill debate delivers up the truth of how DC works, like it or not. Sanders voted against part 2 of the Obama-sponsored bailout bill, which saved the auto industry. It was not a pure bill, which Sanders says he would have supported. Except that this is not how Washington works. Legislators make choices and sometimes, good Dems vote for "impure" bills. Sanders can yell that he refused to support more help for Wall Street -- even though President Obama and both Michigan senators implored him to support the second bill, because the result would be catatrostophic for Detroit.

HE DID NOT!

Hillary has similarly complex decisions about votes. The difference is that Clinton never presents herself as a purist, because very little would be done otherwise. As president, Bernie Sanders would not introduce legislation. It would be delivered to him via Congress.

Clinton has made it this far in the nominating contests by showing that she's just angry enough for Democratic primary voters, but not too angry, and it's proven to be a winning strategy. It's also clear she believes she has the upper hand with Democratic voters on some key issues—that she can, in essence, out-Sanders Sanders—and she used that to good effect Sunday night.
Clinton aggressively went after Sanders for opposing the $700 billion bank bailout in the 2008 financial crisis, saying it had paved the way for the $82 billion auto industry bailout key to Michigan workers. "If everyone had voted the way he did," she said of Sanders, "I believe the auto industry would have collapsed, taking four million jobs with it."

How to Take a Licking & Keep on Ticking

How Hillary Clinton finally addressed Bill's infidelity Christian Science Monitor

Presidential candidate Hillary Clinton spoke to a mostly black congregation at the Holy Ghost Cathedral. Introduced by Bishop Corletta J. Vaughn, Hillary stood before the congregation in a run-down neighborhood, hearing Bishop Corletta J. Vaughn introduce her as the former first lady who taught women how to "take a licking and keep on ticking."

“I’m talking [about Clinton] as a wife and a mother,” Ms. Vaughn said. “She taught so many of us as women how to stand in the face of adversity."

Clinton explained that her strong faith grounded her in the story of the Prodigal Son, a sinner who was welcomed home by his father. 

It was this parable that reminded her to “practice the discipline of gratitude every day,” she said. “There is much to be grateful for even when it doesn’t feel or look like it.”

Hillary Clinton Headlines March 7, 2016

The Daily 202: Five reasons Bernie Sanders lost last night's Democratic debate Washington Post

The fight over Hillary Clinton's speaking fees is ridiculous Washington Post