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BERNIE SANDERS FOR PRESIDENT 2K16

@berniesandrs-blog / berniesandrs-blog.tumblr.com

Anonymous asked:

If Democrats win the presidency in 2020, do you think they'll be ruthless and actually get things done? I understand that Obama wanted to work with Republicans but it didn't help anything. So do you think Democrats in 2021 will do what's good for the country and push through tax reform, single payer, repeal the Hyde amendment etc, while ignoring the hypocritical protests from McConnell that we need to return to 'regular order'?

god, i don’t know i’m of two minds on this. on one hand, yeah, i think dems should do absolutely everything we want to get done if we take back the house, senate, and presidency in 2020 buuut i don’t agree with what republicans are doing, i don’t agree with passing bills at midnight with little to no review process and i don’t want the dems to start doing that just because they can. i’m all for ignoring most attempts at bipartisanship since the republicans have no interest but i think we should do things the way of “regular order” to an extent. i get that the republicans haven’t faced any real backlash for doing this and i think there’s something to be learned for dems about being less careful and less focused on poll numbers and start just doing things for the good of the country but i don’t want the dems to gain power and do all those things we hated when republicans did them. although the inherent difference is dems would be passing bills that would genuinely help people who need the help while republicans are passing bills to help people like wyatt koch.

tl;dr dems should take some lessons from what the republicans are doing right now and not be quite as safe when they get power back in the future but schumer should absolutely NOT turn into the world’s most awful human being mitch mcconnell.

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@bradleyswhitford I have a follow up question for you! 

Do you think it would be possible for the Dems to get stuff done without acting like the Republicans are now? Not necessarily like handwriting bills etc. but only passing things on a partisan basis? I feel like at this point voting with the “opposition” is seen as a death sentence (esp. for republicans)

Oh, this was something else. He damn near destroyed the man.

All that was missing was the mic drop.

No, really. It’s like a scene out of a popular, critically-acclaimed HBO drama series that ends up winning all the emmys in the end.  

He fucking gutted the bastard.

That dude should run for President based solely on this video alone.

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hipsterenglishteacher

The rhetorical precision. 

oh that build

I would love to use this in class to demonstrate the effect of passive voice (it has been reported) and the blend of rhetorical strategies in the final statement. Too bad my County would see it as a skewed lesson.

Anybody else get a definite Socratic feel from this?

Obliterated

The horrified stare the wife gives when she clutches her pears and realizes how utterly fucked Jeff is.

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spanishg0ld

watching this was a great start to my day

It’s a very uplifting video. Someone is finally being held accountable for their blatant lies and corruption. You don’t see that too often in politics.

And it’s not like the dude is even getting angry with Sessions. He is perfectly calm, cold and rational. He came incredibly well-prepared. 

I think the “You understand sir, that I get to ask the questions, you provide the answers in this capacity. You are no longer in the US senate” line was a little dramatic, but, you know, it was cool. 

So I like it. 

“Pearl clutching!” I’m screaming.

Every TV screenwriter and actor should study this.

It is better than anything you will see on House of Cards.

Holy green guacamole…

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persepinecone

Decimated

I sat here vibrating with joy and it just kept getting better.

He’s POLITE. And Sessions is PANICKED and stuttering. A RACIST is being demolished by as black man who is being POLITE.

It literally doesn’t get more poetic than this. Shakespeare couldn’t have written this level of divine justice. The fucking classics wish they were this classic. The old gods are smirking down on this fucker right now, enjoying the human sacrifice that’s going down.

From now on, I will end every cool thing I ever say with: “I yield back.”

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grilleddolphin

The most articulate version of “talk shit, get hit” I have ever heard

Provided that guy avoids any Al Franken-like scandals, he could be going places.

The charisma, sharpness and intelligence he displays here is truly something else.

The questioner is Congressman Hakeem Jeffries from the 8th district of New York.

(Begin transcript) Jeffries: Uh, Mr. Sessions, I have a copy of the transcript of your testimony before the Senate judiciary committee in October. You stated under oath “I don’t recall” in some form or fashion some 29 times. Is that correct? Sessions: I have no idea. Jeffries: I have a copy of the transcript of your testimony before the Senate intelligence committee in June. You stated under oath “I don’t recall” in some form or fashion approximately 36 times. Is that correct? Sessions: I don’t know. Jeffries: In your testimony today, you have said “I don’t recall” at least 20 times. Is that fair to say? Sessions: I have no idea. Jeffries: Now, on October 4 2016, during a TV interview with Lou Dobbs, you criticized Hillary Clinton for telling FBI investigators “I can’t remember” approximately 35 times. You also stated during that Lou Dobbs interview that the intentional failure to remember can constitute perjury. Mr. Attorney General, do you still believe that the intentional failure to remember can constitute a criminal act? Sessions: If it’s, uh, a, uh, act to deceive, yes. Jeffries: K. Now you testified in January that you had no contact with Russian operatives during the Trump campaign. Earlier today, you testified that your story has, quote, “never changed.” Is that correct? Sessions: (no response) Jeffries: That was your testimony earlier today? That your story has never changed. Correct? Sessions: I believe that’s, um, fair to say. We might- Jeffries: (talking over) Okay- Sessions: (talking over) -get, ehh, uh, we’ve added things that I did not recall at the time. Jeffries: Right, but I’m not- Sessions: (talking over) But my statement at the time was my best recollection of the circumstances, and, uh, I, as things are brought up, uh- Jeffries: Reclaiming my time. I understand. Sessions: All right. Jeffries: Sir, you now acknowledge, uh, meeting with Ambassador Kislyak during the Republican National Convention. Correct? Sessions: I remember I made a speech, he came up to me afterwards I was standing in front of the speaker (unintelligble) and, uh, did chat with him- Jeffries: (talking over) Okay, thank you, and you also- Sessions: (talking over) (unintelligible) not a meeting, it was just, uh, an, uh, encounter at that time. Jeffries: Okay, and you also, uh, met with the ambassador in September of 2016 in your office as you’ve acknowledged. Correct? Sessions: (talking over) Yes, for an appointment. I had two senior staffers, both full Colonels in United States Army, retired, in, in the meeting- Jeffries: (talking over) Now you testified- I’m sorry. You testified in June before the Senate intelligence committee that you had not heard even a whisper about possible Russian involvement in the Trump campaign. Yet we understand you attended this March 31, uh, meeting with George Papadopoulos, talked about potential communications with Russian operatives, uh, but also, according to your third quarter 2016 FTC filing, you hosted a Trump campaign dinner meeting on June 30 2016 at the Capitol Hill Club, is that right? Sessions: That’s correct. I was- Jeffries: (talking over) And your Senate reelection campaign paid for that meeting, is that right? Sessions: Uh, I, I think that may be so. Jeffries: Okay, and Carter Page and George Papadopoulos both attended that June 30 meeting, correct? Sessions: (hesitates) That has been reported. Jeffries: And at that meeting, Carter Page told you that the- that he was going to Moscow in a few days, is that right? Sessions: (hesitates) Yes. Jeffries: Okay. At- Sessions: (talking over) Uh, um, and he, um- Jeffries: (talking over) Thank you, thank you- Sessions: (talking over) He said it was a brief meeting as he was walking out the door, I don’t recall that conversation, but, uh, I’m not able to dispute it, and- Jeffries: Understood. Reclaiming my time, I’ve got limited, uh, time available- Sessions: (talking over) That is not, uh, did that establish a, uh, some sort of improper contact with Russians? Jeffries: (talking over) I think you understand, I think you understand that- Sessions: (talking over) He’s not Russian either, you know. Jeffries: (talking over) You understand, sir, I get to ask the questions, you provide the answers. In this capacity you’re no longer in the United States Senate. Uh, you voted in 1999 to remove Bill Clinton from office on charges of perjury, correct? Sessions: That is correct. Jeffries: And connected- Sessions: (talking over) Uh, there were other charges, I’m, I voted for impeachment, yes. Jeffries: (talking over) Simple- Simple question. Yes, I understand. To remove him, actually; impeachment’s in the House. In connection with that vote to remove President Clinton from office, you gave this speech on the Senate floor on February 29, 1999, and in it, you acknowledge, uh, that while serving as U.S. Attorney, you once prosecuted a young police officer who lied in a deposition. And in that speech, you decided to prosecute that young police officer even though he corrected his testimony. Now you’ve testified under oath before the Senate judiciary committee in January. You subsequently corrected that testimony in a March 6 written submission, and have been forced repeatedly to come back to the Senate and now the House to clarify. When explaining your vote on the Senate floor to remove Bill Clinton from office, you stated that you refuse to hold a President accountable to a different standard than the young police officer who you prosecuted. Let me be clear: The Attorney General of the United States of America should not be held to a different standard than the young police officer whose life you ruined by prosecuting him for perjury. I yield back.

(End transcription)

In the wise words of Macklemore, its a murder scene, you’re gonna learn some things 

OH. MY. GOD. 

Hoisted by his own pertard! But actually how could this angel be accused of such treason?!?! pundit would NEVER bark during Game of Thrones

It’s wrong to use politics to obscure science and facts and this acutely threatens the health & safety of our country. Period!

“Trump administration officials are forbidding officials at the nation’s top public health agency from using a list of seven words or phrases - including “fetus” and “transgender” - in any official documents being prepared for next year’s budget.

The forbidden words are: vulnerable, entitlement, diversity, transgender, fetus, evidence-based and science-based.”

this is how it starts 

In New York City, the neighborhood a person lives in can speak volumes. So when Brooklyn-born Bernie Sanders returned to town, there was no chance he would set up his campaign offices on the Upper East Side, or in Tribeca, or in any of the tony neighborhoods that the 1 percent of the 1 percent call home. (God forbid he go anywhere near Fifth Avenue, where Trump Tower looms like an evil obelisk.) Instead, his campaign opened up its first New York headquarters in a warehouse near the Gowanus Canal, the notorious Superfund site, in the hopes of bringing the revolution to a more bohemian part of Brooklyn.

And this part of Brooklyn, it seems, appears ready for it. Gowanus is “a lot of industrial space that has recently been moved into by hipsters,” Tia Schellstede, a freelance video editor turned Sanders volunteer turned phone-bank captain, joked. Sanders’s HQ blends in naturally. It is hidden behind a car wash and across the street from a pie store, with an entrance concealed in an alley that is lined with rusting corrugated-steel sheets. (Or it would have been concealed, were it not for the dozens of blue Bernie signs marking the path from the street to the door, covered in even more Bernie signs.) The Morbid Anatomy Museum, a library dedicated to old-timey death-related artifacts, stands a block away. There’s a cloth-diaper store nearby. And then there is the Interference Archive, a library well known in activist circles,dedicated to collecting memorabilia from radical social-justice movements. It’s a far cry from Hillary Clinton’s Brooklyn headquarters, which is housed in a nondescript corporate office building on the edge of Brooklyn Heights. (Politico New York called the area “an office district in the making.”)

But it wasn’t until I entered Sanders’s Brooklyn shop that I could truly behold the depths of its Brooklyn-ness. Inside is a starving artist’s dream: a warehouse with exposed wood beams vaulting into the ceiling, crammed with the normal detritus befitting a political campaign—boxes of flyers, bags of buttons and pins, foldout gray tables, couches seemingly sourced from the “free” section of Craigslist. And of course, ubiquitous Bernie posters, in all languages, in all colors, several of them homemade and scribbled by hand, others just silhouettes of his windblown white hair and glasses.

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