Padawanbater2
Well-Known Member
That's your opinion, my opinion is different. Since we can't prove either of our opinions, I don't see how this line of criticism is relevantWe've gone around and around about this. Bernie didn't win enough votes in the important delegations of the party. You seem to think that everybody who voted for Hillary were unduly influenced by machinations of some really stupid people in the DNC. (Have you read the extracts that have been published?) Nonetheless, you are saying that you and I and all the other Sanders supporters were clear headed and unaffected but the majority of the Democratic Party's voters were not. I think that's elitist and don't buy that argument. Hillary got 31% more votes than Bernie did, most of the black and Hispanic votes and a clear majority of the women's vote. Using past elections as a guide, the shit that went on by the DNC maybe might have affected a percent or two. But I don't think even that.
Here, you're essentially agreeing with me that the DNC cheated, we simply disagree on the degree of its effectiveness. I think what matters is they cheated at all, you think what matters is only if the cheating affected the election
Can you explain why it doesn't matter if the DNC cheated if it didn't affect the outcome of the election when you don't know if it did or not?
I don't see how that can be ruled out one way or the other since there isn't enough information to make that conclusion. I don't think the DNC would have destroyed their reputation and Debbie Wasserman Schultz would have risked her job for nothing, I think it's naive to believe it didn't affect the outcome of the election in any considerable way, but since I obviously can't prove that, I won't use that line of reasoning to make an argument, just stating my opinionOnce we can rule out an actual steal and can rule out actual laws broken then it comes down to a morals issue. There you do have a point. The Democratic Party hacks behaved abysmally. But in this case, I can see no evidence that Hillary was involved. And so, I'm not morally outraged regarding Hillary or her winning the nomination over this. I'm interested in going back after the election and seeing that something is done to prevent it in the future.
Clinton's involvement to whatever degree, again, is irrelevant. I'm not sure why you keep avoiding addressing my analogy to Monopoly - it wouldn't matter to the legitimacy of the game if Buck was aware of my behavior as the bank - so why would it matter to the legitimacy of the election if Clinton was aware of the DNCs behavior as a "neutral party" during the primary?
So what if someone donated the maximum legal amount to Clinton, then donated the maximum legal amount to the HVF under the presumption it would be going to down ticket democratic candidates that then got funnelled back to Clinton's campaign directly? Wouldn't that mean that same person donated the maximum legal amount to one political candidate twice?That funding issue with the Hillary Victory Fund chaps me though. Again, I'm not going to have a fit over it but I wonder how much "help" the DNC will actually give to State Parties based upon those Victory fund dollars. Hillary's campaign made out pretty well from that bit of shenanigans. I don't like it but it's not enough to move me to vote for Trump. I'd like to see this kind of instrument cleaned up too.
But I'm not in a dither over this. As far as I can tell, this is politics as usual. You can reply with your usual flame.
I'm no lawyer, and I could be wrong, but I was under the impression that was actually illegal according to the FEC