Monker wrote:You analysis is based solely on opinion...what I am saying is based on the available facts. Those facts contradict your opinion.
You have been championing Hillary on here for months. All of your "facts" are rooted in your insuppressible hard-on for the inevitable one, who is running a horrible campaign and will probably be indicted. At the start of September, Hillary strategists rebooted her campaign. She appeared on Ellen and danced - looking like a fucking moron. She did a mea culpa on TV for the email mess. What's next? A phot-op wearing camo waders and hunting for varmints? This is a campaign in a tailspin. I predict that she will drop out of the race by November. At this point, you sound as deluded as a Lyndon LaRouche supporter handing out pamphlets on a street corner.
Monker wrote:In fact, I was watching Maddow a while back, and Sanders alluded that he did not even had the infrastructure in place to run a true national campaign.
And I watched the same interview. First off, presidential campaigns do not typically have campaign offices in all 50 states to start off with. Bernie's campaign has continually expanded and opened more offices. Bernie himself is visiting red states and even conservative viper pits like Liberty University. Say what you will, but the dude has balls. Meanwhile, Hillary keeps the press cordoned off and only agrees to cushy sit down interviews with pre-agreed upon questions. If Hillary's campaign is better financed, well, maybe that is because her top donors are the same corrupt scumbags that destroyed the economy, including: Citigroup, Morgan Stanley, JPMorgan, Lehman Bros, Merrill Lynch etc. Change you can believe in, right?
Monker wrote:He even admitted he didn't expect to have the support that he does. He obviously entered to bring his agenda to the front, but did not expect to be a serious contender.
That is false. Bernie said repeatedly he would only enter the race if he could win and run a campaign based on small donor campaigns.This is not a vanity campaign like Kucinich, Mike Gravel, or Gary Johnson. Several of Obama's top people that orchestrated his campaign are working for Sanders.
Monker wrote:ClintonThis thing hasn't even really started on the Democrat side. When it does and we get some debates, I expect both Sanders and Clinton to go down, and the lesser knowns to go up...and things will really shake up if Biden enters. After a few debates, we'll know who is truly "done", and who isn't.
You poor poor naive fool. And why aren't there any Democratic debates yet, Monker? It is because Debbie Wasserman Schultz, head of the DNC and former Hillary surrogate, colluded with Hillary to limit debates. Now, why would that be? Because every time Hill speaks, her polls take a shit. The Wash Post even reported that Hillary was pushing for the Dems to only have FOUR debates total (link below). Compare that to the 20-some debates that took place in 2008. Does this sound like the strategy of a shoo-in?
https://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/pl ... r-debates/Monker wrote:However you look at things, the Republican leader is their worst available candidate running - and loses against everybody, including Clinton.
I think you are still viewing politics from an old paradigm that no longer applies. Hillary and Jeb are the candidates of the old guard mainstream media, which is now pretty much irrelevant.