Yes, Tony, Sanders Lost His Campaigns. And You’ve Lost the Point.
He and AOC are building something more powerful than a campaign. And it’s working.
Alright, buddy, I’ve been listening to your rant about Sanders and AOC, and I have to say... you’re missing the point. Yeah, Sanders is old. He’s lost two presidential campaigns. And sure, socialist and progressive are words the right and corporate Democrats have turned into boogeymen.
But here’s the thing: None of that matters. Because what they’re doing right now is working. And you know it.
While the DNC is struggling to fill rooms for their so-called “People’s Town Halls,” Sanders and AOC are drawing tens of thousands of people to hear them call out the billionaires, the corporations, and the politicians who’ve spent decades screwing them over.
And they’re not trying to win over the Democratic establishment. They’re trying to make the establishment irrelevant. And judging by the crowds, it’s working.
So yeah, Sanders lost his campaigns. But let’s not pretend those losses didn’t accomplish anything. Those campaigns reshaped the political landscape. They made Medicare for All, free public college, and wealth taxes mainstream ideas. They dragged economic justice into the national conversation where it wasn’t even a whisper before.
Now, he’s using that credibility to build something bigger than himself. That’s the whole point. It’s not about him. It’s about the movement. And people are responding because they can tell this isn’t about personal ambition. It’s about fighting a broken system that’s rigged against them.
They’re Offering Something Different
Here’s what you’re missing: Sanders and AOC are naming the villains. And that clarity is powerful. They’re not just saying, “Republicans are bad, vote blue no matter who.” They’re saying, “This entire system is rigged, and here’s exactly who’s rigging it.”
When Sanders says, “The billionaire class is taking it all, and they’re leaving the rest of us to fight over the scraps. And you know what? We’re done fighting each other. We’re ready to fight back.” — people get it.
You should love this, Tony. They sound like you.
They’re not pulling punches. They’re calling out corporate Democrats and Republicans alike for selling out working people. And the crowds they’re drawing? They’re not just hardcore progressives. They’re people who feel politically homeless, fed up with both parties serving the wealthy at their expense.
You can call it populism or class warfare or whatever. But the reality is, they’re talking about the stuff that actually matters. Healthcare. Rent. Wages. Corporate greed. The things that affect people’s lives every single day. The stuff you rant about every single weekday for two full hours.
And while the DNC can’t fill a room, Sanders and AOC are drawing tens of thousands. Why? Because they’re offering something real. They’re speaking to people’s pain. And they’re not pretending the problem is just the “other side.”
The Balance of Experience and Energy
And I know you think Sanders is too old or that he’s had his shot. But you’re completely missing what makes the Sanders-AOC partnership work. It’s the perfect combination of experience and energy.
Sanders has the consistency and credibility of someone who’s been fighting this fight for decades. People believe him because he’s been saying the same thing his entire career.
But where Sanders brings consistency, AOC brings energy, charisma, and the ability to speak directly to a generation left behind by both parties. When she says, “You deserve better than a country where billionaires are treated like heroes while you can’t afford your rent,” it sounds like YOU.
Together, they’re reaching a broad spectrum of people who feel politically abandoned. And that’s what makes them effective. They’re not fighting for themselves. They’re fighting to build a coalition that can actually challenge the system.
This isn’t the midterms or a set-up for a presidential run. We are in the thick of a constitutional crisis, an increasingly fast descent into authoritarianism. People are screaming for solutions and leadership, and they are the ones providing it.
They’re Addressing Kitchen-Table Issues — But They Could Do Better
Okay, I’ll throw you a bone. Sanders and AOC could be more explicit about connecting corporate greed to everyday suffering. They’re hitting the right topics — healthcare, housing, price gouging, Social Security. But sometimes, it feels more like they’re naming the villains without clearly connecting those villains to the struggles people face every day.
For example:
They talk about Medicare for All all the time. But just saying “no one should go broke from a medical bill” would hit harder and make it personal. (Hmm. Where have I heard that before?)
Sanders already called out Cal-Maine Foods for jacking up egg prices to make record profits. But if he added, “Egg prices didn’t skyrocket because of some mysterious force. They skyrocketed because executives saw an opportunity to gouge you and make record profits while you struggled to put food on the table.” — that’s the connection they need to make more often.
The point is, they’re already talking about kitchen-table issues. They just need to sharpen the language and make it obvious how the villains are causing the pain.
Avoiding the Culture War Trap
And look, I know you agree with me on this one. Culture wars are nothing but distractions designed to keep people divided. And Sanders and AOC are wise not to get pulled into every bad-faith argument about “wokeism” and other nonsense right now.
But here’s where I’ll push them a bit. They should just come out and say it:
“All of these culture war fights? They’re distractions designed to keep you fighting each other instead of fighting the people who are robbing you blind.”
Naming it for what it is would only make their message stronger. That’s what you would do, right? Just more colorfully, no doubt.
How They Could Be Even More Effective
If you want me to be totally fair, here’s where Sanders and AOC could step up: They need to bring in more voices.
They should highlight people like Mallory McMorrow, Cori Bush, Ro Khanna, Summer Lee, and Lateefah Simon and bring in local organizers who are fighting the same battle on the ground.
The more they elevate others, the more they prove this isn’t about their egos. It’s about building a movement so big and undeniable that no amount of corporate money can shut it down. Plus, it counters the dichotomy of their own name recognition: yes, it brings in crowds, but it also comes with baggage.
I’ll be frank with you: I don’t give a damn who it is up there essentially echoing your message. We are desperate for someone— anyone— to rise up and take a stand against this insanity. If we have to literally Weekend at Bernie’s it, I’ll take the right side, and you can take the left because this shit has to happen NOW.
The Long Game
So here’s my question for you: Are we going to build on what Sanders and AOC are doing and make this movement even bigger? Or are we going to sit around picking apart their imperfections while the DNC keeps fumbling its way to irrelevance?
Because whether you like it or not, they’re doing something right. And if we don’t recognize that, we’re wasting our best shot at building something real.
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It’s cute people still believe Bernie lost the votes in 2016 and 2020 and refuse to recognize the BLATANT corruption in the DNC. We The People were completely with Bernie. His donations and crowd size proved it. In 2020 Biden couldn’t fill a HS gym before the Primary and you didn’t see HRC holding any rallies ANYWHERE.
At least Bernie and AOC are doing something unlike any of the other Democrats the pieces of s*** sitting there in their chairs and doing absolutely nothing except getting their paychecks.