The last 3 were Clinton, Obama and Biden 🤢 🤮
Oh but please support the next ghoul we put forward, it'll be totally different this time. Promise! 😉
The last 3 were Clinton, Obama and Biden 🤢 🤮
Oh but please support the next ghoul we put forward, it'll be totally different this time. Promise! 😉
Neo-liberal hivemind think is pretty accurate. Protect the Queen (corporations) at all cost.
The Borgeoisie
Bernie should have been president. He was so good for the working class.
Imperial core social democrats are not the friend of the working classes (the vast majority of whom live in the global south). Their goal is preserve the empire, and negotiate with capitalists to try to allocate a larger portion of the surplus value extracted from the global south into social welfare policies.
IE they want to fund social welfare policies off the backs of the world's working poor, usually funded via a tax on imports.
Ah, I see, so a pedophile was the better choice in your opinion.
Bernie supported and asked people to vote for biden, who raped a woman in the 90s.
Again, despite what bernie and other war hawks tell you, there are options outside the democratic party.
Trump rapes children.
You can just keep repeating that as much as you want but it won't change the fact Democrats are dogshit and perfectly happy with 99.9% of Trump's policies.
Plus, the democrats are perfectly okay with the child rapists. They could have pushed on the Epstein investigation, but there was not a peep about it. Apparently Ghislaine Maxwell was convicted of pimping hundreds of children to absolutely nobody.
Bernie is basically a modern day version of Bernstein. Though a century apart, both peddle reformism as a political pacifier, diverting energy from the radical systemic change required to dismantle capitalism. Their approaches, while superficially progressive, function as ideological traps, diverting energy from serious movements necessary to upend capitalism.
Bernstein was a leading figure in Germany’s SPD, and he famously rejected Marxist revolutionary praxis in favor of evolutionary socialism. He argued capitalism could be gradually reformed into socialism through parliamentary means, dismissing the inevitability of class conflict. He neutralized the SPD’s revolutionary potential, channeling working-class demands into compromises like wage increases or limited welfare programs that left capitalist hierarchies intact. As Rosa Luxemburg warned in Reform or Revolution, Bernstein’s strategy reduced socialism to a “mild appendage” of liberalism, sapping the working class of its transformative agency.
Likewise, the political project that Bernie pursued mirrors Bernstein’s trajectory. While Sanders critiques inequality and corporate power, his platform centers on social democratic reforms, such as Medicare for All, tuition-free college, a $15 minimum wage, that treat symptoms instead of root causes. By framing electoral victory as the primary objective, Sanders diverted a what could have been a millions strong grassroots movement into the Democratic Party, an institution structurally committed to maintaining capitalism. His campaigns absorbed activist energy into phone banking and voter outreach, rather than building durable, extra-parliamentary power such as workplace organizations, tenant unions, and so on.
When Sanders conceded to Hillary Clinton and later Joe Biden, his base dissolved into disillusionment or shifted focus to lesser-evilism. Without autonomous structures to sustain pressure, the movement’s momentum evaporated similarly to how the SPD was integrated into Weimar Germany’s capitalist state. However, even if his agenda were enacted, it would exist within a neoliberal framework. Much like FDR’s New Deal coexisted with Jim Crow, imperial plunder, and union busting. Reforms within the system are always contingent on their utility to capital, and their purpose is demobilize the workers.
A meaningful challenge to capitalism requires a long-term strategy that combines direct action, mass education, and dual power structures. Imagine if Sanders had urged supporters to unionize workplaces, organize rent strikes, and create community mutual aid networks alongside electoral engagement. Movements like MAS in Bolivia, show how grassroots power can pressure institutions while cultivating revolutionary consciousness. Instead, his campaign became a referendum on his candidacy, leaving his followers adrift after his defeat.
Bernstein and Sanders, despite their intentions, exemplify the dead end of reformism. Their projects mistake tactical concessions for strategic victory, ignoring capitalism’s relentless drive to commodify and co-opt. In the end, the reformist approach ends up midwifing full blown fascism. By channeling energy into parliamentary politics, the SPD deprioritized mass mobilization. Unions and workers were encouraged to seek concessions rather than challenge capitalist power structures. This eroded class consciousness and left the working class unprepared to confront the nazi threat.
When the nazis gained momentum, the SPD clung to legalistic strategies, refusing to support strikes or armed resistance against Hitler. Their faith in bourgeois democracy blinded them to the existential threat of fascism, which exploited economic despair and nationalist resentment. In the end, SPD famously allied with the nazis against the communists.
The “progressive” wing of the Democratic Party is following in the footsteps of the SPD’s reformist trajectory. While advocating for policies like Medicare for All or climate action, it operates within capitalist constraints, undermining radical change and inadvertently fueling right-wing extremism. The Democrats absorb grassroots energy into electoral campaigns while their reliance on corporate donors ensures watered-down policies that fuel disillusionment.
The SPD’s reformism actively enabled fascism by disorganizing the working class and legitimizing capitalist violence. Similarly, the Democratic Party’s commitment to pragmatic incrementalism sustains a system that breeds reactionary backlash. Trump is a direct product of these policies. We’re just watching history on repeat here.
While the buffoon you're replying to didn't take the time to appreciate what you said, I just want you to know that I do.
❤️🔥
the closest he ever came to becoming president was during the primaries of 2016 and 2020 and he obediently stepped aside with the democratic party leadership told him to; i don't think he actually wants to become president anymore. (presuming that he seriously did at one point).