Following up on this post, Robert Reich said this:
"Bernie is right – but his point goes far beyond the Democratic
Party. There is no way to reverse widening inequality, stagnant wages,
the persistence of poverty, and unequal opportunity in America without a
political movement to overcome the moneyed interests that have taken
over our democracy. Good policy ideas are irrelevant without a public
that’s mobilized, organized, and energized enough to make them happen.
"In the campaign of 1936, a voter approached Franklin D. Roosevelt,
saying she’d vote for him if he did several things in his second term
she wanted done. “I’d like to do every one of those,” he said, “but if
I'm elected, you must make me.” In other words, he couldn’t do them by
himself even if elected president. He needed her and millions like her
to push him and Congress to do it. I’ve worked for three presidents and
viewed several others close up. Campaign promises are meaningless. The
only way good things happen in Washington is if good people outside
Washington force them to happen. This is truer now than ever.
"Bernie’s campaign is important not just for what Bernie is saying must be done, but for the movement he is mobilizing."
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