Okay but
Vote for Bernie
Not today Justin
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@katersmarie
Okay but
Vote for Bernie
Me age 5: "We should share our things and help each other out."
Everyone: "Wow such a great and nice kid such a good role model sharing is caring!"
Me age 17: "We should share our things and help each other out."
Everyone: "IDIOT SOCIALIST COMMY! ENTITLED MILLENNIAL PIECE OF SHIT!"
When I see people supporting Bernie Sanders
When I see people supporting Donald Trump
If Bernie Sanders wins we’re not calling him President Sanders we’re calling him Grandpa Bernie okay no arguments
I can’t deal with people who treat Bernie Sanders supporters (or anyone who supports democratic socialism, for that matter) like we’re just stupid, lazy, entitled brats who want to live off of the government and never do any actual work or contribute to society. That’s just not true.Â
On top of making minimum wage something that people can actually survive on, and treating healthcare as an inherent human right (because it is!), Bernie Sanders supporters want affordable college education!! Does that sound like a group of people who don’t want to work? Why would you want to go to college if you don’t want to work!? That makes no sense!?Â
Educate the populace so they can find and create good middle class jobs, and they’ll be able to make up for all of their “free” education through taxation and give back to the community which allowed them to succeed in the first place. This isn’t a hard concept. Nobody wants to “mooch” off of the government forever. We want education so that never has to be an option for us ever again! We want to be productive! We want to be able to give back to our community! This isn’t hard to understand!Â
The truly entitled people are the billionaires who could never have become billionaires if it weren’t for this country and refuse to invest in or give back to the community that allowed them to become rich in the first place. The working poor contribute more to society than greedy money grubbers who hoard all of their riches in offshore accounts and refuse to hire people unless they can pay them slave wages.Â
Hozier did a Q/A on facebook and i love him
@qvirkyqvirks
Bernie Sanders on Sandra Bland
I support almost all things Bernie but I have to say I find it hard to think that my $40,000 worth of debt for nursing school and my $15/hr salary that I currently make should be equivalent to someone with a GED working in fast food. Cost of living is going to sky rocket in relation to the minimum wage going up that much, and I don't see how businesses can afford to stay afloat doing this. Please explain to me how this is the same and how my job is the same as someone working at Burger King?
That’s a good question anon. And neither of us feel that we’re educated enough on the topic to speak on it so I’m going to turn this over to our followers who are better versed in economics. Thoughts?
1) nonny, first of all, you should be being paid more than $15 an hour for being a nurse. If the minimum wage had kept pace with inflation right now it would be around $22 an hour. It hasn’t. It’s $7 an hour. The problem isn’t paying people as much as you, the problem is you are being underpaid. The good news is if your employer wants to keep educated people like yourself, they will have to increase your salary because you will have other options out there that pay better than what they’re giving you if the minimum wage goes up overall.
b) There is no evidence that increasing the minimum wage will increase the cost of living. Cost of living is about the price of groceries, rent, medical care, etc. Rents are already insanely high in the US and that’s because people lost their homes in the 2007-2008 crash. The rental market got flooded with people and rents skyrocketed because demand was so high. There’s a strong possibility that a higher minimum wage, bringing people to a more stable income threshold, will increase home ownership, reducing the number of renters and bringing demand down, also bringing rental costs down too.
Medical care costs are now being controlled thanks to the Affordable Care Act, meaning increasing minimum wage will not increase the cost of health care. There is a chance that increasing the minimum wage could result in slightly higher costs for groceries and dry goods, but the cost of groceries is already going up thanks to the massive drought in California. It is unlikely that a higher minimum wage will push the cost of groceries out of reach for anyone, though. (See the quote below.)
iii) If you by chance meant that “inflation” will rise, not cost of living, it won’t. There is no evidence anywhere that minimum wage increases cause big explosions of inflation. Check out this summary:
Past research on how business costs rise with minimum wage hikes indicates that a 10-percent minimum wage hike can be expected to produce a cost increase for the average business of less than one-tenth of one percent of their sales revenue. This cost figure includes three components. First, mandated raises: the raises employers must give their workers to meet the new wage floor. Second, “ripple-effect” raises: the raises employers give some workers to put their pay rates a bit above the new minimum in order to preserve the same wage hierarchy before and after minimum wage hike. And third, the higher payroll taxes employers must pay on their now-larger wage bill. If the average businesses wanted to completely cover the cost increase from a 10-percent minimum wage hike through higher prices, they would need to raise their prices by less than 0.1 percent.[1]A price increase of this size amounts to marking up a $100 price tag to $100.10.
Finally, the Department of Labor sums up the situation:
Since 1938, the federal minimum wage has been increased 22 times. For more than 75 years, real GDP per capita has steadily increased, even when the minimum wage has been raised.Â
Every single time a raise in the minimum wage has been proposed, Republicans have screeched about inflation and lost jobs and how it will devastate the economy and it has never happened.
The real problem here is you are being underpaid and your college costs, like mine, were too high. Requiring people who do the work you and I do not want to do to suffer shit wages for doing that work helps nobody.
our corporate overlords depend on people believing that a minimum wage raise will somehow increase costs for everybody, they depend on this myth so that one of two things can happen
public opinion in favor of a raise isnt strong enough to defeat public opinion against it and they can save their 0.1% of their money
the minimum wage raise passes but everyone believes it will naturally lead to higher prices so they raise all their prices unnecessarily to jam more money in their overstuffed pockets
The minimum wage should be a living wage not a starvation wage - Bernie SandersÂ
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Contribute to the Bernie Sanders campaignÂ
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“Do not pray for an easy life, pray for the strength to endure a difficult one.”
Bruce Lee (via psych-facts)
Watch how Bernie Sanders stop Chuck Todd cold when he tries to spin the corporate media's false narrative on two specific issues. He takes command.
This is why I love Bernie! He won’t put up with their bullshit.
An email from Bernie Sanders
I just received this message from Bernie Sanders’ 2016 presidential campaign. I admire the hell out of Sanders’ voting record and his political agenda, and gladly support his run for president, so I’m pasting most of his recent email below. I hope that you too find its aims important and its rhetoric agreeable:
“Let me be very blunt and tell you why I am running. This country faces more serious problems today than at any time in modern history, and establishment politics will not successfully resolve them. Corporate greed is rampant, and the very rich keep growing richer while everyone else grows poorer. Despite an explosion in technology and a huge increase in productivity, the middle class continues to disappear, most Americans work longer hours for lower wages, and 45 million live in poverty. The skyrocketing level of income and wealth inequality is not only grotesque and immoral, it is economically unsustainable. It is unconscionable that 99% of all new income goes to the top 1%. It is absurd that the top one-tenth of 1% own almost as much wealth as the bottom 90%, and that one family (the Waltons of Walmart) has more wealth than the bottom 130 million Americans. As a result of the disastrous Supreme Court ruling on Citizens United, the billionaire class is spending huge amounts of money to buy candidates and elections. We are now witnessing the undermining of American democracy and the rapid movement toward oligarchy where a handful of very wealthy families and their Super PACs will control our government. The scientific community is virtually unanimous in telling us that climate change is real, is caused by human activity, and is already bringing catastrophic damage to our planet. Yet, the Republican Party is prepared to reject science in order to gain campaign contributions from the Koch brothers, Big Energy companies and others who make billions on fossil fuels. If we do not act boldly on climate change, the planet we leave to our grandchildren may be uninhabitable. The United States once led the world in terms of the percentage of our young people who had college degrees. Today, in a highly competitive global economy, we are now in 12th place. Hundreds of thousands of bright young people have given up on the dream of higher education, while millions of others leave school with oppressive debt. Our infrastructure – roads, bridges, rail, airports, water systems, wastewater plants, levees, dams – is crumbling, and Congress refuses to appropriate anywhere near the necessary funds to rebuild it. If we do not invest substantially in infrastructure, a bad situation will only become much worse. Despite substantial gains, we still have a long way to go to achieve equality for minorities. Instead of investing in opportunities, we are locking people up at an incredible rate. We now have the highest incarceration rate in the entire world with over 2 million in prison and millions more on probation or parole. We have a broken immigration system that divides families and keeps millions of hard-working people in the shadows. Most of the major Wall Street financial institutions that we bailed out because they were “too big to fail,” are now bigger than they used to be. The six largest financial institutions now have assets equivalent to nearly 60% of our GDP, issue 35% of the mortgages, and oversee 65% of credit cards. Our tax system is wildly unfair - rigged to benefit the very rich. Major corporations that earn billions in profits stash their money in tax havens and pay nothing in federal income taxes, while billionaire hedge fund managers pay a lower effective tax rate than nurses or teachers. Despite growing poverty among seniors, almost all Republicans, and some Democrats, want to cut Social Security and benefits for disabled veterans. They want more austerity for the elderly, the children, the sick and the poor, and more tax breaks for the rich. The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have cost us thousands of lives and trillions of dollars. The United States spends more on the military than the next nine biggest-spending countries combined. Today, there are massive cost over-runs with defense contractors and the Pentagon cannot even pass an independent audit. We are at a moment of truth. We need to face up to the reality of where we are as a nation, and we need a mass movement of people to change that reality. Let’s be clear. This campaign is not about Bernie Sanders. It’s about a grassroots movement of Americans standing up and saying: “Enough is enough. This country and our government belong to all of us, not just a handful of billionaires.” I have discussed some of the major crises that we face. Let me give you the outline of an agenda which addresses these problems. Jobs, Jobs, Jobs: The truth is that real unemployment in our country is not the “official” and widely-reported 5.4 percent. Counting those who are underemployed and those who have given up looking for work, real unemployment is almost 11 percent. Even more disturbingly, real unemployment for white and Hispanic youth is over 30 percent, while African-American youth unemployment is over 50 percent. We need a major federal jobs program. The most effective way to do that is to rebuild our crumbling infrastructure. To do that, I have introduced legislation which would invest $1 trillion over 5 years to modernize our country’s physical infrastructure. This would create and maintain at least 13 million good-paying jobs. It would also make our country more productive, efficient and safe. As a member of Congress who voted against NAFTA, CAFTA, Permanent Normal Trade Relations with China (PNTR) and is helping to lead the opposition against the TPP, I will continue my opposition to trade policies which have cost us millions of decent paying jobs as corporate America shuts down plants here and moves them to low-wage countries. Raising Wages: Today, millions of Americans are working for starvation wages and median family income has declined by almost $5,000 since 1999. The current federal minimum wage of $7.25 an hour is totally inadequate. We need to raise the minimum wage to a living wage - $15 an hour over the next few years. Our goal must be that no full-time worker in this country lives in poverty. We must also bring about pay equity for women. There is no rational reason why women should be earning 78 cents on the dollar compared to men who perform the same work. Further, we need to implement “family values” for American working families. It is unacceptable that the United States is the only major country on earth that does not guarantee family and medical leave, sick time and paid vacations. Wealth and Income Inequality: Today, the richest 400 Americans own over $2.2 trillion in wealth, more than the bottom 150 million Americans combined. Meanwhile, nearly half of all Americans have less than $10,000 in savings and have no idea how they will be able to retire with dignity. In order to reverse the massive transfer of wealth and income from the middle class to the very rich that we have seen in recent years, we need real tax reform which makes the wealthy and profitable corporations begin to pay their fair share of taxes. It is fiscally irresponsible that the U.S. Treasury loses about $100 billion a year because corporations and the rich stash their profits in the Cayman Islands, Bermuda and other tax havens. We need a tax system which is fair and progressive. Children should not go hungry in this country while profitable corporations and the wealthy avoid their tax responsibilities. Reforming Wall Street: I have introduced legislation which would break up the largest financial institutions in the country. In my view, if a bank is too big to fail, it is too big to exist. Wall Street cannot continue to be an island unto itself investing trillions in risky financial instruments. We need banks that invest in the job-creating productive economy. We do not need more speculation and gambling in casino-type activities. Campaign Finance Reform: We need to return to a one-person, one-vote democracy. It is not acceptable that the Koch brothers and other billionaires are spending endless sums of money to buy elections. I have introduced legislation which would overturn the horrendous Citizens United decision and will only appoint Supreme Court justices who are prepared to do that. We must also demand disclosure of all large campaign contributions. Long term, we need to move to public funding of elections. Fighting Climate Change: The United States must lead the world in reversing climate change and make certain that this planet is habitable for our children and grandchildren. We must transform our energy system away from fossil fuels and into energy efficiency and sustainable energies. Millions of homes and buildings need to be weatherized, our transportation system needs to be energy efficient and we need to greatly accelerate the progress we are already seeing in wind, solar, geothermal and other forms of sustainable energy. Transforming our energy system will not only protect the environment, it will create good-paying jobs. Health Care for All: The United States remains the only major country on earth that does not guarantee health care for all as a right. Despite the modest gains of the Affordable Care Act, 35 million Americans continue to lack health insurance and many more are under-insured. Yet, we continue paying far more per capita for health care than any other nation. The United States must move toward a Medicare-for-All single-payer system. Protecting Our Most Vulnerable: Today, the United States has more people living in poverty than at almost any time in the modern history of our country. We have the highest rate of childhood poverty of any major nation, and millions of seniors and people with disabilities struggle to put food on the table because of insufficient Social Security benefits. In my view, we have a moral responsibility to make certain that no American goes hungry or sleeps on the street. We must also make certain that seniors and people with disabilities can live in dignity. Not only must we vigorously oppose Republican attacks on the social safety net, we must expand benefits for those most in need. That is why I have recently introduced legislation which would extend the solvency of Social Security until 2065, while increasing benefits for those most in need. Expanding Opportunity and Equality: We need to stop using prisons as a response to poverty. Our criminal justice system needs to be reformed so that we do not continue to house non-violent offenders at huge expense when that money could be used to rebuild communities and create opportunity. We need federal leadership to reform policing in America, to end racial profiling, and to fight the illegal activities of hate groups. We need comprehensive immigration reform that protects families and leads to a responsible and realistic path to citizenship. Dismantling Structural Racism: Throughout much of our history, the elite in America has divided people along racial lines in an effort to consolidate wealth and power. We need to simultaneously address the structural and institutional racism which exists in this country while at the same time vigorously attacking the grotesque level of income and wealth inequality which is making the very rich much richer, and everyone else - especially the African-American community - much poorer. Meanwhile, too many people of color in this country find themselves subjected to a system that treats citizens who have not committed crimes like criminals. We have more people locked up in jail than any other country on earth. We need to invest in jobs and education, not jails and incarceration. Finally, no person should have to worry that a routine interaction with law enforcement will end in violence and death. Black lives matter: we must reform our criminal justice system, move away from the militarization of police forces, and invest in community policing. College for All: The United States must join Germany and many other countries in understanding that investing in our young people’s education is investing in the future of our nation. I have introduced legislation to make tuition in public colleges and universities free, as well as substantially lowering interest rates on student loans. War and Peace: I voted against the war in Iraq, and that was the right vote. We must be vigorous in combatting terrorism, but we can’t do it alone. We must be part of an international coalition that includes Muslim nations which not only defeats ISIS but which works hard to create conditions for lasting peace. I will vigorously oppose an endless war in the Middle East. My approach to campaigning is pretty simple and straight-forward. We hold a lot of public meetings in towns that are big and small. People ask questions and make comments. We discuss the important issues facing our country. And that’s it. Nothing very fancy. It’s called democracy and I like that approach very much. It’s something I’ve done my whole political life. I hope very much that you will join me at one of our meetings. I hope that you will become part of our campaign team. And I hope that you will watch our video and make a contribution to our campaign: https://go.berniesanders.com/sneak-peek Let us never forget: This country belongs to all of us, not just a handful of billionaires. Sincerely, Senator Bernie Sanders”
JoancĂ©Â
Just going to leave this here
)dangernips:
!!!
To date they have killed far more Muslims than any other religious group. It’s not Islam vs Christianity, nor is it ISIS vs Christians, it’s ISIS vs the rest of the world. The media’s portrayal of ISIS is simply manipulative propaganda to inveigle the masses into harboring prejudice against Islam/Muslims and thus supporting US imperialism. They’ve duped the entire west into believing the Christian persecution is the primary, or even most significant endeavor of ISIS. I won’t even mention how ISIS was actually created by the US(either directly or indirectly).
!!!!!!! pay attention!!!
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