320 Years of History
Gold Member
In response to his defeat this weekend in South Carolina's Democratic primary, Bernie Sanders said, "We got decimated." Well, no two ways about that; he did. The thing I find remarkable, given the nature of other candidates' remarks about their performance coming out of earlier races this primary season, is that he didn't try to make a loss into a win; he didn't "spin" the facts. That shouldn't be something that one finds remarkable, yet the bar on honesty and integrity is, these days, so low, it is.
I'm not by any means saying I'm of a mind to vote for Mr. Sanders purely because of my perception of his degree of integrity. I am saying that I sure wish the rest of the candidates still in the race would show equal and greater degrees of it. I'm saying that because although we routinely hear about the electorate being fed up with so-called "establishment" politics and politicians, I believe that dismay is merely a surrogate for what voters truly have had enough of: misrepresentations and "spins" of reality, manipulative prevarication and, of course, boldface lying.
Voters want to be able to rely on what their elected leaders say. Frankly, that's not asking too much.
I'm not by any means saying I'm of a mind to vote for Mr. Sanders purely because of my perception of his degree of integrity. I am saying that I sure wish the rest of the candidates still in the race would show equal and greater degrees of it. I'm saying that because although we routinely hear about the electorate being fed up with so-called "establishment" politics and politicians, I believe that dismay is merely a surrogate for what voters truly have had enough of: misrepresentations and "spins" of reality, manipulative prevarication and, of course, boldface lying.
Voters want to be able to rely on what their elected leaders say. Frankly, that's not asking too much.