Many Thousands of Bernie Supporters Hit Philadelphia's Steamy Streets to Protest DNC & Clinton!

Vigilante

Diamond Member
Mar 9, 2014
51,327
18,076
NBC 10 ^ | 7/24/16
Many thousands of Bernie Sanders supporters are marching down a main thoroughfare in Philadelphia to show their support of him and disdain of Hillary Clinton ahead of the Democratic National Convention. Chanting "Hell No, DNC, we won't vote for Hillary" and "This is what democracy looks like," the marchers headed from City Hall down Broad Street. Broad is the main north-south artery that leads from downtown to the convention site at the Wells Fargo Center about 4 miles away. Many carried Sanders signs, and a huge Bernie Sanders puppet was also a part of the march. Sweltering heat hasn't kept protesters...

Popcorn, peanuts. Get your popcorn, peanuts....COLD BEER!!!!!

maxresdefault.jpg

protest3.jpg

DEM-2016-Philadelphia27-714x485.jpeg


Well GOD BLESS their little Commie/Anarchist souls!!!!!!

Can you say Chicago 1968?????
 
Actually, looks like Chicago 2016 spring when they were attacking Trump's supporters , peacefully standing in line for his rally.

I'm glad now their wild energy has finally found a right object!
 
NBC 10 ^ | 7/24/16
Many thousands of Bernie Sanders supporters are marching down a main thoroughfare in Philadelphia to show their support of him and disdain of Hillary Clinton ahead of the Democratic National Convention. Chanting "Hell No, DNC, we won't vote for Hillary" and "This is what democracy looks like," the marchers headed from City Hall down Broad Street. Broad is the main north-south artery that leads from downtown to the convention site at the Wells Fargo Center about 4 miles away. Many carried Sanders signs, and a huge Bernie Sanders puppet was also a part of the march. Sweltering heat hasn't kept protesters...

Popcorn, peanuts. Get your popcorn, peanuts....COLD BEER!!!!!

maxresdefault.jpg

protest3.jpg

DEM-2016-Philadelphia27-714x485.jpeg


Well GOD BLESS their little Commie/Anarchist souls!!!!!!

Can you say Chicago 1968?????
Wait until the BLM police protests start up again....
 
I am rioting. I will be rioting all week. Providing it doesn't interfere with my schedule. I have 8 more minutes to riot.

Now.............clean it up. Ya..........take that.
 
They exemplify the youth of this country that had their ears stuff full of "EAR candy" from Bernie Sanders, (the candyman.) They are really pissed off they didn't get that "free" college education. That $15.00 per hour minimum wage--and the huge Break Up of the WALL Street banks that Bernie kept campaigning on. Of course, with him having full knowledge that he nor the Federal Government have the authority to break up Wall Street Banks, it sure didn't stop him from campaigning on it anyway.
Bernie Sanders Can't Explain How He'd Break Up Big Banks, Among Other Things | VICE News

This is what radicals do--they protest they're own ignorance, and Bernie Sanders exploited their ignorance to no end.

They also exemplify why there are 714 Democrat Super Delegates. It was the election of 1984--when the Democrat Party experienced this loss.

map_1984_original.jpg


And this is the same result you would have gotten with a Bernie Sanders nominee, just move the blue part over to Vermont. This country is center, it always has been, it always will be. It will not elect far left or far right candidates, much less a recognized and confirmed socialist.


Yes, Bernie Sanders was the perfect candidate for these people. But NOW Sanders has to calm them down, since he has endorsed Hillary Clinton. So the candyman candidate has some issues of his own right now. Sanders started this by referring to the primary as rigged, he's made his bed, so he can sleep in it. It was Bernie Sanders decision, and his alone to change his party status to run on the Democrat ticket. When he did that he also agreed to all DNC party rules and procedures, not only Nationally but in each and every state, and he also agreed to those 714 Super Delegates and what their role was.

There is no doubt that Hillary Clinton is the legitimate candidate of this party. There is nothing in these leaked notes that would have interfered with the vote count, or would have disrupted the Sanders campaign.

Hillary Clinton creamed Bernie Sanders by 3,775,437 popular votes. In comparison, in 2008 Barack Obama defeated Hillary Clinton by a mere 41,622 votes. There were no protests, there were no accusations of a "rigged election". Hillary Clinton graciously dropped out of the race and endorsed Barack Obama. And that's the difference between radicals and non-radicals.
RealClearPolitics - 2016 Democratic Popular Vote
2008 Democratic Popular Vote | RealClearPolitics

ufonotcomingback.jpg
 
Last edited:
Why bother? Bernie still backs Hillary, regardless.

BUT his PEEPS HATE THE C*UNT!!!!... What's da matter can't ya READ????
Still doesn't matter. Hating does nothing, unfortunately. She will be POTUS. Get used to it.
Now you know how Serpico felt. Except it being NYC cops....its the who USA is being screwed. All those in power....media, this administration, the FBI, CIA, etc etc etc...all have been bought.
Now that everyone KNOWS just how deep and high up it goes, it STILL doesn't matter. The usa and all it stood for...is dead.
 
They exemplify the youth of this country that heard all of the "EAR candy" from Bernie Sanders. They are really pissed off they didn't get that "free" college education. That $15.00 per hour minimum wage--and the huge Break Up of the WALL Street banks that Bernie kept campaigning on. Of course, with him having full knowledge that he nor the Federal Government have the authority to break up Wall Street Banks, it sure didn't stop him from campaigning on it anyway.
Bernie Sanders Can't Explain How He'd Break Up Big Banks, Among Other Things | VICE News

This is what radicals do--they protest they're ignorance. Bernie Sanders exploited their ignorance to no end.

They also exemplify why there are 714 Democrat Super Delegates. It was the election of 1984--when the Democrat Party experienced this loss.

map_1984_original.jpg


And this is the same result you would have gotten with a Bernie Sanders nominee, just move the blue part over to Vermont. This country is center, it always has been, it always will be. It will not elect far left or far right candidates, much less a recognized and confirmed socialist.


Yes, Bernie Sanders was the perfect candidate for these people. But NOW Sanders has to calm them down, since he has endorsed Hillary Clinton. So the candyman candidate has some issues of his own right now.

There is no doubt that Hillary Clinton is the legitimate candidate of this party. There is nothing in these leaked notes that would have interfered with the vote count, or would have disrupted the Sanders campaign.

Hillary Clinton creamed Bernie Sanders by 3,775,437 popular votes. In comparison, in 2008 Barack Obama defeated Hillary Clinton by a mere 41,622 votes. There were no protests, there were no accusations of a "rigged election". Hillary Clinton graciously dropped out of the race and endorsed Barack Obama. And that's the difference between radicals and non-radicals.
RealClearPolitics - Election 2016 - General Election: Trump vs. Clinton
2008 Democratic Popular Vote | RealClearPolitics

ufonotcomingback.jpg

Expand Affordable Housing
It is no secret that millions of families are struggling economically. Meanwhile, decent and affordable rental apartments are hard to come by, and millions of households are spending 50 percent or more of their income on housing. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition, 7.1 million American households cannot find affordable housing. That is unacceptable.


  1. As President, Sen. Sanders will fight to:
    Expand the National Affordable Housing Trust Fund. Sen. Sanders is proud to have authored the original National Affordable Housing Trust Fund bill in the House of Representatives in 2001 that became law in 2008. This is the first new federal housing production program in almost three decades, and the first ever designed to build rental housing for extremely low-income households. As president, Sen. Sanders will fight to increase funding for the housing trust fund to at least $5 billion a year in order to construct, preserve, and rehabilitate at least 3.5 million affordable housing rental units over the next decade. Not only will this help address the affordable housing crisis, it will also create millions of good paying jobs in the process.

    Raise the minimum wage. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition (NLIHC), a renter would need to earn a wage of $19.35 per hour in order to afford a modest, two-bedroom apartment in the U.S. One way to start closing the wage/rent gap is to raise the minimum wage to $15 an hour by 2020.

    Reinvigorate federal housing production programs. Over the past decade, the federal programs that build affordable housing for families, for the elderly and for the disabled have been decimated. Nobody disagrees that we need to address the deficit, but it is absurd to balance the budget on the backs of working families, the elderly, the disabled and the poor. We must return to pre-2010 funding levels by ending sequestration and invest more, not less, in affordable housing.

    Defend Fair Housing. The sordid history of housing discrimination is a stain on our collective conscious, and for fifty years the Fair Housing Act has provided critically important legal protection from discrimination because of race, color, national origin, religion, sex or disability. And yet, Republicans have tried over and over again to defund efforts to affirmatively promote fair housing. We must push back, defend and strengthen the law, and make sure we never again tacitly condone housing discrimination.

    Demand more from Affordable Housing Developers. Housing that is built with government subsidies should remain affordable much longer than the 10, 15 or 20 years typically required by federal housing programs. In my state of Vermont, we require affordable housing to remain affordable permanently. In my view, once we subsidize rental housing, we shouldn’t have to pay again and again simply to “preserve” it.

    Repair Public Housing. We need sufficient funding for public housing operating and capital costs, and we need to reduce the unacceptable backlog of public housing capital needs.

    Protect Rental Assistance. We need to provide full funding to all existing project based rental assistance contracts.

    Expand Housing Choice Initiative. We need to increase funding for the housing choice voucher program to target families who need support the most and to provide greater economic stability to the more than 3 million households struggling to remain in safe, secure and affordable housing today.
Promoting Homeownership
Owning a home remains one of the best ways for families to build wealth and enter the middle class. However, for decades, wages have not kept up with the median costs of homes, putting homeownership out of reach for millions of families. The housing crisis that began in 2007 wiped-out the entire household wealth of millions of families, particularly African-American and Latino families who were disproportionately targeted with sub-prime mortgages and had most of their wealth in their homes – the net worth of African-American households fell by more than 50 percent and Latino families by more than 65 percent. We must take aggressive steps to make homeownership more attainable for first time homebuyers, as well as for the millions of families across the country who lost their homes to foreclosure.


  1. As President, Sen. Sanders will fight to:
    Support First Time Homebuyers. We should expand the Department of Housing and Urban Development and USDA Rural Development assistance programs for first time homeownership, particularly through down payment assistance, loan guarantees and direct loans.

    Expand Pre-purchase Housing Counseling. Study after study shows that people who receive counseling before buying a home are more likely to succeed at homeownership. Housing counseling is a good investment in families and communities.

    Implement Credit Score Reform. The credit scores of millions of families have been ruined because of foreclosures or other financial hardships from the economic meltdown. At the same time, a prime score before the crisis was 640. It currently hovers around 740. If we want to rebuild the lost wealth of working families, we need real credit score reform to make the banking and credit industries work for borrowers and not just lenders.

    Prevent Predatory Lending. In the 2000s Sen. Sanders called on Congress to clean up the subprime market by cracking down on predatory lenders. Unfortunately, that didn’t happen. Incredibly, Republicans now want to undermine the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which was created to protect families against fraudulent, deceptive, and abusive lending practices that caused the crisis. By requiring that all mortgage costs are clear, risks are visible, and nothing is buried in fine print, the CFBP makes sure consumers have the information they need to make good financial decisions.

    Protect Homeowner Mortgage Interest Benefits. Sen. Sanders strongly supports tax policies that promote homeownership, and opposes any reform that would negatively impact middle and low-income homeowners. We need to close the second home and yacht loophole, as there is simply no compelling public interest in subsidizing second homes and yachts. We also need to expand homeowner mortgage interest benefits to the 19 million otherwise eligible homeowners who do not itemize their taxes.
Helping Underwater Homeowners
For millions of American families, and for many hard hit communities, the housing crisis is not over. According to the real estate firm CoreLogic, 4.3 million homeowners still owe more than their houses are worth. While the taxpayers of this country, against my strong opposition, bailed out the largest financial institutions in this country with no strings attached, we have never provided an adequate lifeline to underwater homeowners. While Treasury’s Home Affordable Modification Program has helped more than 1.5 million homeowners avoid foreclosure, and the Hardest Hit Fund has assisted another 250,000 ‎homeowners, these are a fraction of the households that were, or are, underwater.


  1. As President, Sen. Sanders will fight to:
    Reinvigorate HARP. The Home Affordable Refinance Program was designed to assist homeowners who are current on their mortgage payments but owe more than their home is worth, by allowing them to refinance their underwater mortgages at lower interest rates. While the average homeowner saves about $2,500 per year, many people who theoretically qualify have not benefitted because of various barriers and inadequate outreach. Sen. Sanders co-sponsored legislation to reduce up-front fees, eliminate appraisal costs for borrowers, streamline the application process and launch a national effort to educate homeowners about the program. As president, he will fight to sign that legislation into law.

    Expand Foreclosure Mitigation Counseling. Just as pre-purchase homeownership counseling works for prospective homebuyers, we need to expand National Foreclosure Mitigation Counseling programs to help underwater homeowners. Studies have shown that underwater homeowners who receive counselling are far more likely to cure a serious delinquency or foreclosure, and stay current after obtaining a cure. The best solution is to keep homeowners in their homes.
Preventing Homelessness
We have made some important strides toward reducing homelessness, but it is a national disgrace that on a given night, almost 565,000 people are homeless in the United States. It is especially distressing that so many are children living in families.

Just as we must build more housing that is affordable to low income renters, we must reinvigorate our homeless assistance programs. Recognizing that one size does not fit all, we must address the unique housing needs of homeless veterans, victims of domestic abuse, and runaway and homeless youth. We must address family homelessness through rapid re-housing where families are quickly connected with permanent housing and their lives returned to relative stability. We must explore new ways to address the more than 83,000 chronically homeless individuals with policies that provide permanent supportive housing first.

And we must address the underlying economic conditions that lead to homelessness, including the fact that a disproportionate number of homeless families are headed by single women.


  1. As President, Sen. Sanders will fight to:
    Prevent Homelessness and Reduce Recidivism. Sen. Sanders strongly supports President Obama’s efforts to house people coming out of prison. In November, he announced a pilot program to reduce recidivism and prevent homelessness by making sure former inmates do not cycle between the criminal justice and homeless service systems. This is a good investment in people leaving prison, and a smart way to prevent homelessness.

    End Chronic Homelessness. Sen. Sanders will fight for sufficient funding to end chronic homelessness.
Getting lead out of our homes
In 2012, the Centers for Disease Control lowered its blood lead threshold for children from 10 to 5 micrograms per deciliter of blood, after research showed that even minute lead levels can significantly impact a child’s brain development and result in behavioral problems and learning disabilities. The CDC estimates that 535,000 American children under six years of age are affected by lead poisoning. This preventable tragedy traps families in poverty and robs children of their opportunity to succeed.


  1. As President, Sen. Sanders will fight to:
    Make HUD-assisted housing lead-free. Sen. Sanders recently joined several colleagues in urging HUD Secretary Julian Castro to do more to prevent lead poisoning in HUD assisted housing. Not only has HUD failed to adopt the new CDC threshold for purposes of requiring landlords to mitigate lead in apartments with children, but HUD has not updated its blood lead level standard since 1999. In fact, HUD allows children’s blood lead levels to be three to four times higher than the new CDC standard before it requires landlords to abate lead. That is unacceptable.
Addressing Housing and Environmental Justice
Homes are not just places to live, they are the building blocks of our communities. Yet, some communities – usually low-income and communities of color – experience a daily assault on their health and environment. They are the hardest hit by air and water pollution from industrial factories, power plants, incinerators, chemical waste and lead contamination from old pipes and paint.

Black children are five times more likely to have lead poisoning. Low-income Latino immigrants are more likely to live in areas with high levels of hazardous air pollution than anyone else; the odds of a Latino immigrant neighborhood being located in an area of high toxic pollution is one in three. At the same time, communities of color lack access to parks, gardens and other recreational green space.

In addition to building homes, we must build communities. Federal agencies must develop and implement clear, strategic plans to achieve environmental justice and provide targeted action where the needs are greatest. As president, Sen. Sanders will work to ensure that all Americans are able to live in safe, secure, healthy, and affordable housing.


_____________________________________________________

What was the problem?
 
Why bother? Bernie still backs Hillary, regardless.

BUT his PEEPS HATE THE C*UNT!!!!... What's da matter can't ya READ????
Still doesn't matter. Hating does nothing, unfortunately. She will be POTUS. Get used to it.
Now you know how Serpico felt. Except it being NYC cops....its the who USA is being screwed. All those in power....media, this administration, the FBI, CIA, etc etc etc...all have been bought.
Now that everyone KNOWS just how deep and high up it goes, it STILL doesn't matter. The usa and all it stood for...is dead.

You're right Crazie....the mentally deranged moron's that could watch this C*unt commit murder would still vote for her....amazing how many mentally defectives we have in this country!
 
Why bother? Bernie still backs Hillary, regardless.
Because his supporters said today on CNN LIVE they didn't care.. that it isn't just about Bernie and they will not stand down nor will they ever vote for Hillary..
 
How long until Debbie is found to have committed suicide by shooting herself 3 times in the back while sitting on a park bench in the back of a plane that crashes into a mountain in Serbia?
 
They exemplify the youth of this country that heard all of the "EAR candy" from Bernie Sanders. They are really pissed off they didn't get that "free" college education. That $15.00 per hour minimum wage--and the huge Break Up of the WALL Street banks that Bernie kept campaigning on. Of course, with him having full knowledge that he nor the Federal Government have the authority to break up Wall Street Banks, it sure didn't stop him from campaigning on it anyway.
Bernie Sanders Can't Explain How He'd Break Up Big Banks, Among Other Things | VICE News

This is what radicals do--they protest they're ignorance. Bernie Sanders exploited their ignorance to no end.

They also exemplify why there are 714 Democrat Super Delegates. It was the election of 1984--when the Democrat Party experienced this loss.

map_1984_original.jpg


And this is the same result you would have gotten with a Bernie Sanders nominee, just move the blue part over to Vermont. This country is center, it always has been, it always will be. It will not elect far left or far right candidates, much less a recognized and confirmed socialist.


Yes, Bernie Sanders was the perfect candidate for these people. But NOW Sanders has to calm them down, since he has endorsed Hillary Clinton. So the candyman candidate has some issues of his own right now.

There is no doubt that Hillary Clinton is the legitimate candidate of this party. There is nothing in these leaked notes that would have interfered with the vote count, or would have disrupted the Sanders campaign.

Hillary Clinton creamed Bernie Sanders by 3,775,437 popular votes. In comparison, in 2008 Barack Obama defeated Hillary Clinton by a mere 41,622 votes. There were no protests, there were no accusations of a "rigged election". Hillary Clinton graciously dropped out of the race and endorsed Barack Obama. And that's the difference between radicals and non-radicals.
RealClearPolitics - Election 2016 - General Election: Trump vs. Clinton
2008 Democratic Popular Vote | RealClearPolitics

ufonotcomingback.jpg

Expand Affordable Housing
It is no secret that millions of families are struggling economically. Meanwhile, decent and affordable rental apartments are hard to come by, and millions of households are spending 50 percent or more of their income on housing. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition, 7.1 million American households cannot find affordable housing. That is unacceptable.


  1. As President, Sen. Sanders will fight to:
    Expand the National Affordable Housing Trust Fund. Sen. Sanders is proud to have authored the original National Affordable Housing Trust Fund bill in the House of Representatives in 2001 that became law in 2008. This is the first new federal housing production program in almost three decades, and the first ever designed to build rental housing for extremely low-income households. As president, Sen. Sanders will fight to increase funding for the housing trust fund to at least $5 billion a year in order to construct, preserve, and rehabilitate at least 3.5 million affordable housing rental units over the next decade. Not only will this help address the affordable housing crisis, it will also create millions of good paying jobs in the process.

    Raise the minimum wage. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition (NLIHC), a renter would need to earn a wage of $19.35 per hour in order to afford a modest, two-bedroom apartment in the U.S. One way to start closing the wage/rent gap is to raise the minimum wage to $15 an hour by 2020.

    Reinvigorate federal housing production programs. Over the past decade, the federal programs that build affordable housing for families, for the elderly and for the disabled have been decimated. Nobody disagrees that we need to address the deficit, but it is absurd to balance the budget on the backs of working families, the elderly, the disabled and the poor. We must return to pre-2010 funding levels by ending sequestration and invest more, not less, in affordable housing.

    Defend Fair Housing. The sordid history of housing discrimination is a stain on our collective conscious, and for fifty years the Fair Housing Act has provided critically important legal protection from discrimination because of race, color, national origin, religion, sex or disability. And yet, Republicans have tried over and over again to defund efforts to affirmatively promote fair housing. We must push back, defend and strengthen the law, and make sure we never again tacitly condone housing discrimination.

    Demand more from Affordable Housing Developers. Housing that is built with government subsidies should remain affordable much longer than the 10, 15 or 20 years typically required by federal housing programs. In my state of Vermont, we require affordable housing to remain affordable permanently. In my view, once we subsidize rental housing, we shouldn’t have to pay again and again simply to “preserve” it.

    Repair Public Housing. We need sufficient funding for public housing operating and capital costs, and we need to reduce the unacceptable backlog of public housing capital needs.

    Protect Rental Assistance. We need to provide full funding to all existing project based rental assistance contracts.

    Expand Housing Choice Initiative. We need to increase funding for the housing choice voucher program to target families who need support the most and to provide greater economic stability to the more than 3 million households struggling to remain in safe, secure and affordable housing today.
Promoting Homeownership
Owning a home remains one of the best ways for families to build wealth and enter the middle class. However, for decades, wages have not kept up with the median costs of homes, putting homeownership out of reach for millions of families. The housing crisis that began in 2007 wiped-out the entire household wealth of millions of families, particularly African-American and Latino families who were disproportionately targeted with sub-prime mortgages and had most of their wealth in their homes – the net worth of African-American households fell by more than 50 percent and Latino families by more than 65 percent. We must take aggressive steps to make homeownership more attainable for first time homebuyers, as well as for the millions of families across the country who lost their homes to foreclosure.


  1. As President, Sen. Sanders will fight to:
    Support First Time Homebuyers. We should expand the Department of Housing and Urban Development and USDA Rural Development assistance programs for first time homeownership, particularly through down payment assistance, loan guarantees and direct loans.

    Expand Pre-purchase Housing Counseling. Study after study shows that people who receive counseling before buying a home are more likely to succeed at homeownership. Housing counseling is a good investment in families and communities.

    Implement Credit Score Reform. The credit scores of millions of families have been ruined because of foreclosures or other financial hardships from the economic meltdown. At the same time, a prime score before the crisis was 640. It currently hovers around 740. If we want to rebuild the lost wealth of working families, we need real credit score reform to make the banking and credit industries work for borrowers and not just lenders.

    Prevent Predatory Lending. In the 2000s Sen. Sanders called on Congress to clean up the subprime market by cracking down on predatory lenders. Unfortunately, that didn’t happen. Incredibly, Republicans now want to undermine the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which was created to protect families against fraudulent, deceptive, and abusive lending practices that caused the crisis. By requiring that all mortgage costs are clear, risks are visible, and nothing is buried in fine print, the CFBP makes sure consumers have the information they need to make good financial decisions.

    Protect Homeowner Mortgage Interest Benefits. Sen. Sanders strongly supports tax policies that promote homeownership, and opposes any reform that would negatively impact middle and low-income homeowners. We need to close the second home and yacht loophole, as there is simply no compelling public interest in subsidizing second homes and yachts. We also need to expand homeowner mortgage interest benefits to the 19 million otherwise eligible homeowners who do not itemize their taxes.
Helping Underwater Homeowners
For millions of American families, and for many hard hit communities, the housing crisis is not over. According to the real estate firm CoreLogic, 4.3 million homeowners still owe more than their houses are worth. While the taxpayers of this country, against my strong opposition, bailed out the largest financial institutions in this country with no strings attached, we have never provided an adequate lifeline to underwater homeowners. While Treasury’s Home Affordable Modification Program has helped more than 1.5 million homeowners avoid foreclosure, and the Hardest Hit Fund has assisted another 250,000 ‎homeowners, these are a fraction of the households that were, or are, underwater.


  1. As President, Sen. Sanders will fight to:
    Reinvigorate HARP. The Home Affordable Refinance Program was designed to assist homeowners who are current on their mortgage payments but owe more than their home is worth, by allowing them to refinance their underwater mortgages at lower interest rates. While the average homeowner saves about $2,500 per year, many people who theoretically qualify have not benefitted because of various barriers and inadequate outreach. Sen. Sanders co-sponsored legislation to reduce up-front fees, eliminate appraisal costs for borrowers, streamline the application process and launch a national effort to educate homeowners about the program. As president, he will fight to sign that legislation into law.

    Expand Foreclosure Mitigation Counseling. Just as pre-purchase homeownership counseling works for prospective homebuyers, we need to expand National Foreclosure Mitigation Counseling programs to help underwater homeowners. Studies have shown that underwater homeowners who receive counselling are far more likely to cure a serious delinquency or foreclosure, and stay current after obtaining a cure. The best solution is to keep homeowners in their homes.
Preventing Homelessness
We have made some important strides toward reducing homelessness, but it is a national disgrace that on a given night, almost 565,000 people are homeless in the United States. It is especially distressing that so many are children living in families.

Just as we must build more housing that is affordable to low income renters, we must reinvigorate our homeless assistance programs. Recognizing that one size does not fit all, we must address the unique housing needs of homeless veterans, victims of domestic abuse, and runaway and homeless youth. We must address family homelessness through rapid re-housing where families are quickly connected with permanent housing and their lives returned to relative stability. We must explore new ways to address the more than 83,000 chronically homeless individuals with policies that provide permanent supportive housing first.

And we must address the underlying economic conditions that lead to homelessness, including the fact that a disproportionate number of homeless families are headed by single women.


  1. As President, Sen. Sanders will fight to:
    Prevent Homelessness and Reduce Recidivism. Sen. Sanders strongly supports President Obama’s efforts to house people coming out of prison. In November, he announced a pilot program to reduce recidivism and prevent homelessness by making sure former inmates do not cycle between the criminal justice and homeless service systems. This is a good investment in people leaving prison, and a smart way to prevent homelessness.

    End Chronic Homelessness. Sen. Sanders will fight for sufficient funding to end chronic homelessness.
Getting lead out of our homes
In 2012, the Centers for Disease Control lowered its blood lead threshold for children from 10 to 5 micrograms per deciliter of blood, after research showed that even minute lead levels can significantly impact a child’s brain development and result in behavioral problems and learning disabilities. The CDC estimates that 535,000 American children under six years of age are affected by lead poisoning. This preventable tragedy traps families in poverty and robs children of their opportunity to succeed.


  1. As President, Sen. Sanders will fight to:
    Make HUD-assisted housing lead-free. Sen. Sanders recently joined several colleagues in urging HUD Secretary Julian Castro to do more to prevent lead poisoning in HUD assisted housing. Not only has HUD failed to adopt the new CDC threshold for purposes of requiring landlords to mitigate lead in apartments with children, but HUD has not updated its blood lead level standard since 1999. In fact, HUD allows children’s blood lead levels to be three to four times higher than the new CDC standard before it requires landlords to abate lead. That is unacceptable.
Addressing Housing and Environmental Justice
Homes are not just places to live, they are the building blocks of our communities. Yet, some communities – usually low-income and communities of color – experience a daily assault on their health and environment. They are the hardest hit by air and water pollution from industrial factories, power plants, incinerators, chemical waste and lead contamination from old pipes and paint.

Black children are five times more likely to have lead poisoning. Low-income Latino immigrants are more likely to live in areas with high levels of hazardous air pollution than anyone else; the odds of a Latino immigrant neighborhood being located in an area of high toxic pollution is one in three. At the same time, communities of color lack access to parks, gardens and other recreational green space.

In addition to building homes, we must build communities. Federal agencies must develop and implement clear, strategic plans to achieve environmental justice and provide targeted action where the needs are greatest. As president, Sen. Sanders will work to ensure that all Americans are able to live in safe, secure, healthy, and affordable housing.


_____________________________________________________

What was the problem?


Sweet Baby Jesus--did you actually just copy and paste Bernie Sanders web page on this thread?

Yeah--everyone wants shit. The problem is as it always is. Where is the freaking money to do it all.

The top 1% cannot pay for the other 99%. The top 1% already pay for 50% of the Federal Tax base, the top 5% pay for 85% of Federal Tax base, and the bottom 84% only pay for 15% of the Federal Tax base.
Top 1% pay nearly half of federal income taxes

When the rich feel like they're paying too much in taxes, they just move and take their money with them.
New Jersey has to rethink its budget because one guy moved

bilde-1.jpeg


Bernie Sanders got his ass kicked by Democrats. They don't want him or his policies. If they did, they would have voted for him and he would be the nominee right now. Get the F..K over it.
 
They exemplify the youth of this country that heard all of the "EAR candy" from Bernie Sanders. They are really pissed off they didn't get that "free" college education. That $15.00 per hour minimum wage--and the huge Break Up of the WALL Street banks that Bernie kept campaigning on. Of course, with him having full knowledge that he nor the Federal Government have the authority to break up Wall Street Banks, it sure didn't stop him from campaigning on it anyway.
Bernie Sanders Can't Explain How He'd Break Up Big Banks, Among Other Things | VICE News

This is what radicals do--they protest they're ignorance. Bernie Sanders exploited their ignorance to no end.

They also exemplify why there are 714 Democrat Super Delegates. It was the election of 1984--when the Democrat Party experienced this loss.

map_1984_original.jpg


And this is the same result you would have gotten with a Bernie Sanders nominee, just move the blue part over to Vermont. This country is center, it always has been, it always will be. It will not elect far left or far right candidates, much less a recognized and confirmed socialist.


Yes, Bernie Sanders was the perfect candidate for these people. But NOW Sanders has to calm them down, since he has endorsed Hillary Clinton. So the candyman candidate has some issues of his own right now.

There is no doubt that Hillary Clinton is the legitimate candidate of this party. There is nothing in these leaked notes that would have interfered with the vote count, or would have disrupted the Sanders campaign.

Hillary Clinton creamed Bernie Sanders by 3,775,437 popular votes. In comparison, in 2008 Barack Obama defeated Hillary Clinton by a mere 41,622 votes. There were no protests, there were no accusations of a "rigged election". Hillary Clinton graciously dropped out of the race and endorsed Barack Obama. And that's the difference between radicals and non-radicals.
RealClearPolitics - Election 2016 - General Election: Trump vs. Clinton
2008 Democratic Popular Vote | RealClearPolitics

ufonotcomingback.jpg

Expand Affordable Housing
It is no secret that millions of families are struggling economically. Meanwhile, decent and affordable rental apartments are hard to come by, and millions of households are spending 50 percent or more of their income on housing. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition, 7.1 million American households cannot find affordable housing. That is unacceptable.


  1. As President, Sen. Sanders will fight to:
    Expand the National Affordable Housing Trust Fund. Sen. Sanders is proud to have authored the original National Affordable Housing Trust Fund bill in the House of Representatives in 2001 that became law in 2008. This is the first new federal housing production program in almost three decades, and the first ever designed to build rental housing for extremely low-income households. As president, Sen. Sanders will fight to increase funding for the housing trust fund to at least $5 billion a year in order to construct, preserve, and rehabilitate at least 3.5 million affordable housing rental units over the next decade. Not only will this help address the affordable housing crisis, it will also create millions of good paying jobs in the process.

    Raise the minimum wage. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition (NLIHC), a renter would need to earn a wage of $19.35 per hour in order to afford a modest, two-bedroom apartment in the U.S. One way to start closing the wage/rent gap is to raise the minimum wage to $15 an hour by 2020.

    Reinvigorate federal housing production programs. Over the past decade, the federal programs that build affordable housing for families, for the elderly and for the disabled have been decimated. Nobody disagrees that we need to address the deficit, but it is absurd to balance the budget on the backs of working families, the elderly, the disabled and the poor. We must return to pre-2010 funding levels by ending sequestration and invest more, not less, in affordable housing.

    Defend Fair Housing. The sordid history of housing discrimination is a stain on our collective conscious, and for fifty years the Fair Housing Act has provided critically important legal protection from discrimination because of race, color, national origin, religion, sex or disability. And yet, Republicans have tried over and over again to defund efforts to affirmatively promote fair housing. We must push back, defend and strengthen the law, and make sure we never again tacitly condone housing discrimination.

    Demand more from Affordable Housing Developers. Housing that is built with government subsidies should remain affordable much longer than the 10, 15 or 20 years typically required by federal housing programs. In my state of Vermont, we require affordable housing to remain affordable permanently. In my view, once we subsidize rental housing, we shouldn’t have to pay again and again simply to “preserve” it.

    Repair Public Housing. We need sufficient funding for public housing operating and capital costs, and we need to reduce the unacceptable backlog of public housing capital needs.

    Protect Rental Assistance. We need to provide full funding to all existing project based rental assistance contracts.

    Expand Housing Choice Initiative. We need to increase funding for the housing choice voucher program to target families who need support the most and to provide greater economic stability to the more than 3 million households struggling to remain in safe, secure and affordable housing today.
Promoting Homeownership
Owning a home remains one of the best ways for families to build wealth and enter the middle class. However, for decades, wages have not kept up with the median costs of homes, putting homeownership out of reach for millions of families. The housing crisis that began in 2007 wiped-out the entire household wealth of millions of families, particularly African-American and Latino families who were disproportionately targeted with sub-prime mortgages and had most of their wealth in their homes – the net worth of African-American households fell by more than 50 percent and Latino families by more than 65 percent. We must take aggressive steps to make homeownership more attainable for first time homebuyers, as well as for the millions of families across the country who lost their homes to foreclosure.


  1. As President, Sen. Sanders will fight to:
    Support First Time Homebuyers. We should expand the Department of Housing and Urban Development and USDA Rural Development assistance programs for first time homeownership, particularly through down payment assistance, loan guarantees and direct loans.

    Expand Pre-purchase Housing Counseling. Study after study shows that people who receive counseling before buying a home are more likely to succeed at homeownership. Housing counseling is a good investment in families and communities.

    Implement Credit Score Reform. The credit scores of millions of families have been ruined because of foreclosures or other financial hardships from the economic meltdown. At the same time, a prime score before the crisis was 640. It currently hovers around 740. If we want to rebuild the lost wealth of working families, we need real credit score reform to make the banking and credit industries work for borrowers and not just lenders.

    Prevent Predatory Lending. In the 2000s Sen. Sanders called on Congress to clean up the subprime market by cracking down on predatory lenders. Unfortunately, that didn’t happen. Incredibly, Republicans now want to undermine the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which was created to protect families against fraudulent, deceptive, and abusive lending practices that caused the crisis. By requiring that all mortgage costs are clear, risks are visible, and nothing is buried in fine print, the CFBP makes sure consumers have the information they need to make good financial decisions.

    Protect Homeowner Mortgage Interest Benefits. Sen. Sanders strongly supports tax policies that promote homeownership, and opposes any reform that would negatively impact middle and low-income homeowners. We need to close the second home and yacht loophole, as there is simply no compelling public interest in subsidizing second homes and yachts. We also need to expand homeowner mortgage interest benefits to the 19 million otherwise eligible homeowners who do not itemize their taxes.
Helping Underwater Homeowners
For millions of American families, and for many hard hit communities, the housing crisis is not over. According to the real estate firm CoreLogic, 4.3 million homeowners still owe more than their houses are worth. While the taxpayers of this country, against my strong opposition, bailed out the largest financial institutions in this country with no strings attached, we have never provided an adequate lifeline to underwater homeowners. While Treasury’s Home Affordable Modification Program has helped more than 1.5 million homeowners avoid foreclosure, and the Hardest Hit Fund has assisted another 250,000 ‎homeowners, these are a fraction of the households that were, or are, underwater.


  1. As President, Sen. Sanders will fight to:
    Reinvigorate HARP. The Home Affordable Refinance Program was designed to assist homeowners who are current on their mortgage payments but owe more than their home is worth, by allowing them to refinance their underwater mortgages at lower interest rates. While the average homeowner saves about $2,500 per year, many people who theoretically qualify have not benefitted because of various barriers and inadequate outreach. Sen. Sanders co-sponsored legislation to reduce up-front fees, eliminate appraisal costs for borrowers, streamline the application process and launch a national effort to educate homeowners about the program. As president, he will fight to sign that legislation into law.

    Expand Foreclosure Mitigation Counseling. Just as pre-purchase homeownership counseling works for prospective homebuyers, we need to expand National Foreclosure Mitigation Counseling programs to help underwater homeowners. Studies have shown that underwater homeowners who receive counselling are far more likely to cure a serious delinquency or foreclosure, and stay current after obtaining a cure. The best solution is to keep homeowners in their homes.
Preventing Homelessness
We have made some important strides toward reducing homelessness, but it is a national disgrace that on a given night, almost 565,000 people are homeless in the United States. It is especially distressing that so many are children living in families.

Just as we must build more housing that is affordable to low income renters, we must reinvigorate our homeless assistance programs. Recognizing that one size does not fit all, we must address the unique housing needs of homeless veterans, victims of domestic abuse, and runaway and homeless youth. We must address family homelessness through rapid re-housing where families are quickly connected with permanent housing and their lives returned to relative stability. We must explore new ways to address the more than 83,000 chronically homeless individuals with policies that provide permanent supportive housing first.

And we must address the underlying economic conditions that lead to homelessness, including the fact that a disproportionate number of homeless families are headed by single women.


  1. As President, Sen. Sanders will fight to:
    Prevent Homelessness and Reduce Recidivism. Sen. Sanders strongly supports President Obama’s efforts to house people coming out of prison. In November, he announced a pilot program to reduce recidivism and prevent homelessness by making sure former inmates do not cycle between the criminal justice and homeless service systems. This is a good investment in people leaving prison, and a smart way to prevent homelessness.

    End Chronic Homelessness. Sen. Sanders will fight for sufficient funding to end chronic homelessness.
Getting lead out of our homes
In 2012, the Centers for Disease Control lowered its blood lead threshold for children from 10 to 5 micrograms per deciliter of blood, after research showed that even minute lead levels can significantly impact a child’s brain development and result in behavioral problems and learning disabilities. The CDC estimates that 535,000 American children under six years of age are affected by lead poisoning. This preventable tragedy traps families in poverty and robs children of their opportunity to succeed.


  1. As President, Sen. Sanders will fight to:
    Make HUD-assisted housing lead-free. Sen. Sanders recently joined several colleagues in urging HUD Secretary Julian Castro to do more to prevent lead poisoning in HUD assisted housing. Not only has HUD failed to adopt the new CDC threshold for purposes of requiring landlords to mitigate lead in apartments with children, but HUD has not updated its blood lead level standard since 1999. In fact, HUD allows children’s blood lead levels to be three to four times higher than the new CDC standard before it requires landlords to abate lead. That is unacceptable.
Addressing Housing and Environmental Justice
Homes are not just places to live, they are the building blocks of our communities. Yet, some communities – usually low-income and communities of color – experience a daily assault on their health and environment. They are the hardest hit by air and water pollution from industrial factories, power plants, incinerators, chemical waste and lead contamination from old pipes and paint.

Black children are five times more likely to have lead poisoning. Low-income Latino immigrants are more likely to live in areas with high levels of hazardous air pollution than anyone else; the odds of a Latino immigrant neighborhood being located in an area of high toxic pollution is one in three. At the same time, communities of color lack access to parks, gardens and other recreational green space.

In addition to building homes, we must build communities. Federal agencies must develop and implement clear, strategic plans to achieve environmental justice and provide targeted action where the needs are greatest. As president, Sen. Sanders will work to ensure that all Americans are able to live in safe, secure, healthy, and affordable housing.


_____________________________________________________

What was the problem?


Sweet Baby Jesus--did you actually just copy and paste Bernie Sanders web page on this thread?

Yeah--everyone wants shit. The problem is as it always is. Where is the freaking money to do it all.

The top 1% cannot pay for the other 99%. The top 1% already pay for 50% of the Federal Tax base, the top 5% pay for 85% of Federal Tax base, and the bottom 84% only pay for 15% of the Federal Tax base.
Top 1% pay nearly half of federal income taxes

When the rich feel like they're paying too much in taxes, they just move and take their money with them.
New Jersey has to rethink its budget because one guy moved

bilde-1.jpeg


Bernie Sanders got his ass kicked by Democrats. They don't want him or his policies. If they did, they would have voted for him and he would be the nominee right now. Get the F..K over it.

Yes, I did and it is the least complicated for you to handle. So, you got nothing. I find that is pretty common. You have posted the same shit on multiple threads. The reality is that there are a multitude of issues that needed to be addressed. It's very easy for you to write them off as ear candy because you have never got off your ass to pay attention to what those issues are. Sometimes it is a matter of............this is where the money is going and how it plays out is leading to fraud; thus it would be better allocated over here. Sometimes it is a matter of requirements. People have a tendency to think that programs are trying to get people in. They are not. They are doing everything possible to keep you out.

So, before the emails people were ready to move because of the issues. Most people protesting still are. Had any of the candidates got the fuck off their asses and listened to what was being said then you would be looking at a different picture. It's very easy for jack offs like you to stand around and say it was ear candy but it's a whole 'nother ballgame for you to face the issues.

Issues like this:
  1. Supporting Tribal Sovereignty and Tribal Jurisdiction: Tribes must have the ability to prosecute non-Native people who commit crimes on tribal land, and have greater jurisdiction over prosecuting all crimes, including family disputes. Bernie will fight to provide Tribes with the resources for effective law enforcement and tribal courts. He will work to streamline tribal retrocession from P.L. 280 for those tribes that wish to do so, and will encourage the continual development of the U.S. Department of Justice Tribal Access Program for National Crime Information to provide tribes with access to national crime information systems for both civil and criminal purposes.
  2. Upholding the Trust Responsibility: We must honor the treaties and federal statutes that are the foundation of the trust relationship. Bernie will maintain a White House Policy Advisor for Native American Affairs to ensure that tribal issues are consistently addressed and coordinated throughout the federal government. Bernie will also create a position within the Office of Management Budget to ensure adequate subject matter expertise and sufficient coordination between federal agencies. Bernie will appoint senior level tribal appointees with access to executive agency leaders to promote meaningful consultation with Native Americans. Bernie is committed to the principles of trust modernization to update antiquated trust practices to better serve tribal nations.
  3. Improving Housing: Bernie will fight for increased local control over the administration and operation of tribal housing programs. He will also fight for full funding of the Indian Housing Block Grant Program.


 
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Many Thousands of Bernie Supporters Hit Philadelphia's Steamy Streets to Protest DNC & Clinton!

They await the coronation of their Queen

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