Saturday, November 30, 2019

Some Tweets from David Sirota

David Sirota is the speech writer for candidate Bernie Sanders.



  • Buttigieg previously won an essay contest by touting Bernie Sanders’ “candor, conviction & ability to bring people together” Now Pete has his staff promoting a screed suggesting Bernie is a “faux progressive” because Bernie is pushing debt-free college 👇🏻
  •   Retweeted
    this has already been said on this site one thousand times, but two parents making $50k each are not millionaires and i genuinely believe people would be a lot less outraged about his position if the campaign would just stop lying about it
  • Pete Buttigieg’s campaign is now frantically promoting an ugly essay by Jeff Bezos’s editorial board that suggests Bernie Sanders is a “faux progressive” for pushing debt-free college. 👇🏻
  • Pete is now citing a billionaire’s editorial board to try to defend his opposition to plans that make billionaires pay higher taxes to fund debt-free college
  • These centrist Dems now explicitly berating progressive voters and telling them to vote for someone else is really a dark plot twist
     
  •   Retweeted
    Democrats, If your candidate is using Republican talking points to attack policies that would provide greater access to healthcare or education, find a new candidate.
  • I agree with ’s argument for electing president. As Pete declared: Bernie’s “energy, candor, conviction & ability to bring people together stand against the current of opportunism, moral compromise & partisanship” in America.
  • “Not only can we afford Medicare for All, but a properly designed transition to Medicare for All could deliver the biggest pay raise in a generation to middle-class workers.”
  •   Retweeted
    And yet, we are not addressing it as an emergency. The questions about the & are how r u going to pay for it & how r u going to pass it. It should be how quickly can we implement it. It’s survival, not partisan politics.
  •   Retweeted
    A MUST READ by ⁦⁩ on : “His energy, candor, conviction, and ability to bring people together stand against the current of opportunism, moral compromise, and partisanship which runs rampant on the American political scene.”
  • More on why should be president: “His stance on gun control led to NRA-organized media campaigns against him. Sanders has also shown creativity in organizing drug-shopping trips to Canada (to) call attention to inflated drug prices in the U.S.”
  • Before raked in cash from billionaires and Wall Street moguls, Pete made one of the most powerful and compelling arguments for why should be president. Read Pete here and retweet:
  •   Retweeted
    Imagine that
     
  • Here’s a three-act tragicomedy about politics and big money
     
  • Axiom: the more absurd a politician’s argument, the more they may be trying to hide that they are helping their donors Example: Pete absurdly insisting he opposes free college because Bezos kids may get free community college obscures how Pete’s opposition helps his donors
     
  •   Retweeted
    Today is revealing who Pete is as clearly as anything else he's done during this campaign, and it's remarkably disappointing. This disingenuous BS is turning the Democratic vision of governing on its head. And both Pete and Lis know that, which makes it all the worse.
  • FDR wanted to make sure all Americans could get a decent job. Thankfully, he didn’t back off his agenda just because bad faith opponents could slam the New Deal for opening up the theoretical possibility that Rockefeller kids could work in the Civilian Conservation Corps.
  •   Retweeted
    “Bloomberg should be nervous that Bernie Sanders is going to be the President of the United States and is going to tax people like Michael Bloomberg and is going to disempower billionaires,” says Ari Rabin-Havt, deputy campaign manager for Sanders.
  • Wall Street is mad at Bernie Sanders’ tuition-free college plan because it is financed by a tax on Wall Street speculation. Pete Buttigieg is suddenly airing ads slamming Bernie’s plan, as Pete raises money from Wall Street. That’s it. That’s the tweet.