Reddit Reddit reviews Stronger Together

We found 5 Reddit comments about Stronger Together. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

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Stronger Together
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5 Reddit comments about Stronger Together:

u/goshdarnwife · 19 pointsr/jillstein
u/SoFatWorldCirclesMe · 5 pointsr/Enough_Sanders_Spam

>Clinton knew it was happening, and didn't even really make a big deal about it until she lost.

That's a lie. She talked about it often and even brought it up in the debates. Remember this? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=66xBDiGrvi8

>I don't think we can truly say we know that Bernie Sanders held a personal grudge against Clinton

Maybe not, but it sure looks that way.

>I think policy matters more than anything in a candidate.

That's why I backed Hillary. She had an ENTIRE BOOK of policy whereas Sanders complained about problems, said we should fix them, but then never gave anyone any plans. After visiting Bernie's campaign website during the primaries and seeing that all his "policy proposals" were actually just a long rant that defined the problem + one line offering a vague solution I knew I couldn't back him.

u/_themgt_ · 2 pointsr/politics

The Amazon reviews on Hillary's new book "Stronger Together" are amazing.

u/counters · 1 pointr/AskThe_Donald

> I'm sure they had their reasons, I'm talking about the campaign itself, not why people voted for her. Though I suspect a big reason why was to vote agaisnt Trump, and I think that was caused by the MSM and the left being ideologues. Not everyone has the time to do research on the subject and keep informed, all of us put faith to some degree into the media whether it be the MSM or the independent media to be honest, it just depends on our personality and political leanings.

You'd suspect wrong. The Clinton campaign published volumes on the issues they perceived were important and they policies they'd pursue to tackle them. They even published those materials. Why is it so unreasonable to think that 10's of millions of Americans thought that these policies presented a favorable vision for the future of our country?

The "media" has got nothing to do with it.

> You're talking about this comment I think, next time please include it for everyone else so you don't look like you're being dishonest.

It was literally two centimeters above my comment in the thread. Save your outrage.

> So for context in this discussion, I have to bring up The Last Night,

That context has nothing to do with my comment.

> u/hadders95 is someone who frequents here very often,

I don't care about your interactions with this person.

> So, am I causing trouble by screaming nonsense?

Yeah. You are.

You're painting a fictitious caricature about why and what Hillary voters cared about. And then you're attacking them based on the beliefs that you've portrayed them as having. You are absolutely misrepresenting people and twisting the facts, which is in and of itself immoral in the sense that you're walling off any chance of engaging with people who likely disagree with you, and for no obvious reason. The very act itself is rude.

Beyond anything else, it's actions like these which are at the core of our country's civic and political dysfunction. Holding such an attitude - that you alone know the true motives and intentions of voters with whom you disagree - is not only counter-productive to healthy dialogue, it kills it entirely. There's no way to engage with you on any of the issues you present, because you've made it clear that you're going to whitewash and ignore and explanations or ideas that others may reply with.

Sorry to put it so bluntly.