The Black/White Thinking of Bernie Sanders

I agree with Republicans that one shouldn't feel ashamed for doing well financially. But that's where my agreement ends. I believe fervently that those such as myself who have done well should pay much more in taxes than we currently do.
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Senator Bernard 'Bernie' Sanders, an independent from Vermont and possible presidential candidate, listens to a question during an interview in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Wednesday, April 15, 2015. Hillary Clinton isn't ready to confront the nation's billionaires to address rising income inequality, said Sanders, a Vermont independent deciding whether to challenge her for president in 2016. Photographer: Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg via Getty Images
Senator Bernard 'Bernie' Sanders, an independent from Vermont and possible presidential candidate, listens to a question during an interview in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Wednesday, April 15, 2015. Hillary Clinton isn't ready to confront the nation's billionaires to address rising income inequality, said Sanders, a Vermont independent deciding whether to challenge her for president in 2016. Photographer: Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg via Getty Images

The rumblings of the Republican candidates are so demented that they warrant little comment. The Democrats are another matter.

I find myself increasingly annoyed by Bernie Sanders. Who gave him the sole right to define who and what is and isn't a Progressive?

I grew up in a family that was impoverished in every conceivable way: financially, mentally, and physically. "Poor" doesn't begin to describe the terrible conditions that gnawed at us daily.
Because I was a smart kid, worked hard, and the costs of an education at one of the best public universities in the world were essentially nil, I ended up becoming well-off. Should I therefore feel ashamed that, because of my expertise, I am able to charge good consulting fees for my services from some of the world's leading corporations?

As someone who grew up in abject poverty, I'm proud of the fact that I now make good money. I'm even more proud that more often than not, I tell organizations what they don't want to hear, namely what they need to do to make things safer for their workers and their surrounding communities.

I agree with Republicans that one shouldn't feel ashamed for doing well financially. But that's where my agreement ends. I believe fervently that those such as myself who have done well should pay much more in taxes than we currently do. I want those who are poor to have the same opportunities to succeed that I had. In this regard, I'm in strong agreement with Senator Sanders.

But this is also where I disagree strongly with Senator Sanders. I not only find his contention that Secretary Clinton cannot be both a Progressive and a Moderate a premier case of faulty thinking, but deeply offensive. Since one can certainly be a Progressive on social issues and a Conservative on financial matters, being a Conservative and a Progressive is not necessarily a fundamental contradiction in terms. Why then is it an inherent contradiction, not to say somehow "bad," to be both a Progressive and a Moderate? To believe that it's a contradiction is black/white thinking at its worst.

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