Sanders Warns Trump Could Start A War
ARLINGTON,
Va. — Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, speaking at a conference on the
“Politics of Love” Thursday evening, said he feared that President Trump
would plunge the nation into war.
Sen. Bernie Sanders speaks at the Sister Giant conference on Feb. 2. (Photo: Garance Franke-Ruta/Yahoo News)
“This
is one of the things that scares me most: For a demagogue to succeed,
they need to cultivate hatred. Now the hatred may be against immigrants —
we’re all supposed to hate immigrants, and maybe it’s other minorities,
African-Americans, Latinos,” Sanders said. “But also I worry that the
hatred will spill over to foreign affairs, and that we are maybe
entering into a situation where a Trump needs a war — and war and war —
to rally public support.”
Sanders
spoke before a rapturous audience at the second Sister Giant
conference, hosted by bestselling spirituality author Marianne
Williamson, author of “A Return to Love” and “The Age of Miracles.” The
conference was part of a movement Williamson has dubbed the Great Resistance of 2017.
Attendees were overwhelmingly female — fans and followers of
Williamson, who is among the leading figures in the New Spirituality
movement in America.
The
gathering, billed as “Creating a Politics of Love,” illustrates how
normally inward-looking communities, especially of women who had
expected Hillary Clinton to win even if they were not all-in on her
candidacy, have been galvanized into action by the polarizing 2016
election outcome.
While
the Women’s March on Washington and its sister marches around the
country struck a chord with the crafting lifestyle community — so much
so that the marches wound up being visually defined by their pink
hand-knitted and crocheted “pussy hats” — Sister Giant is seeking to
mobilize what Williamson calls the “higher consciousness community” to
resist Trump’s agenda and reach out to Americans who hold political
views different from their own.
The
conference, which drew 1,800 guests and an online audience of more than
3,000, opened with a video featuring a medley of words and phrases:
“Say Hell No to Tyranny,” “Rise Up,” “Resist” and “Don’t Be Gaslighted.”
The stage was backed by a banner showing a woman in lotus position
silhouetted against a stylized American flag; on either side stood tall
shelves holding candles. The Washington Unity Choir sang “My Country
’Tis of Thee” and “America the Beautiful.” A handful of women in the
audience held up Bernie signs, and when he walked out to take his seat
in the speakers’ section, one shouted, “2020!”
Sanders,
the conference’s keynote speaker, told the audience that the enthusiasm
for his message at the first-ever Sister Giant in 2015 in Los Angeles
helped encourage him to run for president.
Not
knowing precisely what to do next, but feeling called to action, was a
common refrain Thursday. “With what’s happening today, I don’t know
exactly what to do,” Williamson said.
“We
have more than a political problem. We have an emotional problem, in
that this moment scares us. It scares us. We have a psychological
problem in that we are all being bullied in this moment. We have a
spiritual problem in that hate has been harnessed for political
purposes,” she said.
Sanders
echoed her remarks. “If you think that you don’t have the answers,
trust me, you are not alone,” he said. “What is imperative as never
before is that we really think this thing through, because the stakes
are so extraordinary for this country and for the world. And on behalf
of my seven grandchildren, and the children all over this planet: We
cannot fail.”
“I
know that some of your friends say, ‘Wow, this sucks,’” added Sanders.
He acknowledged that some people are reacting to the moment by wanting
to turn off the news, stop reading the papers “and kind of sink slowly
into despair.”
“And
to those people who say this, I say, as loudly as I can — not only for
your lives, but for the lives of future generations — despair is not an
option.”
Sanders
assured the audience: “On every important issue facing this country,
the views of Donald Trump and his friends are a minority position — and
don’t ever forget that.”
And
yet, he said, being in the majority is not enough. “Let me suggest to
you, and some will disagree with me, that’s OK too. Let me suggest to
you that what happened on November 8th, Trump’s victory, was not a
victory for Trump or his ideology. It was a gross political failure of
the Democratic Party.”
This won Sanders a partial standing ovation.
“Some
people may disagree with me, but if you think that everybody who voted
for Donald Trump is a racist or a sexist or a homophobe, you would be
dead wrong,” Sanders said. Instead, he said, what happened is that
“hardworking decent people” had a lot of questions about their lives,
about long hours and poor wages and their declining standard of living
and school debt and Wall Street destroying the economy.
“So
Trump comes along, and Trump is, among many other qualities, a
pathological liar. So bad that he practically has no ideology at
all. Tomorrow he may come out for a single health care payer program, I
don’t know. He doesn’t believe in anything. It’s just what sounds right
at the moment,” Sanders said.
But
what Trump did do, “if you listen carefully to what he said, he said,
‘I, Donald Trump, I’m going to take on the establishment,’” Sanders
said.
He
won because “there are people in this country who are hurting, and they
are hurting terribly,” Sanders said. “And for years they looked to the
Democratic Party, which at one time was the party of working people. And
they looked and they looked and they looked and they got nothing in
return, and out of desperation they turned to Mr. Trump.”
“All
over this country there are people who are hurting, and our job is to
communicate and talk to and stand up and fight with those people for a
government that listens to them,” he said.
“It
is always easy to come to beautiful conferences like this, where we
look to our friends over here, friends over there, and we’re all in
basic agreement,” he counseled. “It is a hell of a lot harder to start
talking to people who have a worldview very different than yours. But
that is exactly what we have to do.”
Sanders said he planned to go to McDowell County in West Virginia with MSNBC to hold a town hall. McDowell County, which voted 74 percent for Trump,
is the poorest county in West Virginia and also has one of the worst
opium and prescription-drug abuse problems in the nation. The needs and
problems in McDowell are so acute that West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin, a
Democrat, and his wife have been for years now seeking to rally
influential figures in Washington and around the country to give the
place more attention.
Sanders,
who is positioning himself as a leading voice of the opposition to
Trump, also plans to debate Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, on CNN Feb. 7 in a
90-minute show devoted to the Affordable Care Act, which Republicans
have vowed to repeal.
Sanders
encouraged conference attendees to run for office, especially school
boards, city councils and state legislatures. “To people who don’t have
confidence to run for office … I’m a member of the Senate. You should
see some of the Senate. If you have any doubt about your ability to run
for office, turn on C-SPAN,” he joked.
The
conference runs through the end of the day Saturday and features such
other speakers as Black Lives Matter co-founder Opal Tometi, Rep.
Pramila Jayapal, the first Indian-American woman in the House, and
activist attorney Zephyr Teachout.
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