I don't know quite what to make of this, but if this is even partially
true, please explain again how the Sanders campaign is the enemy of the
left?

http://www.alternet.org/election-2016/why-bernie-sanders-starting-attract-conservative-voters
--------------------------snip
Nate Silver has the Bernie Sanders campaign figured out. Ignore what
happens in Iowa and New Hampshire, the “data-driven” prognostication wizard
wrote back in July, when Sanders was polling a healthy 30 percent to
Clinton’s 46 percent in both contests. That’s only, Silver says, because
“Democratic caucus-goers in Iowa and Democratic primary voters in New
Hampshire are liberal and white, and that’s the core of Sanders’ support.”

Silver has a chart. It shows that when you multiply the number of liberals
and whites among state electorates, Vermont, New Hampshire, and Iowa rank
first, second, and third. Texas is near the bottom—a place where Bernie
Sanders should feel about as welcome as a La Raza convention at the Alamo,
right?

I have a new friend who begs to differ.

It’s July 20, and my airplane seatmate asks what brought me to Texas. He is
a construction company sales executive from Houston. He’s watching Fox News
on his cell phone. He tells me he considers himself a conservative. I tell
him I’m a political reporter covering the Bernie Sanders campaign. He perks
up: “I like what I’ve heard from him. Kind of middle of the road.”

Eleven days later, I’m at a Bernie Sanders house party in the depressed
steel town of Griffith, Indiana, in a state that places in the bottom
quartile on Silver’s chart. I approach a young man in his twenties wearing
a thrift store T-shirt. I ask him what brings him here tonight.

“I’m just helping out my friends because they asked me to help out,” he
tells me. He adds that he’s a conservative: “But I approve of some of the
stuff that Bernie stands for. Like appealing to more than just the one
percent and just trying to give everybody a leg up who’s needing it these
days.” Data-driven analysis is only as good as the categories by which you
sift the information. If you’ve already decided that “liberals” are the
people who prefer locally sourced arugula to eating at McDonald’s, or are
the people who don’t watch Fox News, it is a reasonable conclusion that
there aren’t enough “liberals” out there to elect Bernie Sanders. Yet
political categories shift. One of the things the best politicians do is
work to shift them.
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