Medicare for all isn't the only plan, which is the sanders plan, to provide universal healthcare. If that is the goal it should be discussed. Period.
I'm not even going to entertain this any further because you and other diehard Bernie guys criticized Warren for suggesting there are other paths to universal healthcare in this country besides Medicare for all.
Either you're for the open exchange of ideas for a common goal or you're not.
Period.
I've donated more money to Warren than Bernie and haven't criticized Warren beyond pointing out some of the more grounded critiques on her foreign policy coming from the left. You've gotten so far off the point you're just making shyt up. Let's simplify the points I've laid out, that you don't seem to be able to catch while a Sanders related policy is involved.
- The American people can't differentiate between M4A and other UHC plans.
- Claiming to hold a hearing on M4A while emphasizing alternative UHC plans instead of M4A only contributes to that confusion.
Ideas can be exchanged openly but you need clarity for that exchange to have any actual utility. Polling makes it very clear that the Democrats are confused on this specific issue. Whether you want to think it's by accident or purposeful, Democratic leadership has failed to inform their constituents on the differences among the UHC plans Period.
Which brings me back to the original discussion we were having. There's no real evidence that discussing Social Democratic policies (a phrase I chose because it encompasses both Sanders' and Warren's policies) will lead to "major catastrophes" like you asserted before. The reason UHC plans are now all being dubbed M4A is to piggyback on the the popularity of that term and nothing else. It's a rhetorical game that contributes to the confusion of the majority of Americans on what policy does what.
Warren and Sanders are examples of Social Democratic approaches to policy being successful when clarified to the American people.