I don't know, maybe I just have a skewed idea of democrats. Like I read their platform and I agree with every point on it, but then they get into power and... some of those points seem to get a lot more attention than others. Like, for example, I think its great that we don't hate the LGBT community, but I'm disappointed that the change there ultimately ended up coming from the supreme court rather than congress. Granted we only had congress for 2 years, but I'm not convinced they would have pushed hard for marriage equality even with 8 years because multiple factions in our coalition aren't particularly pro gay rights. Or environmentalism, Republicans really hate environmentalism but I'm not convinced democratic politicians actually give a shit. Stuff like that. Economically I admire that they're sane, normalish by worldwide standards, and not complete sellouts in terms of where their campaign funds come from. But they still seem to care a lot more about promoting globalism than they do about student loan debt, tax reform, or the social safety net. And like yes, I get the main problem there isn't dems, its republicans. But like, they could do more to help? And then there's things like, we need to get rid of property tax school funding, and we need to eliminate mass incarceration, since those are two of the big things keeping people down. And again maybe my perspective is skewed, but I don't feel democrats are as mad about this as a progressive party should be. They just want to keep plugging in the same "if we hold all schools to the same standards they'll all perform the same" bullshit education reform in so they can pretend they did something.
Don't get me wrong I think Obama was a net positive influence but for a liberal archdevil he was pretty centerline IMO. Obamacare was the most hyped up insurance regulation change ever, his policy in the Middle East was basically "like Bush but not dumb," his education reform was about what I'd expect from bipartisan education reform (AKA ass). I liked him, but I didn't love him, which I think is about typical for dems talking about Obama. The things I like about Obama go: his big level plans for the nation < the relatively small things he changed or tried to change, like closing Guantanamo Bay <<< the fact that he didn't fuck everything up massively and carried himself the way a president should.
Bernie always seemed different from Hillary to me. Bernie's whole thing was to say "if we change this economic thing, everyone disadvantaged would be better off." Which don't get me wrong, is a very very common message in US politics, but Bernie tied it down to a plan that stepped on a lot of people's toes. He was also very specific about who he would help and how (for example, all the student loan stuff). Hillary came at it from more of an identity politics angle, which I don't have a problem with, but it is different. The best way I can summarize it is that Hillary is a very elite, but otherwise typical, democratic politician, while Bernie is a New Deal Democrat with a time machine. I mean the guy has said things that could be paraphrased as "yeah if you elect me your taxes will go up, but you'll get all this great stuff and your wallet will be about the same in the end." Which is what republicans think dems are but I don't think that's what the party actually is right now. Too afraid to step on toes, can't get too crazy or the swing states will swing swing swing away.
Edit:
This article about Trump's media consumption, well it contains some pretty angry stuff, but it also pretty much has a TL:DR of what I've been saying in my last two posts right here:
Democrats by and large are convinced that no one actually supports their agenda, and they devote a not insignificant amount of time and political capital to explaining to their own constituents why they cannot pursue goals that a majority of them support. (“I supported single payer since before you were born,” says Nancy Pelosi, who has the legislative and leadership record of someone who may support single payer but clearly doesn’t actually expect it to happen in our lifetimes.)
Conservatives, especially those who came up during the Obama era, have, more or less, the opposite problem: They’ve convinced themselves that their agenda is hugely popular and that everyone supports them.
There’s actually been some research on this: Politicians—both liberal ones and conservative ones—believe that the electorate is more conservative than it actually is. Conservative politicians believe the electorate is much more conservative than it actually is. Once you learn this, suddenly a lot of things about how elected officials act make more sense.