The Sanders movement is moving more and more to the right. The Sanders movement was never about social reform and probably why African Americans and Hispanic voters weren't as energized as you and your kind.
By avoiding the touchy subject of racial issues and social equality in this country Sanders is reaching out to white people in the center and right of the political spectrum. It's a smart tactic for an old man who wants to leave the country better off than how he found it. He doesn't have time for the hard issue and so is pushing the easier economic ones. At least that's my current take on what's going on with your guy.
Opinions
The Sanders movement is only just beginning
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/the-sanders-movement-is-only-just-beginning/2016/08/09/228b8744-5d87-11e6-9d2f-b1a3564181a1_story.html?utm_term=.d75f1a0c1ba4
This is a recent article about the developments of the Sanders movement. From my perspective, it's a very positive article about the direction and developments in "Our Revolution" 's recent efforts. I'm not criticizing the objectives of the movement at all, I'm just not on board with a movement that is all about economic reform and downplays or even devalues the objective of social equality.
I found this passage very interesting:
Sanders and his supporters are intent on giving these efforts institutional backing. The Vermont senator has announced the formation of Our Revolution, which will support progressive candidates up and down the ticket. Organizers from the Sanders campaign have launched Brand New Congress, an ambitious effort to run 400-plus populist candidates for Congress — including independents and Republicans as well as Democrats — in 2018, with “a single, unified campaign with a single plan,” and centralized crowd-sourced financing — small donors contributing to a national pool in a historic effort to transform a Congress that is corrupt and dysfunctional. These new efforts will augment progressive groups like the Working Families Party, MoveOn.org, Democracy for America, the Progressive Change Campaign Committee and People’s Action, all of whom are growing in energy and ambition in the wake of the Sanders campaign.
I'll repeat a key line:
candidates for Congress — including independents and Republicans as well as Democrats — in 2018, with “a single, unified campaign with a single plan,”
Again, I'm not saying this is a bad thing to build a coalition across party lines. If this is true then the "revolution" is not that at all. It's "Our Reform", a reform of campaign spending and probably some other objectives such as $15 minimum wage by 2022 thrown in. Some will definitely be anti-choice, some will campaign against political correctness. Maybe this "unified campaign" will include health care reform but in order to get Republicans on board, not single payer healthcare. This is a progressive movement in the center of the political spectrum. This should play well with the white population who make up about 66% of the voters and so it's probably a good strategy.
As I've said before about Bernie's policies, not bad but insufficient. Certainly not revolution.