It makes a twisted sort of sense. Warren was already considered a bit of a traitor for not endorsing Bernie when it counted (after all, the most progressive member of the senate lost in Massachusetts), so her going all the way and actually endorsing Clinton confirms that earlier sense of betrayal for the conspiratorially minded.
The last month-ish has been frustrating for everyone Democrat-affiliated of course. The calls for Bernie to drop out went from "persistent" to "genuinely angry", which only dumped fuel on the conspiracy theory fire because that's how conspiracy thinking works. The epic snarkfest would probably have been hilarious for anyone on the R side of the fence if they weren't all busy putting guns in their mouths.
What's frustrating is I get it to some extent, even from a pragmatic point of view. Like, the argument looks a bit like this.
(Disclaimer: it's entirely possible there's the simple explanation of "Bernie bought his own hype", and presumably it's a 'little from column A, little from column B' scenario, but you know me, I love the long form arguments.)
- Bernie's main goal is (and perhaps always was) to influence the party platform in a more progressive direction.
- His ability to do so increases as he gains more voters in the primary.
- THEREFOR he needs to run the primary to the end as gain as many votes as possible.
- THEREFOR he needs to keep potential supporters willing to vote, ie he needs to have a chance to win.
- The perception of fighting for every single vote and calling to question every instance of potential shenanigans presents a candidate as more viable than the pure numbers suggest.
- THEREFOR call out all instances where the DNC or state parties seem to take actions that could potentially favor Clinton over Sanders.
and after a while that turns from "the system is kinda fucked up" to "CONSPIRACY", although Sanders seemed to play more to the latter than the former a lot of times anyway (*sigh*). But in principle it's an effective option, but it's also playing with fire. Because once people are in CONSPIRACY mode, it's very hard to deescalate from it. People were pissed off when he didn't suspend/concede on Tuesday night and I kinda went "well duh he's not going to concede, giving up in the face of CORRUPT CONSPIRACY will just make the base bugger off into awfulville".
I mean, we may indeed be at the point where nothing is going to work, but at a minimum he needs to be able to enumerate all the gains he's made and show very clearly that he was able to sway the party to his views (or strongly in that direction) despite not actually winning the nomination. Shows the system can be corrected and that working within it is a viable path, which is one of the main sticking points for his holdouts.
Shit, not gonna lie. I have a lot of reservations about sticking with the Democrats after November myself. If things don't change quite a bit we're gonna run out the clock on climate change or some other fascistic demagogue actually winning, and if this primary hasn't been a wakeup call for the Democrats then they're just not going to do it until the generational shift in ~20 years and we'll have to find some other, faster means of effecting change.