Sen. Bernie Sanders may not have won the Democratic nomination, but he won over the heart of a progressive movement.

Revolutions R Us! From the big one in 1776 that created our nation to Bernie Sanders' 2016 political uprising against America's new plutocratic elites, democratic change comes when workaday people start standing up to the bosses, bankers, big shots, and BSers who are knocking us down.

But wait, you say, Bernie lost! Where's the revolution in that?

It's in you and me.

Bernie's campaign was the spark that lit the revolutionary passing of the American majority who are being knocked down and held down by the Powers That Be. When Sanders' amazing, truly revolutionary campaign for president ended in August after the last Democratic primary election, the corporatists, cynics, and most of the media assumed that the grassroots populist revolution he inspired was over as well. They couldn't imagine that the diverse mix of young people, disempowered working-class voters, independents, progressive mavericks and millions of others whom Bernie brought together and energized would stay together, much less mount any serious challenge to the politics-as-usual elites.

Well, those aloof prognosticators might want to glance outside their little negative bubble, for "Our Revolution" is rising all across America's political horizon.

That's the name of the new organizational structure Bernie has generated for the continuation of his Sanders Electoral Storm. As civil rights leader Ben Jealous said when he joined the board of Our Revolution, "Bernie's transformative campaign was just the beginning."

Not only will the revolution continue, but it is going to spread, throughout the country, grow larger, and gain strength by bringing the populist issues, grassroots methods, and small-dollar funding of his presidential run to local and state politics.

Our Revolution (on the board of which I also serve) will be an independent political network of 50 interconnected state networks. Each state group will recruit, train and support statewide candidates, as well as run state and local issue campaigns.

In fact, Our Revolution is already on the move, shaking up the old-line established order by winning dozens of local, state, and congressional elections this year.

Meet Mike Connolly, a 6-foot-8, Boston-area attorney who was part of the Occupy Wall Street protest five years ago -- and who is now headed to the Massachusetts legislature. A disciple of Bernie's low-dollar campaigning, he was known as "No Money Mike" for going door to door, asking voters to support him by donating time rather than dollars. Endorsed by Sanders and backed by thousands of calls into his district from Our Revolution volunteers, Connolly defeated a 23-year, money-powered incumbent. And if you think volunteer power doesn't count anymore, Connolly won the September primary by only 394 votes.

Likewise, Marcia Ranglin-Vassell, a Rhode Island school teacher and Bernie backer defeated the state house's majority leader -- winning by only 17 votes. And three aggressively-progressive Berniecrats recently won primaries for congressional seats -- Zephyr Teachout in New York, Jamie Raskin in Maryland and Pramila Jayapal in Seattle.

Additionally, Our Revolution is supporting state ballot initiatives to lower drug prices, automatically register voters, repeal the death penalty, implement Medicare for all, and overturn Citizens United to get corporate money out of the people's political system. And this is just the beginning of what Our Revolution intends to accomplish.

Our Revolution's goal is not just to run and raise issues, but to win, govern, and transform our society from plutocracy to democracy -- a nation of social, racial, and environmental justice. As Sanders said over and over, "This isn't my revolution, it's ours."

Cynics sneer that We The People can't defeat the corporate establishment. But those who say it can't be done, should not interrupt those who're doing it! Be part of it!

Jim Hightower (info@jimhightower.com) is a best-selling author and nationally syndicated radio commentator who writes for Creators Syndicate.