Bernie Sanders fans are dumping the Vermont senator in mass after he endorsed Wall St.-backed Hillary Clinton on Tuesday.

“So disappointed. Bernie sold out millions and many of us fell for it,” one former fan tweeted. “Never again.”

And this tweet in particular revealed the great divide between populist Bernie voters and Hillary Clinton:

There is a difference between Clinton and Sanders. Thus #neverHillary pic.twitter.com/TY7CsZIfK0 — Mike Archer (@JamesMArcher) July 12, 2016

“Personally, I don’t think I will support Hillary. I don’t trust her,” Sanders fan Lisa Friddle told Fortune. “I can’t see backing someone I don’t believe in.”

Twitter was flooded with ex-Bernie backers with similar views:

Welp, Bernie. "I will make it clear as possible, as to why I'm endorsing Hillary Clinton." #NeverHillary We won't follow you there. — aaron (@leftyaaron) July 12, 2016

@BernieSanders he is endorses HILLARY. This is where we part ways Bernie. #NeverHillary NEVER — Retirees United (@RetireesUnited) July 12, 2016

And a large portion of Bernie followers will dump the Democratic Party altogether by either joining the almost non-existent Green Party or voting for Donald Trump in the general election.

Bernie endorsed. Sad, but found my path: Green! Realized it was my home. @BernieSanders TY for opening my eyes. #bernieorbust #neverhillary — Rose Buchholz (@animedays) July 12, 2016

Bernie is a better man than me! #neverhillary — #FreeAssange #Unity4J (@laurapcd1) July 12, 2016

As we’ve previously reported, a huge percentage of Bernie Sanders supporters would vote for Donald Trump over Hillary Clinton in the general election.

Why would Bernie voters support Clinton, the establishment candidate who stole the election from Sanders with the help of big banks?

Simply put, there’s more to like about Trump than Clinton, many Bernie voters are finding out.

While noble – and populist – the Bernie movement was doomed from the start: it’s impossible to expand the state to fix inequality when the state, which produces nothing, is the creator of inequality.

“We have monopolistic state money, a central planner in monetary affairs (central banks), and banks that receive special privileges from the state,” economist Philipp Bagus of the Mises Institute pointed out. “…It is the state itself that causes increasing inequality, which it pretends to fight.”

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