Hillary Clinton's top contributors since 1989 are mostly big banks -- courtesy of OpenSecrets.org.

Politics has been called “the art of the possible.” In Hillary’s view, this sense of “the possible” is determined by big money’s influence in our country’s policy-making, and she is fine with tiptoeing within this framework and fiddling around the edges.

Hillary says she's never changed a vote because of pressures from her ultra-wealthy donors. That's because her votes, proposals, and views first and foremost have been shaped by big money.

“It is not the Congress that regulates Wall Street. It's Wall Street that regulates the U.S. Congress.” -Senator Bernie Sanders.

For example, Hillary doesn't want to raise the cap on taxable income to fund Social Security because it would impact people who earn over $250 thousand a year -- the same people who are financing her campaign.

She has said that she doesn't favor universal health care because after surveying all the big moneyed forces arrayed against it, she believes it will not work.

Hillary keeps talking about what is “practical” when the underlying problem is: Money in politics has determined what is practical.

Well, we have a choice, we can resign ourselves to the politics of incrementalism that sustains the status-quo or we can flip the status-quo on its head.

Americans want a president with the courage to think and act outside of this broken system. Americans want a president with a vision for a government that works for the people -- not just the ultra-wealthy. That's why I'm supporting Bernie Sanders to be our next president of the United States.