at least that's what they'll say. https://www.yahoo.com/finance/news/burlington-college-closes-jane-sanders-212935597.html
Reading the article, it certainly seems like she had a lot to do with their downfall. Why that should reflect on her husband, I have no idea.
I think the Hillary camp is starting to get nervous (not of the nomination, just looking bad in losing primary after primary), and is grasping at straws.
I was watching MSNBC last night and Sanders seemed adamant about staying in it until the end. He won in Oregon and seems to have a chance of winning California. In that scenario, if I understand correctly, it'll all come down to the superdelegates.
Which are all in the tank for Clinton. I actually feel bad for Sanders, even though I think he's a lunatic if he believes that Socialism would work in the US when it's failed miserably everywhere else it's been tried. He's run an honorable campaign (a little too much, in fact), but he never stood a chance. The Democrat primary system is totally rigged for whomever the party honchos want, the will of the people be damned.
For all my disagreement with Sanders, I agree with you that he seems to have the courage of his convictions. In fact, I wonder whether at this point his motivation is simply to highlight the undemocratic nature of the Democratic Party.