NickCole is only a Democrat in the "traditional" sense in that he doesn't align himself with any particular idealogy within the Democratic Party.
With or without your parenthetical that follows I'm not sure exactly what this means but I'll try to clarify.
01solara is spot-on that I am a Democrat in the traditional sense of the Party, which during the Primaries and General I said of myself only to be attacked by Obama supporters as not a real Democrat.
What I see as traditional Democratic principles was summed up pretty well by Ron Brown, former Chairman of the Democratic Party: "The common thread of Democratic history, from Thomas Jefferson to Bill Clinton, has been an abiding faith in the judgment of hardworking American families, and a commitment to helping the excluded, the disenfranchised and the poor strengthen our nation by earning themselves a piece of the American Dream. We remember that this great land was sculpted by immigrants and slaves, their children and grandchildren."
(It seemed, to me, revealing that a few days ago an Obama supporter proudly started a thread about the majority of "the most educated Americans" approving of Obama. I'm all in favor of education but there is something subtextually elitist about that, especially juxtaposed with the Teabaggers, who are working class protesting conditions of the working class, being aligned with the Republican Party and Obama Democrats ridiculing them.)
Not that Brown's description covers everything but I was raised and have lived my adult life believing that the foundation of the Democratic Party is as champion and advocate for the vulnerable. Jefferson founded the Democratic Party to fight for the Bill of Rights, FDR put in place regulations to keep banks safe for us and programs like Social Security to provide a safety net for workers, LBJ pushed through civil rights laws and programs like Medicare and Medicaid to insure health care for our most vulnerable.
My criticism of Obama has been consistent with those principles.
(Currently the party is split between Obama the POTUS, and those who felt that Hillary Clinton should have won the nomination.).
The split in the party may have begun there but for me and many others it's beyond that now. (Which is not to say we've forgotten how Obama won the nomination.)
Now the split is between Democrats commited to Democratic principles and Democrats determined to protect and defend Obama at any cost, and if you read liberal/progressive blogs you know many in the first group were Obama supporters, some of whom were very caustic about Hillary but now are admitting they may have been wrong.
Obama's bailouts sans regulation and requirements, his stimulus bill that hasn't provided even a fraction of the help our economy needs, his backroom deal with PhRMA and other health care big business, his throwing abortion and illegal immigrants and a public option under the bus in health care reform, his broken promises to gays, diminishing AIDS programs that even George Bush expanded, these and many other choices are disgusting violations to those of us who stand for traditional Democratic principles.
In addition to all that, Obama's passion and leadership only kick in when he wants something for himself, never to fight for a cause bigger than himself. More and more Democrats are realizing this while other Dems insist he must be protected and defended even while he brings us down. That's part of the split as well. Some believe we are made stronger and more competent by forthright criticism, some believe being nice and likable (while selectively attacking those they can paint as Them) will make everything better.
Obama versus Hillary was only what began the split; now it's about much much more than that. Although ... I've wondered if the differences might have been simmering under the surface well before the Primaries because Obama's Primary campaign had the earmarks of exploiting existing differences to create real division of the Us Versus Them variety.