Moderators: Elvis, DrVolin, Jeff
brekin » 09 Nov 2016 21:43 wrote:What did that old man many of you mocked as unelectable say, earlier this year? "We need a political revolution."
Jack, last night we just had a revolution, and that unelectable old man was partly responsible.
Bernie never was going to happen.
Mmh, speaking of, I wonder what his latest tweet is?
Election Day should be a national holiday so that everyone has the time and opportunity to vote. Nov. 7
https://twitter.com/SenSanders?ref_src= ... r%5Eauthor
Yes, another one for the dream drawer.
Hopefully, in four years we will actually still have an Election Day.
Thanks Bernie!
coffin_dodger » 10 Nov 2016 00:25 wrote:Nah, not going to be dismissed by you, mate.
The stats you posted are meaningless with regards to any of the claims you make.
You do hate white men, as does AD. When challenged, you deny - then say racist, racist, racist...stupid, stupid, stupid...idiot, idiot, idiot. It's wearing thin. Genuinely.
Yes, their anger is just and insightful. Yet their designated scapegoats are always small minded and their designated saviors are always worst case studies.
http://www.democracynow.org/2016/11/9/headlines
Donald J. Trump was elected 45th president of the United States on Tuesday, defeating Hillary Rodham Clinton in a stunning upset that reverberated around the world. Trump carried at least 279 Electoral College votes to Clinton’s 218, although Trump appears to have narrowly lost the popular vote. Around 2:50 a.m., Donald Trump took the stage at a New York City victory party, saying he had received a phone call by Hillary Clinton congratulating him on the win.
President-elect Donald Trump: "To all Republicans and Democrats and independents across this nation, I say it is time for us to come together as one united people. It’s time. I pledge to every citizen of our land that I will be president for all Americans, and this is so important to me. For those who have chosen not to support me in the past, of which there were a few people, I am reaching out to you for your guidance and your help, so that we can work together and unify our great country."
The contest pitted the two most unpopular candidates in modern presidential history against one another, with a majority of Americans viewing both Trump and Clinton unfavorably. Donald Trump has never held elective office. He opened his campaign in 2015 with a speech calling Mexican immigrants criminals and rapists. Trump has proposed banning all Muslims from entering the United States. He openly mocked his opponents, reporters, Asians, African Americans and the disabled. More than a dozen women have accused Trump of sexual assault, and he was heard in a 2005 videotape boasting about sexually assaulting women. Throughout the campaign, Trump drew the enthusiastic support of white nationalists and hate groups. Former Ku Klux Klan Grand Wizard David Duke, who ran unsuccessfully for a U.S. Senate seat in Louisiana, cheered the outcome of the election. Duke tweeted, "This is one of the most exciting nights of my life -> make no mistake about it, our people have played a HUGE role in electing Trump! #MAGA.”
coffin_dodger » Wed Nov 09, 2016 7:25 pm wrote:Nah, not going to be dismissed by you, mate.
The stats you posted are meaningless with regards to any of the claims you make.
You do hate white men, as does AD. When challenged, you deny - then say racist, racist, racist...stupid, stupid, stupid...idiot, idiot, idiot. It's wearing thin. Genuinely.
slomo » Wed Nov 09, 2016 10:12 pm wrote:Again, breaking from my self-imposed self-ban...
I basically predicted this almost a year ago, in that thread that got me labeled a "psychopath": the tone-deafness evident in the rhetoric from the left was going to result in violent swing of the pendulum to the right. In the meantime, I see a number of RI members have come over to basically the same kind of thinking.
It's not exactly a full swing to the right, but it's telling.
Jack, as you know I love numbers, but my interpretation is that they only reinforce the dynamic I predicted. Many voters checked out because although HRC could not / would not speak to their core issues, they were not quite racist enough to vote for Trump. It's as much a failing of the DNC as it is the rottenness of Trump's core base.
slomo » Wed Nov 09, 2016 11:09 pm wrote:
I will grant that there is no monolithic left in real life, but there tends to be a centralization of a "progressive" message amplified by what is (has been) considered to be the legitimate media.
This message has tended to downplay the concerns of the shrinking middle class, including (in particular) white men who are feeling marginalized. Whether or not the concerns of this demographic bloc are valid (some of them are, in my opinion as a mixed-race gay guy, but some of them are not), they have been left unaddressed by the major Democratic presidential candidate of 2016.
Lena Dunham is a symbol of that messaging, she is symbolic of the tone-deafness of this (somewhat artificially constructed) brand of "progressivism"
and she is the symbolic target of the ire of many (possibly reluctant) Trump supporters.
She is not the only symbol, but she's a pretty rich one (in many senses of the word "rich"). Dunham is the symbolic poster-girl for the DNC this election cycle.
Human behavior is largely based on emotion, and emotion is based on symbols and archetypes.
This is particularly true of elections. So to discount the effect of symbols on the outcome of this election
simply because the symbols don't quite align with a complex and prosaic reality
JackRiddler » 09 Nov 2016 20:41 wrote:slomo » Wed Nov 09, 2016 11:09 pm wrote:
I will grant that there is no monolithic left in real life, but there tends to be a centralization of a "progressive" message amplified by what is (has been) considered to be the legitimate media.
So who is doing that? You're saying it: The media. It's an old story, they pick who is representative.This message has tended to downplay the concerns of the shrinking middle class, including (in particular) white men who are feeling marginalized. Whether or not the concerns of this demographic bloc are valid (some of them are, in my opinion as a mixed-race gay guy, but some of them are not), they have been left unaddressed by the major Democratic presidential candidate of 2016.
Wait, now Clinton is the left? The left just never catches a break in centrist American discourse. No matter how far to the right the D's move, they still get blamed on the "left."
Surely the whole point is that she didn't for a moment consider being "left" even in the moderate mode of Sanders. Or she would have talked about the shrinking middle class, and offered something other than an image.Lena Dunham is a symbol of that messaging, she is symbolic of the tone-deafness of this (somewhat artificially constructed) brand of "progressivism"
Very artificially constructed, very much "progressivism" as opposed to anything progressive.and she is the symbolic target of the ire of many (possibly reluctant) Trump supporters.
And that's mainly a matter of convenience. The more reluctant, the more they need such a symbolic target, which (my point) can always, always be found & pumped up as though significant. I don't think many unreluctant Trump supporters even have a clue who she is. They don't need her. They know what they think.She is not the only symbol, but she's a pretty rich one (in many senses of the word "rich"). Dunham is the symbolic poster-girl for the DNC this election cycle.
Sure. And neither is "left." Actually we're agreeing. I'm just not seeing Trump votes (the usual Republican vote, minus a bit) as reaction formation to "liberal" "elite" snootiness. I am seeing that as a big part of the failure to appeal to six or seven million who went for Obama last time, but not Clinton this time. Or to very many outside that circle. It's hard to imagine Clinton being handed a better opponent to beat than Trump (the DNC wanted him!), so the fuck-up is hers and the DNC's.Human behavior is largely based on emotion, and emotion is based on symbols and archetypes.
So we're fucked. Since the media can run this effortlessly.This is particularly true of elections. So to discount the effect of symbols on the outcome of this election
I don't, but clearly they are an intermediary step. People choose the "symbols" they need to reinforce the direction they're already tending in. The symbols don't generally prompt the choice. They allow one to make that claim after the fact. "Yeah, I voted for Trump, but only because that Lena Dunham was so irritating." You believe that? The "reluctant" Trump voter does, in the end, but that's not what happened. Dunham's the totemic after-the-fact excuse.simply because the symbols don't quite align with a complex and prosaic reality
Not quite. They barely align at all. At least half of the 59.6 million (those who aren't the Christianist base, another story) are basically patsies who, out of anger and scapegoating of the racial other, just voted to be fucked (even worse than before) along with everyone else.
In any case, even the uninspiring candidate (you think I disagree?!) just beat Trump in actual votes. We're having this discussion because of the continuing joke pulled on us by the 55 dead men from 1787.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 172 guests