• tacosanonymous@lemm.ee
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    1 month ago

    To be brief, itā€™s propaganda designed to keep rural voters red. Ie- ā€œthose big city folk donā€™t care about you.ā€

    • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      Partlyā€¦

      But also that the Dem party today is significantly more ā€œconservativeā€ economically than we used to be, as the article points out:

      In 1910, Teddy Roosevelt thundered his warning that ā€œa small class of enormously wealthy and economically powerful men, whose chief object is to hold and increase their powerā€ could destroy US democracy. Rooseveltā€™s answer was to tax wealth. The estate tax was eventually enacted in 1916, and the capital gains tax in 1922.

      In the 1912 presidential campaign, Woodrow Wilson promised ā€œa crusade against powers that have governed us ā€¦ that have limited our development ā€¦ that have determined our lives ā€¦ that have set us in a straitjacket to do as they pleaseā€. The struggle to break up the giant trusts would be, in Wilsonā€™s words, a ā€œsecond struggle for emancipationā€.

      Wilson signed into law the Clayton Antitrust Act, which strengthened antitrust laws and protected unions. He also established the Federal Trade Commission to root out ā€œunfair acts and practices in commerceā€, and created the first permanent national income tax.

      Years later, Teddy Rooseveltā€™s fifth-cousin, Franklin D Roosevelt, attacked corporate and financial power by giving workers the right to unionize, the 40-hour workweek, unemployment insurance, and social security. FDR instituted a high marginal income tax on the wealthy ā€“ those making more than $5m a year were taxed up to 75% ā€“ and he regulated finance.

      Plus, Teddy was the first presidential platform that used universal healthcareā€¦

      So part of it is that Republicans lie and propaganda

      But if the modern Dem party didnā€™t think the Dem party platform from a fucking century ago wasnt ā€œtoo extremeā€ the modern Dem party would be as popular as it was with FDR.

      • acosmichippo@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        I think thatā€™s more of a symptom than a root cause. republicansā€™ goal since the 70ā€™s has been to pull the lower and middle classes to them with wedge identity issues like abortion. the whole ā€œelitismā€ thing is a part of that too. So now the parties are competing on those wedge issues and identity more than economic progress, as they were in FDRā€™s time.

        • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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          1 month ago

          Like, you understand that if the Dem party wanted to, they could still be that economically progressive, right?

          And that in doing so it mitigate Republicans lying?

          The Dem party becoming more economically conservative is solely the fault of the people choosing to do what donors want over what Dem voters wantā€¦

          Both parties focusing on the ā€œwedge issuesā€ is by design, that way the wealthy who donate to both parties always winā€¦

          The only people who control the Dem.platform is Dem party leadership, them choosing wealthy donors over voters is literally no oneā€™s fault except the people running the party who keep repeatedly making that choice.

          I get wanting to blame Republicans, but we canā€™t on this one.

          Itā€™s literally as easy as Kamala deciding to do so at this point, itā€™s a month from election and sheā€™s the candidate. But sheā€™s not, instead she keeps moving to the right economically the closer we get to the election.

          • Semi-Hemi-Lemmygod@lemmy.world
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            1 month ago

            The Dem party becoming more economically conservative is solely the fault of the people choosing to do what donors want over what Dem voters wantā€¦

            Do not make the mistake of thinking nerds on the Internet represent the Democratic Party rank and file. They like neoliberal economics.

            • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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              1 month ago

              They like neoliberal economics

              Then why did 08 Obama carry the party and flip red states when all those neo liberals voted R due to the PUMA movement?

              The neo liberals are not a majority of voters, they just still have a death grip on party leadership positions at the DNC

              • PugJesus@lemmy.world
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                1 month ago

                Then why did 08 Obama carry the party

                ā€¦ because Obama was a moderate neoliberal.

          • Carrolade@lemmy.world
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            1 month ago

            Fortunately both Biden and Harris support an unrealized capital gains tax, which would be an absolutely huge move. If we can acquire both houses of Congress and thus the ability to pass laws, we may actually achieve it.

            Also, have dems cut taxes or regulation on the wealthy at any point that you can remember?

          • acosmichippo@lemmy.world
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            1 month ago

            the point is there would be more of a political mandate for economic change if our demographics looked more like this today. that map is never going to happen today no matter how progressive dems go on the economy, because of the work republicans have done to divide us over the last 50 years.

            • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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              1 month ago

              The point is thereā€™s been a political mandate for economic change for over a centuryā€¦

              The reason the Dems donā€™t have the numbers to accomplish it, is them giving up on progressive economics.

              Think of it like a restaurant. One that used to serve food people wanted and was always busy. Then the restaurant got kick backs from a differemt food supplier. One whose food was worse, and thus unpopular.

              The restaurant loses business because the food gets worse, it takes a while because people only go out to eat every four years, and the only other restaurant serves shit sandwiches exclusively.

              People wonā€™t still go out to eat and pick the shit sandwich, theyā€™ll just stop going out to eat. The patrons of the shit sandwich restaurant will eat anything, theyā€™ll keep showing up.

              In this analogy, that explains the decrease in Dem voters while Republicans stay steady.

              We can bitch and moan when the shit sandwich restaurant is the most popular, but bullying people to still patronize the restaurant thatā€™s a shadow of itā€™s former self isnā€™t going to work as well as that restaurant just serving the food customers want.

              But they wonā€™t do that, because they make more serving cheap shitty food even if they get less customers

              Itā€™s really as easy as running a Dem candidate that is as progressive as Dem voters.

              Hell, Pennsylvania is an important battleground state where close to 60% of voters want to ban frackingā€¦

              If Kamala gave voters what they want on just that one single issue it would likely hand her the presidency. But sheā€™s not.

              For some reason we only hear ā€œthis is what voters wantā€ from the Dem.party when itā€™s used to rationalize being more conservative. When the voters are more liberal than the party, the voters are told their views donā€™t matter, and that depresses turnout which is why we donā€™t have ā€œthe mandateā€ we used to.

              I hope that makes sense.

              • acosmichippo@lemmy.world
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                1 month ago

                People wonā€™t still go out to eat and pick the shit sandwich, theyā€™ll just stop going out to eat. The patrons of the shit sandwich restaurant will eat anything, theyā€™ll keep showing up.

                continuing with your analogy, people have NOT stopped going out to eat. a significant portion have absolutely gone over to the shit sandwich shop.

                a greater percentage of voting-age people voted in 2020 compared to 1932. In 1932 they were much more unified under FDR, today we are more evenly split between R and D.

                https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voter_turnout_in_United_States_presidential_elections

                • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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                  1 month ago

                  If the two restaurants both serve shitty food, thereā€™s not as much judgement for eating a shit sandwich. Because everyone eating at a restaurant is eating ahitry food. It becomes normalized.

                  The ā€œgoodā€ restaurant becoming ahittier doesnā€™t steal customers from Shit Sandwiches, it just makes people think that shit sandwiches isnā€™t as crazy as it seems because both restaurants serv shit.

                  Which still fits.

                  Dems moving to the right year after year and adopting things like fracking and a border wall when a decade ago we said only a racist idiot would want those thingsā€¦ Makes the average American question if other ā€œconservativeā€ ideas are really as bad as Dems say they are, or if 5 years both parties would want them.

                  It only hurts the left and helps the right

          • Wiz@midwest.social
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            1 month ago

            instead she keeps moving to the right economically

            Itā€™s not all ā€œMove to the right.ā€ Just this week she suggested expanding Medicare for in-home care.

            • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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              1 month ago

              Just this week she suggested expanding Medicare for in-home care

              Which is like the most widely abused part of Medicareā€¦

              Not by people, by predatory providers who max out benefits while going months without even calling their ā€œpatientsā€.

              Jon Oliver just did an episode on it this season even, was just like a month ago I think.

              As long as someone makes a profit on healthcare, itā€™s going to be absurd by overcharging and undeserving.

              We need a nationalized system lol kentge VA where thereā€™s no insurance middleman, Medicare gives us one middle man which just doesnā€™t solve the root problem.

              Itā€™s been 112 years since universal healthcare was part of a presidential platform, that being ā€œtoo extremeā€ for todayā€™s candidat is making my point, not disputing it.

              You need to look at the longer timeframe.

      • SupahRevs@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        I also wish the Dems would promote more progressive policies. At the same time, the media does not celebrate the wins for Dems, such as the creation of the CFPB that Elizabeth Warren established. They donā€™t celebrate the response to oligopoly through review of mergers and acquisitions by the FTC under Lina Kahn. They donā€™t celebrate the reduced child poverty rate under the expanded child tax credit. Positive progress doesnā€™t make it to mass media even when it does happen, which isnā€™t often enough.

        • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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          1 month ago

          By the same token, they report everything trump saysā€¦

          The report everything Vance says, but also Biden and Kamala too.

          If Biden and Kamala talked about those things, then the media would too.

          Kamala just went on an interview blitz, I watched some of it, didnā€™t see her being up anything you mentioned. Did she in any of the recent interviews you e seen?

          She was just on Colbert, heā€™d have let her say anything she wanted toā€¦

          Do you remember what she choose to discuss?

          Edit:

          Walz just talked about ending the Electoral college, and the media reported on it.

          But they also reported on Kamala distancing herself from it.

          Thatā€™s an example from like today of what Iā€™m talking about. All it takes for the media to report on something is a high ranking politician saying it. Thereā€™s so many and so desperate for ad revenue they will cover anything that comes out of someoneā€™s mouth if theyā€™re on the presidential ticket.

      • Dagwood222@lemm.ee
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        1 month ago

        Stop blaming the Dem leadership and look at the facts.

        The voters heard Donald Trump say that he liked grabbing the pussy and that he didnā€™t like soldiers who got captured.

        People are choosing garbage because theyā€™d happily eat a ton of manure if it meant they could blow stink in a Libs face.

      • Krauerking@lemy.lol
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        1 month ago

        Death had to take him sleeping.Ā For if Roosevelt had been awake, there would have been a fight.

        Damn I miss Teddy. One of the last presidents to truly give a fuck and put the actions behind it.

        • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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          1 month ago

          He really wasnā€™t one of the last thoā€¦

          Not by a longshot, hell, Ike was the last good Republican and he was long after Teddy.

          https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_presidents_of_the_United_States

          Things were going pretty fucking great till the original ā€œOctober surpriseā€

          According to the allegation, on top of the Carter administrationā€™s agreement to unfreeze Iranian assets in U.S. banks in exchange for the release of the embassy hostages, the Reagan administrationā€™s practice of covertly supplying Iran with weapons via Israel likely originated as a further quid pro quo for having delayed the release until after Reaganā€™s inauguration, setting a precedent for covert U.S.-Iran arms deals that would feature heavily in the subsequent Iranā€“Contra affair.

          https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/1980_October_Surprise_theory

          Which is why Iā€™m so fucking nervous hearing right wingers start using that phrase lately.

          They might not know where it comes from, but somewhere the person coming up with their talking points does. They just donā€™t spontaneously come up with shit, they parrot the phrases theyā€™ve heard.

          But anyways, on the timeline of our country things have only been getting worse since we stopped running progressives and started Bill Clinton and the neoliberals.

          We had a brief respite with Obama, but when you compare Obama and Carter and remember there was 27 years between themā€¦

          Obama wasnā€™t anywhere near as progressive as we should have been.

          ā€œModerateā€ democrats is not a successful strategy, we have all this freaking data and history to support it, but we just fucking ignore and keep letting the wealthy run shit cuz itā€™s easy.

      • Plus, Teddy was the first presidential platform that used universal healthcareā€¦
        So part of it is that Republicans lie and propaganda

        Ironic considering that Teddy was a Republican.

        But also that the Dem party today is significantly more ā€œconservativeā€ economically than we used to be

        But thatā€™s the contradiction. The GOP is even further along this scale, so how can the GOP be seen as the party of the people while the Dems are elitists?

        Partlyā€¦

        I think mainly.

      • grue@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        We need to bring back the Bull Moose Party (at the local level, not the Russian-backed spoiler effect garbage like the Green Party is debasing itself at).

        • psvrh@lemmy.ca
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          1 month ago

          A better idea is to do to the Democratic Party what the Tea Party and MAGA did to the Republicans.

          Primary out corporate candidates and push for progressive ones at every level. President, congressional rep, school board trustee, dog-catcher: it doesnā€™t matter.

          The problem progressive voters have is that they donā€™t show up, and the especially donā€™t show up during off years, in primaries and in down-ballot races. The polticial right, by comparison, has been getting people in place on small races for years.

          Sanders did more for progressivism by enthusing Democratic members to vote in primaries and down-ballot races than Stein or any third party has ever done, and weā€™re seeing results. It needs to continue.

          • grue@lemmy.world
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            1 month ago

            Thatā€™s a nice thought, but it wonā€™t happen because the ratcheting effect of primarying out moderates only works in one direction, rightward. This is because corporate donors are just as happy to fund fascists as they are moderates.

            In contrast, progressive candidates often donā€™t stand a chance because corporate donors fucking hate them and will spend effectively unlimited amounts of money to destroy their chances, especially if they make regulation and oversight of corporations a big part of their platform. Ditto for the police ā€œunion[sic]ā€ and police reform, or AIPAC and opposing genocide, for that matter.

          • UltraGiGaGigantic@lemmy.ml
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            1 month ago

            No thanks. Ranked Choice voting or bust. Yall choosing bust? Sall good with me, I had a vasectomy so I donā€™t have kids. Rest well kids, you wonā€™t ever have to suffer these fools (me too, thanks).

        • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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          1 month ago

          I can see the reasoning that the presidency is the biggest office and gets people talking about third parties the mostā€¦

          But the reason the Green Party is obviously a grift is they focus on battleground states for those presidential runs.

          If they were doing what they said theyā€™re trying to do, theyā€™d focus on states like Cali where they can get the media attention and votes while not handing the presidency to Republicans.

          Like everything in American politics, it all depends on what state something is happening in

          • HakFoo@lemmy.sdf.org
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            1 month ago

            But conversely, the ā€œspoilerā€ factor of even a fuly realized Green campaign is nil if the Democrats tack left. Pull the plug on Bibi and Jill Stein has very little to talk about.

            Itā€™s like they know the party will never bother to win those voters, and assumes theyā€™ll capture them as good-enough/lesser-evil.

            • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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              1 month ago

              Yep, if the easiest votes to get were between the two parties, Republicans wouldnt pull the shit they do with far left parties while embracing the far right.

              Theyā€™d move to the center to fight for those mythical ā€œmoderatesā€ or at least have the Green party positioned slightly to the right of the Dem party.

              But theyā€™re not. Because Dems just use those mythical moderates as an excuse to do what big money donors want. Moving to the right is effective at raising money from billionaires, but completely ineffective at increasing Dem votes.

              The party and the voters donā€™t have the same goals.

            • Maeve@midwest.social
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              1 month ago

              If she did this and raised taxes on corporate and individual wealthy, it would be a win of historical proportions.

        • UltraGiGaGigantic@lemmy.ml
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          1 month ago

          You wouldnā€™t bring up the shortcomings of First Past The Post voting and then do nothing to change the voting systemā€¦ would you?

          So glad to hear of your public promise to work towards pass electoral reform in your state. Wishing you and your people the best of luck in this campaign you just signed up for.

    • index@sh.itjust.works
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      1 month ago

      Propaganda makes you believe that one of the two party is your fiend. Meanwhile for the past century both the red and blue party has served elites interests and fuck over everyone else (including the planet). The proof is that you are a peasants and it would take you a couple of minutes just to visualize how much a billion is.

      • Doomsider@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        The system is working as intended. A country created by the wealthy, for the wealthy, and controlled by the wealthy.

        Having said that the two sides of the same coin is a bunch of bullshit when you see 60+ years of hate and fear propaganda conducted by conservatives.

        Making every modern amenity a partisan issue and is also no mistake. It is very clear one side is keeping us from free education, free/cheap healthcare, equality, and a living wage. It is even clearer when they are pushing for more child labor, pollution, racism, and sexism.

        • index@sh.itjust.works
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          1 month ago

          You are contradicting yourself.

          The system is working as intended. A country created by the wealthy, for the wealthy, and controlled by the wealthy.

          Itā€™s not hard to understand, in such a system you donā€™t make it to the top unless you belong to the wealthy

          • Doomsider@lemmy.world
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            1 month ago

            Not at all, I am just not falling for the two sides of the same coin bullshit invented by the conservatives to further denigrate our government.

            There is a serious problem and it is not with the liberal/left/Democratic party. The reason we are in this situation is because the conservatives are garbage people dragging this country down.

            • index@sh.itjust.works
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              1 month ago

              There is a serious problem and it is not with the liberal/left/Democratic party. The reason we are in this situation is because the conservatives are garbage people dragging this country down.

              The reason we are in this situation is because for centuries if not thousand of years rulers enslaved and beat up people to seize power.

              Thereā€™s a genocide going on right now where kids are being murdered daily, if you believe thereā€™s not a problem in the current system you are complicit.

              https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_support_for_Israel_in_the_Israelā€“Hamas_war

              • Doomsider@lemmy.world
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                1 month ago

                This is not ancient history and the US is not unique in its genocidal actions. There is not a country that exists that has not engaged in this behavior.

                There are several genocides going on right now.

                https://www.genocidewatch.com/countries-at-risk

                I know there is a problem. In fact, I gather I know a lot more than you about it. Not disagreeing about that aspect at all.

                Having said that we are also experiencing far less genocide than any other time in history. It is weird to say it but things have gotten a lot better although I am sure the Palestinians, for example, would disagree.

                • index@sh.itjust.works
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                  1 month ago

                  It is weird to say it but things have gotten a lot better

                  For billionares and rulers things keep getting better yes, for everyone else they donā€™t. Look outside your window or at your bank account then remind yourself that thereā€™s someone chilling in one of their 500f yachts. For the average person in the past decade things have gone south.

                  Having said that we are also experiencing far less genocide than any other time in history.

                  Go ahead and compare the genocides perpetrated by parties without serious problems with these of their colleagues from history.

    • Cryophilia@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      To be fair, there is a kernel of truth there.

      https://www.cracked.com/blog/6-reasons-trumps-rise-that-no-one-talks-about

      The rural folk with the Trump signs in their yards say their way of life is dying, and you smirk and say what they really mean is that blacks and gays are finally getting equal rights and they hate it. But Iā€™m telling you, they say their way of life is dying because their way of life is dying. Itā€™s not their imagination. No movie about the future portrays it as being full of traditional families, hunters, and coal mines. Well, except for Hunger Games, and that was depicted as an apocalypse.

  • SelfProgrammed@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    To Democrats, ā€œelitesā€ mean your in some top percentile of wealth and income. To Republicans, ā€œelitesā€ means having a college degree.

    • Tyfud@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      This is the correct answer to the question the Guardian poses. Iā€™ve lived among them and can 100% confirm this is how they think.

      Elites is all about having a college degree and being ā€œbook smartā€ vs their ā€œstreet smartā€ or ā€œwise in the ways of manā€ sort of bullshit charlatans throughout history have used to make up for a lack of critical thinking skills.

      • TropicalDingdong@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        It really is the right answer. But I think we can sharpen it if we look at how the media around Democrats elevates and highlights elitism as a quality to be pursued, for example, in a candidate.

        A great example of this was the treatment of Pete Buttigieg, and specific media outlets elevation of him to a nationally relevant political actor. Harvard, then Oxford Rhodes scholar then a decade long McKinseyite (that alone should have disbarred him from running for president), then intelligence officer US Navy. He was the definition of ā€œqualifiedā€ to the CNN and NPR editorial boards.

        But how well had only political bonafides were a failed run for treasurer in Indiana, and a mayoral victory where he garnered all of 10k votes. So the guy has never actually won any significant state or federal elections. Yet in 2020, suddenly this guys is gets treated like a serious contender in the Democratic primary. Why?

        Democratically aligned corporate press is obsessed with credentials, and specifically, the kind that comes from ā€œeliteā€ schools and organizations. Partially because they themselves also come from these elite schools and organizations.

        • Krauerking@lemy.lol
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          1 month ago

          We really have become addicted to certifications and tags and qualifiers for everyone because itā€™s easier to ā€œunderstandā€ them at a glance and thatā€™s decided as all you need.

          On paper is good enough for far to many, itā€™s just easier to categorize people and move on.

          Being in your categories is the easiest way to automatically think of then as moral and good because they must be, you are. Itā€™s fucked up both parties. Look at Eric Adams and Marco Rubio.

        • captainlezbian@lemmy.world
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          1 month ago

          Very true. The Dems could really stand for more blue collar qualifications. Especially if we treated ā€œlocal union presidentā€ half as well as ā€œMcKinsey employeeā€

    • Grandwolf319@sh.itjust.works
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      1 month ago

      So they basically turned anti elitism to anti intellectualism so they can fool their audience.

      I mean, I thought we all knew that.

      • vxx@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        I wonder what kind of people ran on anti-intellectualism in the past? Maybe around the time of UdSSR, or some German leader? Maybe some famous leader in Cambodia as well?

    • InverseParallax@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      It means the nerds you shoved in lockers who learned to read and now have successful lives while you scrape by trying to make alimony at a job that would pay a living wage if you didnā€™t live in a right to work state.

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        See thatā€™s the elitism. Plenty of bullies made it out and plenty of their victims didnā€™t. Ruthlessness is profitable and you donā€™t have to be a good person to go to college.

        • InverseParallax@lemmy.world
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          How exactly is that elitism? Youā€™re specifically arguing against the meritocracy that they consider elitism, all that fancy book-learnin.

          Their mascot shits on a golden toilet in his own private country club ffs.

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            Youā€™re assuming everyone stuck in rural America in a shit job with grievances is a shit person who did it to themselves. A lot of them are, especially the die hard republicans, but plenty had hard choices, or any number of other decent reasons beyond just not being smart or something.

            And yeah their mascot is a filthy rich asshole, and a lot of them do suck ass. But also I spend enough time with those people to know plenty of them arenā€™t terrible but they are sick and tired of being treated like inherently morons for being rural

            • InverseParallax@lemmy.world
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              I get that, but I was that nerd shoved in lockers, and while the Midwest was decent, in the south it was far worse because I wasnā€™t white.

              The south tolerated those assholes a lot, and they were extremely ignorant, and their ignorance was a source of pride for them.

              I donā€™t want to demean the Midwestern red staters in any way, other than they clearly follow the wrong person, but the south is following moloch, their literal antichrist, out of hatred of others, and Iā€™m fine holding them in contempt for that because itā€™s no better than I would expect for them.

              Also, they scream and scream about a Bible theyā€™ve never read, and I say that as someone who went to catholic school, they thought I was lying like I said I memorized the phone book.

  • Random Dent@lemmy.ml
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    This is one of the greatest scams that conservatives get away with IMO, not just in the US but it happens in the UK and other places too. Conservatives get in, go hog wild cutting taxes, selling off public assets and throwing huge contracts to their friends, and then as soon as the other side gets back in they find that they have to now balance the books, the conservatives start complaining and saying theyā€™re the fiscally responsible ones.

    Itā€™s literally happening right now in the UK - we just got rid of the Tories finally after about 15 years, and the new Labour government immediately found a Ā£20 billion hole in the economy which they now have to make harsh cuts to sort out, and theyā€™re the ones getting criticized for it by the media.

    • Grandwolf319@sh.itjust.works
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      We need a government report card.

      At the end of every administration, we need to compare the national debt and all important factors.

      Itā€™s one thing people missed in coming up with democratic systems. If different people take turns to steer the ship then you need to define what their goal is so you can evaluate each.

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        That generally also does not go over well in the media.

        Conservatives make a mess to their advantage and win/win every time

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          Sure, because the media is generally profit oriented and therefore aligned with capitalist interests. We need more mutually supported and supportive media and journalism.

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        Donā€™t say this around any conservative. They only believe in cutting taxes.

        They always have these ā€œhousehold budgetā€ analogies when it comes to the government, but even in a ā€œhousehold budgetā€ situation one solution to overcoming debt is to find a way to raise your income so you can pay down the debt fasterā€¦Facepalm

    • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      not just in the US but it happens in the UK and other places too

      Damn. Canā€™t believe New Labour is getting tarred with accepting soccer tickets, fancy clothes, and vacation packages from British Peer Lord Alli. Seems so unfair. Wish people would stop accusing the Labour government of being corrupt, when they are very obviously following the rules of accepting gifts and definitely not operating on any quid pro quo.

      the new Labour government immediately found a Ā£20 billion hole in the economy

      New Labour has a set of accounting rules that count investment in capital as an expense and insists on running daily budget surpluses for their operating expenses.

      Popping open your household account, making cartoonish bug-eyes, and announcing ā€œWe owe $200k on our 30 year mortgage but we only make $80k/year! Weā€™re bankrupt for the next three years until we pay this house off!ā€ This is New Labour accounting. Itā€™s laughable and only ever used as an excuse not to spend any money.

      On the flip side, this is the same party that insists on privatizing everything. From Thames Water to British Gas to UK Rail, every once-public service has to be turned over and rented back from the private sector. The Brits pass out these privatization contracts as sinecures, guaranteeing their financial friends huge piles of free no-risk revenues at the expense of the British taxpayer. And then they complain that the country has no money.

      That New Labour slid directly into the driverā€™s seat the Tories left and gunned it isnā€™t something you can ignore, simply because the party leadership has changed.

    • GhostFaceSkrilla@lemmy.world
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      To be fair, in this monopolized 2 party system, both parties are owned by pretty much the exact same corporate interests and mega rich. Everything is by design. There is nothing they leave to chance.

  • aesthelete@lemmy.world
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    Because the media continually accepts and perpetuates the right wing framing of everything.

    • Signtist@lemm.ee
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      Because the media is owned and operated by rich men who benefit from putting the blame on others and calling it ā€œnews.ā€

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    Because the Democrats abandoned working class voters in the 80s and 90s to court the professional-managerial class in a pivot towards the center, and the Republicans were able to win over these disaffected blue-collar voters with resentment politics.

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        Most elected Democrats had abandoned a working class message by the 90s. Jimmy Carter seems like a socialist by todayā€™s standards, but its important to remember that at the time, he was running on a pivot towards the center and an attempt to distance the party from the New Deal. Ted Kennedyā€™s primary challenge was a campaign to return to their New Deal principles. Mondale and Dukakis were both moving to center as well, as the party had convinced themselves that Reganā€™s success meant New Deal politics seemed fiscally irresponsible.

        By the time Clinton was in power, the party was essentially a center-right party by their own historical standards. Clinton and the 1993 Congress passed legislation that actively hurt the middle class while helping the managerial and financial class. His deregulation of Wall Street was a gift to investors, while his work requirements for Welfare basically killed the program. Worst of all was NAFTA, which created the largest outsourcing of manufacturing jobs in American history.

        Obama at least ran on a progressive platform (which should have proved to Democrats that centrism was not a winning strategy), but he governed like another moderate. He even attempted to pass another NAFTA like trade agreement, the TPP, and Trump successfully won over blue-collar workers by promising to kill that deal. Granted, he also won them over by blaming their economic woes on immigrants, and his opposition to the deal probably had more to do with his racist desire to undermine as many achievements of the first black President as he possibly could, but the TPP would have been another nail in the coffin of American manufacturing jobs.

        Anyway, point is, aside from a few progressive hold-outs, the Democrats by-and-large pivoted away from their New Deal roots towards being technocratic centrists whose policies benefit investors and white-collar workers and often hurt the working class. Meanwhile, the Republicans, whose policies are even worse for the working class, are able to create the illusion of being on their side through scapegoating and dog whistles that appeal to blue-collar workers (particularly white blue-collar workers, although not exclusively).

          • pjwestin@lemmy.world
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            Well, A) I didnā€™t say the Democrats had lost the working class. I said that their policies were not targeting the working class. Even this election, Kamala Harrisā€™ stump speeches repeatedly focus on the middle class but make no mention of the working class.

            And B) those overall numbers donā€™t factor in race or geography. The Democrats still do very strongly amongst black Americans because of the legacy of Civil Rights Act and the Republicansā€™ Southern Strategy, and they are much more likely to live below the poverty line, but the black population is also unevenly distributed throughout the south and in northern urban population centers. Because of the Senateā€™s structure and the Electoral College, winning white working class voters can be a successful path to power in the Midwest and most of the South, where blue-collar whites can deliver GOP victories. In fact, the Republicans have won white working class voters in 8 of the last 11 elections, and that support handed them the presidency in 6 of them.

            Thatā€™s why the Republicans have the reputation of being for the working class, and the Democrats donā€™t. The Republicans are actively working to win working-class whites (and thereā€™s some evidence that Trump is gaining ground with working class black and Latino men), while the Democrats are actively trying to win moderate white-collar voters and assuming their base of working class minority voters will turn out

      • nifty@lemmy.world
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        In some categories, but overall Dem voters get more income. I think most wealthy donors skew Republican, which is rational. Why shouldnā€™t they vote for self-preservation? No one justifies to these wealthy donors that no one wants a handout.

        People, regardless of their socioeconomic status, should be taxed appropriately for the resources they use. If your business is generating billions in revenue, and your net worth is multi mill+, you got a lot of benefit from the civilized order of society. Thatā€™s basically what your taxes are for. Well, that and human potential is worth investing in as thatā€™s how we got so far here. It would be great to go further instead of boiling to death in some war torn, poverty stricken wasteland, but I digress.

        Hereā€™s some data on income by party, I canā€™t speak to the quality of the source: https://www.thehivelaw.com/blog/average-income-republican-vs-democrat-by-political-party/

  • Dudewitbow
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    because US politics is center right vs far right

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    Why havenā€™t Democrats embraced economic populism? Because for too long theyā€™ve drunk from the same campaign funding trough as the Republicans ā€“ big corporations, Wall Street, and the very wealthy.

    US two-party sham needs replacing

    • HobbitFoot @thelemmy.club
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      Poor Republicans donā€™t show up to push their representative or senators.

      There could have been a public option to the ACA if a Republican Senator voted for it; none did. If Republicans canā€™t get the full credit for being Santa, no one can.

  • CharlesDarwin@lemmy.world
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    Probably for the same kind of reason that ā€œeveryone knowsā€ that the corporate media is a ā€œliberal mediaā€.

    • rsuri@lemmy.world
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      ā€œThe media is liberal!ā€
      ā€œWho told you that?ā€
      ā€œThe media.ā€

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    Because itā€™s convenient to have bad faith actors sowing discord before any election.

    Tankies (sleeper conservatives that they are) canā€™t rely on logic, merit or hope for a better tomorrow, so they cause as much chaos as possible to their perceived ā€˜enemiesā€™. This chaos includes the encouragement of unrealistic statements and general cognitive dissonance.

    My true thoughts are that they went too far and started to believe their own drivel as generations of hexbears rose and fell and shit themselves into .ml

    • Juice@midwest.social
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      What does this post or article have to do with ā€œTankies?ā€ Did you just hop in here to badmouth them without any context? The idea that anyone who opposes Democrats is a conservative is so out of touch. You must live in a world of ghosts, probably ones wearing ushankas and singing the InternationalĆ©. What a strange comment.

      • DeanFogg@lemm.ee
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        Not strange at all. Mostly the people shitting on the libs around here are ā€œtankiesā€ or whatever flavor gets the fascists more points. Itā€™s simple math.

        • Juice@midwest.social
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          there is not and never has been any historical evidence of a red-brown alliance. Communists, even at the height and horror of Stalinist purges, were never fascist. Fascism is something different, and the urge to conflate the two just makes you seem dangerously uneducated on the subject. No, worse than that, because misunderstanding and miscommunicating the nature of fascism is actually a boon to the fascists! It is in essence no different than when Stalin intentionally mischaracterized social democracy as being ā€œthe moderate wing of fascismā€ and worse than actual Nazism in order to give himself political cover in the lead up to Molotov-Ribbentrop.

          So when you deceive yourself and others about the nature of fascism, you are aiding the fascists. So like donā€™t do that.

          But this still has nothing to do with the article or post, talk about living rent-free

          • Cryophilia@lemmy.world
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            there is not and never has been any historical evidence of a red-brown alliance.

            Heā€™s not saying thereā€™s a red-brown alliance. Heā€™s saying all these supposed reds are actually browns, or useful idiots.

          • Koarnine@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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            Apologies for the long post that largely agrees with what you had to say :p To give some background to the uniniated, the theory of ā€˜Social Facismā€™ as described gives a historical perspective into so-called ā€˜red-brown unityā€™ leading up until WW2.

            (anti communist parties described Stalinists as fascist) [ā€¦] led to mutual hostility between social democrats and communists, which were additionally intensified in 1929 when Berlinā€™s police, then under control of the SPD (socdem) government, shot down communist workers demonstrating onĀ May DayĀ in what became calledĀ BlutmaiĀ (Bloody May). That and the repressive legislation against the communists that followed served as further evidence to communists that social democrats were indeed ā€œsocial fascistsā€.

            The idea of social fascism, that social democrats are ā€œobjectively the moderate wing of fascismā€ as Stalin put it, intensified by SocDem authoritarian anti-left policies, lead to even greater hostility from the Communists against the Liberals than the Naziā€™s themselves at the time.

            In 1929, the KPDā€™s paramilitary organisation, theĀ Roter FrontkƤmpferbundĀ (ā€œAlliance of Red Front-Fightersā€), was banned as extremist by the governing social democrats.Ā A KPD resolution described the ā€œsocial fascistsā€ [social democrats] as the ā€œmain pillar of the dictatorship of Capitalā€.Ā In 1930,Ā Kurt SchumacherĀ of the SPD accused Communists of being ā€œred-lacqueredĀ doppelgangersĀ of the Nazisā€.Ā InĀ Prussia, the largest state of Germany, the KPD united with the Nazis in unsuccessful attempt to bring down the state government of SPD by means of aĀ Landtag referendum.

            So technically, there was a red-brown (Communist-Nazi) alliance within Prussia in order to take down the SocDems, the Comms were obviously more ideologically aligned with socdems but felt they were the main thing preventing progress and thus wanted to speed up their demise.

            We all know how collaborating with the Naziā€™s turned out:

            AfterĀ Adolf Hitlerā€™sĀ Nazi PartyĀ came to power in Germany, the KPD was outlawed and thousands of its members were arrested, including ThƤlmann. Those events made the Comintern do a complete turn on the question of alliance with social democrats and the theory of social fascism was abandoned. At theĀ Seventh Congress of the CominternĀ in 1935,Ā Georgi DimitrovĀ outlined the new policy of theĀ popular frontĀ in his address ā€œFor the Unity of the Working Class Against Fascismā€.Ā This popular front [ā€¦] The American historianĀ Theodore DraperĀ argued that ā€œthe so-called theory of social fascism and the practice based on it constituted one of the chief factors contributing to the victory of German fascism in January 1933ā€.

            It turns out that by the communists temporarily aligning against liberals with the fascists in what today would probably be known as ā€˜accelerationismā€™, we headed from social democracy to concentration camps in 10 years.

            And as you say, fascism is typically more obvious:

            Leon TrotskyĀ argued against the accusations of ā€œsocial fascismā€. In the March 1932Ā Bulletin of the Opposition, he declared: ā€œShould fascism come to power, it will ride over your skulls and spines like a terrific tank. [ā€¦] And only a fighting unity with the Social Democratic workers can bring victoryā€.

            And while there are elements of logic to such a conclusion of ā€˜social fascismā€™ especially when today you have every ā€˜social democratā€™ or ā€˜liberalā€™ capitaluting heavily rightwards and forming alliances with the far-right (France etc.) BUT As you say, and as history has shown, muddying the waters about the true nature of fascism pulls wool over the eyes of those with potential to affect change and prevent the rise true fascism. Which is growing every day.

            Karl Popper argued that some radical parties of the era welcomed or turned a blind eye to the weakening of democracy, or saw a dictatorship as a temporary stepping stone to a revolution. quote from Popper ā€œ[Communists] even hoped that a totalitarian dictatorship in Central Europe would speed up matters [ā€¦] Accordingly, the Communists did not fight when the fascists seized power. (Nobody expected the Social Democrats to fight). For the Communists were sure that the proletarian revolution was overdue and that the fascist interlude, necessary for its speeding up, could not last longer than a few months.ā€

            And finally, it reeks of the unfortunate leftist ā€˜purity testā€™ behaviour which weakens unity and divides potential allies.

            In 1969, the ex-communist historian Theodore Draper argued that the Communists who proposed the theory of social fascism, ā€œwere chiefly concerned with drawing a line of blood between themselves and all others to the ā€˜rightā€™ of them, including the most ā€˜left-wingā€™ of the Social-Democrats.ā€

            Anyway, when I read this theory it opened my eyes a tonne to the folly of refusing to collaborate with liberals. While I still believe liberal and center right policy, along with intense anti-left propaganda, are the reason for the rise of fascism today (overton window, ratcheting effect, disillusionment with electoral politics due to ineffective and oppressive governance that only benefits the wealthy).

            Despite this by ostracising and refusing to collaborate with liberals we shoot ourselves in the foot by being so obsessed with purity that we reject reality. Perfect is the enemy of good. All progress is good provided it takes us along the right path and does not cut off the path to something greater.

            • Juice@midwest.social
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              I love this so much.

              I didnā€™t really have the time or energy to go into the supporting logic, for as youā€™ve just demonstrated its a very involved argument that involves a lot of oft ignored history of the period after the crushing defeat of the German working class uprising (1923, '24) but before the Nazis took power in the wake of the Reichstag fire ('33, '34). Which honestly Iā€™m not great on anyway, I appreciate your insight, slight factual correction that just makes the point even more urgently, and any book recommendations!

              So while we are providing clarification and context to the uninitiated, I dug out Trotskyā€™s definition of fascism from 1932 since we are being so adamant about properly defining it:

              At the moment that the ā€œnormalā€ police and military resources of the bourgeois dictatorship, together with their parliamentary screens, no longer suffice to hold society in a state of equilibrium ā€“ the turn of the fascist regime arrives. Through the fascist agency, capitalism sets in motion the masses of the crazed petty bourgeoisie [the small business owners basically MAGAs], and bands of the declassed and demoralized lumpenproletariat [working poor who are so exploited and disillusioned they defy their own class interests]; all the countless human beings whom finance capital itself has brought to desperation and frenzy. [ā€¦] And the fascist agency, by utilizing the petty bourgeoisie as a battering ram, by overwhelming all obstacles in its path, does a thorough job. [ā€¦] When a state turns fascist, it doesnā€™t only mean that the forms and methods of government are changed [ā€¦] but it means, primarily and above all, that the workersā€™ organizations are annihilated; that the proletariat is reduced to an amorphous state; and that a system of administration is created which penetrates deeply into the masses and which serves to frustrate the independent crystallization of the proletariat.

              In my opinion, wrt building coalition between liberals and communists, there tends to be a real failure by all parties, Marxist communists and liberals alike, to orient the alienated individual within the class or ideological milieu. Liberals can really only see the alienated individual; whereas commies, who claim to be materialists, can view the class/ideological superstructure, or sometimes reluctantly the individual, but almost never both at the same time. Mfs never read/donā€™t understand Theses on Feuerbach and it shows.

              Which is to say liberalism and communism canā€™t really be allies, but individual liberals, who we might call progressives, more concerned with rights and human emancipation than preserving private property, can be won over to the demands of class struggle, especially as the conditions of struggle introduce sharp contradictions into their lives and the lives of the people around them. At this point the demands of their class outweigh the explanations furnished by their ideology and alliances can be forged between members of the fractured liberal or social democratic workers, and the communist/socialists who (hopefully) have prepared the field of struggle for the intensifying conflict.

              Tldr: noone has a monopoly on being insufferable and maybe we could try not demonizing each other for like 15 seconds and see each other as rational people doing our best, reacting to rapidly changing conditions, that will result in pretty serious lose/lose final consequences for libs and commies alike if we canā€™t resist the actual fascists together.

              But now Iā€™ve been led away from the topic of the post article, proving that we are doomed to become what we most strongly condemn.

    • werefreeatlast@lemmy.world
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      Now that you mentioned putin, I propose we go looking for the Mexican cartel people who do the political events such as head and shoulders separations and we give them a challenge. Maybe give them a small island as a reward? šŸ˜‰ Could you please bring back putinā€™s happy face for a chance to win Mara Lago! Or Mara Island! šŸļøšŸ–ļø. With margaritas!

    • mojofrododojo@lemmy.world
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      yup. Amoral leadership lying to gullible supporters who want conspiracies, itā€™s really that simple. A base who want simplistic explanations that reinforce their prejudices. Truth doesnā€™t even rate.