Again you show your arrogance quite well. — ssu
Feel free to refute the counterpoints I provided! — Maw
It's been nearly three years since Trump won the 2016 election and we have ample evidence to confirm that racism in fact played a key role in mobilizing votes for Trumps. Not "economic anxiety" - The video claims that Trump voters have been struggling financially while Hillary voters mainly comprised of coastal elites, a majority of voters with income <$50K voted for Hillary (53%) over Trump (41%), while voters with an income over $100K were split 47% vs. 47%. — Maw
Well, places where Trump was very popular were places in the rust-belt and not the most well off prosperous places. (And white, of course) From this chart you can see that typically the more well off households did vote for Clinton than Trump. Now, we can argue about the statistics and have a discussion about them, but what I'm just saying is that dismissing totally the video with such ferocity and hurling so many accusations on it comes off to me as quite arrogant. — ssu
↪unenlightened
Does the label matter ?
— Amity
the body politic under threat from foreign bodies and so on. I reject the framing of the crisis in terms of us and them
— unenlightened
Nevertheless,, this is precisely our situation: it is the formation of different "foreign bodies" within our societies through various gradations of hatred: dehumanization, labeling, delegitimization, and intolerance. Essentially, the true borders are not the outer ones, but the invisible internal barriers, so that the extreme partisanship has been advancing. — Number2018
I'm a deplorable. you may talk to me. — ozymandias11111
Imagine I responded to your post like this: 'Oh here's another person who thinks every one who voted for Trump should be treated as a literal nazi. Big surprise.'
That's not what you were saying, but it does certainly make categorization easier. And it prevents me from getting bogged down in nuance.
I pose this challenge to you. Reject my hypothetical response to you, while defending the substance of your post, and all without using undue nuance. (As an added challenge explain how your rejection and defense is different than what I was saying when responding to Maw.) — csalisbury
Yes, labels matter, fuck wit. I seem to have labeled one of you 'fuck wit'. In this case it is unimportant because I am unimportant — unenlightened
Should we consider it as a fascistic or proto-fascistic attack against a democratic institution?
— Number2018
I don't know. What do you think ?
Does the label matter ?
Arguably, the contempt for and attacks on democratic institutions, the rule of law; incitements to mob violence; attacks on the press, etc. are similar enough to warrant concern. — Amity
Sorry, I did not understand your question.Probably, so far, there is noMy question was related to the adjectives 'fascistic' v 'protofascistic' and how significant were the actual differences between them. — Amity
Yes, labels matter, fuck wit. — unenlightened
Does the label matter ? — Amity
you are not labeling, but you tacitly assume that one side is more responsible forDemocratic institutions are at risk. I am thinking of recent events in the UK.
Following the court decisions on the prorogation of Parliament, there were hostile accusations against both Parliament and the judiciary.
There are extreme right wing forces gathering, using similar tactics and chipping away... — Amity
Maybe they don’t. But like I said, my immigration views are my own. — NOS4A2
I believe in walls and fences for the same reason we have walls and fences around our houses. This is something I agree with Trump on. Walls work. — NOS4A2
This is exactly what I’m talking about. No mention of efficacy in the link you provide because, for a follower like yourself, that’s not the important part. Solidarity and fitting in is primary.
You’re deliberately avoiding the overriding point, and thereby inadvertently indicating it’s validity, which is that Trump followers such as yourself have been conditioned in such a way that they comfortably hold multiple contradictory beliefs. For instance, you know that if someone wants to cross a border, a fence will be a minor obstacle, and you just acknowledged that there are better solutions. Negotiations resulted in a 65% decrease within only a handful of months, for instance. It’s not so much that you favor the irrational choice, it’s that you’ve been conditioned to do it with such ease.
I don't advocate treating Trump supporters as literal Nazis. I advocate treating them as literal Trump supporters. That is, treat them as if they knowingly support all the things Trump is doing, insofar as they are a matter of public record or otherwise obvious. This, of course, only applies to current Trump supporters. But it applies regardless for their stated reasons for intending to vote for Trump again.
Voting for Trump is voting for Trump to continue what he has been doing. Trump's policies and behaviour are bad. To argue whether it's fair to claim Trump supporters are racist is, IMHO a distraction from the actual issue - that Trump is a bad president that supports bad policies. If all you worry about is whether or not your support for Trump is wrongly interpreted as evidence for racism, you're already part of the problem.
So, I don't think it matters whether or not it is entirely fair to every Trump supporter to call them racist. Because if you support Trump, you're so obviously supporting "bad things" that it's not a debate worth having. The only debate worth having is how to get enough people to vote for someone who will do less harmful stuff. — Echarmion
In terms of tactics, I think one puzzle piece is to not alienate roughly half of the US population( of voters.)
There are, I'm sure, many people who voted for Trump who are queasy on certain policies. That's the populace you need to sway. If you write off the entirety of active voters who votes for trump, you automatically hand him the win. — csalisbury
I think it makes sense to get real and precise about what policies help people, which could very well be leftist options (in fact I think this is the case!) But introducing these leftist options after shaming many of the people they'd benefit, means they won't vote for them. so its a bad approach. I don't know why this controversial. — csalisbury
Also Maw I was really careful here so its frustrating when you bulldoze over it. I wouldn't have qualified population with 'voting' if I didn't understand the stats you posted. — csalisbury
This is demanded by people who don’t want Trump to win. If you wish to encourage Trump to moderate his tone to pull in people leaning more in the other direction then you’re effectively in favour of Trump winning. — I like sushi
Long term it may be better if Trump wins again. Maybe it will force people away from directionless outrage and toward practical solutions? Or maybe it will just enflame the opposition into more silly sensationalist posturing and deepen the the lack of trust the public have for the administrative powers? — I like sushi
This is a true distraction, but perhaps the worse outcome isn't that the politicians themselves are accused in this way (to be racist etc.), it is that those who voted for him are all tagged as a group represented by the worst, the most eccentric and ludicrous fringe there is. As if all Trump supporters are racist whites fearing losing their 'white priviledge' and as if all Democrat voters are all AOC fanboys and fangirls craving for social democracy, sorry, democratic socialism. And do notice that this is exactly the strategy of Trump too and this isn't anything new. What is new is how headlong Americans fell for this and how the "silly-season" of the election 2016 never went away. This creates the toxic and vitriolic political environment where the US is now in. This is the way you erode social cohesion and divide the people into separate camps, which then you legitimize by saying that they belong to separate 'tribes' and explain that people are tribal.To argue whether it's fair to claim Trump supporters are racist is, IMHO a distraction from the actual issue - that Trump is a bad president that supports bad policies. — Echarmion
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