There is not a huge bulk of middle class. That was my point. About 75% of people make less than the mean income. About 50% of people make less than HALF of the mean income, i.e. the median is half the mean. The mode (the amount that the largest group makes) is close to half of the median, or a quarter of the mean. The vast, vast majority of people are way, way below average. — Pfhorrest
That huge difference between high and low figures is exactly what I'm talking about, and what makes it the case that the vast majority of people would benefit greatly from something that just moved them closer to average: because only a tiny number of people get most of the money. Approximate figures from memory: the mean personal income is about $50k/yr (which falls at about the 75th percentile), the median personal income is about $25k/yr, and the mode personal income (that I recall less clearly) is about $13-15k/yr. (I remember it being just slightly more than half the median). Household income figures (more commonly reported) are about twice that, because households on average have about two people in them.I don't think the mean income has any meaning in a distribution where the high figures are so huge compared to the lower ones. What are the actual figures? — Tim3003
I think the poverty line in the US is defined at the bottom quintile.I think in the UK poverty is defined as half the median, but I'm guessing there's less income inequality here than in the US - although the gap has probably narrowed over the last decade. — Tim3003
What's wrong with that?Most people are still tied to the view of 'their' nation state repelling foreign invaders when necessary. — Tim3003
Which btw shows how absolutely useless it is as a mark of povetry: no matter what happens there is a bottom quintile. It says nothing about actual povetry or how prosperous we are than earlier.I think the poverty line in the US is defined at the bottom quintile. — Pfhorrest
I think the governing principle is not whether there is a deficit, but how large it is, and whether it is less than the rate of inflation. So if inflation is at the 2% target and the deficit is 1.5% then the total debt is increasing at less than inflation - ie decreasing in real terms. Interest rates also have a bearing. As they are now so low both govt and opposition are happy to borrow more. Infact they are talking about instituting new targets for the annual repayment of debt as a % of gdp (I think of ~3% for the Tories and ~5% for Labour), rather than just aiming to limit the size of the deficit. — Tim3003
As you say, socialist policies would dominate if the easing of poverty was the populist view. — Tim3003
Populism isn't tied at all to the current situation. — ssu
Openly populist parties emphasize this and their idea of populism leaves out (at least officially) the crucial ingredient: that populism has the important division to "us" and "them" and that "they", the elite, the establishment, the powers at be, are against their ideas.
There's a distinct difference in saying normal democratic movement "We want this and the leaders should listen to us" and a populist movement "We want this and the leaders are against what we want". — ssu
I saw someone recently characterize the difference between left-wing populism (which is a thing) and right-wing populism something like this: both are ostensibly in favor of the common people against their elite rulers, but left-wing populists see the "common people" as the laboring classes (proletarians) generally and the "elites" as the wealthy ownership classes (bourgeoisie) generally, while right-wing populists see the "common people" as the "middle class" (petite bourgeoisie) of the "normal" national identity (race, language, religion, etc) within the country in question, and the "elites" as some nefarious international cabal of foreigners and their political puppets within the country in question. — Pfhorrest
I think easing poverty is A populist view. I am a bit confused by THE populist view. Trump and Bernie are both populists. The populism of "the american dream" still just has more support than the populism of reducing poverty. (in America, things are different in Scandinavia) But it does feel like the populism of "billionaire's suck" is catching up with the american dream. — ZhouBoTong
Just to be clear: the populism I'm talking about is that espoused by Trump, the Brexit Party and others who promote nationalism at the cost of demonising immigrants. Other policies could be said to be based on what the people want or what is best for them, but that's not what I'm majoring on here. — Tim3003
Thus it's no more a force for improvement in society than was the credo of Hitler. — Tim3003
If it spreads, as the increasing mobility of poor or war-ravaged populations seem to threaten it could, what will the future look like? — Tim3003
The more public fear is whipped up the more dictators can seem acceptable as the antidote. I don't think it's coincidence that, whatever destabilising tactics the Russian use internationally, Trump unashamedly admires Putin.. — Tim3003
Well, those who have bashed in history government and corporate elites have been, just to give some examples, a) communists b) national socialists, c) various socialists, d) Occupy Wall street-movement, e) Tea party-movement, f) Trump supporters, g) Brexiteers... and the list goes on.I am confused. I thought the current situation is nothing but elite bashing. One side bashes government elites while the other is bashing corporate elites. — ZhouBoTong
Once populists are in power, they surely change the focus from evil domestic elites to evil international elites. Populism needs a culprit, an adversary or an enemy.Wouldn't they still be acting against international elites? — ZhouBoTong
I agree that this type of populism thrives on people not knowing what is best for them. But I would still argue that Trump is often giving the people (those people) EXACTLY what they want (demonizing immigrants). — ZhouBoTong
I agree that this type of populism thrives on people not knowing what is best for them. But I would still argue that Trump is often giving the people (those people) EXACTLY what they want (demonizing immigrants).
Does the Davos man really exist? Really? There can be people that are invited to the "World Economic Forum" and go there on a usual basis, but in the end this hodgepodge of rich and powerful people don't truly share the same agenda or objectives. That's the conspiracy bullshit of Alex Jones. If you just listen for a while the panels, it ought to be obvious that they don't all agree on what to do. It's actually a perfect example of the conspiratorial side of populism.The “Davos man”. — NOS4A2
Or have you heard about the political movement that declares that they don't know what's best for the people? :yikes:
Besides, the elite seldom truly thinks about what would be best for the people. It would be great if they actual would do that. But usually it's only this condescending snobbery of how stupid the common people are and how they don't get the complex issues at all, or take it the wrong way. And this snobbery can be seen on both sides of the political spectrum. Traditionalist conservative elites and the leftist cultural elites can equally look down upon the common man.
And of course, the common man usually isn't as interested and have as much knowledge of the most complex issues of politics.
Does the Davos man really exist? Really? There can be people that are invited to the "World Economic Forum" and go there on a usual basis, but in the end this hodgepodge of rich and powerful people don't truly share the same agenda or objectives. That's the conspiracy bullshit of Alex Jones. If you just listen for a while the panels, it ought to be obvious that they don't all agree on what to do. It's actually a perfect example of the conspiratorial side of populism.
And let's not forget that the Common Man is simply a myth.But the “common man” knows what’s best for himself is my point. The idea that people vote against their best interests is, as you said, snobbery. The accusation could be just as easily used against them. — NOS4A2
Few times I listened to him, but not anymore. I always thought of him as entertainment and someone that has found his niche audience in the American media field. First he was all about 9/11 conspiracies and even didn't notice the financial crisis. Only when it had long started, Jones added economics into the conspiracies (which actually was telling). But then with the Trump candidacy Mr Jones went to become a true Goebbels like propagandist. Perhaps it's the "logical" response to a person that believes in vast conspiracy theories: if you believe everything is propaganda, then you'll do the same and simply create classic propaganda yourself too. Anyway, there is this problem with the conspiracy buffs: they are an extremely intolerant crowd that isn't open to other kind of ideas (starting from the idea that historical events can happen without anyone actually planning them).You listen to Alex Jones? — NOS4A2
Well, for many he exists. Just like the Cultural Marxist that has lurked in the universities and planned all the wokeness and political correctness we see everywhere now.I use “Davos man” strictly as a term of derision. — NOS4A2
And let's not forget that the Common Man is simply a myth.
The Common Man is both a Republican and a Democrat in the US, both an active voter and someone who hasn't bothered to vote. To say that the 'common man' thinks this or that is as wrong as to think that the 'poor' or the 'middle class' or the 'upper class' thinks in one certain way.
Anyway, there is this problem with the conspiracy buffs: they are an extremely intolerant crowd that isn't open to other kind of ideas (starting from the idea that historical events can happen without anyone actually planning them).
And that's why we have a representative democracy in our republics. And unlike the US, here we don't even have things like felony disenfranchisement.My point was that each individual, no matter how you classify them, knows what’s in his best interests better than some aloof technocrat who spent his whole life in a classroom. I’d rather be governed by those who work in my local grocery store than the entire faculty at Harvard. — NOS4A2
Call it a ban or not, but the conspiracy buffs don't take it lightly when someone that has argued that one conspiracy is true then states that another one isn't. Or that the government / security system performs well in other issues or is correct in some other case. Likely he or she will be seen as a "turncoat" who has "sold" the cause, gone over back or perhaps been always on the other side. Once your audience and income depends on a specific crowd, then you will shape your message to that crowd.The only intolerant bigots are those who ban others — NOS4A2
What Trump and other populists give people is what they feel they want. ie feel, from their uneducated fear-propelled guts. His means is to exploit base fears, not to educate in the realities of the situation, its perspective, or what future knock-on effects short-termist policies can have. Populism is a politics not of reason but of ignorance and fear. That's what separates it from communism, socialism, liberalism, all of which have some philosophiccal basis which their politicians can hope voters learn and agree with rationally.
I'm sure Trump's supporters don't especially want to hate immigrants, but they are scared into seeing immigrants as threats to their jobs and culture, and their fear is whipped into prejudice and nationalism by liars and distorters like Trump. That's happened throughout history. Its human nature for the strong to exploit the weak I'm afraid. — Tim3003
But there is a view that especially among the older generation part of the reason for the leave vote was people wanting to turn the clock back, to return to a pre-globalised economy, to 'get our country back'. The naiivety of this view is clear but that doesnt stop it persisting. — Tim3003
The elites, of course, live no where near these people, nor hardly interact with them unless it is to be served by them. And they would know what is best for us? — NOS4A2
Perhaps my fear is that despite the huge growth of internet communication and the potential raising in peoples' education, societies instead become more fear-based. — Tim3003
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