Toby Buckle offers (to my way of thinking) stellar analysis of what's going on politically as large numbers of Americans, our media, and corporate leaders jump with alacrity on the Trump bandwagon: it's not the old "economic anxiety" canard.
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William Lindsey :toad:replied to William Lindsey :toad: last edited by
"MAGA is someone who is angry that they might have to shift from buying their goods at a middle-class-coded supermarket to the cheaper, working-class-coded supermarket.
The American Republic has been pulled down, possibly past the point of no return, by affluent people. People who have lives their ancestors would have literally killed for."
#Trump #economy #race #gender #cruelty #solidarity #CommonGood
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William Lindsey :toad:replied to William Lindsey :toad: last edited by
"Who on average spend 10% of their pay on groceries, the lowest in the country’s history, not to mention human history. Who are lashing out at others at the slightest inconvenience, because they want to lash out at others."
That "ancient, compelling, and evil" force to which Buckle refers: it's the ravenous need many of us have to hurt someone else, to blame someone else, to eschew responsibility to anyone but ourselves.
#Trump #economy #race #gender #cruelty #solidarity #CommonGood
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@wdlindsy Yep and what you're missing is what changed isn't MORE people voting for trump, but LESS people voting. The metrics are unambiguous, there's a shit ton of committed racists and psychopaths, a fair number of committed democrats, and a lot of people who don't care unless something will change for them.
And you can't keep screwing them to appeal to a non-existent center.
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William Lindsey :toad:replied to William Lindsey :toad: last edited by
Trump has given us — and by us, I mean largely the people at the top of the economic ladder, corporate leaders, their media lapdogs — permission to indulge that urge to cruelty while pretending we're "rebuilding" a "great" America and a "great" American economy. We're now going to see media and other leaders kowtow to Trump big-time, and as that happens, we'll see a lot of cover-up of the real price we're all paying for indulging ourr cruelty..
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peachfrontreplied to William Lindsey :toad: last edited by
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Todd Millecamreplied to William Lindsey :toad: last edited by
@wdlindsy https://www.axios.com/2024/02/27/price-food-us-inflation-data-groceries Actually, we're at a 30-year high right now at 11%, but go on and post to social media without data so people who already know you can blindly agree with you and vilify people like me who read something and say, "Oh, that's interesting. I wonder where I can find source data to support that?" and then go looking only to find this is utter nonsense.
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Susan Kaye Quinn 🌱(she/her)replied to William Lindsey :toad: last edited by
@wdlindsy this is one of the few articles I've seen that actually *gets* what's happened
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Greengordonreplied to William Lindsey :toad: last edited by
In short, many average Americans adopt or display the same values as the oligarchs looting the country and destroying democracy.
"Americans are prosperous, but without any deep sense of obligations to others. We are a highly commercial, individualist people, and when we let go of even a thin liberal conception of the public good, we become nasty, petty, small, vindictive and irrational."
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@wdlindsy thank you for posting this article, which I would not have encountered otherwise. So many keen observations, carefully analyzed and explained. Big thoughts for me to ponder.
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Rachel Greenhamreplied to William Lindsey :toad: last edited by
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Matthias Krämerreplied to William Lindsey :toad: last edited by
@wdlindsy In Germany in 1933 biggest support for NSDAP came from the "petite bourgeoisie" that was threatened by economic crisis to sink down into proletariat. That seems the analogon to this MAGA core.
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lupus_blackfurreplied to William Lindsey :toad: last edited by
Absolutely.
Buckle has it nailed.
Aligns directly with my phrasing:
There exist *many* entitled 🫏's that have always been assholes in private & yearned to be assholes in public for lo some 70+yrs.
Their parents taught it to them & they in turn taught the same to their children.
Along comes Chump giving them all permission & encouragement to be those public assholes.
They will always revere him for giving them that permission regardless what else he may do.That's MAGAt core.
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officerripleyreplied to William Lindsey :toad: last edited by
So true; there were a lot of big fancy homes in the fanciest neighborhoods in my town with Trump signs in their yards.
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eberhoferreplied to William Lindsey :toad: last edited by
@wdlindsy people voted for Trump for a number of reasons, many of which are evil. Totally agree on that. Same for Maga. Mostly evil.
The issue is a different one: these evil votes aren't sufficient to win an election by themselves. To win an election, they had to win other votes and suppress turnout for Harris.
The real question is: how did they win/suppress those votes?
Economic anxiety is driven less by "objective" wealth but by wealth difference and by outlook.
For wealth difference: the income and wealth gap have grown further even through the Biden years. That may not be his fault, but neither did he or Kamala Harris address it, or at least not forcefully enough in the campaign.
For the outlook: health care and housing are huge issues (United Healthcare illustrates this) and polls showed people trusted Trump more on the economy than Harris. Sad, because Harris had better policies but didn't get through with her message.
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@wdlindsy America is finished; time to look to others to protect democracy.
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@BubblegumYeti We'll see, won't we?
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William Lindsey :toad:replied to eberhofer last edited by
@eberhofer The claim that I hear repeatedly about economic anxiety driving anti-Democratic votes is not about the huge and growing disparity between the wealth of the very few and all the rest of us.
It's about the perception — the reported perception — of people that they are doing badly economically. When, in fact, many of those reporting this are doing reasonably well economically.
Blaming the Democrats for creating that problem when Republican policies hugely favor the super-rich: bizarre.
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William Lindsey :toad:replied to officerripley last edited by
@officerripley One of the richest families in my state lives a block up the street from me. That family is super-excited to see Trump back in the White House, as are all the friends of that family.
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William Lindsey :toad:replied to lupus_blackfur last edited by
@lupus_blackfur I agree.