Discussion about this post

User's avatar
ICouldBeWrong's avatar

The theory that a large oppressed class will inevitably overwhelm its oppressors and seize power, led by an enlightened educated vanguard that will maintain absolute rule as it restructures society to cater to the formerly oppressed, is--shall we say--not exactly novel in leftist circles...

Expand full comment
E.W.R's avatar

Perhaps this is implied among the first couple reasons listed, but to me there is a deeper, related reason this rhetorical and strategic tack is so wrong, beyond it being obnoxious or leading in part to alienated/backlash votes for Trump. You could be a fifteen year old white kid raised by a single parent living in a more rural area, trying to figure out how you’re going to afford community college, and, unless you march to the cultural left tune without missing a beat and celebrate all the people more worthy than you from birth - whether raised in highest-wealth zip codes or conferred deeper dignity and nobility by approved identity group membership, you’re trash. Bill Clinton, for all phoniness, all the neoliberal policy sellouts, would’ve told that kid, biting down earnestly on his lower lip: don’t you let anyone tell you you’re worth any less, that you belong any less, just because you grew up without two parents in your home. Clinton knew what that kind of upbringing was like, said something very much like that in 1992 Convention speech, and probably mostly meant it. I heard it and it meant something to me. The Obama re-elect was more like a young black woman raised by two professional parents in an comfortable suburb standing up and introducing herself to fellow activists by saying “my parents both always told me that as a young African American woman I’d need to work five times as hard and be five times as good as the next person”. Uh…no. And by the time, it’d already been a good ten years since every single Dem and activist left organization followed every single job ad with a litany of identity characteristics they most encouraged in applicants - white and male and straight was the only one never included. But there was likewise zero focus on class or actual lived hardship or any other marker of real diversity in background or experience, other than the litany of mostly immutable, inherited identity traits. The effective message that only the recipients of those preferred-identity-shoutouts counted, of course came at a time when much of “flyover” America and so many of the profoundly struggling residents of those NYT “highest misery index” counties - people and places that RFK and MLK and even Jesse Jackson in the 1980s were both decent and shrewd enough to care about, were in economic free-wall, becoming ever-more geographically isolated and sorted, and simultaneously becoming the butt of every joke and the acceptable scapegoat for every problem. It came at a time when drug addiction and social breakdown and deaths of despair - endemic feelings of hopelessness were soaring. I guess what I’m saying is that more than even obnoxious or alienating electorally, the CoTA was cruel and wrong and anathema to who and what the Democratic Party had always claimed to stand for.

Expand full comment
14 more comments...

No posts