MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE
by Michael Wolraich
Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop
MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE by Michael Wolraich Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop |
‘‘Liberal’’ has long been a dirty word to the American political right. It may be shortened, in the parlance of the Limbaugh Belt, to ‘‘libs,’’ or expanded to the offensive portmanteau ‘‘libtards.’’ But its target is always clear. For the people who use these epithets, liberals are, basically, everyone who leans to the left: big-spending Democrats with their unisex bathrooms and elaborate coffee. This is still how polls classify people, placing them on a neat spectrum from ‘‘extremely conservative’’ to ‘‘extremely liberal.’’
Over the last few years, though — and especially 2016 — there has been a surge of the opposite phenomenon: Now the political left is expressing its hatred of liberals, too. [...]
Comments
so-called "Liberals" have been attacking me for some years - I'm just too pro-business, too old, too establishment, too heartless/different on Mexican immigration, etc. It's gotten crazy - to be pro-union can be establishment and post-establishment at the same time (depending on the spin), and we should go back to unions but look forward to non-establishment solutions.... as just 1 example of the cognitive disconnect.
We largely won the social debate over gay marriage in 2004 while losing everything else. This past year, the left spent its energy re-debating a precarious Obamacare, getting North Caroliners riled up over transexual bathrooms and going AWOL in Dakota over a pipeline. A huge lack of priorities.
And then the latest Silicon Valley WTF article - $1 million from 2 tech fat cats makes a bit of difference when the opposition is spending billions?
by PeraclesPlease on Fri, 07/07/2017 - 4:19am
The "liberal" label has been making a slow but systematic comeback for the past 20 years. Still not as popular as conservative, but the branding worries are really overblown. Just an excuse to clutch pearls and whine about someone on the internet calling them smug and arrogant.
by Obey on Fri, 07/07/2017 - 11:53am