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 |
Comments
This is one of the "system broken" things that helped Trump win. I am seeing it everywhere now,
after reading what Mayor Peter said here:
and what this Max Fisher/New York Times piece said on the same globally.
Liz Warren knows these populist memes inside and out, her problem is only that her personality and background comes across as elite. She actually has been working on this "our system is broken" meme for decades. And furthermore, she has never made a big deal about the partisan thing, she just goes after the class thing.
But I am convinced now, especially after reading umpteen articles about Obama/Trump voters that this is the thing, this is what helped win it for Trump, and why someone like Ocasio-Cortez won against a long time Dem incumbent, why Bernie's Independent status resounds with many and how Dems can lose again: don't present as if your party's status quo is the answer and everything will be hunky dory. It wasn't the answer for many as the Obama years went on, there were many unhappy people. There are too many that are not happy with the Dems nor the Republicans, nor are they happy with Labour nor the Tories in the UK. Candidates have to admit the system is broken, not laud their party status quo as an answer.
by artappraiser on Wed, 04/03/2019 - 2:39pm
And for those of us who wanted Hillary, who knew Obama would compromise too much and it would go largely nowhere, and then 8 years later get this "well you had your Obama-Clinton government, time to try something different" - and *then* hear Joe fucking Biden offered as one of the new untried but experienced solutions... it all gets a bit rich. And yeah, her opponent Bernie never had to release his taxes, never had to make any of his proposals balance out even close financially...
I wrote about Poroshenko vs Zelenskiiy - that I'm worried this independent fever just favors people who never had to thread the needle, make bargains with the countless devils. It's easy to look clean as a spectator or side show. And now I feel we've inherited a boatload of side shows and not too many main attractions. That Pete or Beto or Stacey or who else can seem possible because we simply have no hard minimum requirements for a president aside from over 35. Maybe we need a parliament so we can roll thru PMs and give them all a try.
by PeraclesPlease on Wed, 04/03/2019 - 3:01pm
I actually think Abrams and Gollum are putting in the work to qualify for a future run. Beto seems to think he won his race.
by rmrd0000 on Wed, 04/03/2019 - 3:08pm
I now see that Hillary's only problem in this zeitgeist was being part of the directly previous administration, the status quo. And that even some who had voted for Obama second time around had had enough of status quo.
We here all know that they were stymied by the GOP, you can rag on it forever and the unfair smearing too. That's not enough, though, for low info. voters when they are fed up. It's a long time problem, the way it's looked at is basically re-electing an admin. that's been in two terms already. Voters in swing districts better be super pleased with what's been going on for 8 years, or they will vote for the new guy, especially if the new guy talks independent or bi-partisan.
Edit to add: traditionally, once removed a term or more, nostalgia for the old status quo can work. But not right following. And it should be said she did great with that handicap, got a popular majority. It's the electoral college swings where things fell apart.
by artappraiser on Wed, 04/03/2019 - 3:45pm
It's the millions (esp blacks) taken off voting rolls, the too few voting booths in Dem precincts, restrictions on students/campuses, the flood of propaganda by Cambridge Analytica and Psy-Group using stolen voter demographic data and targeted accounts, the partially forced error of the FBI head by Giuliani's pals somewhere in the FBI, the stolen emails by Russian hackers as dripped out by Roger Stone and Wikileaks, and some bad vote rigging activity in Wisconsin, PA & Michigan that we still don't quite understand (% discards in known Dem districts?) since there was no audit, but we know it was only a 90,000 vote diff of 13.5 million and Trump's handlers sent him to these states at the last minute to cover up their rigging (not some genius intuition he had)
Once we acknowledge this illegal and/or unethical activity that likely took away at least 2 million more votes (switched or abstained) and enough electoral votes to win, we can diagnose the flaws in Hillary's campaign and the plight of white working class in flyover country, as well as the poor job (or biased job) the media does in communicating news, such as Trump's crooked business dealins or the Clinton Foundation or last week the Barr "report"/summary-non-summary, with the Fox/Sinclair propaganda chain a legal but immoral state of affaors that feeds many low info voters effectively.
Now, even Obama didn't step in to fix some of these legal and structural problems, and they aure haven't been fixed under Trump, plus of course the electoral college bias against dense states towards rural states gives the GOP another advantage to take into account. This bias wasn't so fixed before the Fox/Sinclair full-press began, but we have to figure a way around it now.
We've seen recent GOP malfeasance w voting machines in FL and GA, we've seen Saudis hack Bezos' phone using Israeli software, we know a number of Republicans were visiting voting machinc conventions paid by companies, we know how rump and the OP funnel illegal money around, how many unethical things the GOP have bonded together to do - it will happen again, except for any strength shown by the House.
So how's our incoming field look? Who can handle these structural issues and eke out a win?
by PeraclesPlease on Wed, 04/03/2019 - 4:21pm
It's the millions (esp blacks) taken off voting rolls,
I'm sorry, that just doesn't cut it for me. Those voters are mostly in districts that won't make a big difference in national races; compared to effect of inflammatory issues and trolling it's a nothing burger. Can be a big deal as to state and local, but not national.
As for the other stuff, one way or another, for national elections, you have to deal with swings until current gerrymandering and electoral college is gone.
In the end, on the Russian thing, they were simply ahead of the curve. Manipulation of low info voter is now a tool available to everyone and the ones that can troll the best and manipulate emotions the best and brand or slander the best, and microtarget such things capably, etc. Tribalism is a big problem! People read their preferred tribe's messaging.
Edit to add: In no way want to minimize disenfranchisement, it's a serious issue. I just don't think it's that much of an effect on national. You can just as well argue, for instance, that Milwaukee blacks staying home because "a pox on both their houses" did as much damage to Hillary. The effect is micro numbers in the national scheme of things There's always gonna be some little group somewhere that could have saved ya.... just go back to Florida and Gore vs. Bush and hanging chads...ridiculous, should never have happened, to argue it was Nader's fault or whatever is ridiculous, you should have a safe margin to cover those things or you failed.
by artappraiser on Wed, 04/03/2019 - 4:42pm
People who tried to vote in Wisconsin were stymied by voter suppression. Many were enthusiastic about voting.
https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2017/10/voter-suppression-wisconsin-election-2016/
by rmrd0000 on Wed, 04/03/2019 - 5:11pm
Thanks.
by PeraclesPlease on Wed, 04/03/2019 - 6:31pm
Ahead of the curve, but horridly in violation of federal campaign laws, including accepting foreign things or services of value as well as coordination between general funds and presidential campaigns. Not to mention the conspiracy to defraud the American people which is sitting in Mueller's indictments, and any American assistance of this effort is a felony - think that might be in the 400-700 page report or the millions of pages of evidence?
by PeraclesPlease on Wed, 04/03/2019 - 6:35pm
You are going off topic, mho. If they interfere this time, they will no doubt do something totally different.
Edit to add: Furthermore, I've never been convinced that they made much difference as to the actual election of Trump. (If they did, how come he still has the same approval rating?) Where they made a major difference is in amping up the divisiveness and tribalism in our society at exactly a time when it would do more harm than usual.
Keep in mind, if he lost he would still be out there, wasn't going away. Yelling "lock er up".
by artappraiser on Wed, 04/03/2019 - 7:34pm
Look Oct. 1, 2018: Russia gives up on Trump; that's over, history.
by artappraiser on Wed, 04/03/2019 - 7:37pm
Ha! Change in voter sentiment since 2016:
Considering Hillary lost the last 3 by a total of 90,000 votes,
113,000 in Florida - did she run a bad campaign, or did it just
take these slow states 2 1/2 years to come to Jesus?
Can we have all those reporters revisit the "heartland"
and give us an update on what's changed, how white people feel now?
by PeraclesPlease on Fri, 04/05/2019 - 12:34pm
Excellent news, not to mention bias confirmation for moi. Where'd you get it?
by artappraiser on Fri, 04/05/2019 - 3:02pm