No self-respecting woman should wish or work for the success of a party that ignores her.
- Susan B. Anthony
No right is more precious in a free country than that of having a voice in the election of those who make the laws under which, as good citizens, we must live. Other rights, even the most basic, are illusory if the right to vote is undermined. - US Supreme Court
Showing posts with label elitist persecution. Show all posts
Showing posts with label elitist persecution. Show all posts
Barack Obama graciously allowed that Hillary probably didn't really mean anything by daring to bring up the Kennedy assassination. Of course, we're all going to continue to take it as a given that she should just know not to go around talking about whatever she wants. Anything that could possibly set off Obama's little weakness must be guarded against, because he has a pathological fear of - you know - certain kinds of people. People who are crude and racist and gun-toting and bitter.
Of course, it is understandable that a really fragile person might just assume we're dangerous. We really are that scary, to those who've never seen our kind before.
Bigotry is a problem in this country, all right. Obama is bigoted against white people. And I am bigoted against shrieking, hysterical little men who let their xenophobia rule them.
The problem is, this pathological dread of people who are not like him is just too deep at the heart of the Obama campaign. As Sean Wilentz writes:
The main difference between now and then is the openness of the condescension with which many of Obama's supporters - and, apparently, the candidate himself - hold the crude "low information" types whom they believe dominate the white working class. The sympathetic media coverage of Obama's efforts to explain away his remarks in San Francisco about "bitter," economically-strapped voters who, clinging to their guns, religion, and racism, misdirect their rage and do not see the light, only reinforced his campaign's dismissive attitude. Obama's efforts at rectification were reluctant and half-hearted at best - and he undercut them completely a few days later when he referred derisively, on the stump in Indiana, to a sudden "political flare-up because I said something that everybody knows is true."
(emphasis mine)
"Everybody" means - well, him.
All of which is just one more way of saying what people have been saying about Obama for some time now: one way or another, anything and everything anyone does, it always ends up being all about him.
Is runaway ruling egocentrism really a quality anyone wants in a President?
I love Jon Stewart. He was the first guy I thought of when Obama did that one-fingered salute thing and then brushed Clinton/bird poop off his shoulders. Remember how Jon ignored the in-crowd to talk straight to the TV audience when he did the Academy Awards? How bout that Bush press corp comedy thing, eh?
But just as I went from expecting to vote for Obama to becoming actively opposed, so too I am re-evaluating my belief that Jon Stewart is this incredibly intelligent, insightful man. I am thinking now he's just more like an amplifier - what everyone else believes, he magnifies.
Worse, he is helping the defeat of the Democratic party - and progressive ideals. He just doesn't know it yet. By jumping into the existing tension between two incompatible beliefs within the Democratic party, he is widening the split.
(Two incompatible beliefs: that the Democratic party is for the working man, and believes in "all men are created equal", vs. the idea that the Democratic party is aristocratic, smarter than everyone else - and therefore better suited to deciding on behalf of the less intelligent how things ought to be run.)
The basic problem is that he doesn't understand what the word elitist means to those who are using the word - that the word elitist is being used to convey a concept the English language has no word for.
It means something like the belief that the notion that democracy is flawed, because inferior people get to vote - and implies that the fix involves disenfranchising the unworthy (or, conversely, that if only the unworthy could be stopped from voting, so that their betters could run things, America's problems would go away).
Which, in my view, is what this election is turning out to be all about: disenfranchising the people, so that the media can choose the "worthier" candidate over the will of the little guy voters.
Does he really believe I approve of Clinton's performance because I am fooled into thinking she's something she isn't? Can anyone really believe I am so dumb I don't know Clinton doesn't normally do shots the way they do it in Crown Point, IN?
Well, yes, it appears that Stewart and his audience really do think I am that dumb.
Stewart's humor is probably tremendously funny to those who think elitism means...well, what Stewart thinks it means. Yes, it is silly to suggest that Barack Obama is elitist and the Clintons aren't, if you define elitist as being something defined by wealth, rather than attitude.
But to me, it's not funny: my former hero is taking the other side in a debate that feels a lot like "me and mine" being put on trial. And Stewart appears to be saying, yes, it's true - those who disagree with Obama are pandering to unworthy idiots.
Like all other civilized types, he doesn't understand why Clinton would down shots with the yokels, and so he assumes she is wrong to do so, even ridiculous.
Of course, with the liberal elite, you always have to wonder - perhaps they genuinely do believe that all of America's problems would just go away if John Kerry types got to pick and choose which voters ought to be allowed to vote. Maybe they are all so genuinely enamored of what liberals have done that they think forcing a liberal agenda on the nation would solve all its ills. I would have had a hard time believing that smart, educated, sophisticated people could be reduced to such simpleminded scapegoating, but it seems my big problem has been the fact that I overestimate other peoples' intelligence.
update: look what I found! anyone else remember this? Bet you could tell who is/isn't a "Reagan Democrat" by just mentioning this song - was it really 1981 this came out?
...not just party officials, but also the intelligentsia that formulates the political philosophy and the echo chamber that shouts its approval, is running a campaign on little more than class resentment against former Democratic constituencies. (White) Race is elided with (working) class to create the ultimate clash of culture – to make racist demons out of people asking to have their material interests defended.
It is no less than the mobilization of resentment of the socio-economic winners against the losers. How dare you not keep us in power, when we have done so little for you and promise to do even less?
...
The ultimate shadow of Reagan is that you don’t win by defending losers, only by securing the interests of the winners. That is the dark heart beating in the chest of the Unity Democrats. They are done with the losers. - Anglachel They're just not used to somebody really smart. They’re just not used to somebody who’s really well educated. They just don’t know quite how to handle it. Cause if he’s as smart as Barack is he must not be from my neighborhood. - Joe Biden (on why "Republicans and blogs on the far right" are 'mischaracterizing' Obama)
One of the things I really like about PUMA is that, unlike an unfortunately growing faction of the Democratic Party, there are no loyalty oaths, no uniforms to wear, no hierarchical leadership structure to pay homage to or suck up to, and no demagoguery to reflexively swallow. I’ve read and participated in many disagreements on The Confluence, esp. recently with regard to voting McCain, and never once been told ’you’re not a true PUMA!’ or had ’you’re a Republican/bitch/trailer trash/freak because you disagree!’ - commenter, Corrente Whatever Palin’s political impact, her cultural significance is profound. For better and for worse, she introduces a new and likely long-running cultural type to the national stage—the red-state feminist. - Kay S. Hymowitz, City Journal
The vice-presidential candidacy of Sarah Palin is, in part, an effort to wrest the leadership of the feminist movement from the elite and militant left, and to put it in the hands of a silent majority of relatively traditional but ambitious women. It is a bold move to try to separate abortion from other issues generally associated with women’s rights. - Conrad Black I think we need to add a new term to the lexicon to sum up that prevalent bit of sexism. I'm calling it Penis Years* (not a coincidence that it echoes the term dog years.)
*Penis Years: Each year of any experience of a person with a penis is equivalent to five years of experience by someone without a penis. - The Confluence (alleging bias in the media's treatment of female candidates Clinton and Palin, as compared to the media's treatment of Obama)
Her greatest hypocrisy is in her pretense that she is a woman. - Wendy Doniger, Newsweek They believe that the Democrats are right in the same way, to the same degree, that 2 plus 2 equals 4 and the Earth revolves around the sun. They take the ‘rightness’ of liberal and Democratic views as such a given, that they are not even able to think within any other framework.
Conservatives, and I am one, understand that some people disagree with us and it’s up to us to sell our ideas and get their vote. Liberals think that their correctness is self-evident and that those who don’t agree are uninformed, stupid or evil. They should be lectured and if that doesn’t work, mocked or ignored. - commenter, FT.com [Democrats'] concern is real and admirable. The trouble is, they lack respect for the objects of their solicitude. Their sympathy comes mixed with disdain, and even contempt. - Clive Crook, columnist
She added nothing to the ticket that the Republicans didn't already have sewn up, the white trash vote, the demographic that sullies America's name inside and outside its borders yet has such a curious appeal for the right....
...Palin was not a sure choice, not even for the stolidly Republican ladies branch of Citizens for a Tackier America. No, she isn't even female really....
...Palin has a toned-down version of the porn actress look favoured by this decade's woman, the overtreated hair, puffy lips and permanently alarmed expression. Bristol has what is known in Britain as the look of the teen mum, the "pramface." Husband Todd looks like a roughneck; Track, heading off to Iraq, appears terrified. They claim to be family obsessed while being studiously terrible at parenting. What normal father would want Levi "I'm a fuckin' redneck" Johnson prodding his daughter?
...Palin has it all, along with being vicious.... - Heather Mallick, CBC Sarah Palin thinks she is a better American than you because she comes from a small town, and a superior human being because she isn't a journalist and never lived in Washington and likes to watch her kids play hockey. - Michael Kinsley, TIME
...those numbers showing a 20-point swing in the support of white women have got to be in error -- unless of course, they meant to say ditzy white women, and the first adjective was omitted in error. - commenter, TalkLeft
On the day McCain announced her selection as his running mate, Palin thanked Clinton and Ferraro for blazing her trail. A day later, Ferraro noted her shock at Palin's comment. You see, none of her peers, no one, had ever publicly thanked her in the 24 years since her historic run for the White House. - Tammy Bruce, San Francisco Chronicle One ''hot-button'' issue is whether a woman with young children could be a good president and still handle her domestic obligations, or would she become conflicted, so that, say, if the Russians were getting ready to launch nuclear missiles at us, and the president was supposed to get on the Hot Line, she would instead be seized by an uncontrollable maternal instinct to make a pediatrician appointment.I don't know about Palin. But I do know this: women in general are WAY better at work/home multi-tasking than -- to pick another gender at random -- men. - Dave Barry
She was put on this earth to do two things: kill caribou and kick butt. She's all out of caribou. - Jonah Goldberg (enthusing over Republican VP nominee Sarah Palin)
And Hillary….I know you want to keep your job but for God’s sake woman how much abuse are you willing to take? - Mountain Sage
There is always talk of conservatives loving to start cultural war when they are down, but I can’t say that I’ve found this any more sickening and disgusting than the liberals’ tactic of belittling and demonizing much of the population of this country. I’ve found it incredibly hard to get mad at their usual attacks on liberals when my fellow liberals attack with the same degree of ferocity, but in a different way. If they are stereotypically “cheerfully vicious”, than we are most definitely “blissfully smug”. - commenter, Corrente
What is it about Republican Conventions that bring out America's inner police state? - Tennessee Guerilla Women
He's a one-trick (unity) pony, whose trick has been trotted out once too often. His sole and only schtick – standing at a podium in front of huge crowds and offering himself as their mirror – is already so yesterday that nobody can even work up much energy praising it anymore. Witness the speeches at this convention. All anybody could say on his behalf is that he isn’t John McCain. - Falstaff (on Obama) The reason that some of us will support Palin, even though we may not agree with all of her political positions, is that she is not an illegitimate candidate. She did not steal votes from her opponent. She did not smear us with charges of racism. She actually has a lot in common with some of us (mother, businesswoman, athlete, etct). And the man that will be her boss showed us that he is at least listening and aware of our presence. He didn’t flick us off his shoulder and tell us we weren’t needed. He didn’t play the abusive boyfriend and say “where else are you gonna go babe?”. - The Confluuence
Party bosses fixed a title fight between Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton. In bare knuckles Scranton where I’m from, that’s tantamount to treason. So they better watch out when I come looking for a rematch. - Steve Corbett, talk show radio host
All those years I took pride in my party loyalty and now I realize I was just a fool, because I was telling the Democratic party and candidates they could take me for granted and ignore my wants and needs. The could pursue their own agendas without interference from me, because no matter what they did (or failed to do) they could count on my vote.
If I had been more disloyal they might have offered to pay me for my vote instead paying me no attention. Who knows what I could have got in return for my vote? I might have universal health care right now instead of my current plan which is called “don’t get sick.” We might even have “Congressional oversight” of the Bush Mob. - Klownhaus Nancy Pelosi said not too long ago that she supported Obama because he has the judgment to be President. This is of course, like a homeless person giving advice on how to fix the housing crisis. - Marc Rubin The Republicans couldn’t have come up with a better way to destroy the progressive movement from within if they’d invented him. Which maybe they did. - Reclusive Leftist Resolved, that 18 million Americans voted for Hillary Clinton, more than any other presidential primary candidate in history, and they have a right to help shape the agenda and processes of the Democratic Party. - Declaration of Objections
I know that candidates usually run toward the center during the general, but, damn, they don’t usually run all the way to the opposite goal! - commenter, Corrente
who I am
I am an alienated former Democrat, who intends to vote independent from now on.
I took down my blogroll because I don't want to belong to any communities at the moment. I think groupthink is the biggest threat there is right now.
I always did like to play devil's advocate, and I think an honest debate is worth more than a hundred "right" opinions. Two hundred if it's lively.
I'm not ashamed to place myself near the center of the political spectrum. I have little respect for people who are way out on either wing, who see nothing but their own little bubble, and hear nothing because they can't listen to anyone but themselves and their mirrors.
I am an unashamed member of the low information bitter small town gun totin' hick crowd, though I've lived in cities too.
I've been a Democrat ever since I could vote, but I'm fed up with the sneering contempt liberals have aimed at everyone outside their little gated-community world.
To me, the word elitist brings up images of Brad Pitt on ice skates, and it is exactly how I think of the Democratic party. And, no, "elitist" has nothing to do with how wealthy you are. It is merely the opposite of someone who believes in equality (or, ironically, democracy), but who believes that 'some pigs are created a little more equal than others'.
I don't pretend to be particularly well-educated; I have no fancy degrees and I've learned (the hard way) to be very cautious of assuming a fancy degree is worth jack.
I care about eradicating poverty and I care about dignity for all (even poor people, trailer trash, Southerners, and Republicans). I care about education, equal access to opportunity, FDR's Four Freedoms, minimum protections for workers, and a fair shake for anyone willing to work hard and obey the rules.
I care about an honest dialog, and the idea that everyone ought to have a voice. I care about fair and honest elections. I am angry about how manipulative the media is. I care about procedures being followed and process being respected.
Also: when I comment on other blogs - which I don't usually do ever since I noticed someone going around posting this site as his or her personal link (??) - I use this Blogger account. If the name is the same as mine, but it's not a Blogger account - it isn't me.