From Pine View Farm

Politics of Hate category archive

Branding 0

Excerpt:

If the Republican Party is a “brand,” their product is hate.

Share

No There, There 0

Gwynne Dyer tries to visualize a “real” Donald Trump and can’t find one. A snippet:

All of his present positions are calculated to appeal to the group whose support he must win to get the Republican nomination: “angry white men” who feel that they have been cheated of their right to a good job and a central role in American politics by unseen economic and demographic forces and clever, wicked foreigners. The internal politics of the Republican Party is now largely dominated by their concerns.

Trump is so focused on getting their support that he even opposes the traditional Republican policies that have contributed to their marginalization and impoverishment: free trade, low taxes for the rich and deep cuts in welfare programs. And he gets away with it, although no other Republican candidate would.

(snip)

The answer is that there is no real Trump, in terms of policies and principles. He will do anything and say anything to get what he wants . . . .

Read the rest. Her most optimistic take on the results of Trump’s being elected is a hoot.

In related news, here’s a snapshot of Donald Trump’s (and the Republican Party’s) America.

Share

“Moral Choices” 0

PoliticalProf.

Share

Still Rising Again after All These Years 0

Tou Ger Bennett Xiong, an American citizen of Hmong descent, wonders what is happening to his country. Here’s how he starts his article; follow the link for the rest.

Back in elementary school in the 1980s, when I first arrived here from the refugee camps, I remember being bullied and called “chink” and “gook” on a regular basis. Out of their fear of the unknown, other kids would tell me to go back to my country. Sometimes, I even got beat up for being different. I would never wish this experience upon anyone. Luckily, through a strong family foundation and support, these experiences have made me a stronger person and a prouder American, especially when I reflect on how far we have come from those days. Today, I have forgiven those racist bullies who wronged me and my family as we made our transition into American life. I continue to pray for them as I hope they have come to understand that their deep-seated hatred for me was more a reflection of what they saw in themselves.

Lately, though, I feel that my faith in America’s great promise is being called into question again by the recent hate and animosity in our political climate.

Share

Punishing Profits 0

Via Mother Jones.

Share

All the News that Fits 0

Share

Quandary 0

Alex Steed wonders how to tell his daughter about the facts of Trump. A snippet:

It’s hard to describe Trump to a child, especially considering that a key part of getting kids ready for the world is teaching them to act with dignity and respect. Meanwhile, this guy has suggested that all women are gold diggers and on at least one occasion implied he’s sexually attracted to his daughter. It’s hard to make the case to a child that virtue is worth all that much if someone so committed to being without it is the front-runner for his party’s presidential nomination.

Share

The Capitulation 0

ISIS fighter:  Our goal is to create so much fear and panic that it disrupts Democracy.  Images of Trump and Cruz spouting anti-Muslim rhetoric.  ISIS fighter says,

Via Job’s Anger.

Share

Shrinking Violence 0

Noz suggests that ISIS is not living up to its press releases.

Share

“Beatings Will Continue until Morale Improves” 1

Elie Mystal sums up the Republican reaction to the bombings in Brussels.

Share

Profiles in Cowardice 0

Shaun Mullen tries to make sense of the Trumping of the Republican Party and finds himself with a case of the vapors. In a depressing spiral universe, he suggests that each side, Trump and the Republican establishment (whatever that is) is worse than the other. Here’s a bit:

As diabolical as the vainglorious Trump’s ascendancy has been, the cowardice with which it has been greeted by the Republican elites and their deep-pocketed oligarchic backers has been worse.

Do please read the rest.

Share

Trump, the Symptom 0

Share

The Fire Next Time 0

Donald Trump pouring gasoline on flames labeled


Click for a larger image.

Share

The Crux of the Matter 0

Republican elephant to President Obama:  We were wrong about you not having the power to nominate a Supreme Court Justice during the last year of term.  We meant the last seven years of your term.  So why don't we take back Sotomayor and Kagan.  President Obama:  Get bent.  Republican Elephant:  Why must you be so black--I mean unreasonable.

Via Job’s Anger.

Share

Good Sports 0

One seems to be seeing more and more reports like this one.

Officials at Catholic Memorial School have apologized after some students chanted anti-Semitic taunts during a basketball game against a school with a large Jewish population.

Dozens of Catholic Memorial students attending Friday’s game against Newton North High School were overheard yelling, ‘‘You killed Jesus’’ to Newton North fans.

For example.

Share

Unintended Consequences 0

Jamelle Bouie, writing at the Boston Review, finds something positive in Donald Trump’s race to the bottom for the Republican presidential nomination. A nugget:

But he has nonetheless given America something it needs. Oddly from a man so uninformed and inarticulate, that something is knowledge. He is teaching white people something important, for many of us have been locked in shameful ignorance of our countrymen. Much of America convinced itself that there were no racists left—that the silencing of overt bigotry by social and legal censure (think of Paula Deen, Donald Sterling, or Don Imus) meant the problem of personal racism had been overcome. We therefore had to wrap our minds around “racism without racists.” But in fact the racists were with us all along.

Do read the rest.

Share

Kicking It 0

Warning: Language.

Via Raw Story.

Share

Along for the Ride 0

Donald Trump driving recklessly while Republican elephant sits in back seat, saying,


Click for a larger image.

Share

“Sweet Seduction” 4

Der Spiegel attempts to figure out Donald Trump’s appeal and leans towards the idea that he fills a vacuum created by the refusal to the powers that be (when I was a young ‘un, it was called “The Establishment”) to deal with very real social and economic problems. Here’s a bit (emphasis added):

The reason Trump’s promise to “make America great again” has been so effective is that it revives this dream and reaches voters who long ago turned their backs on the political system. A considerable share of his voters are based in rural regions and suburbs. They are likely to be poor, working class and lacking a college education. Trump appeals to the kind of voters who have been left behind by the forces of modernization — people disconnected from societal progress who have neither profited from wealth nor the digital revolution.

There is no lack of proposals for combatting social inequality. What is missing is the will of the elite. But for as long as those who profit from the division of society are not prepared to relinquish at least a modicum of their power, privilege and affluence, Trump’s sweet seduction will not diminish.

Keith Zakheim seems to have reached a have reached a somewhat similar conclusion. Here’s a bit from his piece at NorthJersey.com:

Trumpians are Republicans and Democrats, hawks and doves, evangelicals and atheists, urbanites and suburbanites and men and women. They are united by their class suffering: growing income disparity, stagnant working-class wages, subpar health care, failing schools, unaffordable college tuitions, blighted urban areas, underwater mortgages and massive youth unemployment.

They will no longer be fooled by the smooth-talking pol who harangues against Wall Street on the stump but uses its lucre to pay for campaign advertisements. . . .

Trump is a foul-mouthed bigot who lacks the intelligence, grace and humility to lead the greatest nation on earth. But he does have one redeeming quality — he is not a member of the political class — and a vote for him is not an irrational choice. In fact, if it is true that “insanity is repeating the same mistakes and expecting a different result,” then Trump voters today are acting perfectly rationally in not pulling the lever for career politicians.

Click the links. Read the rest.

Again along the same lines, Chauncey Devega and Tim Wise recently discussed, among other things, the question that lefties and economists often ask:

    Why do poor and middle class white voters so often vote against their economic best interest?

Wise theorizes that, in a racist and sexist society, whiteness and, to a lesser extent, maleness are themselves almost tangible property; if the folks who overtly incorporate them into their self-identities see them threatened, they will fight to defend and retain them, as they might chase an armed burglar without a thought to their own safety (the interview with Wise starts about 20 minutes into the podcast).

In other words, if you don’t got much, you hang on to what you got, however ephemeral and fantastickal it may may be.

Or, as Lyndon Johnson once put it:

If you can convince the lowest white man that he’s better than the best colored man, he won’t notice you’re picking his pocket. Hell, give him somebody to look down on, and he’ll even empty his pockets for you.

Share

Trumping the Gospel 0

A Davidson college student recounts her experience protesting at a Donald Trump rally. A nugget:

In a breathless moment, we joined hands and raised them above our heads, chanting the words that Jesus taught us: “love thy neighbor.” For 30 seconds, my heart was racing – especially when Mr. Trump stopped speaking and turned his attention toward us. He commanded us to “get out.”

And that’s the way it is.

Share
From Pine View Farm
Privacy Policy

This website does not track you.

It contains no private information. It does not drop persistent cookies, does not collect data other than incoming ip addresses and page views (the internet is a public place), and certainly does not collect and sell your information to others.

Some sites that I link to may try to track you, but that's between you and them, not you and me.

I do collect statistics, but I use a simple stand-alone Wordpress plugin, not third-party services such as Google Analitics over which I have no control.

Finally, this is website is a hobby. It's a hobby in which I am deeply invested, about which I care deeply, and which has enabled me to learn a lot about computers and computing, but it is still ultimately an avocation, not a vocation; it is certainly not a money-making enterprise (unless you click the "Donate" button--go ahead, you can be the first!).

I appreciate your visiting this site, and I desire not to violate your trust.