From Pine View Farm

Political Theatre category archive

“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.

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How Stuff Works, Advise and Consent Dept. 0

Caption:  The Senate Plowing Service.  Image:  Snowplow parked on road while voice comes from near-by bar saying,


Click for a larger image.

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“Raging Hormonal Imbalances” 0

Samantha Bee suggests that men are too emotional to be in charge.

Warning: Almost as tasteless as a Republican debate.

Via Raw Story.

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Abnormal Psych 0

There’s a whole new phobia come to town.

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You All Shush Up Now 0

Southern Beale discusses the sexist payload of shushing a sister. A snippet:

Here’s the deal, guys: women don’t like to be shushed. At all. If my husband ever tells me to be quiet or shush — yes, it’s happened — it elicits an intense, visceral, negative response. It makes me furious. And when it happens in a professional setting? It pushes every feminist button I own.

Why? Because you’re telling me I’m not important. You’re discounting me. You’re saying my ideas don’t matter, and that I don’t have the right to express them.

Men interrupt each other all the time and I daresay they don’t have that same response. It’s just how they communicate. But men and women come at communication from very different places.

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Strange Bedfellows 0

Welcome to the morning after the night before.

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The Lincoln that Time Forgot 0

Thom and David S. Reynolds discuss the Lincoln of the Party Once of Lincoln.

During the Great Depression, one wag remarked (and it’s still true today), “The Republican Party has gone from being the party that freed the slaves to being the party that frayed the sleeves.”

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Chris-Crossed Off 0

Via Delaware Liberal.

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The Retirement of Sisyphus 0

Philadelphia, like many jurisdictions (not just cities), has a “pension crisis.”*

The cause of the crisis is not pensions. The cause of the crisis is the decision of governments small and large to agree to pensions, then choose not to fund them. Now that funding time is due, the solution of choice seems to be to screw the workers who have been paying their share of the pension plans all along through payroll deductions.

The Philadelphia City Controller, looking at the example set by professional fraudsters, has proposed a novel idea: buy out pensions at a cut rate so that the pensioners, now that they have reached retirement age, can keep right on working. A snippet from the story:

Butkovitz is proposing that the city offer up-front cash payments to retirees, who, if they took the option, would surrender their lifelong pensions.

The payments would represent only a portion – say, 50 percent – of what a retiree could expect to receive over a lifetime. Still, a fair number of retirees might be enticed by the prospect of a cash windfall they could invest on their own, Butkovitz said.

“This would give people the opportunity to start a business,” he said. “Or do something that could potentially change their life and provide financial security long-term. And, of course, they could convert it into an annuity.”

You can take it from me, starting a new business or gambling at the Wall Street track is not a retirement dream of most persons at retirement age.

Retiring is the damned retirement dream, one which is more and more a stolen dream.

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*In Philadelphia’s case, the problem is exacerbated by the systematic screwing given Philly by the Republicans in the state legislature. For example.

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GOPocalypse Now 0

Shorter Leonard Pitts, Jr.: They brought it on themselves.

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Verbal Gymnasts 0

Watch the WSJ columnist assert that the “conservative establishment” (whatever that is) did not do what they have done.

Via C&L.

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None Dare Call It Terrorism 0

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If One Standard Is Good, Two Must Be Better 0

Key quote:

He’s (Trump–ed.) treated as a celebrity; he’s not treated as a politician.

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Dis Coarse Discourse 0

Picture of tape measure extended to 5 1/2 inches labeled,

Via Job’s Anger.

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Shorter Susie Sampson: That’s about the Size of It 0

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How Stuff Works, Cable News Dept. 0

Kate:  So what's the point of being in a constant state of outrage, Danae?  Danae:  That's how the world works. . . . Apparently, if you are in a mindless state of outrage, the world will go along with it, figuring you must be right if you are so outraged.  Kate to Father:  I think it's time we dialed back on the cable news, Daddy.


Click for a larger image.

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He Participated. Did You? 0

Klansman  holding torch and wearing an

Via Juanita Jean.

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Dis Coarse Discourse: The Candidates Debate 0

PoliticalProf has the play-by-play.

Now, we turn to Kiko’s House for the analysis.

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Mein Koif 0

Donald Trump poster showing Trump with is hair combed into a KKK hood with slogan,

Click for the original.

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The Personal Responsibility of Politics 0

Image:  Virginia legislature reacts to complaints about police by considering a bill to make their identities secret.  Image:  N. C. legislature, ignoring data from other states, acts to drug-test welfare recipients, with the same failure.  Voter asks,


Click to see the original image.

Voting is not a right; it’s a duty.

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