I really think that's setting false expectations. Nevada will be a better indicator than South Carolina, in the unlikely situation that's where we end up.
Why do you keep harping on Nevada?
EDIT: it comes after NH. nvm
I really think that's setting false expectations. Nevada will be a better indicator than South Carolina, in the unlikely situation that's where we end up.
Why do you keep harping on Nevada?
I really think that's setting false expectations. Nevada will be a better indicator than South Carolina, in the unlikely situation that's where we end up.
Isn't the biggest threat to the Iranian regime youth unemployment?I don't think that'll go anywhere. Iran doesn't really want to upset the US too much; Rouhani is a moderate and their economy had a pretty big uptick after the sanctions were partially listed.
If he's going to win the whole thing he'll need the african-american vote, if he can't start chipping away after two straight wins then it isn't going to happen. As the calendar continues urban areas become much more prominent, if he can start moving the african-american vote his way it will be an indicator that he'll be able to compete in those urban areas.
Not that I know anything anyway but I could see anywhere that's invested heavily in oil markets or financially exposed to them get significantly worse.On a different note entirely...
http://www.theguardian.com/business...at-2016-financial-crisis-warns-city-pessimist
Thoughts?
In other words, appealing to the "identity politics" of white working class people by moderating on gun laws is A-OK, but women, people of color, gay people, transgendered people, and basically, anybody else that's not a blue collar voter in a marginal Obama/Romney district should just sit down and shut up, because what you care about might offend the mythical working class voter.
For the record, I disagree. You absolutely have to fight for minority issues, and you don't compromise them, ever. You just have to know your audience at the same time, and not make it the centrepoint of your campaign. That should *always* be economic stuff.
Sure. That's a morally correct position. The thing is you need to offer something in return*. And that's where the centre-left has failed the working/lower middle class white workers. They've embraced identity politics which disadvantages these people compared to their prior position and they often nothing in return. In fact the centre-left has pretty much abandoned what they previously offered (minimum wages (recently re-embraced but at far below the rate of inflation), the legitimization of unions**,etc) for a double hit.
*You can also opt to sacrifice that vote but in that case you need to accept those consequences. That's how it works. You don't get to throw people under a bus and then complain that they dislike you because you threw them under a bus for the right reasons.
+1!I think you are reading what you want to believe I said, rather than what I said.
Bingo.
The GOP has spent the last, what, 40 years, building their party around identity politics and ideologues? Mind you, kicking ideological democratic asses over and over in the process? Our victories in presidential elections have been two presidents who were known for being people who fought for unity and togetherness rather than tribal identities. Mind you - they built a coalition around ideology that loosely held together while they had the presidency. Once the sweet taste of victory went away - you have the modern schism that defines the GOP.
Going after them in an area of strength (fighting with identity rather than policy & analogy) is a fucking terrible idea. The GOP has decades of using cultural identity politics to get people to vote against their own self-interest. The democrats have always been a much bigger tent for "everyone else". If you try to go down the rabbit hole of racial / gender / sexuality identity politics within the "everyone else" camp; the demographic advantage the Democrats currently have will be torn asunder, as a lot of the groups are tenuous ideological allies in many cases, and many of the groups are not natural allies when it comes to race / sexuality / gender.
As the country turns less and less white, those groups may start acting in their own self-interest rather than working together, since you would have spent years telling them to define themselves based on their sexuality / race / gender rather than their ideology. People forget that the HERO ordinance (anti-LGBT act) was passed in Houston because those supporting HERO went after black Christians who typically vote democrat in elections. Hispanics and Asians are notoriously socially conservative, but tend to vote Democrat.
Following the GOP path while we are watching the consequences in real-time of following said path seems extremely foolish.
Also, going to point this out.
As the country turns less and less white, those groups may start acting in their own self-interest rather than working together, since you would have spent years telling them to define themselves based on their sexuality / race / gender rather than their ideology. People forget that the HERO ordinance (anti-LGBT act) was passed in Houston because those supporting HERO went after black Christians who typically vote democrat in elections. Hispanics and Asians are notoriously socially conservative, but tend to vote Democrat.
The unifying platforms of god, guns, gays and taxes don't seem like something I'd define as "identity politics." They unify in being anti-progress.
Hypothetical situation:
Sanders pulls off shocking wins over Clinton in Iowa and New Hampshire.
What happens to the race?
LOL.Frank Thorp VVerified account
‏@frankthorpNBC
Rep Steve King (R-IA) will be leaving his guest seat for the #SOTU open "for 55 million unborn, aborted babies"
Dems have opposed pretty much every cut to he new deal. Except welfare reform. I don't get the fact that they've not given any thing on the economic front. They also greatly expanded health care (that was undermined by the courts, help lead to lower energy prices, reduced a lot of the burden of student loans (loan forgiveness among other things).
This reads like a mix white paranoia, misunderstandings about minorities views on social issues, and general concern trolling.
Hispaniss and Asians are liberal on pretty much every social issue in this country. Gay marriage, abortion, welfare spending, racism etc.
Last year I was on Jeopardy! and I got a Daily Double about Arthur Miller right. Here is footage of that moment.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mYkB5f1X-yM
I was down in the game and thrilled to rebound with a $5,000 pickup. You could say I was feeling more like myself at that moment, and here’s what that means: I felt like an ebullient, intense, trivia-obsessed gay guy. I would argue that I looked like one too. Look, I even wrote about it.
That GIF enjoyed some Reddit acclaim, so every once in awhile I still see it pop up on Tumblr. Today I saw it somewhere else: The GOP's website! They’re advertising their (I guess?) sassy Snapchat handle, and that’s where my "snap" comes into play. It's the “Snap of the Union," you see. That’s the kind of pun work you get from the GOP, which is grim enough.
But after glancing at their "humorous" posting for more than two seconds, I realized how horrified and sad I am. / Nothing about representing myself on Jeopardy! with excitement, self-possession, and pride has anything to do with the GOP’s ideals, and it is borderline traumatizing to see my image associated with their horrifying, regressive shambles of a party. Every fearful, closeted kid I knew growing up in suburban Illinois had one thing in common: ignorant, blindly adherent Republican parents. In my mind the Republican party (especially its current lineup of candidates) has done nothing to advance the cause of LGBT rights, and in fact they were dragged kicking and screaming into basic LGBT tolerance in the first place. Jeopardy! is beloved by people of many political leanings, but my GIF is a celebration of apparent, serious gayness. Newsflash: Nothing about the GOP is a celebration of gayness, and it is a sick joke that they’d feign such a stance for the sake of their social credibility.
I happen to be a standup comic, so many of my friends (including several gay standups) encouraged me to take a saucy approach here. In the past I’ve stated that every GOP candidate seems like a horrifying Wonka parent. In the past I’ve stated that every GOP candidate seems like a string of ALL-CAPS YouTube comments come to life. I like mocking their disgusting existence because something has to be said about their disgusting existence. But when it comes to addressing their pathetic use of my image (and their lack of research about the identity of the guy in the — ahem — aubergine suit), I become numb and unwilling to respond with tweet-length rage. My militant belief in the power, importance, and well-being of the LGBT community supersedes any instinct I have to respond with just a pithy retort worthy of Hollywood Squares. And I love Hollywood Squares.
So instead of "dragging" the GOP for being a gross, harmful creepshow that continues to endanger the lives of LGBT Americans, I will solemnly say this: The fact that the GOP can’t detect gay pride in arguably the gayest "Jeopardy!" moment of all time is proof of their brutal ignorance. There is nothing sassy or cute about the GOP invoking my image to prove they're hip with the kids, who almost unanimously think they're a joke anyway. The GOP’s aggressive, antigay hysteria fills me with contempt, and this is just another laughably moronic mistake to consider alongside their regressive legacy. I will save my harmless ribbing for loving allies like Taylor Swift, who is what happens when you water a Livejournal, and Tilda Swinton, who is italicized Cate Blanchett. The GOP, meanwhile, deserves straightforward, unyielding derision. Though I’m still thunderstruck and depressed by the GOP’s error, I’ll phrase my final remark on their snafu in the form of a question: Who’s snapping now?
Minimum wage has stagnated, health care should be single payer, public university should be vastly cheaper. Not moving forward is the same as cutting given the, oh, forty fucking years that all left economic progress has stopped.Dems have opposed pretty much every cut to he new deal. Except welfare reform. I don't get the fact that they've not given any thing on the economic front. They also greatly expanded health care (that was undermined by the courts, help lead to lower energy prices, reduced a lot of the burden of student loans (loan forgiveness among other things).
This reads like a mix white paranoia, misunderstandings about minorities views on social issues, and general concern trolling.
Hispaniss and Asians are liberal on pretty much every social issue in this country. Gay marriage, abortion, welfare spending, racism etc.
LOL.
As the country turns less and less white, those groups may start acting in their own self-interest rather than working together, since you would have spent years telling them to define themselves based on their sexuality / race / gender rather than their ideology. People forget that the HERO ordinance (anti-LGBT act) was passed in Houston because those supporting HERO went after black Christians who typically vote democrat in elections. Hispanics and Asians are notoriously socially conservative, but tend to vote democrat.
Why do you think that those issues appeal mostly to the white working class that used to vote Democrat? 'Christian' has become an identity, 'straight' has become an identity, gun-owner has become a partisan identity. It's all code for white rural working class.The unifying platforms of god, guns, gays and taxes don't seem like something I'd define as "identity politics." They unify in being anti-progress.
Gonna need a citation on Asians and Hispanics being notoriously socially conservative, as most polls and a recent editorial in the NYT paint the opposite story.
In fact, I'm pretty sure one of the only minority groups which still steadfastly holds socially conservative views while reliably voting democratic are muslims.
Dems have opposed pretty much every cut to he new deal. Except welfare reform. I don't get the fact that they've not given any thing on the economic front. They also greatly expanded health care (that was undermined by the courts, help lead to lower energy prices, reduced a lot of the burden of student loans (loan forgiveness among other things).
It's one of those things that people say, like that the media is liberal, that has no real basis.
Rubio is in 4th.New Reuters data out.
Trump still killing it. http://polling.reuters.com/#!poll/T...20151204-20160112/collapsed/false/spotlight/1
Clinton up 55-36. http://polling.reuters.com/#!poll/T...20150901-20160112/collapsed/false/spotlight/1
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Also, funny how we're now getting a pushback on "identity politics" when black people just happen to be getting vocal about how they're still being royally screwed.
New Reuters data out.
Trump still killing it. http://polling.reuters.com/#!poll/T...20151204-20160112/collapsed/false/spotlight/1
Clinton up 55-36. http://polling.reuters.com/#!poll/T...20150901-20160112/collapsed/false/spotlight/1
Wanting to own guns isn't part of one's "identity" in the sense I'm referring, it's a hobby (at best.) Being straight is, but being a bigot isn't. Being white is, but again, being a bigot isn't. Although, I imagine this is now just semantically talking past each other.
Wanting to own guns isn't part of one's "identity" in the sense I'm referring, it's a hobby (at best.) Being straight is, but being a bigot isn't. Although, I imagine this is now just semantically talking past each other.
Still 100% against unjustified shootings of black people and them getting institutionally screwed.
You mean static traits are identity?Wanting to own guns isn't part of one's "identity" in the sense I'm referring, it's a hobby (at best.) Being straight is, but being a bigot isn't. Being white is, but again, being a bigot isn't. Although, I imagine this is now just semantically talking past each other.
New Reuters data out.
Trump still killing it. http://polling.reuters.com/#!poll/T...20151204-20160112/collapsed/false/spotlight/1
Clinton up 55-36. http://polling.reuters.com/#!poll/T...20150901-20160112/collapsed/false/spotlight/1
@stevenportnoy
CBS NEWS/NYT NATIONAL POLL:
Clinton 48
Sanders 41
O'Malley 2
(Clinton had a 20 pt lead in this poll last month. Now down to 7.)
No, it's that these things have become emblematic of an identity over time. If the economic security of the white middle class wasn't being eroded, you would see many of these behaviors decrease dramatically. Tokenism and what is seen as special rights (not saying it's true, saying it's seen that way) for minorities exacerbates the problem. None of this would be seen as a problem if the economic conditions of the white working class were improving or even keeping up with where they were pre-Neoliberal-economics. Democrats supporting NAFTA, TPP, and presiding over much of the era of outsourcing didn't help.Wanting to own guns isn't part of one's "identity" in the sense I'm referring, it's a hobby (at best.) Being straight is, but being a bigot isn't. Although, I imagine this is now just semantically talking past each other.
You mean static traits are identity?
@Taniel
And Trump has a big lead on the GOP side:
Trump: 36% (highest yet in a NYT/CBS poll)
Cruz: 19%
Rubio: 12%
Bush & Carson: 6%
And now, CBS:
Man, the national picture is unclear as fuck. I thought NH had some extreme opposite polling, but how can you have Clinton +4 and Clinton +19 in the same week!?
Washington (CNN)Sen. Elizabeth Warren is facing growing pressure from Senate Democrats to get behind Hillary Clinton as the former secretary of state suddenly finds herself struggling to keep pace with Bernie Sanders in early primary states.
In interviews with CNN, Democratic senators are grumbling over Warren's refusal to pick a side, arguing that the populist liberal firebrand could help unite the party behind Clinton, whom they believe represents their only chance of winning the White House.
"I think it would be important," Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Missouri, said of Warren backing Clinton. "I think it would be helpful."
At least one senator, Michigan Democrat Debbie Stabenow, has asked Warren to endorse Clinton, according to other Democrats. Stabenow's office declined to comment.
Warren, whose influence with core Democratic voters is rivaled only by Sanders himself, could provide the Clinton campaign the boost it needs after two polls suddenly showed her trailing to Sanders in Iowa and New Hampshire.
"She's waiting way too long," said one Democratic senator who asked not to be named.
The potential endorsement also puts Warren in a bind. If she jumps behind Clinton, she will undoubtedly anger the legions of like-minded progressives who are powering Sanders' insurgent campaign. But a Sanders endorsement will turn off not only women's groups that back Clinton but also many of her fellow senators.
McCaskill noted not a single Democratic senator has backed Sanders, the Vermont independent who caucuses with Democrats.
"Probably all of us respect and love him, but we have a lot people here who have worked with him for many years -- and he has yet to have one endorsement from people who know him well and who have worked with him," McCaskill said. "There is a collective judgment there that one candidate is going to be better president, and I think that counts for something since we work with him every day."
Warren has said previously she expects to give an endorsement, but it's unclear when it will come. A Warren spokeswoman declined to comment.
Indeed, Democratic senators have lined up behind Warren (IVY'S NOTE: TYPO LOLOLOL) - including the 13 other women in the Senate Democratic Caucus. In late November, Warren was the only Democratic female senator who skipped a fundraiser held at the Hyatt Regency on Capitol Hill in honor of Clinton. While she signed a letter in 2013 with fellow women Democratic senators urging Clinton to run, she has since said that did not constitute an endorsement.
"Of course she would love to have Elizabeth's support," Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-California, said of Clinton. "It's hard for me to get in anybody else's mind as to why they would not."
Privately, Warren met with Clinton at her Washington home in December 2014, and has since chatted with Sanders. Tad Devine, the senior Sanders strategist, said that Warren's support would be "more than welcome" but he didn't know what she would do.
"There's no secret Elizabeth Warren plan," Devine said. "She's going to do what she wants to do when she wants to do it. That's the way it goes."
The chatter comes at an urgent time for the Clinton campaign. A Monmouth poll Tuesday found Clinton losing to Sanders by 14 points in New Hampshire -- while a new Quinnipiac poll reported that Clinton was trailing by five points in Iowa.
Some Democrats are nervous about the prospect that Sanders could win the nomination.
"If Bernie was the nominee, I think creates a challenge," said Sen. Joe Manchin, the moderate West Virginia Democrat. "But of course, Republicans have tremendous challenges, too."
McCaskill said it's time for Clinton to more sharply show the contrast between the two of them.
"That's what happens when someone remains undefined, and the other is so familiar to voters," McCaskill said. 'You've got a shiny new object, and you've got Hillary Clinton. That is a contrast in terms of familiarity. It's not unusual for someone to go with the new and unfamiliar over something that is very familiar."
McCaskill added: "I think the contrast is going to have to be drawn so people understand that Hillary Clinton is the only person running for president that is really qualified to lead in a stable and pragmatic fashion on the issues facing our country."
Sanders repeatedly discounts the lack of support from his colleagues -- even like-minded colleagues like Sen. Sherrod Brown, whom he referred to as "the establishment" after the Ohio Democrat endorsed Clinton.
"Bernie says, the next day, 'I didn't expect any help from the establishment," Brown said. "I said to him, 'Even though that kind of pissed me off, that was actually pretty good line.' He smiled."
It's not something I ever particularly associated with the term "identity politics." And it basically broadens the term to the point where anything and everything could be considered as such. Being a farmer is identity politics. Being a stoner is identity politics. Being a vegan is identity politics.
Identity is created by the presence and awareness of out-groups. That's all it really is and it's simply exacerbated by the relative perceived health and resource availability of the group identifying itself. The false scarcity caused by the resource distribution that capitalism creates engenders greater in-group/out-group awareness. The identity doesn't have to be a minority identity, it simply has to feel threatened in order for it to solidify against the perceived threats of out-groups.This is an interesting question. Where do we draw the line between identity, lifestyle, attitudes... Is it really ONLY immutable traits? Is being religious a part of someone's identity? Gun culture? How about ethnicity, since that's not really changeable but is externally imposed?
It's not something I ever particularly associated with the term "identity politics." And it basically broadens the term to the point where anything and everything could be considered as such. Being a farmer is identity politics. Being a stoner is identity politics. Being a vegan is identity politics.