by asg70 » Mon 30 Oct 2017, 18:41:01
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')It is the Right which began it by focusing upon single issue politics. One by one they've taken singular moral issues, such as abortion and gun rights, and coerced people to vote against their more wide ranging best interests.
The reason I'm emphasizing the left is not that the right isn't partly to blame. It goes without saying that it is, starting with Rush Limbaugh and Fox News turning news into propaganda. But somewhere along the line the right stopped trying to pretend it had the moral high ground. The 'fair and balanced' moniker became a joke that even right-wingers stopped pretending to believe in. From that point onward, the right sort of "owned up" to its reputation of being the ideology that stands for insensitive bullying, hypocritical "moral majority" culture-wars, and a full embrace of the illusion of trickle-down economics.
You know when Trump made that comment about how the Iraq war was a mistake because we didn't take the oil? That's kind of what I mean. G. W. Bush tried to obfuscate the conflict of interest between his big oil cabinet and the decision to go to war in Iraq. But Trump just moved the goalposts to validating the idea of sacrificing American lives for resource wars. This is horrifying as far as a moral slippery-slope goes, but at least it's being honest, not that Trump doesn't still hide behind his share of dog-whistles.
The left, on the other hand, can't accept that if they push things too far they lose the moral upper-hand they may have had back in the MLK days. All this bitching and moaning about manspreading and mansplaining, for instance, is just calling for tyranny under the guise of social-justice. Also, their rigidity in regards to immigration policy (in Europe mostly) is a big factor in making the recent spate of terrorism possible. I wonder how many pressure-cooker bombs would need to explode off before they started to lay off on anti-fat-shaming and mansplaining kick...
Point being that there's no mid-ground and there's no civil discourse to be had between both sides.
I think this is what the Internet is doing. It's creating not so much physical tribalism but ideological tribalism. We may walk past our ideological enemies as we're staring down the street while unknowingly duking it out online in drive-by Facebook comments.
To whatever extent demographics has been mapped out via red and blue states or red and blue regions (in the case of liberal enclaves huddling the cities within otherwise red states) the endpoint may very well be the breakup of the US into red and blue states, perhaps not that different from the splitting up of the USSR, the balkan wars, Brexit, etc...
Diverse populations really can't function as a unified society without ideological tolerance.
This has been stewing for a long time, at least as far back as 2000 with the hanging chads in Florida. Then add in the backlash against a black president which some in the US could not deal with, etc... leading up to the kneeling NFL players.
National unity is in serious danger in the US because of this factionalism. I'm not saying we should all salute Trump because I think the guy should be impeached, but at the same time, he's there because enough of the American public bought into his populist rhetoric. How many of them think he should be impeached? He's "their guy" even if it winds up ending with NK managing to vaporize Los Angeles in his cheap pissing contest.
There's really no other way to look at this rant above other than that I'm pretty damn misanthropic at this point. I used to look at the US as this self-regulating system, the best possible government, but I have such a low opinion of the level of intelligence and the moral fiber of the voting public that we'd probably be better off with a benign dictator, a philosopher king of some sort, someone with such charisma that he could get on TV and find a way to tell us all to
get our shit together.