Democratic Convention

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Indy
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Re: Democratic Convention

Post by Indy »

Mori Chu wrote:
Wed Aug 19, 2020 2:45 pm
A common fallacy with all these rah-rah political thingies is to think they are about persuasion. In many cases they are about activation and enthusiasm. There are some potential voters who are liberal but might feel kind of "meh" about Biden. Things like the conventions and debates can convince those voters to get up and go to the polls rather than staying home. I agree that very few people watch a convention and flip from one party/candidate to the other because of it.
But I will say that the coverage it gets might be enough to make someone that only votes sometimes be more likely to get out if they are excited by seeing someone they respect/think highly of nudging them to do so.

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Nodack
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Re: Democratic Convention

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Obama gave the best speech ever. He even got choked up.

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Indy
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Re: Democratic Convention

Post by Indy »

He is as good as they come when it comes to speeches.

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Cap
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Re: Democratic Convention

Post by Cap »

The bettors aren’t impressed. Biden’s implicit chances the lowest they’ve been since early July: https://www.realclearpolitics.com/elect ... president/

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3rdside
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Re: Democratic Convention

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Identity politics has shattered America
If Biden wins, he must confront the left’s ‘oppression Olympics’

Matthew Syed
The Sunday Times UK

I first noticed the depths into which the American left had descended during the build-up to the inauguration of Donald Trump in January 2017. The Million Woman March scheduled for the day after was supposed to be the first step in the fightback leading to 2020, a broad base of people campaigning on mainstream issues and showing Trump that he still had a fight on his hands.

Within minutes, the vision was being pulled apart by forces that, I fear, the Democratic Party leadership still doesn’t understand. Black women objected to the name of the march because it was the same name as that used for a largely black march in 1997. One poster on Facebook regarded this as “cultural appropriation” while another described it as “white supremacy disguised as white feminism”.

As activists started pulling out, the name was changed to the Women’s March, but minorities continued to feel “uncomfortable” walking alongside white women, given that 53% of this group had voted for Trump. White women — particularly those of a Democratic persuasion — retaliated, appalled that they were being singled out. “You’re no better than Trump supporters,” one wrote.

As these skirmishes ricocheted through the internet, other factions piled in, with yet more boycott threats and recriminations. Even though the march went ahead with an impressive 4.2 million people, a headline in the Washington Post called it “The somehow controversial women’s march in Washington” — a classic understatement.

I mention this because it indicates, however tenuously, how identity politics is tearing America apart, and is likely to continue to do so regardless of who is elected in November. On this side of the pond, we tend to focus on the alt-right white nationalism of Donald Trump. The president has played on white fears, stoking racial tensions in often shocking ways.


But while Trump has demeaned his office, the left has played its own deadly game, only with a different and mutating set of identity grievances. This isn’t just about the trans movement, but “intersectionality”, where oppression is said to be proportional to the number of minority identities a person embodies. On this rubric, black women are more subjugated than white women, black trans women more than black women, and so on in what has been called the “oppression Olympics”.

So desperate are people to commandeer minority status that Elizabeth Warren, briefly the frontrunner for the Democratic nomination, took a DNA test to show that she was between 1/1,024 and 1/64 Native American Indian, explaining to the public in 2018 that one of her great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great (great?) grandparents was indigenous. In a society based on shared interests, this toenail of DNA would have been irrelevant. In today’s America, based on every kind of difference, it was endlessly portentous.

It is for the same reason that the LGBT movement became LGBT+, then LGBTQ, then LGBTTQQIAAP. It is difficult to know what term to use today because the cause is adding letters faster than the German mark added zeroes during the 1920s hyperinflation.

Twenty years ago, people would call themselves Irish-Americans, Pakistani-Americans or Italian-Americans, but the emphasis was on the second word in that couplet. Americans were proud of their heritage but more proud of the identity shared with millions of others by virtue of what they saw as the honour of citizenship and commitment to the constitution.

The joint crime of left and right has been to shatter this identity, focusing, instead, on narrower identities based not on shared beliefs, but immutable traits such as sex, race, ethnicity — and their intersections. Because these characteristics are unchangeable, they cannot be bridged or shared, and are jealously policed, based on “lived experience”. This is what caused such deep tensions on the Women’s March, and explains the explosion of allegations of cultural appropriation.

A few weeks ago, Morgan Bullock, a black American dancer, was castigated as a “racist” on social media. Her crime? She performed a beautiful Irish jig that went viral. Or take the trend of shaving one’s eyebrows so that they are slightly thinner at one end — yep, one eagle-eyed activist read racism into this, too, a point missed by the wider world until he ignited a firestorm of protest. Apparently, the technique “appropriates Asian beauty features”.

I’m sorry, but this is madness. The left insists that identity politics is necessary. It points to the civil rights movement of the 1960s and the feminist cause a little later. It says, not without reason, that the unifying rhetoric of the republic — that all citizens are equal before the constitution — always had a strong element of hypocrisy. Black people were denied rights for centuries, as were women.

Yet, it doesn’t seem to see the fundamental difference between the movements of the 1960s and the surrealism of today. Martin Luther King, a great African-American (emphasis on “American”), sought to build bridges, not erect more barriers. His vision was for a society where blacks and whites were treated the same; where colour mattered less, not more. It was the Black Panthers and Nation of Islam who were the precursors of today’s identitarians, for they insisted upon irreconcilable differences, demanding a separate homeland for blacks within the borders of America.

And this is where identity politics is headed today, not least with the phenomenon of “neo-segregation”. Last year, Harvard staged separate ceremonies for students of colour and Latinos, while Brown University celebrated its “blackalaureate” and Columbia its “Black” and “Raza” ceremonies. One review found that 72% of colleges hosted segregated graduations and 42% had segregated residences for black and minority students. The left, needless to say, regards this as a celebration of diversity — a catastrophic misreading of that important concept.

November’s election takes place against the backdrop of the shattering of American identity. Identity politics in the UK, although troubling, doesn’t yet come close on the Richter scale of divisiveness, or match its McCarthyite dynamics. Given Trump’s serial incompetence, Joe Biden is faced with an open goal. But if he wins (his cognitive capacity remains an issue), his primary task will not be facing down the Trumpian right — hopefully that brand of grotesque populism will come to be seen by Republicans as an aberration. No, his challenge will be facing down the identitarian left.

Let me re-emphasise that America has much work to do in combating racism and other scourges, particularly in the south, but this reinforces the point: social progress is impossible in a society retreating deeper into hermetically sealed silos. Is it any wonder that Congress has lost the capacity for bipartisan action, or that special interests loot the republic as progressives on both sides of the aisle bicker over whether to add an X to LGBTTQQIAAP?

When a nation is divided against itself, it loses strength, virtue and any hope of collective action. America can become great again only by ditching its identity obsession.

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jonh
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Re: Democratic Convention

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Cap wrote:
Thu Aug 20, 2020 7:24 am
The bettors aren’t impressed. Biden’s implicit chances the lowest they’ve been since early July: https://www.realclearpolitics.com/elect ... president/
I’m really still shocked it is even still a race at this point. With everything Trump has done, his support has remained amazingly strong.

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Nodack
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Re: Democratic Convention

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42% will be solidly behind him no matter how many evil things he gets caught doing.

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Indy
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Re: Democratic Convention

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3rdside wrote:
Sun Aug 23, 2020 3:55 am
Identity politics has shattered America
If Biden wins, he must confront the left’s ‘oppression Olympics’

Matthew Syed
The Sunday Times UK
That was bonkers. Who writes an article based (in part) on how some facebook users reacted to viral videos? Or complaining that the movement to secure rights for LBGT folks is getting more inclusive? smh

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Mori Chu
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Re: Democratic Convention

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Yeah, that article was garbage.

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3rdside
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Re: Democratic Convention

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You're entitled to your opinion but you vastly underestimate both the author and the content.

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Re: Democratic Convention

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Here's a new book by Piers Morgan on the same subject:

https://www.harpercollins.com.au/978000 ... -covid-19/

Morgan has his flaws (huge ones, that are thankfully mellowing for various reasons) but if you think he's unenlightened then you vastly underestimate him also.

To clarify - Morgan's book isn't about protecting free speech of the right wing / Parler / Alex Jones / Milo variety, it's more the day to day stuff.

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Indy
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Re: Democratic Convention

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Everyone is entitled to an opinion. And it doesn't matter how enlightened one is. That article was built on "some people on facebook say this" and "minorities didn't want to march with white women" and so on. None of this is referenced and nobody was called out by name/sourced. It was an opinion based on opinions based on opinions. No facts. The entire story about the Irish jig TikTok dancer is ridiculous, too. Someone called her a racist? So what? How many posts on social media have a comment somewhere in their threads being called racist? I think it is comparable to Godwin's law.

As for Mogan's book--I haven't read it. Can you tell me which type of Free Speech he says is being criminalized?

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3rdside
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Re: Democratic Convention

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Matthew Syed is a deeply educated (Oxford) and deeply well written and respected author. If you think he wrote a pop article for click bait based solely on facebook or tik tok memes then I'll say it again; I think you're vastly underestimating him.

And I haven't read Morgan's book but if you've followed his justified tirade against the woke left over the last few years - and having been subjected to the rage of the woke left on Twitter myself - I don't think I need to.

Not that Syed or Morgan shouldn't be taken seriously on their own, the two of them together suggests there's a point being made that's worth considering.

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Indy
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Re: Democratic Convention

Post by Indy »

3rdside wrote:
Mon Aug 24, 2020 3:28 pm
Matthew Syed is a deeply educated (Oxford) and deeply well written and respected author. If you think he wrote a pop article for click bait based solely on facebook or tik tok memes then I'll say it again; I think you're vastly underestimating him.

And I haven't read Morgan's book but if you've followed his justified tirade against the woke left over the last few years - and having been subjected to the rage of the woke left on Twitter myself - I don't think I need to.

Not that Syed or Morgan shouldn't be taken seriously on their own, the two of them together suggests there's a point being made that's worth considering.
I didn't underestimate him because I never made a statement about him. I was talking about his 'article.' I guess I did question who would write it, but it is about the piece, not the author.

It doesn't matter if he was the most well-educated person, ever. His article was trash. Point out anything in there that isn't based on conjecture or facebook/twitter/tiktok sentiment. I didn't see it.

I am not saying the guy is trash and he has never written anything that isn't trash or that he doesn't have relevant views. He just didn't share any of that in that particular article.

And I don't think any tirade Piers Morgan has led has ever been justified. :P

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3rdside
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Re: Democratic Convention

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Ok perhaps because I have a greater appreciation for Syed I can take the content of his article more seriously.

But with the two of them together, that should have been enough to get the point across.

You weren't supportive of his anti-NRA / pro-gun control tirade?

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Indy
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Re: Democratic Convention

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Maybe it isn't worth arguing about anymore (agree to disagree and all that), but what part of his article is serious? I have gone through it now 3 times, and I can only count a couple paragraphs that have any substance (regardless of if I agree or disagree with his conclusions).

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3rdside
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Re: Democratic Convention

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I restate that Syed doesn't write rubbish.

His views are supported by Morgan.

If you want to disagree or ignore the point they're making no problem, that's your choice and I'm not going to argue.

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3rdside
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Re: Democratic Convention

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(admittedly the article on it's own does come across a little loose .. but again, there is corroborating evidence!)

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Nodack
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Re: Democratic Convention

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It’s an opinion piece. That seems to be 3/4 all articles today. Is it click bait? One could argue what isn’t? I think his point was he thinks the left is fawning all over itself in an Olympics to see who is the most oppressed in the US. I can sort of see his point. The Democratic party has positioned itself as the party fighting for the oppressed and everyone in the political hemisphere wants a piece of the pie. There are people that have been oppressed though and fighting for the cause is how you change things.

Things have gotten better for some people because of the attention brought from the free press and protest marches. Society’s acceptance of the LGBT crowd has increased ten fold in my lifetime. Blacks have made a lot of progress in my lifetime. Does that mean they are accepted by everyone or their work is done? No. Do all the different groups always get along? Of course not. We are all hypersensitive to everything now.

My brother in law staying with is is all over the map politically. Loves Trump and openly admits he’s a total lying cheating con man. He believes all of the conspiracy theories about everything and doesn’t trust the mainstream media. He believes two different types of aliens are running the country. Qanon is real. George Soros was behind 9/11. The CIA is running around spraying Covid at all large gatherings to infect people. The more outrageous the conspiracy, the more likely he will believe it. He said he went to a BLM event protesting against it. He says BLM is evil and worse than the KKK. They all hate white people. He says all lives matter, not just black lives. To him saying black lives matter means you are saying white lives don’t matter. I think the saying BLM is being used by the right for just that purpose. I wish they would have chose All Lives Matter as their slogan. You can’t reason with people like him.

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Indy
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Re: Democratic Convention

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Sounds like he should be on medication. Or is on too much of it.

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