Author Topic: The Potency of Trump's Populism  (Read 785 times)

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Online Free Vulcan

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The Potency of Trump's Populism
« on: December 11, 2015, 08:35:23 am »
http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2015/12/11/the_potency_of_trumps_populism_129001.html

WASHINGTON -- Donald Trump became the driving force in American politics by giving voice to anger, fear and resentment that were already there, just below the surface, waiting for their moment and messenger.

     At present, Trump's target is any believer in Islam who seeks to enter the United States. Back in June, he launched his campaign with invective toward any Latino immigrant living in this country without documents. He attacks President Obama less for his policies than for his identity -- not for what the president does but for who he is. Trump has made himself the champion of a fading, embattled "us" in a life-or-death struggle against a swarming, threatening "them."

     The blustery billionaire's "us" is nowhere near a majority of the U.S. electorate, but it might be enough to win him the Republican nomination for president. And even if he falls short, the forces he has loosed will not easily be tamped down.

     Trump's rally Monday in Mount Pleasant, South Carolina, was a lesson in what his campaign is really about. Just hours earlier, he had issued a statement saying all Muslims should be barred entry to the United States in light of the San Bernardino terrorist rampage. The subtext was clear: All Muslims are potential terrorists. We have to keep them out.

     Some commentators pronounced, for the umpteenth time, that "Trump has finally gone too far." But the Mount Pleasant crowd apparently thought otherwise.

     "I wrote something today that I think is very very salient, very important and probably not politically correct, but I don't care," Trump said. Then he read his no-Muslims statement and the crowd responded with a huge, raucous ovation.

     And Muslims were not his only target at that rally. He railed at the journalists covering the event, pointing them out at the back of the room and calling them "scum" for supposedly never showing how big his crowds are. He also focused the crowd's attention on a Black Lives Matter protester in the back of the room, declaring that he should be ejected but treated gently.

     Trump's audience in Mount Pleasant appeared to be overwhelmingly white. If it mirrored his support base in the polls, it was also older and less educated than the Republican electorate as a whole. A vastly wealthy tycoon who was born with a silver spoon in his mouth and lives in a Manhattan penthouse has somehow become the unlikely spokesman for a segment of voters who feel most threatened by what the nation has become.

     Demographic change means that whites will no longer be a majority by the middle of the century. When you call the electric company to pay a bill, you're asked to push as a button "para continuar en espanol." Incomes are stagnant except for those at the very top; manufacturing jobs are gone; and if you don't have a college degree, you're trapped on the wrong side of the wall between middle-class comfort and lower-class misery.

     To add insult to injury, serving his second term as president is a black man who was educated at Ivy League schools and whose father was a Muslim. For Trump's supporters, it is hard to imagine a more perfect target for fear and loathing.

     The people at Trump's rallies do not necessarily believe he will do all the things he promises. Is it really possible to round up and deport 11 million undocumented immigrants? Will Mexico really pay for building an impenetrable wall along the border? Is it legally or practically feasible to identify and turn back every Muslim seeking entry to the country? Is a pledge to "bomb the s---" out of the Islamic State any different from what Obama is already doing or any more likely to prevent another terrorist attack?

     It's not that Trump will do the impossible, it's that he might do something.

     Trump gives unfiltered voice to the anger and frustration some Americans feel. When he says he refuses to be "politically correct," what he means is that he rejects the traditional constraints of public discourse. He doesn't chastise his supporters for racism, nativism or religious bigotry; instead, he validates such views, bringing them out of the closet where they had been hiding.

     Whatever happens to Trump's candidacy, he has exposed a kind of rage that we haven't seen in many years. His pitchfork populism is not the worldview of most Americans, to be sure. But it is likely to remain a significant political force -- even if the Republican establishment somehow quashes the Trump rebellion.
The Republic is lost.

Offline famousdayandyear

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Re: The Potency of Trump's Populism
« Reply #1 on: December 11, 2015, 08:45:36 am »
Bravissimo.  All in for Trump and the country I love and will defend to my death.

Offline aligncare

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Re: The Potency of Trump's Populism
« Reply #2 on: December 11, 2015, 12:52:13 pm »
The author fails to mention the real source of the electorate's anger. Let me help him, since I support Trump and consider myself a typical supporter.

It's not foreign immigrants that have me angry; I'm an immigrant to this country. It's not racism either; I was an activist for civil rights in the 60s and 70s. It's not Muslims that anger me...it's violent Muslim jihad that does. It's not Mexicans that anger me...it an uncontrolled southern border that gives access to drug and weapons traffickers, and cheap labor that undercuts' citizen jobs.

It's not journalism that worries me. it's a left wing, biased media slanting stories to favor democrats, planting misleading headlines and lying by commission and omission.

And, it's not Obama's identity that has me pissed; it's Obama's rigid socialist ideology where he skirts the constitution and picks winners and losers in economic prosperity.

And the number one motivation for Trump's support: he's listening to the little guy whereas the fat and happy Washington establishment hasn't heard our voice in decades.

As usual these elite journalists don't care enough about the truth to get to where the real support for Donald Trump is coming from.

Offline Right_in_Virginia

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Re: The Potency of Trump's Populism
« Reply #3 on: December 11, 2015, 12:58:28 pm »
Quote
When he says he refuses to be "politically correct," what he means is that he rejects the traditional constraints of public discourse.

The author gives the most politically correct definition of politically correct I've ever read--completely missing the true potency of Trump's support.   :whistle:


Offline Longiron

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Re: The Potency of Trump's Populism
« Reply #4 on: December 11, 2015, 01:09:15 pm »
Anger, fear, and resentment this idiot said that is why Trump rules. Let's see, with the anniversary of 9/11. Just had the second largest Jihad Islamic attack in this country. What is there to fear, the boys and girls just blowing off some steam. Anger, what is their to be angry about after all no media, pundits, politicans got hurt or killed. They all have body guards who carry weapons and they or their families will never be less than 20 miles from the illegal invaders or terriorsits. Resentment, We elect these scumbags to prevent the above and they do nothing only make themselves and there big donors more wealthy than they are. Nothing here!
Then they get a audience to publish BS like this article. :chairbang:
« Last Edit: December 11, 2015, 04:22:59 pm by Longiron »