• xmunk@sh.itjust.works
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    7 months ago

    That lack of anything Isreal related is fucking frustrating. There’s so much assumption that “working class” means completely ignorant about international policy.

    Some of these points are good but the one that would knock it out of the park is increasing tax and spend - especially if accompanied by an increase to the range of tax exempt income (raising the floor of the bottom tax bracket).

    • PugJesus@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      That lack of anything Isreal related is fucking frustrating. There’s so much assumption that “working class” means completely ignorant about international policy.

      If you assumed “American” meant completely ignorant about international policy, you’d be correct more often than not - and this is coming from an American who does follow foreign affairs. So why would “American working class” be an exception?

      • WalrusDragonOnABike [they/them]@reddthat.com
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        7 months ago

        Given how many people are upset about those polices, to the point of using armies of police to harass college students for being against those policies, it seems that it is an important issue to a lot of Americans and its not exactly a secret how unpopular current international policy is. They might not be average Americans, but those who are likely to vote democrat are those people they’re using violence to silence.

        • AA5B@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          Are people upset? This started out defining working class as non-college. I see protests at colleges and technical people (like you’d see on Lemmy) are more likely to be college educated than the general population is.

          I mean, I’m asking seriously, I have no idea. This elitist coastal college educated libtard has no clue what the racist gullible uneducated flyover people who falls for Trump’s BS think

    • Bye@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      He is as anti Israel as he can be. Usually anything less than full throated support would lose the election for a candidate of either party. And he’s still managed to condemn them a little bit, and is building a pier for aid delivery to Palestinians so fucking hmas can’t steal their aid. Like there really isn’t much more you can ask of a us politician without basically asking them to forfeit the election.

    • chakan2@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      That lack of anything Isreal related is fucking frustrating.

      Not really…the average person doesn’t care. It’s two bullies throwing rocks at each other in a sandbox halfway around the world. If anything, the Palestinian protests of late made the US care even less about it. IMO, just pull out of that whole shit show and let them sort it out on their own.

  • TropicalDingdong@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    Here are the 7:

    Shut Up and Listen

    Forget Fox News

    Forget the Brahmin Left

    Tax and Spend and Support Labor

    Talk Insulin

    Be Working Class

    Not agreeing or disagreeing but wanted to pull them out because they weren’t obvious.

    The fuck is the Brahmin left?

    • mozz@mbin.grits.dev
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      7 months ago

      The fuck is the Brahmin left?

      The subheadings alone won’t give you a very good idea about it; they honestly don’t really indicate much on their own. If you are trying to get a sense of what the article says in TL;DR form, you could do a lot worse than this little excerpt:

      Two months after the 2022 midterms, a poll by the nonprofit American Family Voices asked 600 likely voters living in industrial counties across six Midwestern states to name the top issues. “The rising cost of living” led, with 37 percent, because at the time the Consumer Price Index was twice what it is today. But ranking second was “jobs and the economy”—which Democratic candidates had avoided in the election.

      Don’t blame President Joe Biden, who has lavished more attention on working-class issues than any president since Harry Truman (and considerably more than Biden’s three modern Democratic predecessors Barack Obama, Bill Clinton, and Jimmy Carter). Blame Biden’s fellow Democrats. Only half of the Democratic-candidate websites surveyed by the Center for Working-Class Politics bothered to mention Biden’s $1 trillion infrastructure bill. Only about one-quarter mentioned Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act, or IRA, which is spending another half-trillion on technologies to reduce climate change. And only 15 percent mentioned the CHIPS Act, signed into law three months before the election, which will spend another $53 billion to boost domestic manufacture of semiconductors. The combined effect of these three bills has been to nearly triple the construction of manufacturing facilities since Biden took office.

      Part of the Democratic reticence was perhaps attributable to Biden’s low approval rating, then stuck around 40. Still, however unpopular Biden was (and remains), Biden’s policies are very popular, especially among working-class voters—on those rare occasions when they hear about it. The IRA, for example, was favored in a March 2023 poll by 68 percent of people earning between $50,000 and $99,999. But these working-class people needed the pollsters (from Yale and George Mason) to first explain what the Inflation Reduction Act was. A 61 percent majority had no idea.

      And it lays out a bunch of specific prescriptions for what to do about that weird disconnect.

      • TropicalDingdong@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        I mean I read it before I posted that, I was just picking it out because I think it warrants dissection.

        Whats interesting is that they associate the ‘brahmin left’ with issues that I largely associate with RW issues projection (moral panic over transrights/ dont say gay/ book banning/ immigrant crime/ border crisis/ you fucking name it).

        Like its only being brought up and defended because some RW pr firm trotted it out as a new talking point, and there is always some one willing to write an article on why the RW moral panic is stupid. But the term is pretty fucking perjorative, and dismissive of the fact that without the progressive left of the left-wing of the Democratic voting block, they don’t get elected, period. Its this kind of weird, anti-activist performative centrism.

        Like this class of individuals exists mostly as a response to RW moral panic, then the RW touts them around as having made those arguments in the first place. Its a kind of circular straw man where you engage in a moral panic, some one speaks out in defense, then you project the arguments you want them to have made onto them. Its what the right does, and its what the author is doing to.

        This one is a ‘leave’ in the take it or leave it of the authors bullets.

        • mozz@mbin.grits.dev
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          7 months ago

          Hm… I actually 1,000% agree with you on this part:

          Its a kind of circular straw man where you engage in a moral panic, some one speaks out in defense, then you project the arguments you want them to have made onto them.

          I don’t think I see this discussed nearly enough – Sometimes the left picks up some strawman the right has come up with and actually runs with it, which I’m sure delights the right. It’s a common enough pattern to have a big impact and I basically never see it discussed, so yeah.

          Whats interesting is that they associate the ‘brahmin left’ with issues that I largely associate with RW issues projection (moral panic over transrights/ dont say gay/ book banning/ immigrant crime/ border crisis/ you fucking name it).

          Did they list all these things? I thought it was just trans rights and “defund the police” mostly. I could have missed it?

          I think the author is talking about more of performative leftist stuff. “I put my pronouns on my Starbucks nametag but I have no appetite for starting a union there” style of left that I would also be critical of. But, on the other hand, police reform is a grey area arguably in the core leftist category and the author puts it in the “Brahmin left” category… so yeah, maybe you’re right, and the author is throwing out some stuff that shouldn’t be thrown out (even if it would tactically a “good idea” for appealing to not-politically-conservative-but-not-real-leftist working-class voters.)

  • son_named_bort@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    Is anyone else bothered by the fact that this article defines working class as non college? I’m pretty sure a lot of people with college degrees work for a living, many of which work jobs that don’t require a degree. Do their voices not count as working class?

  • mommykink@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    Intelligent people don’t like being talked down on. This article is just another example of that, “oh you’re sad about not being to afford the same basic items you had two years ago? Here are four charts to prove that your feelings are invalid and things are better than ever.” That logic works on the anti-intellectual right who pride themselves on subservience (when the people in power tell them what they want to hear), but not on the side that polls better-educated and more capable of critical thinking in almost every metric. No, the IRA, CHIPS, and any other acts this article mentions have not been a success and their failures are evident in voter sentiment

    • PugJesus@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      “No, I don’t like them, so they haven’t been a success and voter sentiment is the measurement by which policy is determined to be a success or failure.”

      Holy shit, that’s literally feels over reals

      That logic works on the anti-intellectual right who pride themselves on subservience (when the people in power tell them what they want to hear), but not on the side that polls better-educated and more capable of critical thinking in almost every metric.

      Fucking right out of “I DO MY OWN RESEARCH”.

      Don’t mistake the fact that the right is anti-intellectual for the idea that the left can’t be anti-intellectual. Considering you’re saying that being given data is being ‘talked down on’, I might not be throwing stones in your place.

      • mommykink@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        Data collection isn’t an objective process, sorry to break it to you but real people with real biases make errors (whether intentional or not) when collecting and presenting data. It’s worth considering that maybe if that data conflicts with the sentiment of the overwhelming majority of the people you’re trying to win over THE DATA COLLECTION PROCESS IS FLAWED. These people are experiencing real hardship that’s being handwaved by charts made for, and exclusively for, a reelection campaign.

        • PugJesus@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          You apply that standard evenly? If so, I have some great policy and reality-oriented questions to fucking ask you.

          It’s worth considering that maybe if that data conflicts with the sentiment of the overwhelming majority of the people you’re trying to win over THE DATA COLLECTION PROCESS IS FLAWED.

          This is literally the same Boomer shit that dribbles out of right-wing Facebook chuds. Like, word for fucking word.

          • mozz@mbin.grits.dev
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            7 months ago

            I noticed that similarity, too. And I’m sure you have a fairly good idea of what is the ultimate source where those right-wingers on Facebook picked up a lot of their arguments from? And why the arguments tend to be very emotionally persuasive even though they’re wrong?

            • PugJesus@lemmy.world
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              7 months ago

              And I’m sure you have a fairly good idea of what is the ultimate source where those right-wingers on Facebook picked up a lot of their arguments from?

              Nah, this is an old-one. Inherent to the human condition, you might say. You see it everywhere, just in different doses.

              And why the arguments tend to be very emotionally persuasive even though they’re wrong?

              Because they appeal to tribalist instincts rather than rationality.

              • mozz@mbin.grits.dev
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                7 months ago

                I was thinking that they come out of literally the exact same how-can-we-produce-the-public-impact-we-want factories

                I have no real evidence or basis for saying that, it’s just what I think

            • mommykink@lemmy.world
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              7 months ago

              What similarity are you referring to? Can you explain how you interpret my argument to be right-wing?

              what is the ultimate source

              A basic undergraduate education, in my case.

              • mozz@mbin.grits.dev
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                7 months ago

                I didn’t interpret your argument as right wing - I interpreted it as based on emotion and anecdote and overt rejection of analytical thinking, and packaged up in this forceful presentation that would be perfectly at home in a campaign commercial. I can see the end where the lady looks right at the camera and says, “Well let me tell you something, Joe Biden. Me and my family are hurting. And this November, we’re going to let you know exactly what we think of all your facts and figures about how things are oh-so-good off in Washington.”

                • mommykink@lemmy.world
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                  7 months ago

                  based on emotion and anecdote

                  My argument is based on the fact that people’s opinion of the economy is more pessimistic than ever. This fact is/has been reinforced through almost every relevant poll of the past four years.

                  Do you believe that these people are making up hardship? Or maybe it’s some sort of conspiracy against our Glorious Leader by those damn MAGAt scum? The reality is that people are actually suffering in a way that contradicts what studies are reporting to a near-unprecedented extent. That gap is unexplainable in any way other than concluding that the studies are fundamentally flawed and the charts showing how great things really are do not accurately reflect reality.

          • mommykink@lemmy.world
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            7 months ago

            You apply that standard evenly? If so, I have some great policy and reality-oriented questions to fucking ask you

            My entire point is that no one can be entirely objective, but I try to be, so sure, “fucking” ask me anything.

            This is literally the same Boomer shit that dribbles out of right-wing Facebook chuds. Like, word for fucking word.

            I seem to recall a pretty big guy in the conservative circle make it pretty big off the whole “facts don’t care about your feelings” argument that you’re peddling here… I’m blanking on his name.

            The reality is that millions of people are feeling more pessimistic about the future than ever. Work backward from that. Do you think that they’re all part of some conspiracy against you or that maybe, just maybe, these feelings are real, are justified, and that there’s some sort of gap in the data collection process that’s accounting for the discrepancy.

            You are not a member of the intelligentsia, shepherding the uneducated prolies towards something they don’t know they want; people aren’t dumb. If things were actually as good as the current administration says they are, every single poll of the past four years wouldn’t show such a large discrepancy between real and perceived conditions.

    • mozz@mbin.grits.dev
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      7 months ago

      I don’t like the doctors talking down to me. I don’t want to see a bunch of charts and figures, I know Ginny wasn’t right after she got her vaccine. That stuff might work on the liberals, but not on me.

      • Ensign_Crab@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        Billionaires are doing great, therefore anyone who isn’t must be imagining it. They’re exactly like antivaxxers for noticing they can’t make rent.

      • eskimofry@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        See you’re doing it again. You’re insulting the intelligence of critics and saying they are too daft to read charts or understand the benefits of vaccines. Instead of focusing on the actually problematic stuff.

        A politician with the same level of knowledge and experience as a Doctor? Surely you know those two things are different.

        How much are you scared about Trump being in office that you will bash people for criticizing democrats?

        • mozz@mbin.grits.dev
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          7 months ago

          I’m insulting the intelligence (or, the education / choice of worldview) of someone who wants to look at a large analytical and hard-to-understand problem through an ancedotal lens, and actively rejects someone who wants to talk about the numerical aspect as “talking down” to them. I feel comfortable insulting that way of being because to me it’s very wrong. It’s not done out of hatred or anything for someone who does that, but they are making a mistake yes, and it’s a deceptively infectious mistake in a way that makes it worthwhile to call out. In my opinion.

          How much are you scared about Trump being in office that you will bash people for criticizing democrats?

          Pretty sure I posted an excerpt elsewhere in this thread that was highly critical of most Democrats’ strategy, and earlier today I posted a video of Biden fucking up the response to a question about “anti-Semitic” protestors, and briefly talked about how he fucked it up and why. Criticizing Biden or Democrats I think is great. If I think the criticism is wrong (or particularly if I think the pattern of thinking behind it is wrong) then I’ll “bash” the person doing it, yes.

          • Ensign_Crab@lemmy.world
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            7 months ago

            I’m insulting the intelligence (or, the education / choice of worldview) of someone who wants to look at a large analytical and hard-to-understand problem through an ancedotal lens

            Most people don’t care about broader economic trends when they’re deciding which bill to not pay this month. Democrats have forgotten how to speak to that.

            • mozz@mbin.grits.dev
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              7 months ago

              Yeah. Hence the good points in the OP article. Doesn’t mean that analyzing the bigger picture suddenly becomes a bad thing to do though.

              • Ensign_Crab@lemmy.world
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                7 months ago

                Nope, but calling people who are suffering antivaxxers because they don’t slap on a big doofy fake grin and pretend that Biden is their fucking savior is insulting.

                • mozz@mbin.grits.dev
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                  7 months ago

                  Why are you so hostile to the idea of objectively trying to determine what is and isn’t working, and who is and isn’t helping the situation?

                  And I didn’t call anyone suffering an antivaxxer. I sort of called PP_BOY an antivaxxer, but that was specifically because he used antivaxxer style arguments.

  • jordanlund@lemmy.worldM
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    7 months ago

    He’s already failing on the first bullet point and that one alone will cost him the election:

    “Shut up and listen
    Nearly every expert I interviewed for this article said some version of the following: If Democrats want to win back the working class, they have to go out and ask working-class people what they need.”

    We can see how well he’s doing on that:

    “A majority of Americans – 55% – said in the recent CNN poll that they believe Biden’s policies have worsened economic conditions in the country, while just 26% believe his policies have improved conditions. The president’s approval rating for handling the economy hasn’t broken the 40% mark since December 2021, and it currently stands at 37%.”

    Source: https://www.cnn.com/2024/02/06/politics/the-us-economy-is-doing-well-president-biden-wants-to-know-why-so-many-americans-are-still-feeling-bad/index.html

    So when the working class tells him the economy is bad and they are hurting, Biden responds with:

    “Look, here’s where we are. We have the fastest-growing economy in the world. The world. The world.”

    https://www.cnn.com/2022/06/10/politics/fact-check-biden-fastest-growing-economy-jimmy-kimmel/index.html

    The problem is, the metrics he’s talking about aren’t the same metrics normal people use on a day to day basis.

    Clinton nailed this 32 years ago…

    “It’s the economy, stupid!”
    “I feel your pain!”

    But it’s easier to run on that message when you aren’t the incumbent.

    Yes, things would have been demonstrably worse under 4 more years of Trump, but that’s a hypothetical staring at the reality of $5 and $6 gallons of milk.

  • ReallyKinda@kbin.social
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    7 months ago

    They shout out a stat from gallup I hadn’t seen— 43% of people gallup polled in 2023 identified as independent. Much higher than I thought.

    Edit to add the gallup source they referenced.

    • return2ozma@lemmy.worldOP
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      7 months ago

      Yup. 43% of U.S. adults identified as independents, 27% as Republicans and 27% as Democrats. Only about 60% of eligible voters vote.

    • FuglyDuck@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      There’s a lot of leftist or progressive independents.

      We just feel betrayed by dipshits like Biden.

    • mozz@mbin.grits.dev
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      7 months ago

      Yeah, this is a really good article.

      Pretty much the only thing I would add to its list (and overlapping with some of its detail recommendations) would be to hire some younger people and some more present-day-media savvy people. Trump’s whole operation works because it’s full of people who know how to effectively influence public opinion, and I feel like Biden’s campaign is still relying very heavily on the path to failure that is the DC political-consultancy elite.