zompist wrote:Coal miners, seriously? There are 44,000 coal miners in the US. FWIW there are 10 million NYT subscribers.
This literalism is a common trope I've encountered with liberals before. I worked in a factory for 5 years. Even though the people there weren't coal miners, when Trump talked about coal miners, they still felt like he was talking to/about
people like them, because of their sense of class solidarity with fellow blue-collar workers. Dismissing coal miners because there's so few of them is unwise for a leftist party that wants to build class consciousness. (Hence why I don't think that the Democrats are a left party at all...)
On the other hand, there are 4.3 mlllion auto workers. I'll wager you that not one single solitary "liberal", or whatever your stupid straw man is, believes that the vote of those auto workers is unimportant.
Why did Clinton pass NAFTA then?
BTW, in the actual world, seven labor leaders were featured speakers last night at the Dem convention.
Great! But are the Dems actually gonna deliver for labor this time?, or betray them like Obama did? (
https://www.huffpost.com/entry/obama-la ... s_b_922576 )
It's possible that it does, actually, at least for some definitions of 'better person' morally...and ones that i suscribe to! still, even if it was the case, to force people to get college degrees simply because it will make their values more aligned with one's own values is, you know, p r o b l e m a t i c
This is a common trope in liberal media:
https://youtu.be/jYa1eI1hpDE?si=MrCcbbHMhPki-w6R&t=213 (Note the college degree on the wall, and the lyrics of the song.)
Another:
https://imgur.com/gallery/billy-wait-WKhpOQ2
(Note also that at the same time, Trump is saying "I love the poorly educated.":
https://youtu.be/O9F6EAMPky4?si=9NPPHo7mJQj6J0se&t=32 )
(Note also the comments: "He said he loves the poorly educated and they applauded lol". My grandfather never graduated high school. Am I not supposed to love him or think that he is worthy of a good life or think that he should be allowed to vote? According to liberals, apparently not.)
How are non-college degree havers supposed to interpret these messages? I think that liberals think that people will feel ashamed that they don't have a college degree, and then servily sign up for college to try to get one, but in reality it just alienates people from liberals.
after we establish universal right to work and to obtain a minimum of the social product in order to survive, housing food water basic healthcare, when education is genuinely a matter of curiosity and self-improvement as opposed to most people's only chance not to be poor... yeah, then we can talk about morally educating the masses or whatever as a matter of state mandate. and
Yes, exactly.
I have to chip in on the idea that NYT readers are "Republicans that don't want to admit that they're Republicans." That's a pretty odd take. Not a surprising one—I've certainly seen it before—but it's odd, insofar as it just isn't ... true.
What I mean by that is that they're often the kind of people that put up signs like this:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0nNRJ1Sq0bA As Thomas Frank mentions in the video, the problem isn't that he (or I) disagrees with anything on the signs, it's what is
not on the sign: anything to do with labor. They're true libertarians: liberal on social issues, but conservative on economic issues.
With this in mind, it's no surprise that they pull the shenanigans that zompist describes, because they don't actually want the economic system in this country to change, and the safest way to get that is by simply voting republican, but pretend they're "independent" (or "democrat" but change their mind at the last moment) so the democrats spend all their time trying to win their vote (Chuck Schumer plan, yada yada).