‘Real America’ is its own bubble

FriendlyFire

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And when that Bubble burst (again) the Federal government will not be able to stop the collapsed. because its exhausted all its economic ammunition the last time and the coming depression will be globally devastating.
Iam hoping for a small trainwreck, but realistically I think NYT prediction is spot on

The polorization of America and its media has been going on for a while now, there no question that the liberal media has also shaped its views with a Liberal slat and lens. But the Republican distortion went full bat[censored] for the last eight years cumulating(sp?) with this election.

We the liberals had our bubble burst, next is the Republicans turn

‘Real America’ is its own bubble

This column is for Bernard Gibson, a good man from the state of Indiana. Late last month, NPR went out to Vigo County there to explain why it flipped from voting for Barack Obama in 2012 to Donald Trump in 2016. Gibson was one of those interviewed, and here is what he said: “These are real people here. These are not New York City, Chicago, Los Angeles. You know, these are real people that live every day from hand to hand, just have to work to make a living and everything else.”

Oh.

There are some things you ought to know, Mr. Gibson. I served in the Army. I worked at blue-collar jobs. I washed dishes and bused tables. I went to college at night and worked during the day for an insurance company (as the legendary “Cohen of Claims”). My father was raised in an orphanage, and my mother was an immigrant from Poland whose first childhood memory was of hunger. Somehow, despite all of that, I am called a member of the “elite.” If so, I damned well earned it.

I do not mean to pick on Gibson, a real person after all, but I am tired of being told by him and others that I am not quite a genuine American because I did not vote for Trump or because I live on one of the coasts. I want to point out to Gibson that there are more of us than there are of him. At least 2.8 million more Americans voted for Hillary Clinton than for Trump. That does not mean Clinton won the election — she lost the electoral college, and that’s what counts — but it is nevertheless true that Clinton was the candidate not just of the limousine set, but of most voters.

After the election, I was repeatedly told that I live in something called a “bubble” and, because of that, I know nothing about my fellow Americans. Well, in the first place, my bubble is bigger than theirs — size ought to matter in this instance — and in the second place, I know plenty. Among the things I know is that Trump voters were played for suckers. After lambasting Clinton as a tool of Wall Street, Trump has so far named four Wall Street figures to his administration — three from Goldman Sachs alone — and an oilman is under consideration. And for the Labor Department, Trump has chosen Andrew Puzder, a fast-food magnate (Hardee’s and Carl’s Jr.) who is opposed to a decent minimum wage. This is fast shaping up as a Cabinet of billionaires and, just for leveling, the occasional millionaire. So far, ain’t no one who works with his hands.

Ever since the days of Jefferson and Madison and their veneration of “yeoman farmers” (some of whom owned slaves), we have been a bit gaga over our rural cousins, associating acreage with wisdom. Whatever the case, Americans have so totally fled the farm that now only 2 percent of us till the legendary fields. The country has not had a rural majority since 1920. Nevertheless, our electoral system favors the country mouse. The city mouse can vote or not vote — it often amounts to the same thing.

As it happens, Mr. Gibson, I have plenty of sympathy for typical Trump voters. (I exclude the alt-right and other menaces to the public good, such as Rudy Giuliani.) I have written about cultural dislocation and I understand the corrosive effect of diminished expectations. Clinton talked about the glass ceiling, but too many American workers — or former workers — had to contend with a cement one: jobs that were gone and not coming back. We in the bubble understand. Truly, we do.

But I will not concede that a greater wisdom exists in what is known as “flyover country.” It has voted for a charlatan, a blinged ignoramus who has promised the past as the future. Trump, who lives in a gilded bubble of his own, cannot reverse automation, replace robots with people or blunt American businesses’ compulsive search for the cheapest workforce.

Gibson is one thing. I understand. What I cannot understand is fellow bubble dwellers who tell me, with an air of impeccable condescension, that a vote for Trump was such proof of their own superior wisdom that it eclipsed all doubts about his qualifications, his temperament, his honesty in business and his veracity in speech. These people live in a bubble of their own. It is one that excludes the lesson of history and the demands of common sense. It will burst.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opin..._story.html?tid=pm_pop&utm_term=.c879d3857444
 
And when that Bubble burst (again) the Federal government will not be able to stop the collapsed. because its exhausted all its economic ammunition the last time and the coming depression will be globally devastating.
Iam hoping for a small trainwreck, but realistically I think NYT prediction is spot on

The polorization of America and its media has been going on for a while now, there no question that the liberal media has also shaped its views with a Liberal slat and lens. But the Republican distortion went full bat[censored] for the last eight years cumulating(sp?) with this election.

We the liberals had our bubble burst, next is the Republicans turn

During the great depression my mother used to get ketchup from her job at White Castle and bring it home and make tomato soup. Do what you got to do. Victory gardens.
 
There's really nothing to say about this "real America," "real Americans" narrative. What are we to make of people who grow up in small towns only to flee them? Did they have a chance to be a "real American" and fail? What is it exactly that makes Americans fake? Does Milo Yiannopoulous(sp?) get a chance to be a real American because of his hard conservatism (read: fascism) or do you have to be heterosexual to be a real American? Is Kanye West a real American now that he's met with the Realest American of All, the Don?

So many absurd ways in which class is papered over in this country, and in the English-speaking world. What we have here is another debate where we name-drop this concept of "the elite," who are not "real people." Very truly there is an elite class in this country of people who are so removed from what it is to live an ordinary life that they might as well, yeah, not be "real people." Hillary Clinton is a great example of one such ruling class "elite" type who is completely disconnected from the problems of ordinary - "real" - Americans. Donald Trump is another. Yet, at the same time, when we couch things in this "real American" narrative, we're not really talking about the working class at large, just White people. You never see people talking about how the dudes from NWA were "real Americans" even though their music and art is rooted in the working class concerns of ordinary people. Is Eazy-E not a real American because of his criminal activities or because of the color of his skin? What about White working class artists and public figures who similarly advocate distaste for authority, drug use, et. al?

Rest in peace to the nation-state. People are beginning to realize that nation-states and federal governments are no guarantor of cultural homogeneity, certainly not in the "Information Age," and that most terrifyingly of all, other people of their own nationality disagree about what the important, defining characteristics of the "shared" national identity are. I guess we can talk about a "traditional" American lifestyle, and people who desperately cling to it. Perhaps "real Americans" deserve their own communities, and control over them, such that they can feel comfortable that they are not surrounded by fakes, degenerates and perverts, or being ruled over by the same. Who's going to make that happen? The same federal government that can barely stop the flow of migrants from the southern border for fear of angering the powerful business interests who so desperately want the cheap labor their former workers despise?

Really I think what's saddest about all of this is the gleeful anticipation by upper middle class people of the horrible future in store for the hated "White working class" who have already suffered so much under this country's predatory leadership. That'll teach them to vote for someone other than the candidates good, college-educated people put in front of them.
 
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