aelf
Ashen One
Yeah, the real extreme centrists are people who label themselves as 'Moderates'. Now those buttholes will insist on civil debate when people are dying outside.
The deepest weakness in his argument is the "they" at :22. Who's that "they"?
The assertion made in the video is that this "they" "want the right to be outright fascist."
Those people you listed do not want the right in America to be outright fascist. No sane person wants that.
There's no "they."
He's imagining some outside agent that "wants" the two parties to be a certain way. The two parties are a certain way, based on what they believe and espouse and work for.
So let me get this straight, if I feel that unbridled capitalism doesn't work, and unbridled socialism doesn't work, while a balance of the two does work, keeping each other in check, am I centrist, and have no vission?
This is why I feel (in America's case) that a strong Democratic party and a weak Republican party is not the best for the country. These two ideologies need to balance each other out.
If the status to date is one of unbalance, then that means, I do not want to preserve the status quo.
It's a very strange message
Again, when the alternative is
nothing sounds pretty tasty.
As he says, "the only possible appeal of that politics is, 'well, at least they're not Nazis.'" When the alternative is Nazis, that's an appeal--about which your Graeber fellow shouldn't be so glibly dismissive.
And by the way, it's XXXTREEEEEEEME Centrism, thank you very much. At least have the decency to spell our movement's name correctly.
The deepest weakness in his argument is the "they" at :22. Who's that "they"?
No I'm not. Neither am I saying Republicans represent "unbridled capitalism"Are you really saying that the Democrats represent "unbridled socialism"???
What planet are you living on?
It's the one thing Trump has been upfront about. They have a plan, it's the best plan ever, and it is always going to be released in 2 weeks timeThey still don't have a real plan for healthcare, despite them campaigning against the ACA since 2009. That is over a decade.
I agree with you, but the problem we face right now is that the Republican Party represents and champions some things that cannot be accommodated. There's no balancing White Nationalism and Christian fundamentalism with a republican democracy that values justice and liberty. Personally, I've abandoned the notion that the Republican Party is the Conservative Party, just as I've abandoned the idea that the Democratic Party is the Progressive Party, and I encourage other people to do the same whenever I can. Just yesterday, I gave one of Max Boot's op-eds to a colleague who had explained their (probable, they hadn't decided yet) vote for Trump by saying "I'm a conservative." Americans need to abandon the idea that the spectrum "conservative-moderate-progressive/liberal" maps onto the spectrum "Republican-Independent-Democrat."So let me get this straight, if I feel that unbridled capitalism doesn't work, and unbridled socialism doesn't work, while a balance of the two does work, keeping each other in check, am I centrist, and have no vission?
This is why I feel (in America's case) that a strong Democratic party and a weak Republican party is not the best for the country. These two ideologies need to balance each other out.
If the status to date is one of unbalance, then that means, I do not want to preserve the status quo.
It's a very strange message
I think one reason the Left has lost almost every struggle it's ever been in for the last hundred and fifty years or so is because leftism, pretty much by definition, tends to involve siding with the weak against the strong. When your allies are politically feeble and your enemies are immensely powerful, it's difficult, if not impossible, to achieve anything at all. Right-wing extremism always has an easier time of things because it ultimately promises to protect the powerful, which is a message those with power like to hear.
I think one reason the Left has lost almost every struggle it's ever been in for the last hundred and fifty years or so is because leftism, pretty much by definition, tends to involve siding with the weak against the strong. When your allies are politically feeble and your enemies are immensely powerful, it's difficult, if not impossible, to achieve anything at all. Right-wing extremism always has an easier time of things because it ultimately promises to protect the powerful, which is a message those with power like to hear.
You must have slept through the Civil Rights Act, the Voting Rights Act, the Equal Rights Act, the women's movement, the Vietnam War protests, Teddy Roosevelt's trust busting, the New Deal, school desegregation, Obamacare, Title IX, Medicare, etc.I think one reason the Left has lost almost every struggle it's ever been in for the last hundred and fifty years or so is because ...
A GOP strategist who has been consulting with Senate campaigns said Republicans have been carefully laying the groundwork to restrain a Biden administration on federal spending and the budget deficit by talking up concerns about the price tag for another round of virus relief. The thinking, the strategist said, is that it would be very hard politically to agree on spending trillions more now and then in January suddenly embrace fiscal restraint.
I see what you're getting at, but poverty-stricken towns in Appalachia with more drugs than jobs and farmers who have to cull livestock because they can't afford to feed them aren't the powerful, unless you broaden the definition of powerful to include "those who used to be doing okay, but aren't anymore." The right-wing message appeals to people who look around and say, "Gee, our lives used to be pretty good and now everything sucks. WTH happened?" I think it was similar in 1920s Germany. The National Socialists started out as the German Workers Party (or something like that, I forget the exact name) and part of Hitler's early pitch was that the German working class had been screwed by the ruling class. How do you say "Drain the Swamp" in German? It's then that they bring out the scape-goating and the bending of the truth.I think one reason the Left has lost almost every struggle it's ever been in for the last hundred and fifty years or so is because leftism, pretty much by definition, tends to involve siding with the weak against the strong. When your allies are politically feeble and your enemies are immensely powerful, it's difficult, if not impossible, to achieve anything at all. Right-wing extremism always has an easier time of things because it ultimately promises to protect the powerful, which is a message those with power like to hear.
I think one reason the Left has lost almost every struggle it's ever been in for the last hundred and fifty years or so is because leftism, pretty much by definition, tends to involve siding with the weak against the strong.