That's their rhetoric in any event. Though in my view, the republican party can hardly be anti-establishment given that they're half the establishment. It's not like they want to abolish their own position, they intend to remain an elite. They just want to extend their power. — Echarmion
What's different is also that the rising right wing movement is not traditionally conservative but progressive in the sense that they want to actively change society. — Echarmion
We could say that the establishment is centrist by definition. — Echarmion
I think economic anxieties are a big part of it everywhere. — Echarmion
They're actually making lists of loyalists to plop into critical spots. I think they're serious. This isn't the old Republican party. — frank
Exactly. The Democrats stand for the status quo. The parties switched roles (again). — frank
I don't think that's true. The political pendulum swings and the establishment is a dragging reflection of that. — frank
Which is weird considering the economy is booming. — frank
Right, but that makes it a power grab, I don't see how it's anti-establishment. These are not revolutionaries, they're part of the elite cementing their (relative) power. — Echarmion
I think economic anxieties are a big part of it everywhere.
— Echarmion
Which is weird considering the economy is booming. — frank
Look behind the curtain of Trump's bullshit and you'll see a pending American reformation. That's how the puzzle pieces are coming together for me. How about you? — frank
I guess you could call Trump elite, but I wouldn't say he's part of the establishment, which is those who set foreign and domestic policies. His power came from public support that was so strong that establishment Republicans dared not antagonize him. In that way he's anti-establishment. The only reason he's not a revolutionary is that he couldn't pull it off. No? — frank
Trump as a person is not, or was not, part of the establishment. But since he also did not come with any formed policy, his actions ended up being mostly in favour of the republican establishment.
He has the irreverence and the populist instincts of a revolutionary, but not the conviction. So I guess we could say that he is not an establishment candidate, but he also doesn't care about being anti-establishment. As long as the establishment - in this case the republicans - stroke his ego he won't move against them. — Echarmion
i agree. I'm just more focused on what it means that there was so much popular support for him. He was telling people what they wanted to hear. Let's focus again on what that was: what did they want to hear? — frank
So if you think of Trump vs Harris in terms of the social forces involved, how do you read it? — frank
A counter-movement would be one that develops a positive vision for the future. — Echarmion
Oh, and Vance's memoir is pretty well written. He's a fraud though. Profit and power are his sole motives. — creativesoul
If you listened to his speeches in 2016, the message was: we're going back to the 1960s and 70s in terms of job security. That was the positive vision he outlined. Obama commented on how his vision was impossible because the industrial infrastructure of America is already gone. I take it you missed that aspect of his first campaign. — frank
Oh, and Vance's memoir is pretty well written. He's a fraud though. Profit and power are his sole motives.
— creativesoul
Why do you think that? — frank
That's part of "why" I think that. — creativesoul
People can openly express and complain about real issues, and then perpetuate them. — creativesoul
It was anathema to neoliberalism, so anti-establishment. I think we're just quibbling over who the establishment actually is? — frank
Christians, get out and vote, just this time. You won’t have to do it anymore. … You got to get out and vote. In four years, you don’t have to vote again. We’ll have it fixed so good you’re not going to have to vote. — Trump
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