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"Polarization of American politics"

6 Comments -

1 – 6 of 6
Blogger jscorse said...

All I can say is that this is simply some evidence supporting what has been obvious to anyone with half a brain for at least the past decade- the GOP is nothing more than a corporate lobbying arm of the plutocrats masking itself as a political party. All the noise it makes is meant to distract from its true intentions which is to enrich the rich at any expense.

July 8, 2012 at 8:20 PM

Anonymous James said...

I agree, but the Democrats--Obama included--perform the same function with a different libretto.

July 10, 2012 at 1:31 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

The Dems perform a similar, but not the same, function. There are still semi-powerful constituencies inside the tent (Labor, environmentalists) that force some anti-corporatist policies out of the Democrats. At least for now.

July 10, 2012 at 1:42 PM

Anonymous Dan B said...

Good post; but, yes, it does bolster the documentation of what is evident. However, there are certain issues on which both parties in congress agree: TBTF bailouts, surveillance, encroachment of liberties, the unitary executive, corporatism, political repression, and so forth. And their legitimacy is waning as they refuse/are unable to articulate and address real issues: energy, inequality, ecological degradation, economic collapse.

July 12, 2012 at 5:26 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Dale responds: Ideological polarization is the face of class polarization, based on diverging incomes, or the program of increasing inequality.

One small class takes all new wealth (often based on new taxpayer funded technologies like the internet, GPS, and satellite technology, plus 1/3 of the workers median wages. Median wages have declined by 30% since Reaganomics, which ended the era of shared prosperity and replaced it with engineered inequality and as a result ideological polarization.

Class warfare, in the 21st Century, is a way of appropriating wealth created by labor through a legal/tax system controlled by the ruling class. Then, to defend this theft, the ruling class uses its wealth to support propaganda the goal of which is to get the poor fighting each other over wedge issues unrelated to their actual common condition of being ripped off by the rich.

This divide and conquer technique uses the corporate media to spread its divisive narrative , framing the debate in such a way that the fighting parties are not the 1% and the 99% but the 99% fighting each other, as the 1% picks their pockets.

Class warfare was invented as a way to enrich the rich by taking from the working poor. When workers fight back, they are called out for "class warfare...a Marxist idea." This reduces analysis to name-calling.

Ideological polarization tracks with income/wealth polarization.
In this case, the facts are Marxist.

July 15, 2012 at 2:16 PM

Blogger anisurrups said...

While I agree with you that the origin of the change isn't going to come from nowhere and requires a widespread shift in thinking, what it eventually needs to achieve is to reform the institutions etc. We're living in a material world, you're not going to convince anybody to move their ass with throwing around philosophy and epistemology. What we need is a practical how to. Best,
https://www.politicalscienceview.com/best-books-to-understand-american-politics/

March 2, 2019 at 12:32 AM

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