tapitsbo » 18 Nov 2016 09:38 wrote:Sounds to me like you're interested in sticking with the rhetorical configuration that we saw during the election cycle dada.
White men more and more realize that that all big politicians are owned by hostile oligarchs who are going to suppress our group rights too like freedom of association. White people might be a global minority but their politicization doesn't require your permission, if you actually want common ground instead of a war of attrition you need to find new rhetoric.
Let me guess, all the big institutions dedicated to women and minorities in the US are "liberal"?
What would non-liberal ones look like?
We acknowledge the Donald never explicitly appealed to "white" people right?
How was Clinton to the "left" of the Donald anyways? Yah, yah, all of you hate her too now. Clinton's time as Secretary of State was wildly hostile to minorities in the Middle East, for instance.
Identity politics is not a non-starter because it always gets smuggled in covertly. In your post you equated "left" with "not white men". That's been a winning strategy in many places but not in the most recent US election...
I get that the heroic struggle against the white man and western civilization has a long, illustrious history. The culture of the west is dormant and basically dead now. Other societies and cultures have bounced back from this, however (Islamic ones most dramatically.) If you really want to stamp out any chance of the west being reborn, you'd better start kicking a little harder while it's down.
Or depending on our objectives, we could all find new axes to orient ourselves around, maybe. To one degree or another...
To reiterate this idea in the form of an anecdote: a dear relative recently complained that Sanders could not have won over Trump, as he only appealed to white men. I felt like telling this person, "news flash, you need white men to win elections." Kept my mouth shut, because I value the relationship and nothing would be gained by arguing the point, given the ideological commitment of this relative.