I think some white males might feel marginalized as the structure of society becomes a more level playing-field. Misogynist liberal gamergaters would fall into that category. Distributing power equally feels like robbery to them. Other white males are fine with it. I am.
I have a pretty wide video game social group that is wondering where the fuck I am recently. Classic/retro scene. I actually have the world record on qbert. (Not something I'm proud of, but it's true. I'm on trading cards, in the guinness book, and everything) I understand you're saying that the disaffected white male gamer represents a larger trend in society. I'm not so sure about that. Video gamers think they're much more important than they are in the scheme of things. All of them. Consumers in niche hobby echo chambers. When I step away from the internet, it's obvious to me.
There's lots of people on the left, not just white or male, that said 'no' to Clinton. Making it about 'white male identity' is ignoring that. I think it's probably a larger issue, people on the left of all kinds, rejecting the system.
slomo wrote:Human behavior is largely based on emotion, and emotion is based on symbols and archetypes. This is particularly true of elections. So to discount the effect of symbols on the outcome of this election, simply because the symbols don't quite align with a complex and prosaic reality, is kind of, I don't know, either ignorant or disingenuous.
I think you're talking about consumer behavior. The consumer may even know they're being manipulated, and allow it. Human behavior is not as easily manipulated.
Both his words and manner of speech seemed at first totally unfamiliar to me, and yet somehow they stirred memories - as an actor might be stirred by the forgotten lines of some role he had played far away and long ago.