Topsy-turvy world

Articles like this Guardian piece confuse me. The authors seem to be serious, but there's such a looking-glass quality to the arguments and assumptions. They're alarmed that the new Republican platform, attributed to Trump, is moderate and popular, which makes it dangerous, because people might like it. They complain that Trump is adoping policies and positions that by rights belong to Democrats; they're apparently unaware that it's been a long time since Democrats pursued those policies.
Rather than running on the Biden administration’s oversight of job growth in distressed areas and its new industrial policy, liberals seem content to do battle on the cultural front. This discursive failing has allowed common sense policies that are more reflective of the governing practice of today’s Democratic party – from defending the social safety net to growing manufacturing jobs – to become rebranded as the bread-and-butter of the Republican party.
The Biden administration has been pursuing job growth in distressed areas and a new industrial policy?
In power, it’s likely that Trump will once again betray his working-class supporters and govern like a typical business conservative, because he is utterly committed to more tax cuts and weakening trade unions.
The authors appear unaware of the appeal to current working-class supporters of policies like reasonable tax rates and curbs on corrupt trade unions.

They complain that Trump was supposed to destroy the Republican Party, but instead he made it stronger.
And in office, he reassured establishment figures by coupling largely symbolic protectionist measures with the deregulation and tax cuts for the wealthy that one would have expected from a Mitt Romney administration.
In what universe? Where do they get these ideas about what a man like Romney would have done in office?

I guess I shouldn't be surprised that they're so baffled. They don't seem able to look at anything outside their own heads.

4 comments:

E Hines said...

I guess I shouldn't be surprised that they're so baffled. They don't seem able to look at anything outside their own heads.

There's that. There's also, though, the fact that the British press is as ignorant of us colonials as our press is of what's going on in the UK.

Eric Hines

Gringo said...

I guess I shouldn't be surprised that they're so baffled. They don't seem able to look at anything outside their own heads.


Forget it, Jake/Tex, it's the Guardian. Recall the Guardian's Operation Clark County, where it launched a letter-writing campaign to Clark County Ohio voters, to induce them to vote for Kerry. Apparently the letter-writing campaign was less than successful. DuckDuckGo: Guardian newspaper Clark County Ohio 2004.


It appears that the Guardian no longer has a comments section. I recall one American living in Brazil who commented on Venezuela articles, informing us about the murderous police in Brazil- unlike enlightened Chavista Venezuela. It wasn't difficult to find out that au contraire, Chavista Venezuela policemen killed civilians at many times the rate that Brazilian policemen did. Good times, good times, those Guardian comments.

Texan99 said...

It's not just the Guardian that talks this way, it's the majority of mainstream American pundits as well.

Texan99 said...

https://hotair.com/headlines/2024/07/10/the-dirty-secret-about-trump-hes-a-moderate-n3791644