the real challenge - OUR perspective

We participate on this site and others. We understand the value of Bernie Sanders or OWS. We understand that "the Economy" isn't something that just happens, but that it's a result of deliberate government policies. We see the blatant corruption of the dem party. We know that trump is a vacuous buffoon. We know who paul ryan and mitch mcturtell and Merrick Garland and rahm immanuel are. We know what's wrong with chained cpi and private prisons and school choice and tpp. We know what's bad about goldman sachs and general electric and walmart and koch industries. We know our Government has been sold out from under us. Some or most of the people in our circles will know or have heard these things. We know we have fellow travelers all over the country. But we're a minority in "knowing" these things. Our discussion of these things is "Inside Baseball". It's academic. It's preaching to the choir. We'll need to expand outside our group to prevail.

Here are quick justifications for my opinion - like 'em or lump 'em... TOP and the politically engaged folks who frequent it are a minority, and we are a minority subset of them; (Shenanigans aside), we got less than half of the dem vote, which is maybe around 25% of the overall vote. In terms of the general electorate as opposed to the primary, that's about the same or a little less than the amount that consistently thought w was a great president...

My fear is that the largest political block may be the people who don't vote and are ignorant of all of it. All they know is that it's all fucked. They can't be bothered to participate, and can't see any justification for doing so. I believe encouraging such beliefs, while discouraging participation, has been a deliberate, central, and very successful part of the vast right wing conspiracy...

There are the people who will vote for the likes of rmoney or ted cruz, and who turn out for every election. They apparently vote more reliably than liberals, since many of the states are run by regressives from top to bottom, and the house is firmly in the hands of people elected for their promises to halt or reverse social progress (without regard or even awareness of the policies those people, once elected, actually support or enact). (I suspect the entire corporate media apparatus aims at these people as ground zero, and assumes the surrounding zones of fallout will get enough of the rest)

That leaves the "liberals" and others who vote democratic party. (I believe they're the majority) They turn out in presidential years. It's been my experience that they don't look much beyond the narrative, whether it's because they don't have the time, or because it doesn't occur to them, or whatever. They get the bulk of their information from corporate media. They understand times are bad, but if you start getting in to details, you lose them. I have sisters that are socially liberal, but they hadn't heard of Bernie. The one feels that the best place is the center, and that both dems and repubs have good ideas, and she tries to teach her children to be open to everybody. If I tell her there's no such thing as a good repub, or that we're where we are because we've had 40 years of conservative policy, I lose her. She becomes defensive. Blue collar types I encounter seem to buy into conservative talking points without knowing that's what they are. They may understand their boss has the game rigged against them, but if you start talking about unions, you lose them. White collar types think President Obama is a great guy, that he gave us health care reform, and they may know that he's been largely obstructed by the gop. They look forward to hrc as being more of the same, and see it as a good thing. If you point out that he's sold us out to Wall St, that he's running a perpetual war, or that he's just another neoliberal opportunist, and that BTW hrc would be worse, you lose them. These are the people Bernie didn't reach, and the reason hrc was able to hold the line. They might have thought it was better to go with the known quantity because otherwise trump might win. They still believe in the democratic party brand and what it traditionally represented. These are people for whom a message and policies that are "self evidently" good are not enough.

Those groups don't share our perspective in any major way, even though there is potential overlap. The key is to recognize that although many - likely a majority of - people agree with and support progressive policies, that's not enough to elect a majority, nor to enact those policies. Expanding the reach of progressive ideas exponentially is necessary before we can defeat even the repugs, let alone the rotted corpse of the dem party. I'm not here claiming to have an answer to this. But I believe the answer will have to involve the traditional dem electorate and a significant number of the non participants. Breaking through the media embargo is vital. Aside from a small potential number, I believe conservative voters in general won't come around until progressive policies are in effect and well enough established as to be thought of as conservative.

Somewhere, there are republicans having an equal but opposite discussion.

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sojourns's picture

the ones that are easily lost are the flakes that used to surround me in high school and now they're all grown up.

Good Essay.

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"I can't understand why people are frightened of new ideas. I'm frightened of the old ones."
John Cage

Lookout's picture

If people had real information they might make better decisions.

If election fraud wasn't so blatant more people might vote.

No wonder average work-a-day folk don't bother. Why?

How fortunate for those in power that people do not think.

Hitler

How can they think when they have no real information?

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

shaharazade's picture

then you and say why should they vote Democratic. How insulting to say that people do not think. I'm not pig ignorant or upside down and neither are most people. If the Democrat's would fight for ordinary people and were not so corrupt and represented more then Republicans are evil and scary maybe some 'conservatives' or those the don't vote would vote.

Why in the hell we should get more Republicans in this already RW Democratic party is beyond my comprehension. If people were given a real choice perhaps the disenfranchised would support a party that fought for basic representation, your rights and a government that was not for and by the 1% . The Dems are nothing I support as a liberal and the RW is the last people I would recruit to this sick and hopefully soon extinct party.

I find this essay condescending and frankly borderline offensive. But hey to each his own and this poster is welcome to air hios partisan views. I just don't buy anyone that stirs the culture war pot in the name of recruiting more Dems.

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There's nowhere in there that I say anybody should vote democratic, or that people don't think. I don't advocate for the dems, but speculate that the left needs to draw support from traditional dem voters. I believe my direct reference to the party is as a rotting corpse. It's never my intent to offend or condescend.

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shaharazade's picture

in my perspective but YOURS. The people that don't vote are not ignorant they just don't share your partisan bs. Why should they vote for this binary partisan non choice? It's not apathy or ignorance that drives people to not vote it's the fact that neither side is about to stop this shit and represent the rule of law or our basic common good. No self evident truths to vote for anywhere.

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I say they're not paying the attention to politics that most of the folks at this site appear to. Other than that, you restate what I said - they can't find any justification to participate.

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Big Al's picture

job performance. That's ignorant. I've found some of the most ill informed and ignorant people are those that follow politics, watch Meet the Press and Rachel Maddow, and believe the War OF Terror is real.

The perspective that we can vote our way out of this mess is what needs to be changed. Long time dems have the hardest time with that. They've been conditioned for so long that voting for politicians equals democracy and citizen engagement they simple can't understand there are those that don't vote who are politically active, engaged, and seeking real solutions to real problems.

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Meteor Man's picture

Most people are too busy with the daily grind to become informed about arcane inside the beltway political trivia. The media covers the horserace. Issues are intentionally obscured. Headlines are misleading.

In L.A. 25% vote in off year elections. Evertyone knows that both candidates on the ballot are corporate toadys. Jill Stein is trying to give voters something to vote for. The media will not cover her or her issues.

What's a voter to do?

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"They'll say we're disturbing the peace, but there is no peace. What really bothers them is that we are disturbing the war." Howard Zinn

lunachickie's picture

you note--that all overlap one another in some ways--aren't a majority, either. So what should our perspective be?

that's not enough to elect a majority, nor to enact those policies.

That we're not a "majority", therefore we should just give up? What the hell good does that do?

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Just musings on how we might increase our numbers. I don't think the outlook is necessarily pessimistic.

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Pluto's Republic's picture

…the score, and we know the score, but they don't know the score, and might not know the score for quite some time, so….

Where are you going? You got me interested but you never nailed the ending.

Lots of folks are not going to vote in 2016. The Millennials have no candidate in the race and they are a larger group than the Boomers. So they're not available to play.

Then there are the Independents, the largest group among voters. They're registered to vote but don't identify with a Party. The majority of them liked Bernie, but they couldn't vote in the primaries to put him over the top. In November, they likely won't make an effort just to vote against someone, and they don't have anyone to vote for. Maybe they'll get excited as the election draws near. Maybe not.

That leaves Republicans and Democrats. For the first time, a lot of Republicans are not going to vote for the Republican presidential candidate. They certainly will not vote for Hillary, in any event. Many of them simply don't have a candidate in this race.

And, that leaves the Democrats, the only group of voters still in play and yet to be won. A large chunk of them are Bernie supporters. The ones that still believe voting means something will dutifully vote for more of the same in November. But, because "nothing will ever be the same again," a sizable chunk of them will forge a new way, politically. They're looking for authentic experience, this time. They're done with the Democratic Party.

It seems to me, there's nothing that needs to be done before November. The party operatives can wind it up just fine.

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____________________

The political system is what it is because the People are who they are. — Plato

It kind of petered out towards the end. I'm grasping for answers in the face of what can at times seem like insurmountable obstacles. Yes, I've basically given up on this cycle on the national level - I think the fix is in. On the other hand, given Bernie's success, I think there's reason for optimism for future cycles, but I think the left/Bernie coalition needs to roughly double in size to begin to gain sufficient momentum.

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Bollox Ref's picture

that the average Joe/Jane knows they're going to be fcuked regardless.

Trump/Clinton. No difference. And so the voters shy away from the voter roll.

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Gëzuar!!
from a reasonably stable genius.

about the avg. dick and jane (at least among my family,friends and co workers) I talk to them all the time about the issues going on and for the most part they just can't comprehend or don't want to comprehend what is happening in this country. I think they prefer the MSM views or no view at all, Its like the Jack Nicholson movie A Few Good Men, They Cant Handle the Truth. These are Dems,Repugs and most do vote as far as I know.

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Nearlynecessary's picture

It happens quite a bit when I have political conversations with people that get most of their news from mainstream sources. Even my wife, who reads CNN daily can't be bothered to follow a link or two to election fraud stories. She thinks Bernie is some old crackpot promising rainbows and Unicorns, and we are just sore losers blaming Hillary because he lost "fair and square"! There was nothing fair or square about it, I say, but there is no getting through her THICK MSM info bubble. Sometimes the lack of objectivity and intellectual curiosity is maddening!

So your point about people that are not engaged or willing to participate/ dig into alternative sources for news, hits close to home for me. There are a whole lot of apathetic ordinary people all around us, and it's really hard to pound the truth through the crusty shell of their preconceived notions.

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Any stained glass afficionados? Please check out my website: www.masterpieceglass.net

and it's not possible to "pound the truth"

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lunachickie's picture

Ideas?

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I'll be considering the questions. I think some of Bernie's more successful strategies can be built on, though.

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the scary thing is I think it is a lot more people than we realize.

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