I mentioned a few times during the election that it is more
fashionable to be a Democrat, and this has its effect. I have been saying similar things for years,
and it draws ire. I can see why. I mean it to sting, thanks. But it is only fair to say exactly what I
mean by that. If I am to give offense,
at least let it be for the right reasons.
The central argument is three points:
1. In every society, some ideas, people, or associations are
more fashionable than others.
2. Some people give their support on that basis and no other. That is, whatever they
say, the fashionableness accounts for all the variance.
3. Democrats, including Obama, are currently net
beneficiaries of this.
I don’t see that any of these three can be seriously
questioned. However, I quite consciously
used the qualifier net beneficiaries
in that third one. It doesn’t all flow
in one direction. There are many
American subcultures, and in some it is more fashionable to be Republican. In many evangelical circles, you have to be
prepared to justify an Obama bumpersticker.
It is in fact the third premise that causes all the
controversy. First, “Fashionable” is a clear pejorative, which I do not turn
away from. Second, I suspect that there
are those on the left who are quite certain that fashionableness flows away
from them, not toward, and are prepared to give evidence. Third, with so many
unmeasurables, it would seem that at a minimum, I should not be so sure of
myself. Point three will be hard to
prove with any reliable numbers, yes?
Yet I am sure of myself.
For openers, everyone needs to return to the first two
premises: there is fashion in politics, and for some people, that is
enough. Can anyone mount a serious
argument against that?
My first contention is that liberals consistently pretend
that no such thing as 1 & 2 occurred in the last election, or indeed, has been going on for some time. Yet when you put
it out there as a general premise, they reluctantly, suspiciously have to
acknowledge that of course that is what human nature is like. My second contention is that by acknowledging
this, the argument is over, and only the mopping up remains. The mopping up will be lengthy, however, and
will take at least two more posts. For
now, conservatives can feel smug – that will change by the end – and liberals
can seethe. That may or may not change.
Liberals always seethe, because there is someone with the audacity to not agree with them.
ReplyDeleteI wish to sell them Tums.
Young hipsters + aging hippies = trendier party to vote for
ReplyDeleteI can get behind that math.
Driving back from Houston last night, I listened to a lot of NPR. They grate on me with their conventional political and social assumptions, but when they stay away from that business, I'm much more at home with them than with conservative shows. We obviously share a lot of education and aesthetics. Just the way they express themselves verbally in asking and answering interview questions shows our essential agreement in approach.
ReplyDelete