John Haltiwanger on Fri, 18 Nov 2016 18:22:53 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: <nettime> What is the meaning of Trump's victory? |
Hello Angela, "I do think that every person who voted for Trump is a racist, and this is because from the perspective of its effects and those who will suffer them, there is no difference between the person who embraces Trump's voluble racism and those for whom it was not a deal-breaker." How is this different than any other monolithing of a given population? Am I a war monger who supported the destabilization of Libya just because I voted for HRC?� Am I an unapologetic money grubbing neolib because I voted for HRC? Furthermore, why am I not a safety net slasher who believes black men are super predators? I mean, I voted for HRC, and that is one of her historical positions which I did not personally feel she did anything substantial to shake off. Was I against gay marriage just because Obama was publicly against it in 2008? Or maybe I was secretly excited about a massive increase in the surveillance state? The writing was on the wall with Obama's vote for retroactive immunity for the telcoms. And I still voted for him. I guess I am also a spy state supporter? The presentation of a two party system necessarily flattens the individual's own motivations. And it is a seriously despicable (and exploitable) aspect of leftist arguments that only the other side can be called out for monolithing. If the left cannot learn to self-reflect and acknowledge its own totalitarian impulses, our rhetoric will remain empty and obviously flawed. Is everyone who voted for Trump a racist? Racism is so endemic in US culture that this statement is both true and inadequate. Whether or not racism is possible without systems to enforce it, there is no small amount of bigotry in the form of�Islamophobia, xenophobia, and homophobia�in the ranks of Democrats. It is the fear of mutual destruction that keeps the voting block together and I would be a fool to think that the Wasserman-Schulz's of the world are unaware of this. HRC supporters claim that the social implications of the vote so far outweigh the international/economic ones as to make them irrelevant This claim is precisely the doublethink they need to absorb in order to vote for a hawkish warmonger like HRC while retaining their own self-righteousness. (My own entrance into the post-truth era came when I had to embrace HRC as the "best option", only possible by absorbing this doublethink myself). We can sit around and say that this was an election *only* about bigotry, but that does not make it so. And of course, Trump supporters do the same doublethink but in the opposite direction. Where do we go from here? Hopefully to a place of true plurality where we can acknowledge that conflicting realities and impulses can and do coexist beneath the surface. Hopefully to a place where we can acknowledge that no "thing" is only one "thing" and that simplifications and monolithing only serves to shut down dialog by ignoring the vast interconnecting relations which underpin any and every "thing". On Fri, Nov 18, 2016 at 10:28 AM, Angela Mitropoulos <s0metim3s@gmail.com> wrote: Felix, >And to argue that all forms of social solidarity that existed in >the post-war period (such as the welfare state, unions, community >churches and so on) where simple white solidarity seems also overly >broad. Polanyi's understanding of social solidarity stretches much, much further back than the mid-20th c, post-war period, all the way to some pre-capitalist paradise that never existed. <...>
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