Leon Wieseltier, who was for many years the literary editor of “The New Republic,” wrote this essay in “The Washington Post.” We are already beginning to forget the vile things Trump said during the campaign. He won’t really build a wall–or will he? He won’t round up 11 million undocumented people–or is it only two or three million? He didn’t really mean to jail his political opponent–but it’s too soon to say (let’s see what his Attorney General says…Guiliani?) Remember the scores of #NeverTrump Republicans? They are building bridges and mending fences.
Wieseltier will have none of it.
He writes:
“The ascendancy of Donald Trump is surprising, but it is not shocking. How could this have happened? Easily. We are not a society of angels. The poisons that Trump peddles have been loose in the land for a long time. For decades the Republican Party has played with this fire with increasing recklessness, until finally it surrendered to the ravaging flame. There was never anything “unimaginable” about the nasty anti-modern furies that carried this repulsive demagogue to the White House; more precisely, liberals appear to have suffered yet again from a failure of imagination. If our allegiance to the ideals of justice and equality and tolerance leaves us shocked at the persistent vitality of their opposites, then our idealism is parochial and naive. This is a country of wildly different destinies, and the belief in equality does not make people equal: The unprecedented pace of change, the daze of historical acceleration in which we live, produces a sensation of insecurity, a terrible volatility, that often results in fear. Trump battened off working-class panic and white panic. He practices the politics of panic. He is not the first: There is a tradition of such politics in America. In the wake of its victory, we must attend to its causes. Why all this American panic?
“It is unforgivable not to know one’s own country. Yet the expansion of our understanding does not absolve us of the responsibility for judgment. To understand is not to forgive. Let us study the roots of populism and ponder the nature of ethnonationalism, but let us also maintain our disgust at the low and malign politics that have just prevailed. There is no economic analysis that can extenuate bigotry. The scapegoating of otherness by miserable people cannot be justified by their misery. Resentment, even when it has a basis in experience, is one of the ugliest political emotions, and it has been the source of horrors. Trump’s road to power was manifestly a foul road, even if it was supported by millions of people. Wisdom is never to be found in numbers. Trump’s success vouches only for his strategy. It says nothing about his probity or his decency. Those Americans who are ashamed that we have elected as our president a man bursting with prejudices and lies are right. Their shame makes America great again.
“Isn’t it rich? The apostle of anger now hopes that we rise above anger. Having employed divisiveness as his primary instrument, the president-elect now implores us to put an end to our divisions. In the name of post-electoral comity, we are supposed to forget what we know. At this moment, therefore, it is important to affirm the reality, and the inevitability, and even the nobility, of some of our divisions. They are, some of them, based on fundamental distinctions of philosophy, on divergent conceptions of the individual and society, on incompatible ethical standpoints, on irreconcilable views of America and its responsibilities in the world. Vaporous homilies about working together — one of President Obama’s specialties, and behold his legacy — only confuse the situation. Where we can work together, let us work together — who is against infrastructure? The rehabilitation of compromise in a system of government designed for compromise would be a salutary development, though the unified Republican government makes it unlikely. Yet there is still the matter of first principles. There is no way to unite the view that one should deport the children of illegal immigrants with the view that one should not deport the children of illegal immigrants. This is what Martin Luther King Jr. meant when he deplored “the luxury of cooling off.” If the presidency of Donald Trump inspires anything, it should be a fierce spirit of opposition.
“But Trump’s victory, we are told, was owed mainly to the hatred of Washington, which is plainly dysfunctional. It is indeed hard to say a kind word about Congress, which could not even find a way to act against Zika when it mattered most. But this, too, is rich. Republicans contribute significantly to the breaking of the system, and then they thunder to the country that the system is broken. They refuse to govern, and then they denounce government. They seem to confuse governing with having their way. And more to the point, how does this vast alienation from Washington excuse this vast contempt for whole groups and races and genders? The same question must be asked of the anti-elitism upon which Trump based his campaign. Never mind the bad joke of the billionaire from Fifth Avenue and Palm Beach pretending to be an outsider, a man of the margins. The real issue is the relationship of social status to decency. There is no such relationship. It is not elitist to respect Muslims and Mexicans and African Americans and women and immigrants and Jews, and a blue collar is not a moral pass. A college education is not a requirement for, nor a guarantee of, a moral compass: There are educated members of the American elite who spectacularly lack one, such as the man who was elected president Tuesday. And there are “poorly educated” Americans who abundantly express kindness and solidarity for Americans unlike themselves. Neither the elites nor the masses have a monopoly on qualities of character. But Trump’s American vision despises people at the top and people at the bottom. It is an inclusive vision.
“The demons that have haunted our society for decades and even centuries, the vile illiberalism that currently disgraces other governments in the West, will now inhabit the White House. Difficult times are giving way to dark times, and dark times require a special lucidity and a special vigilance and a special ferocity about principle. We must not lose our faith in moral progress and in social progress, but we must remember that moral progress and social progress are not linear and unimpeded and inevitable. There will always be reversals and setbacks, because change rattles the world that preceded it. If you demand justice, prepare for instability, and for the exploitation of instability by political reactionaries who weaken the wounded with nostalgia and fantasies of exclusiveness. The struggle for reform is often succeeded by the struggle to repeal reform. Trumpism, insofar as it is coherently anything, is a great promise of repeal. If Trump succeeds in his repeal, then the fight for the repeal of the repeal must begin. There is nothing Sisyphean or cynical about this. It is the abiding condition of a democracy comprising conflicting ideals. The fight is never over.”
“The prettification of Donald Trump has begun. When a crushed Hillary Clinton graciously asked that Trump be given “a chance to succeed,” I confess that I felt no such graciousness. This made me as small as Mitch McConnell, I know. But if Trump succeeds, America may fail; and it is America, its values and its interests, whose success matters most desperately to me. No cooling off, then. We must stay hot for America. The political liberty that we cherish in this precious republic is most purely and exhilaratingly experienced as the liberty to oppose.”

wonderful analysis.
thanks!
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“The prettification of Donald Trump has begun. When a crushed Hillary Clinton graciously asked that Trump be given “a chance to succeed,” I confess that I felt no such graciousness. This made me as small as Mitch McConnell, I know. But if Trump succeeds, America may fail; and it is America, its values and its interests, whose success matters most desperately to me. No cooling off, then. We must stay hot for America. The political liberty that we cherish in this precious republic is most purely and exhilaratingly experienced as the liberty to oppose.”
Obstruct,Obstruct Obstruct There will be little to compromise on . Anyone who could lower our politics into the sewer that he did .Could not possibly offer anything but poison .
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Ha. “Prettification.” 🙂 Putting lipstick on the pig never hides the fact that the intention to disguise is superficial.
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The early protests must be having an effect on the Trump organization. Harry Reid issued a scathing rebuke of Trump. Conway, in speaking with Chris Wallace, proceeded to threaten in cold, chilling tones that Reid should be “very careful” about what he says and implied a lawsuit. This is consistent with Trump’s desire to use libel laws as a way to silence the media. And Trump is again in a twitter war with NYT.
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Agree x 1,000,000. Thanks for posting this.
Already the entire James Comey successful attempt to use a completely trumped up FBI investigation to influence an election seems to be forgotten. All the blame on Hillary, and the people who abused institutions that should not be partisan are getting a pass. No one is looking closely.
I watched this happen with Ken Starr, too. His office got a pass on some very shady stuff – including why Linda Tripp went from recording scandalous explicit details of an illicit affair to suddenly egging Monica Lewinsky non-stop to ask Bill Clinton for a job — immediately after meeting with lawyers who ran in the same Federal Society crowds as Starr’s office.
It’s bad enough that Trump is getting a pass for the outrageously xenophobic and hateful comments he made. It’s bad enough that he appoints an alt-right activist as one of his right hand men. And to top it off with the fact that the FBI is given a pass for one of the most rotten smelling smear campaigns in the history of American Presidential elections?
I couldn’t help cringing at the 60 Minutes interview. “Mr. Trump what about this?” “Didn’t happen, next question”. “Fine, what about this?” “Sorry, you are wrong, next question”. It will be a long 4 years with the co-opted media who does not understand how you report on such a man.
I have only one wish: Please Jon Stewart return to television. If you had been doing the Daily Show each day, Trump would not have won. You would have easily succeeded in skewering the media for its non-coverage of Trump’s real scandals and the embarrassingly gullible way in which the fake scandals of Hillary were presented. That was sorely missed in this election and it will be sorely missed when Trump reigns.
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“I have only one wish: Please Jon Stewart return to television. If you had been doing the Daily Show each day, Trump would not have won.”
Now that there is a good one, ha ha ha ha ha ah ha or in Spanish je je je je ej je je je. One of your best, NYCpsp! Got any extra of whatever it is you’re smoking?
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I’m glad I can amuse you.
I don’t think it is a coincidence that when Trump has run before, he was the joke he should have been.
Jon Stewart’s shows always skewered the media! He’d show clips of the talking heads saying the most inane and embarrassing things. Why do you think O’Reilly hated him so much? He could have just ignored him but he couldn’t. Jon’s shows got to him.
Jon didn’t just skewer Trump. He skewered the media’s ridiculous treatment of Trump. He skewered the media’s bad reporting. He skewered the media’s falling for the wrong-headed meme offered by the Republicans and parroting the line.
We could have sorely used that kind of sharp commentary during this campaign. Not for the voters. For the media. They needed to be shamed for their double standard while it was happening. Like Bill O’Reilly, other media stalwarts don’t like it when they look as stupid as they are.
If we don’t want the alt-right propaganda led by Trump’s new right hand man Bannon to set the tone for the next few years, we need someone like Jon Stewart to call them out on it. I’d love to see his take on Leslie Stahl’s interview with Trump and his family. In that special way the Daily Show could do it
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I’m torn. After watching the GOP stonewall Obama for 8 years, I think liberals will look like wimps and fools if they try to cooperate. Justice and self-respect seem to demand that the GOP be treated as belligerently as they treated the Dems. On the other hand, chronic loud protests could play make it easy for Trump to go full Nazi: the “chaos” will disgust middle Americans and allow Trump to justify suspension of civil liberties and worse. I think militia types are eager for a civil war, and while Leftists will try to fight with words and rallies, the Right will fight with guns. The opposition needs a leader that can turn the protests on and off judiciously.
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Why do you assume that those on the Left will only fight with “words and rallies” and not with guns?
I fervently hope that it does not come to that, but some of us on the Left are, in fact, armed, and will defend ourselves if attacked.
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You might try becoming informed about reality rather than relying on ideology The rioters in the streets aren’t Trump supporters. It’s the people you justify that are the violent ones.
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You, on the other hand, might try working on your reading comprehension, rather than relying on what you assume was said.
Ponderosa did not say that “the rioters in the streets” are Trump supporters, but rather that “chronic loud protests” might give Trump the excuse to suspend our civil liberties.
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John, there’s violence and then there’s violence. Smashing some store windows, as has been done in Oakland and Portland by that handful of anarchists who always infiltrate Leftist protests, is wrong, but it’s a far cry from the brutal beatings and killings committed by the brown shirts as Hitler consolidated his power. It’s this kind of violence that I can imagine right-winger zealots committing. It’s my reading of history that the Right tends to be more brass-knuckles than the Left. Perhaps you can correct me. JFK, RFK and MLK have been picked off; Hillary, Kerry and Gore had their characters assassinated with brazen lies. How many conservatives have been treated as ruthlessly?
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Yes, they stonewalled Obama, but Obama has done plenty to circumvent the legislature and use what he deems to be Constitutional authority to go ahead and make things happen unilaterally, strictly from the executive branch. That’s number one.
Number two: Obama is NOT a progressive. He is a neo-liberal elitist who has governed illiberally and has put public education in very dangerous jeopardy of privatization. He has ruined the teaching and learning process by tying scores to APPR. He could have resisted all of this and pushed for the opposite or for good policies, but he DID NOT WANT TO!
He is a fraud. His ACA is a joke in term of cost for medical services and supplies. I think my fellow Scandanavians (the Swedes) were very high on marijuana when they awarded him the Nobel peace Prize.
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It’s your fellow Norwegians who gave Obama the Nobel Peace Prize. The Peace Prize is awarded in Oslo, Norway, and all the other Nobel Prizes are awarded in Stockholm, Sweden.
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Norwegian Filmmaker: You are too harsh on Obama. Many of your points are correct: Obama is no progressive, his educational policies are an abomination, he did not help unions, and the ACA is too expensive and complicated. BUT……..the ACA covered 20 million more people and got rid of many bad policies such as the pre-existing conditions nonsense, denial of claims, lifetime caps and rescissions. He did appoint 2 relatively liberal justices to the SCOTUS. On social issues he is a liberal, he is not a climate denier and he is not anti-science. He did not kill off Social Security, Medicare or Medicaid. You also have to consider that Obama was blocked and obstructed by the GOP for 8 years, he was forced to use executive authority to get anything done. He was blocked from even having a hearing for his pick (Merrick Garland) for the SCOTUS. You have to understand that, Americans have to choose between the lesser evil of 2 corporate friendly candidates. This is our meshugganah system. I certainly voted for HRC who has come out way ahead in the popular vote.
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Great essay! Thanks for sharing it! It captures the simmering anger I feel bubbling up since the election… and now that Mr. Trump is appointing Republican mainstays to his cabinet it is increasingly clear that he is going to be a figurehead. His ad-libbed “agenda” will quickly fade into the background and the Republican platform will emerge as the template for governing. This will settle the stock market but be bad news for everyone Mr. Trump defined as “the other”… and it will be especially bad news for the “elites” who work in “government schools”… Read this if you want to see the future of public education: http://www.ontheissues.org/Celeb/Republican_Party_Education.htm
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“. . . it is increasingly clear that he is going to be a figurehead.”
Like Unca Ronnie, eh! But more to the point, just like Georgie the Least!
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Applause!! the truth and the mind of many patriotic Americans written in such articulate manner.
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I am all for massive and monumental peaceful protests against Trump and his policies. I am absolutely opposed to violence of any kind. The racists and white supremacists would just love to drive this country into a civil war.
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99% of liberals would agree with the peaceful part. Unfortunately, there will be some window smashers, and Trump will radically exaggerate that, as he always does, and lead his followers to believe the protesters are sowing anarchy and must be put down by any means necessary. He could turn one smashed window into a pretext for gutting the Bill of Rights. That’s the kind of creep Trump is. (By the way, I have little doubt that many of us will be on a black list as soon as Trump gets his hands on the NSA. That prospect alone will chill free speech.)
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Get used to it, Ponderosa. At least some of us “oldsters,” like Mr. Zorba and me, are most likely already in FBI files, at least, from way back in the day when we were anti-Vietnam War protesters. I know that we both had our names taken, as well as our photographs.
And I’m sure I can say the same about many, many people our age active in the Civil Rights movement. Of course, a lot of them were killed.
But then, so were some of the anti-war protesters (see: Kent State).
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Diane:
I heard you speak in Pittsburgh a few years ago when you were launching your book. I was very inspired by your presentation and subscribed to your blog. I appreciate all you were doing to champion public education. I am sharing an email request from a friend. Perhaps you would consider posting it on the blog. It is a call to action for every day people to consider in light of the new Trump era.
I appreciate your consideration.
Diane Cohen 412-973-3585 drothcohen@hotmail.com
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Life is an oxymoronic experience.
It’s a helluva lot more puzzling than jumbo shrimp or baggy tights or a dull shine. That’s amusing stuff. But putting up word-walls on any anti-Common Core site is not so amusing. It’s disturbing.
Isn’t discussion the stuff of real education? Or is there a new paradigm that insists that certain discussions are better than other discussions? Did I miss the Orwell memo?
That is the very worst display at very best moment. And that is why we are our own worst enemy.
There has never been a brighter time for the Common Core resistance than right this minute. There is now an unexpected window of opportunity for those able to get over the political shock.
Though the opposition to Common Core been both fierce and fervent, the results have been disturbingly dismal.
That truth is a hard swallow.
Common Core is becoming cemented in place. Our tactics are like shiny objects … and that’s about it. Defense is the favored strategy … and we react like predictable bobbleheads.
We have stale, unsurprising, and uninspiring strategies that are neither potent nor feared. We are, in the kindest terms, disjointed. Inchoate. Even spasmodic.
We are mighty only because we insist we are.
We are hopelessly fractured into dozens of very unconnected fiefdoms of opposition. Some are dominated by free thinking and others are citadels of egoism. Some seem consumed with a single issue or two, and others are in need of focus. But we all share an undeniable and powerful passion for children … and the innocence that is theirs by right.
But until this resistance comes together under some banner of unity… and with a renewed commitment to children … this reform is doomed to wheel-spinning and concocted fame.
The opportunity presented by this dramatic changing of the guard is ours for the taking. And to cop an expression from our nation’s past … (and pretzel it a bit for this moment) … we’d better all hang together, or we shall all fail separately.
And that means that our children will share in our miserable defeat. And they are not as shock absorbent as we are.
Perhaps our success is to be found in our nation’s own rich history.
This moment demands a grand confab of local giants in this resistance. Those energetic figures who command small militias of defiance. Those charismatic doyens who have lengthy experience and essential connections with other power figures. Why shouldn’t we expect them to all band together?
This is not the moment for the more famous figures in this reform. This is the hour for the grassroots talent. And there is plenty. We all know them by name or by website. Right?
But the thriller questions are these …
Who’s going to step forward and stitch themselves to a cause greater than their ego or their admiring constituency?
Who will help rejuvenate this resistance?
Who can glue us together and make us more mighty?
And who will be the grounded leaders who ever asks … “How are the children?”
So … oxymoronically speaking … who will turn us from doubting believers into a sure bet?
There’s no time to waste. Any takers?
Denis Ian
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In regards to your questions, Denis, you’ll have to show us how it’s done!
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I hadn’t felt any of the emotion expressed by family, friends, coworkers, and students after the election. I remained cheerful.
Denial. It finally hit me when I heard Sarah Palin might receive a cabinet appointment. Sarah Palin? Sarah Palin.
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Can the DNC admit that a political party that wants to win, so that they can sell influence (check out the bio. of the Podesto firm’s CEO), will continue to lose?
Can a party that allows itself to be run by Gates and the Waltons (CAP) admit that, it doesn’t make for a winning strategy, to have both political parties run by similar people?
The two choices for DNC chair, are Howard Dean, who met with hedge funders of DFER while teachers protested outside in the rain and Ellison, who, last year, introduced HR 1355, to get financing for privatized education.
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Bill Gates is the 800 lb. gorilla in the state that has the most regressive tax system in the nation. His family benefits greatly from a system where the poor pay at a tax rate up to 7 times his rate, and the middle class pays up to 4 times the rate, he does. Obama appointed a former Gates and Walton Foundation President as the Secretary of Health and Human Services…
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MLK
“The dispossessed of this nation must organize a revolution that would require
MORE than a statement to the larger society, MORE than street marches.
There MUST be a force that interrupts capitalist america’s functioning at some
key point.”
Interrupt the flow of money, as in ONLY put your money where your mouth is.
BOYCOTT, starve THEIR beast.
Does calibrating the commentary with doses of ‘merican greatness, color-blind
pretensions, foundational illusions, theories of information management,
noble missions, ad nauseaum, CHANGE the relationship between the leaders
and led, or WHOSE interests are being served?
Is it simply too painful to acknowledge, even to ourselves, that we’ve been taken?
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“Is it simply too painful to acknowledge, even to ourselves, that we’ve been taken?”
No, not all “have been taken”. Have we been swept up in the “undertoad” of insanity that is American politics? Yes, but that is different than “being taken”. When a cataclysmic tornado comes one’s way one has no choice but to hanker down and hope to survive.
I’d say that 49% of the voting population hasn’t “been taken”. They have chosen to say “F&^% You!” to those who would do that taking. They hunker down every four years knowing that category 4-5 storm will pass, if only they can survive is all that matters.
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My blather wasn’t about the 4Q vote. Think fairytale history…
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4Q???
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I am so disappointed in your blog today. I have followed you for many years, but this time your quotes from Wieseltier have absolutely gone too far. We live in a country of law and personal choice. Now I watch Clinton followers rioting and destroying property in a country that has a history of changing presidents with graciousness. Why do liberals feel that their end justifies the means? While I do not like Trump’s personality, I am tired of the liberal elites taking away my fundament rights for religious beliefs and looking down on someone who can be so foolish as to believe in God and the ten commandments. Elites look down upon those who believe hard work should get us ahead, and that we can’t give everything to everybody even if they are in a protected or minority class. I can no longer state my beliefs for fear I will say something that is not politically correct. I should just follow Obama’s “Dear Colleague” letter for our schools, and assume the Washington Elites know what is best. However, I still believe in the land of the brave and the home of the free. I do have choices. Am I truly one of the deplorables? No, I am independent, college educated and disappointed in the despair of all those who might not get preference for everything in the future. We should start working together and do what is best for the United States of America and all of its citizens including God-fearing, hard-working people who don’t live in the cities!
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Starlene,
I have voted Democratic and Republican in my life. I have been a registered Democrat, a registered Republican, and a registered Independent. I support the candidate in any election who is likely to maintain the American ideals I believe in: freedom, justice, equality before the law, the value of education, the First Amendment freedoms, and respect for other human beings. In another election, I might support a Republican, not a Democrat.
It is my opinion that Donald Trump is unqualified for the presidency. He has no relevant experience and he has a very bad habit of mocking and humiliating people. He has openly expressed bigotry towards groups. Yes, her personality is a problem but it also reflects his character. He is a privileged member of the elite who ran against himself. He flies around in a gold-plated jet and he doesn’t pay taxes. That bothers me. It all bothers me.
The blog is open to other views, so long as we speak in a civil manner.
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Starlene,
As I said in an earlier post, the purpose of this blog is to support the institution of public education and its teachers. Trump said during the campaign that he would divert money away from public schools and send it to schools that do not have qualified teachers. That is reason enough for me not to vote for him, if more were needed.
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Starlene, it’s rich for a Trump supporter to demand graciousness in defeat. Can you honestly imagine Trump, of all people, taking defeat graciously if he had won the popular vote, as Hillary has? He would be saying the system is rigged and calling for his followers to riot in the street.
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Well, apparently Starlene has totally ignored the increasing numbers of people of color, Muslims, Latinos, or anyone who doesn’t “look” like a white (Christian) heterosexual, who have been harassed, even beaten up since the election.
Maybe they don’t matter to her.
They matter to me. We have a number of friends who are black, or mixed race couples, Latino, Muslim, and LGBT. They are terrified, and I am afraid for them.
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I’m with you, Zorba. I’ve seen more friends and neighbors express fear about their rights and status as citizens in the past 3 days than I have in my entire life combined. And my neighbors displaying their Trump signs seem to be very happy about that.
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Yes, it’s gotten ugly, Greg.
Although, you may be younger than I am. I lived through the Civil Rights era and the anti-Vietnam War era, and it was even uglier then.
Civil rights protesters getting fire-hosed, beaten, arrested, killed.
War protesters getting arrested, and shot by the National Guard.
It’s ugly now, but it hasn’t gotten that ugly……….yet.
We need to remain vigilant.
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Starline: “liberal elites taking away my fundamental rights for religious beliefs”
Just what does that mean? What “fundamental rights for religious beliefs” have been “tak[en] away”? Do loving, committed gay couples who choose to get married, Muslims who want to worship in peace, minorities who demand to be treated as citizens without the fear of being profiled, or those who do not believe in a god at all infringe on those “beliefs”?
“Elites look down upon those who believe hard work should get us ahead”
Examples? Would that be a billionaire and his children who inherited their wealth and have have a public record of stiffing hard working people through the use of legal intimidation and unethical manipulation of laws?
“we can’t give everything to everybody even if they are in a protected or minority class.”
Who is giving “everything to everybody”? Are you referring to the mythical welfare queen driving a cadillac (who I think hangs out with the Loch Ness monster)? Who is a “protected or minority class”? If people who have been wrongly oppressed for generations finally are able to express their rights as American citizens, have the become a “protected…class”?
It’s nice that you “still believe in the land of the brave and the home of the free”, but why are so many of your fellow-travelers petrified of immigrants, people being shot in the streets everywhere in the country, non-existent terrorists behind every corner, and ready to discard civil rights for some nebulous idea of security and law and order? It seems that most of the Trump agenda is based on fear and has little to do with being free and brave.
It’s also nice that you “do have choices.” But your arguments imply limiting choices for a whole lot of Americans.
And I don’t think “hard-working people” all live outside of cities. I think they are everywhere and virtually all of them work too hard for too little fair reward.
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Very well said, GregB.
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What a lesson for the DNC elites! Rather than blame others…they should blame themselves. I know I do. I hope others will as well.
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Urban Lad,
What good does blaming do? It keeps you stuck in the past. Know the past, but don’t be mired in it. We have a very difficult four years ahead of us. Forming a circular firing squad won’t help.
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I do hope the DNC learns the right lessons. I heard a top Bernie advisor saying the take-away was that we have to make race more central in the next election. I fear this is very wrong. The Trumpers I know hate identity politics. They say that talking about race, gender, ethnicity makes them feel like aliens in their own land; that we should all just talk about ourselves as Americans. I sort of agree. The labeling is divisive, even if well-intentioned. I think we can win back many Trumpers if we downplay race etc. I think a lot of Trumpers have fairly warm feelings for other races; they are just sick of being cast as the Other and made to feel unwelcome in their own country by the coastal elites and their allies. Once Dems can learn to understand “Deplorable Lives Matter” and act and speak accordingly, some of the “deplorables” will come back into the fold.
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That advisor was Heather McGhee, the head of the liberal think tank Demos.
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Reblogged this on Politicians Are Poody Heads and commented:
Leon Wieseltier speaks for me. I’m not willing to “rise above” the anger and disgust I feel. I want the Democrats to find their spines and push back.
For the sake of our country. For the sake of our future. For the sake of all those in America who are not “typically” white, heterosexual, of a “different” religion (or no religion at all).
If this country cannot learn to be more inclusive, then this is not the country that I thought we were striving to achieve.
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Nothing pretty to prettify
Begin quote
Story highlights from CNN today
White nationalists say Bannon’s hiring is a signal that Trump will follow through on some of his more controversial policy positions.
“I think that’s excellent,” former Ku Klux Klan leader David Duke told CNN’s KFile.
White nationalist leaders are praising Donald Trump’s decision to name former Breitbart executive Steve Bannon as his chief strategist, telling CNN in interviews they view Bannon as an advocate in the White House for policies they favor.
The leaders of the white nationalist and so-called “alt-right” movement — all of whom vehemently oppose multiculturalism and share the belief in the supremacy of the white race and Western civilization — publicly backed Trump during his campaign for his hardline positions on Mexican immigration, Muslims, and refugee resettlement. Trump has at times disavowed their support. Bannon’s hiring, they say, is a signal that Trump will follow through on some of his more controversial policy positions.
“I think that’s excellent,” former Ku Klux Klan leader David Duke told CNN’s KFile. “I think that anyone that helps complete the program and the policies that President-elect Trump has developed during the campaign is a very good thing, obviously. So it’s good to see that he’s sticking to the issues and the ideas that he proposed as a candidate. Now he’s president-elect and he’s sticking to it and he’s reaffirming those issues.”
End Quote
More at http://www.cnn.com/2016/11/14/politics/white-nationalists-on-bannon/index.html
Have we forgotten the history of the Ku Klux Klan altogether?
Is anyone here comforted by the fact that Steve Bannon as to be Trump’s chief strategist?
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Thank you for sharing this important essay that reminds us all of what is at stake if we become complacent and accepting–especially for teachers–who’s voices are rarely raised therefore never heard or if raised simply dismissed as minor women issues. And now the specter of privatization supported by Trump leads me to think teachers may be quieter that ever as they worry for their jobs. Thank you for always “talking out loud” about the issues that schools and teachers face.
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Really interesting
On Sunday, November 13, 2016, Diane Ravitch’s blog wrote:
> dianeravitch posted: “Leon Wieseltier, who was for many years the literary > editor of “The New Republic,” wrote this essay in “The Washington Post.” We > are already beginning to forget the vile things Trump said during the > campaign. He won’t really build a wall–or will he? He w” >
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