Trending positive
By Carl
One thing about being educated in America in the second half of the 20th Century: you forget just how rare you really are:
Re-read that. And for you Republicans, let me spell it out. Less than 1/3, one in three, Americans. Have. A. College. Degree.
Hard to believe, I know, considering the high price businesses place on a college education in the workforce. And note that this is after the Vietnam War when pursuit of a college degree was the best way to avoid the draft. You'd think the percentages would be much higher. Curiously, that rate is second highest in the world ( Canada is number one,) but it's slipping.
So how is this "trending positive"? Well, over the longer term, politically speaking...well, let me have Petrilli finish his thought:
Or, as Karl Rove so eloquently put it, "As people do better, they start voting like Republicans - unless they have too much education and vote Democratic, which proves there can be too much of a good thing."
Rule of Thumb: Smart people vote Democratic. Dummies vote Republican.
Not that this is the salvation this nation needs. After all, it still means that 70% of the country doesn't have a college degree, and the current graduation rates have about 17% of people 25-34 with degrees. Now many of those are likely in the armed services and will get their degrees on the GI Bill's dime, so let's be generous and say it will be twenty percent by the end of 2015 (allowing for the Iraq and Afghan pull outs).
This means we have a short window to show our stuff, to encourage the less-educated folks in the heartland to stop listening to people who want them to remain dummified, and to pay attention to the world around them. We have to defuse the old Nixonian "east coast intellectuals" trope, which has evolved into the wide perception of "liberal thought," period.
In other words, we have to lift people up to our vision while not talking down at them. From my observation within the walls of cyberspace, that's not going to be an easy trick. Liberals tend to assume that the people they want to lead want to be led, but here's the thing: autocracy works in an atmosphere of violence, fear, and hatred, but is not well-suited for a free society. Free societies tend to think freely, and the tendency of liberals in a free thinking atmosphere is to, well, overthink things.
Not that this is a bad thing, but you have to keep in mind that 70% of the people considering your thinking don't have a grounding in philosophy beyond the Good Book, have never heard of Descartes much less Sartre, and are going to be put off by that kind of roaming thought-process.
You have to find a visceral connection to these people, too, because you aren't going to win many elections with the 17% of the people with degrees that are represented in the 2008 exit polls. As much as we liberals poo-poo the Blue Dog Democrats, like it or not, they represent a large enough voting bloc that they cannot be ignored, and indeed, have to be put first.
On a practical basis, as I pointed out yesterday, it means making a connection between a complex issue like the bank bailouts, the greed of bankers, and the opposition viewpoint that greed is good, and then selling that image to these voters. It means calling the heads of Citibank and Goldman Sachs "fat cat bankers," even if their past campaign contributions put you in power.
It means making an issue like a public healthcare option so identifiable to the mass public that they can't help but support it, so much so that Joe Lieberman has to shrug his shoulders and give up. Maybe a "Katrina" moment would do it, where we see who is most affected by the lack of insurance: the most vulnerable among us. People just like the people we need to help get liberals elected.
It's Christmas time, it could work, you know.
We do best when we talk up to people, not down to them.
(crossposted to Simply Left Behind)
One thing about being educated in America in the second half of the 20th Century: you forget just how rare you really are:
About 30% of Americans 25 and older have at least a bachelor's degree; in 1988 that number was only 20% and in 1968 it was 10%.
Re-read that. And for you Republicans, let me spell it out. Less than 1/3, one in three, Americans. Have. A. College. Degree.
Hard to believe, I know, considering the high price businesses place on a college education in the workforce. And note that this is after the Vietnam War when pursuit of a college degree was the best way to avoid the draft. You'd think the percentages would be much higher. Curiously, that rate is second highest in the world ( Canada is number one,) but it's slipping.
So how is this "trending positive"? Well, over the longer term, politically speaking...well, let me have Petrilli finish his thought:
As less-educated seniors pass away and better-educated 20- and 30-somethings take their place in the electorate, this bloc will exert growing influence. And here's the distressing news for the GOP: According to exit-poll data, a majority of college-educated voters (53%) pulled the lever for Mr. Obama in 2008—the first time a Democratic candidate has won this key segment since the 1970s.
Or, as Karl Rove so eloquently put it, "As people do better, they start voting like Republicans - unless they have too much education and vote Democratic, which proves there can be too much of a good thing."
Rule of Thumb: Smart people vote Democratic. Dummies vote Republican.
Not that this is the salvation this nation needs. After all, it still means that 70% of the country doesn't have a college degree, and the current graduation rates have about 17% of people 25-34 with degrees. Now many of those are likely in the armed services and will get their degrees on the GI Bill's dime, so let's be generous and say it will be twenty percent by the end of 2015 (allowing for the Iraq and Afghan pull outs).
This means we have a short window to show our stuff, to encourage the less-educated folks in the heartland to stop listening to people who want them to remain dummified, and to pay attention to the world around them. We have to defuse the old Nixonian "east coast intellectuals" trope, which has evolved into the wide perception of "liberal thought," period.
In other words, we have to lift people up to our vision while not talking down at them. From my observation within the walls of cyberspace, that's not going to be an easy trick. Liberals tend to assume that the people they want to lead want to be led, but here's the thing: autocracy works in an atmosphere of violence, fear, and hatred, but is not well-suited for a free society. Free societies tend to think freely, and the tendency of liberals in a free thinking atmosphere is to, well, overthink things.
Not that this is a bad thing, but you have to keep in mind that 70% of the people considering your thinking don't have a grounding in philosophy beyond the Good Book, have never heard of Descartes much less Sartre, and are going to be put off by that kind of roaming thought-process.
You have to find a visceral connection to these people, too, because you aren't going to win many elections with the 17% of the people with degrees that are represented in the 2008 exit polls. As much as we liberals poo-poo the Blue Dog Democrats, like it or not, they represent a large enough voting bloc that they cannot be ignored, and indeed, have to be put first.
On a practical basis, as I pointed out yesterday, it means making a connection between a complex issue like the bank bailouts, the greed of bankers, and the opposition viewpoint that greed is good, and then selling that image to these voters. It means calling the heads of Citibank and Goldman Sachs "fat cat bankers," even if their past campaign contributions put you in power.
It means making an issue like a public healthcare option so identifiable to the mass public that they can't help but support it, so much so that Joe Lieberman has to shrug his shoulders and give up. Maybe a "Katrina" moment would do it, where we see who is most affected by the lack of insurance: the most vulnerable among us. People just like the people we need to help get liberals elected.
It's Christmas time, it could work, you know.
We do best when we talk up to people, not down to them.
(crossposted to Simply Left Behind)
Labels: Democrats
13 Comments:
Nothing like an arrogant liberal. So called uneducated dummies see through your shit!
By Anonymous, at 9:43 AM
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
By Anonymous, at 9:43 AM
What does that even mean? Do you actually have anything substantive to say, or is calling people names all you've got? All you do is embarrass yourself and everyone else on your side.
By Michael J.W. Stickings, at 11:09 AM
No - nothing substantive to say. I peruse your fucking blog to find out what the enemy is thinking and then throw up and shit my pants at the same time when I realize how many of you are out there. Merry Christmas!
By Anonymous, at 11:17 AM
Well, at least we scare you, little boy.
Good. I like that thought.
BOOGABOOGA!!!!
BWAHAHAHAHAHAHAHHAHAHA
By Carl, at 12:12 PM
And presumably conservatives scare you, or you wouldn't have so much excrement flowing from your mouths!
By Anonymous, at 1:46 PM
Yes, "conservatives." Everything is about liberals and conservatives, isn't it? All things are summed up by two completely exhausted and meaningless words.
If there were a trace of anything but the bitter, dimwitted jealousy of a self-pitying failure behind your nauseous tantrum, you'd be making specific criticisms about specific statements, rather than tilting at hollow windmills handed to you by your favorite subversive group in exchange for your cooperation in undermining civilization in general and the United States in particular.
Take your Bolshevik class warfare somewhere else. You're not fooling anyone here.
By Capt. Fogg, at 4:46 PM
Enough, Anonymous.
By Michael J.W. Stickings, at 1:05 AM
If you want to make constructive arguments here, fine. If all you want to do is attack us, then fuck off. You're just wasting our time by proving that you're just a waste of time.
By Michael J.W. Stickings, at 1:06 AM
The lunatic fringe . . . . .
. . . . . in the twilight's last gleaming . . . . . .
By Anonymous, at 5:49 AM
%:49 AM? Up before feeding time, are we? Does Nurse Ratched know you're at the computer again?
I'm curious to know how a large majority becomes a "lunatic fringe" while monumental self glorification on your part becomes our arrogance. Perhaps it's the same phenomenon that allows you to think enlightenment is clouded by education and intelligence. Of course saying that all wisdom comes from the masses isn't exactly new, is it comrade?
It's always a loser hiding behind such things. Of course - you're not really a puffed up mental cripple, you're a conSERRRRvative, aren't you? Sounds so much better, particularly for those with no clue about what it means.
So keep taunting until you go apeshit and your little weenie gets sore. You'll always be a monkey and you'll never get out of that cage.
By Capt. Fogg, at 9:21 AM
Up early for children and work: let the dogs out; put on Fox & Friends at 6 a.m.; empty the dishwasher, ya know, bipartisan shit - LiBBBERULLS probably doing the same thing; main difference would be turning on MSNBC instead of FOX. What a great country we are, hunh?
By Anonymous, at 11:01 AM
Peasants work, Elitists don't have to. Besides we need to use our time preventing those Bolshy uprisings.
Don't forget your little Red book, comrade.
By Capt. Fogg, at 11:46 AM
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