Given the ever-widening and fragmented divisions in a society gripped in revolution, I guess this should be no surprise….
Where to start this tale? For simplicity, a return to 2008 and the financial crisis. I found myself on the side of those who contacted congress to vote against TARP. I remember Maria Bartiromo, then on CNBC, whining to the camera, “come on people…”, blaming the people for being against bailing out the institutions that, after the Federal Reserve and federal government, were most responsible for the financial calamity then realized.
After going down in defeat, the real arm-twisting began in congress, and the TARP bill was passed on the next vote – despite overwhelming public opposition (I recall 80% - 90% or more calls to congress against).
Even though by this time, September 2008, the media had done its job of burying the Ron Paul presidential campaign, it was clear that this uprising by voters reflected the economic views advocated by Ron Paul.
Not that many of these same voters appreciated some of Paul’s other views at the time…. I was firmly against the earlier invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan, and it wasn’t clear that these notions were shared by those who also were against the TARP bailout. Many booed Paul when he spoke of the adventurism of US foreign military action.
Shortly thereafter, Occupy Wall Street. Whatever the origins of this events, I understood and sympathized with the objective.
What camp did this all place me in? Certainly, my views were influenced by the non-aggression principle, but the divisions in society were not yet nearly as clear as they are today.
However, the signs were already there, even before TARP and Occupy Wall Street. Barack Obama first verbalized the divide he worked so hard to thereafter create, when, in April 2008 on the campaign trail, he offered:
And it's not surprising then they get bitter, they cling to guns or religion or antipathy toward people who aren't like them or anti-immigrant sentiment or anti-trade sentiment as a way to explain their frustrations.
So, he dumped on the workers who had lost their blue-collar jobs, he dumped on gun owners, he dumped on those concerned about unchecked immigration, and he dumped on religious people (and clearly this meant Christians). Obama’s statement perhaps most clearly describes the divide in America today – but not quite all of it. And I was on the wrong side.
But, again, this didn’t really make clear my place – as war and military worship didn’t quite fit into my picture. Many of those same people who were clinging to their guns and religion worshipped the military, went to churches on Sunday that sang military songs and paraded the US flag. I wasn’t on their side. But even the left was no longer protested the wars, not once Obama was warmonger-in-chief.
Picture my ever-shrinking intersection in the Venn Diagram of all US residents….
Basically, this divide remained stable but grew more secure through Obama’s term in office, now starting to offer clear evidence of the addition of the rainbow. In the 2016 election campaign, Hilary Clinton labeled Trump supporters a basket of deplorables.
“You know, to just be grossly generalistic, you could put half of Trump’s supporters into what I call the basket of deplorables. Right?” Clinton said. “The racist, sexist, homophobic, xenophobic, Islamaphobic—you name it. And, unfortunately, there are people like that. And he has lifted them up.”
Clinton completed the picture of the divide, to ensure inclusion of the rainbow. Now, she noted that many of his supporters wanted a change, but this didn’t clean the stink of her larger comment – and she didn’t really want it cleaned up.