On Trump and BoJo the Clown

Donald Trump and Boris Johnson have plenty in common. Both view politics more as a form of entertainment than public service or a battle of ideas; neither has much of a fixed ideology; both believe in the same kind of smashmouth negotiating style; neither has much regard for the truth; and both have a tremendous sense of self-worth. It is no wonder that Trump sees BoJo as a kindred spirit.

And yet, there are significant differences, too. BoJo is an experienced politician, not a businessman. He doesn’t treat the press as a public enemy, which makes sense, since his background is in journalism. He’s much more intelligent and well-informed than Trump–not that the bar is very high. Finally, and most importantly, BoJo will be operating under different constraints than Trump is, because the votes of a handful of Conservative activists do not represent any sort of mandate within the country.

My prediction? There will be a general election very shortly. The principal issue in the election will, of course, be Brexit. The Conservatives will run as a militantly pro-Brexit party; the anti-Brexit vote will be split between Labour and the Lib Dems as a result of Corbyn’s failure to embrace the second referendum; the Conservatives will consequently win big even though the anti-Brexit vote will be larger; and a no-deal Brexit will be the outcome, with disastrous results for the UK.

Can Biden Bounce Back?

The luck of the draw did Biden no favors; it put him in a group with two hungry identity politicians–Harris and Booker. He’s clearly more vulnerable from the identity side of the graph than he is from the fundis.

How can he improve his performance? Here are some ideas:

  1. GET AN EARLIER WAKEUP CALL: Too many of his answers at the first debate were tentative and rambling. Harris hurt him, not because anyone really thinks he’s a bigot, but because she made him look like a loser. The whole rationale for his candidacy is his ability to win in 2020; if he loses that, he’s done. More, and better, preparation is the key.
  2. BEWARE OF BOOKER: Booker needs to peel realo votes from him to remain viable in the race. Expect him to attack early and often on identity issues.
  3. CHANGE THE SUBJECT: Talk about Trump and make the realo case as often and forcefully as possible. Warren and Sanders may provide some opportunities with their statements on the previous night.
  4. HARRIS IS A FLIP-FLOPPER: Harris is vulnerable on her record as a prosecutor, but Biden isn’t positioned to make that case. Instead, focus on her inability to decide whether she is a realo or a fundi, particularly on health care. Presidents have to make hard decisions, after all.
  5. DON’T OVERREACT: There will be a temptation to come out being too aggressive to compensate for last month’s fiasco. Don’t do it. Remain as calm and affable as possible.

How the Left is Won

Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren are in a struggle to win over the progressive base. They will share the stage on the first night of the debate next week. Should we expect fireworks?

No. Their voters are actually demographically different; Sanders supporters tend to be male and poorly educated, while Warren appeals to women and the highly-educated. Second, they appear to get along pretty well. Third, while their intellectual approaches to problems are different (and that matters), their positions on the kinds of issues that will be debated are pretty much the same. As a result, their battles will be muted; Warren will probably gently remind America that she isn’t a socialist, and Bernie will make it clear that he supported Medicare-for-all before it was cool. That’s about it.

How will the left be won? Primarily through friendly pundits and surrogates, over a period of several months. In the meantime, both of them will probably go after Biden to some extent, and the real drama will come if Mayor Pete, or one of the also-rans, makes the realo case against both of them. I think that will happen; whether it will work or not remains to be seen.

On Iran and Europe

The Iranians apparently believe they can flip the Europeans against the Americans by applying pressure. Will it work?

No. First of all, unlike any of his predecessors, Trump doesn’t care what they think. Second, several of their leaders (presumably including Boris Johnson) are friends of his. Third, they are far more dependent on American goodwill than Iran’s. Fourth, they have no reason to trust a country with a history of lying on nuclear issues and committing terrorist acts on their soil. Finally, they are largely ineffectual, anyway.

In the end, they will wring their hands about Trump’s decision to scrap the nuclear agreement, and they will do their best to talk both sides out of war, but they won’t do anything meaningful to restrain Trump if and when he decides that war is necessary.

You would think that the Iranians would turn to Putin, their supposed ally, for support here, but they know he would sell them out in a heartbeat for something he really wants. They would be wiser to put their money on Xi. He needs their oil, and he’s much less dangerous as a friend.

The Problem with Base Mobilization

There are three conceptually different models for a successful Democratic candidacy in 2020:

  1. The “revolution”–persuading reactionary white workers to vote for their economic interests over their cultural preferences;
  2. The united front–moving to the center and picking off moderates disillusioned by Trump, including Never Trumpers, suburban women, principled conservatives, and some business interests; and
  3. Base mobilization–convincing reluctant minority and millennial voters to go to the polls with promises of shiny new government programs and extreme statements on cultural issues.

At this point, no one, including Sanders, is really trying #1, which would probably require the Democratic Party to make concessions to the right on cultural issues. #2 is consistent with the outcome of the midterms and has plenty of history behind it. Many leftist pundits, however, are pushing for #3, which is, of course, the Trumpian model.

Assume, for purposes of argument, that #3 can generate millions of new blue votes, even though there is very little historical support for that premise. Assume further that exacerbating existing national divisions by engaging in Trumpian tactics doesn’t present any future issues in governing the country. My question is, if you succeed in mobilizing the base, where are the additional blue votes going to be cast? Winning California by another million votes accomplishes precisely nothing in the big picture.

If the Democrats want to win and get something done, they are going to have to flip purple, and possibly even red, states. Moving to the left on both cultural and economic issues isn’t going to accomplish that.

On Wokeness in 2030

White America is divided into three groups:

  1. A very small percentage (mostly millennials) is woke. These people view American history as a narrative in oppression and are eager to do penance in the form of reparation payments. The lunar landing would be a timely illustration of the woke mentality; while most of us consider it to be a remarkable, unifying story of American accomplishment, a woke person would say it is just another example of minority oppression, because all three Apollo 11 astronauts were white men.
  2. A much larger percentage, but not a majority, is defiantly unwoke. These folks not only reject the notion of white privilege; they assert that white people are victims, and that minorities are the true privileged group, because they receive a boatload of undeserved government benefits and cuts in line. Lindsey Graham’s Rosa-in-reverse statement during the Kavanaugh hearing about the white man refusing to be silenced as a classic example of this mentality.
  3. The rest of us, including me, think that white victimhood is a bad joke, and acknowledge the reality of racism on a daily basis, but do not accept the notion of white privilege or any obligation to pay reparations.

So where is this debate going? Will the center hold?

I have my doubts. Demographics and momentum are on the side of the woke. The backlash from the unwoke is likely to be ferocious. It’s hard to be optimistic that good sense will ultimately prevail.

Love Trump or Leave America

Richard Nixon’s most potent weapon in his waning days as president was his ability to wrap himself in the flag and portray his opponents as bad Americans. I predicted years ago that Trump would ultimately do the same thing. He is just starting to prove me, and Dr. Johnson, right.

If you think this is bad, wait until the war starts.

The right, of course, had a completely different attitude about strident opposition to the government when Barack Obama was president. If you were to ask a reactionary why he views criticism of Trump, but not Obama, as unpatriotic, he would wind up having to admit that he thinks Trump is a real American, and Obama was not. In the final analysis, that is the difference between deep red and deep blue people; the latter view the former is second-class Americans, but the former view the latter is not being Americans at all.

On Bernie, Jeremy, and Identity

To Jeremy Corbyn, it’s always 1945, when the national divisions revolved almost exclusively around class. Corbyn is a Marxist, and has no use for identity politics, which he views as a distraction created by capitalists to divide the working class. That’s why he can’t really embrace the opposition to Brexit and the second referendum; he would have to leave behind the millions of pro-Brexit reactionary workers that he views as the true backbone of his party. And that is why he will lead Labour into an abyss at the next election, which may be sooner than you think.

Bernie Sanders, as you would expect, feels much the same way. Bernie’s Marxist background tells him that the battle in America that matters is between oppressed workers and big business. He understands identity politics, and has made some grudging concessions to them this time around in order to win the election. He will never embrace them, however.

There can’t be any serious doubt that Bernie’s heart is in the right place on issues of race and sexual identity; he has always identified with downtrodden people, and he always will. Due to his obsession with the class struggle, however, Bernie is not woke, and he never will be.

And that is one really big reason why he won’t get the nomination in 2020.

Checking Privilege at the Airport

(This never happened, but based on an article in the NYT, it easily could have.)

I was grinding my way through an unbearably long TSA line at the airport when I saw a middle-aged African-American woman coming to join the line. Even from a distance, I could see that she was checking me out. She was stereotyping me. She saw me as an oppressor. I was the kind of guy who would flaunt his white privilege.

I considered my options. Should I speak to her? If I didn’t, she might interpret my hauteur as a form of white privilege. If I did, however, she would probably think I was trying to dominate the situation, which was just another form of white privilege.

And then there were her possible reactions. Would she think my place in line ahead of her was another form of white privilege? Would she believe that I had stolen it from a worthier African-American? Would she assert her black privilege to attribute what I considered my earned place in line to racism, and play the victim card?

I temporized. I decided I would speak only if she spoke first; that was the ideal outcome. In the event, she didn’t, and I could only hope for the best.

Meanwhile, the line trudged on. When I finally got to the front of the line, they asked me to take out my tablet, but no one demanded to check my white privilege. Thank God.

Don’t Tread on Me

Reactionaries aren’t libertarians; they are happy to support a strong central government as long as it enforces their values. Reactionary t-shirts, flags, and bumper stickers, however, often feature a libertarian theme. How can these two facts be reconciled?

Reactionaries believe that, in the natural and correct order of things, government assists them in the legal imposition of their “order and orthodoxy.” As they see it, the primary problem with the federal government is that it prohibits them from doing exactly that. And so, the circle can be squared; refusing to permit Reactionaries to impose their will on society is in itself a form of governmental oppression to be resisted at all costs.

On White Privilege

“White privilege” is clearly a core concept of wokeness. So what does it mean?

It can be a very elastic idea. I thought the NYT was coming to my rescue when it ran a lengthy article about it yesterday. Unfortunately, the article was windy, tedious, and of little assistance.

To the best of my knowledge, “white privilege” is typically used in these contexts:

  1. White people live off wealth created by, and stolen from, African-Americans as a result of slavery, Jim Crow, redlining, etc.
  2. White men typically feel they have the right to dominate in social situations.
  3. White people demand, and typically receive, better service from both public and private sector providers than African-Americans.
  4. White people get more lenient treatment from law enforcement and the criminal justice system than African-Americans.

#1 is the case for reparations, which I have discussed on many occasions and will not repeat here. #2 and #3 revolve around particularized situations and don’t lend themselves to my analysis; all I can say is that I personally don’t ever remember demanding or receiving special treatment from anyone. #4 is a serious and legitimate problem, but calling it “white privilege” is a conceptual mistake.

“White privilege” assumes that unfair treatment by the police and the judicial system is the baseline, and that people who are actually treated properly are being given a special break. Our system is not designed to work that way; everyone is legally entitled to the same level of treatment. If, as it seems clear, African-Americans are being singled out for unfair treatment, instead of fatalistically attributing that to “white privilege,” we all should be demanding improvements to the system. Using “white privilege” as an explanation for the inevitability of unequal protection is both obnoxious and a guarantee that things will never get better.

On the State of the Race

Here’s what we know about the Democratic candidates for president two weeks before the second debate:

  1. Biden is an eminently fallible frontrunner, but enjoys the strong support of moderate and elderly voters;
  2. Warren and Sanders are in a struggle for the limited number of fundi votes. Warren has the higher ceiling, but will have difficulty winning over Bernie Bros;
  3. Based on his fundraising success, Mayor Pete has emerged as the most likely Biden replacement candidate over the more qualified Klobuchar and Booker;
  4. Harris has shown impressive campaigning skills, but has not clearly decided whether to run as a realo or a fundi. The votes for her are most likely on the realo side; and
  5. The other candidates don’t really matter much.

The only real surprise here is #3. I still think Booker has a chance, but he needs to establish himself as a viable Biden replacement candidate quickly, or his window will be closed.

On the GOP and the Moon Landing

NASA is a public agency, and the landing was a government project funded with large sums of public money. The question for today is, would today’s GOP even consider expanding government in that manner?

You know the answer to that as well as I do. Today’s GOP would assign the task to the private sector, which, of course, would have accomplished it far more efficiently. LOL.

On Trump vs. the Squad

You can make a reasonable argument that all of the parties got what they wanted out of this episode. The Squad got lots of attention; Pelosi got an issue she could use to unify the party; and Trump was able to mobilize his base. Same old, same old.

I think Trump’s calculations were wrong, however. Outrageous statements which mobilize the base only really work if they provoke an overreaction from the left, which helps with swing voters. In this case, the racism was extremely obvious, and the response was not disproportionate. I think it cost him votes from the center that he will need, whether he knows it or not, in 2020.