The horizon is not so far as we can see, but as far as we can imagine

Clinton and Trump Win

Donald TrumpMargin is about 4 percent for Hillary. Trump’s victory is crushing.

Sanders won the majority of Hispanics, but African Americans broke hard for Clinton.

It seems unlikely that Sanders will win South Carolina, given the make-up of its primary voters.

Much of this depends upon whether Bernie’s momentum in the polls continues. African Americans are an important constituency, but if he can extend his numbers with Hispanics and women, he’ll be in good shape.


(I am fundraising to determine how much I’ll write this year. If you value my writing, and want more of it, please consider donating.)


As for Trump, I don’t see a scenario that doesn’t involve his health, where he isn’t the Republican presidential candidate.

If he runs against Clinton, a lot of Sanders working class voters are going to vote for him, not Clinton, but his bashing of minorities may cost him the election. Unlike mainstream pundits, I am not 100 percent certain of that: After all, mainstream pundits also said there was no way Trump could win a primary.

(Update: I wasn’t going to comment on Jeb dropping out since he’s been such a non-factor, but I think it’s worth noting that he did speak out against Trump’s demonization of Hispanics and his anti-Muslim ban. That said, the fact that Trump said George Bush Jr. lied the US into Iraq and still won this primary is revealing.)

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56 Comments

  1. Ivory Bill Woodpecker

    “A lot depends on if Bernie’s momentum in the polls continues.”

    Clinton has won two out of three states so far–and Sanders won in a state no one expected him to lose–but Sanders has the momentum?

    Oooookayyyyyy… 🙄

  2. Ian Welsh

    Bernie’s numbers keep improving, Clinton’s do not.

  3. Ivory Bill Woodpecker

    I think you’re one of Nature’s Noblemen, Ian, but I also think you put too much stock in polls.

    [Insert Twain’s (?) quip about “lies, damned lies, and statistics” here] :mrgreen:

  4. Ivory Bill Woodpecker

    Joe Cannon weighs in.

    The first part is concerned with the Syrian mess, while the second part is concerned with the presidential election.

  5. El Guapo

    “and Sanders won in a state no one expected him to lose”

    This is complete nonsense. Sanders was expected to lose every state big time. Instead he trounced her in New Hampshire and came within a few points in one of her “firewall” states. The fact that she is barely getting by with all her tremendous advantages is pathetic and speaks to what a horrendous candidate she is.

    Trump will eat her alive in the general election. She personifies the establishment, just like Jeb!, and she is plagued by scandal and baggage. He will pounce on that and the white working class will be motivated by his stance on free trade and general proto-fascism. Turnout will be massive.

    Trump is absolutely awful but at least in winning he will have done a great service in finally killing off both the Clinton and Bush crime families. Hopefully the world never hears from them ever again.

  6. Ivory Bill Woodpecker

    When I was 11 years old, the President of the USA was shown to be a criminal, and he resigned his office in disgrace, and…nothing happened.

    No armed mobs clashed with Five-O in the streets, no National Guard units were called out, no tanks rolled–holy Haruhi, the disgraced Prez’s Veep almost managed to win the next Prez election.

    Suffering Sappho, even the Great Depression failed to install Communism, or Fascism, or anything else more radical than the rather moderate New Deal, in the USA.

    So, yeah, I’m going to remain skeptical about massive changes in the USAmerican political order.

    I suspect bloggers, us blog-haunters, and other people interested in politics tend not to realize how little like us the majority of USAmericans are. Most people are moderates, and I doubt they will take well to a posturing vulgarian like Trump, much less the Oliver Cromwell wannabe Cruz.

    How many times does the Apocalypse need to be delayed before we can finally conclude it isn’t coming?

  7. Ben

    I think Trump should be favored now, but the party doyens have a clear path to stop him: get everyone besides Rubio and Cruz to drop out.

    Rubio wins in a three-way race. Look at the numbers in the contests so far.

    Kasich isn’t running to win, and Carson is running a grift. They’re persuadable.

    (the only problem is that Rubio is bought-n-paid-for by a Florida billionaire; the party can’t sink its hooks into him they way they would have Bush, Christie etc. But at this point he’s literally their only option.)

  8. Ivory Bill Woodpecker

    If Trump or Cruz wins the nomination, the GOP Establishment still has one other option:

    Take a dive.

    I’m just barely old enough to remember “Democrats for Nixon” in 1972.

    The GOP Establishment might decide they would prefer to lose this presidential election than lose their control of their party.

  9. kj1313

    Another thing to consider is that turnout was down on the Dems side. 80,000 compared to 120,000 in 2012. I do think the DNC elites might be happy to lose with Clinton but I think they are postponing an inevitable backlash and both establishment parties are on borrowed time.

  10. Some Guy

    kj1313 makes good points that I agree with.

    Ben says, “I think Trump should be favored now, but the party doyens have a clear path to stop him: get everyone besides Rubio and Cruz to drop out.”

    That’s the plan (although Kasich doesn’t seem to be on board yet, and his strongest areas are well off so he could hang around for a while – although I suspect he’ll be carrot and/or sticked out of the race in relatively short order), but look at the numbers:

    In South Carolina: Trump/Cruz/Carson = 62%, Rubio/Bush/Kasich = 38%

    Nationally: Trump/Cruz/Carson = 61%. Rubio/Bush/Kasich = 30% (doesn’t add to 100% because rolling poll average still contains some dropouts)

    Sure, establishment figures will consolidate, but you always lose some votes when you consolidate, and they barely have enough votes to begin with, even if they could sustain an even split of votes between Trump and Cruz (and note how impossible that dynamic was to manage for Harper last election in Canada).

    I do wonder if the Carson campaign is simply a front to divert whatever votes from Cruz that they can. If so, it’s worked pretty well so far and you could expect Carson to hang in as long as Cruz does.

    Anyway, I’m not saying consolidation won’t work, but it’s not as simple as consolidating the superior establishment vote count into a single candidate and rolling to victory.

    Meanwhile, on the Democratic side, the Clinton coalition is wealthy old white people and Black people, which seems odd, and makes you wonder if Black people really know what they are doing, but I guess really what it comes down to is liberal (in U.S. terminology) democratic voters vs moderate democratic voters.

    I think the moderate/defensive democratic votes are still a majority on the Democratic side and Clinton will win the nomination, but I must say I’ve been quite surprised how well Sanders has done so far (not as surprised as the clueless beltway media, but surprised all the same), so perhaps I will be surprised again. The media will spin his upcoming losses in the Southeast as hard as they can, but the reality is if he wins enough of the Hispanic vote, he can lose the Southeast and still win the nomination.

    Despite the pleas of electability from Clinton supporters, I can’t say I like her chances much in the general, she could beat Cruz I imagine, but anyone else?

  11. kj1313

    Thanks Some guy :). I read an interesting piece from black agenda report which might provide some insight on the African American electorate.

    http://www.blackagendareport.com/black_politics_bernie_sanders

  12. Jeff W

    …the Clinton coalition is wealthy old white people and Black people, which seems odd, and makes you wonder if Black people really know what they are doing…

    I think part of the answer is this comment on a previous post:

    The reason African-Americans support the Clintons is simple: they have shown that they can beat Republicans.

    My own impression is that the more people learn about Sanders, the more they like him—as Ian points out, his numbers keep improving while Clinton’s do not—and I would assume that holds for Hispanics, women, and, yes, blacks so he probably has some room to extend his numbers.

  13. Ben

    Some Guy:

    Yeah, it’s not fool-proof. But in a three-way race Rubio has better than even odds, right? Trump’s consistent ceiling is about 35% when people have options.

    kj1313:

    You’d *really* like the racial analysis stuff I alluded to in an earlier thread, by a philosopher out of PA:
    http://eyeofthestorm.blogs.com/eye_of_the_storm/2016/02/monocultre-2.html

  14. Ben

    Also to steal Ian’s point about the Dems: Rubio’s numbers keep improving, Cruz / Trump’s do not

  15. So, yeah, I’m going to remain skeptical about massive changes in the USAmerican political order.

    I suspect bloggers, us blog-haunters, and other people interested in politics tend not to realize how little like us the majority of USAmericans are.

    Yep. My election prediction record isn’t very good, so I won’t try to predict the final outcome! But some folks around these parts (I don’t mean Ian who is being rightly cautious here) really really want to believe that elections can be won on a rational calculation of interest, in this day and age (may have been true of other day and ages; am skeptical). A lot of progressives still want to evade doing the emotional calculus, still want to believe that opinion research and public relations are dishonest corporate tactics that are Beneath Them, etc.

    In a Trump vs. Clinton battle, the determining factor/election question won’t be Trump’s apparent promise of single-payer health care. There’s a reason why Trump ads talk, in deep growly voices, about making Mexico pay for the wall, why Trump says triumphantly than when the ex-president of Mexico told him that Mexico will never pay for a wall “that wall just got 10 feet higher” (or something). The point, and everyone knows it, is not that Trump has a real way to make Mexico pay for the wall. It’s the emotion behind it, about Mexico being the source of the Hispanic workers that are seen as the direct cause of the ruin of white working class communities and loss of opportunities. Saying it focuses the anger.

    Similarly, the slogan “Make America Great Again” is a very calculated one. It’s not to be read as “MAKE AMERICA GREAT (again)”—everyone wants to do that—but rather “make america great !!!AGAIN!!!”. Restore what has been taken away, not build what could be built.

    Of course with that framing, Trump can then sell concrete things he can give to his constituency. But the whole economic positioning is strictly contingent on the resentment framing.

    Similarly, in a hypothetical Trump vs. Clinton battle, a few people at least underestimate the importance of Clinton’s life story in her message in the belief that life stories of particular politicians aren’t “real things”, but economic and foreign policy choices are. This is a fatal error. In the Trump vs. Clinton battle, Clinton’s greatest strength is precisely that of someone who has survived constantly unfair attack and yet pulled through. That symbolic power is a real thing and will be perceived as such.

    The Trump vs. Clinton battle would be a battle of jilted resentments first and foremost, and saying so early that Trump would beat Clinton because of social policy. is way premature.

  16. Ivory Bill Woodpecker

    If Ian has any African-American readers:

    [snark]I’m sure they just love privileged palefaces like Some Guy (and of course he’s a guy) whitesplaining to them how they don’t really know what they’re doing and need Wise Honkies like Some Guy to tell them how to vote.[/snark]

    *CLUNK* Aw, where’s the super glue? I gotta glue my butt back on after laughing it off. AGAIN. 😆

  17. Susan of Texas

    Look at all the white people voting against their interests, out of mistaken trust or ideology or lack of alternative. Are African -Americans immune to our system? Doesn’t our lesser of two evils system force them to undermine themselves, just as it does for whites? In the end, it will be the unspeakable against the unthinkable and we will all be voting against our interests if we vote.

  18. S Brennan

    On the subject of; “why do black folks vote for Hillary?” I find the comments above ignoring a rather glaring piece of history, working class people in general, but working class blacks in particular have seen a decline in their fortunes since 1978 EXCEPT in the latter years of Bill Clinton’s Administration. While Bill’s policies had absolutely nothing to do with it he get’s the credit for driving employment levels so high, that employers were FORCED to give lower class people a chance and a raise…when they found out the could do the job well and might be recruited away.

    Let me say for the record, I am no friend of Hillary or Bill, both are Wall Street lacky’s, both have a large role in re-birthing the cold war and Hillary is a war criminal for her “Wars of Aggression” in Guatemala, Libya, Ukraine and Syria. Hillary/Obama are responsible for the deaths of at least 350,000 innocent civilians. Indeed, Hillary presided over a genocide against blacks in Libya [12-25,000 innocents] carried out by her forces…which was conveniently NOT reported by ANY western media.

    Sadly, those who clapped the loudest for Obama drowned out any discussion of Hillary’s race war against blacks in Libya must now share in the blame if Hillary is able to garner enough black votes to disguise her undemocratic use of super-delegates to overcome her ballot failures. Chickens do come home to roost.

  19. Some Guy

    “[snark]I’m sure they just love privileged palefaces like Some Guy (and of course he’s a guy) whitesplaining to them how they don’t really know what they’re doing and need Wise Honkies like Some Guy to tell them how to vote.[/snark]”

    You could probably cram a few more insults in there if you really try, but it won’t change the fact that when you find yourself voting alongside people who’ve screwed you for decades, it’s worth stopping to think for a moment about whether you can both be right, and if not, who is wrong – regardless (as always) of your skin colour / culture / gender / orientation / age / income / volume of nose hair / whatever.

  20. Some Guy

    If you look at the two groups, I think the difference is that for wealthy old white (sadly, ‘wow’ doesn’t seem line an appropriate acronym) Clinton supporters, the reality is that Clinton is a better choice for them (assuming they don’t care about their fellow citizens or death destruction for millions abroad) regardless of electability concerns.

    For Blacks, the available evidence (notwithstanding S Brennan’s useful point above) suggests (IMO) they will do better under Sanders than Clinton.

    The counterveiling points is that Blacks obviously have a lot more at stake in preventing a Republican victory.

    So for the ‘wow’s, there are 2 rationale’s – self-interest and electability, for Blacks, just one (electability), but it is a much more powerful force for them.

    At any rate, in case there are others out there as slow-witted as Ivory Bill, let me note that I don’t claim to know what people’s best interest is better than they do (not in this case at least!), I’m just pointing out warning signs and reading the tea leaves.

  21. Ivory Bill Woodpecker

    I’m not fond of Clinton’s foreign policy record, but none of the candidates, including St. Bernard, are anti-imperialist, which leaves me free to base my eventual vote on other matters.

    The Malefactors of Great Wealth will not allow anyone who is serious about ending, or even shrinking, the Empire of Capital to win a Presidential election.

    As usual, please note that I said “the Empire of Capital”, not “the American Empire”. Capital is Palpatine; Uncle Sam is merely Darth Vader.

  22. Some Guy

    OK, one last bit of honkywhitemancanuckbrocrackersplaining and then I’ll leave this alone.

    If we assume (for the sake of argument) that the intensity of concern about electability is what drives Blacks to support Clinton, then support for Clinton vs Sanders among Latinos is likely to vary depending on who the front-runner is on the Republican side.

    If Trump is in for sure, the stakes get higher for Latinos as well. But if Rubio takes over, then the stakes drop a lot.

    Part of this I think has to do with splitting anti-minority Republican behaviour into two pieces.

    One part is screwing the poor to benefit the rich via economic policy. This is something that the Republicans will do no matter who is the nominee (less under Trump, but likely to continue all the same – look at his tax plan) and I’d argue it matters more to Black people than to Latinos.

    The other part is screwing the (domestic) poor to benefit the rich via immigration policy. Here Republicans are split. The base wants this to stop, and are voting for Trump and his wall. The rich want this to continue and are supporting gang of 8 Rubio. Arguably this piece matters more to Latinos – so they don’t have as much at stake in preventing a Republican victory – unless it looks like Trump is going to win.

    So if you want Sanders for Pres., support Rubio?

  23. Ivory Bill Woodpecker

    I feared that Some Guy might take back some of what he said, but no, Haruhi bless him, he doubled down on the “I am SO much smarter than both you and those benighted brown brothers” vibe. He’s gonna be fun. :mrgreen:

  24. Hugh

    Add to Madeleine Albright and Gloria Steinem the name of Jill Filipovic who has an article in the Sunday NYT with the subtitle: “Young women aren’t voting for Clinton. Maybe that’s because they haven’t faced years of sexism at work”. She argues that the real “radical” feminists are the older women who are supporting Hillary because she “shares both their political views and their experiences.” The thesis is that millennial women’s feminism is primarily centered around sexual issues because they basically have no workplace experience. This is really nothing more than a reworking of Albright’s and Steinem’s comments minus their more incendiary expression. And it is still hilariously funny and insulting to women of all ages.

    Young millennial women have never really experienced the kinds of discrimination that Hillary Clinton has who had to accept a measly $675,000 for 3 speeches to Goldman Sachs because, as she said, it was all they offered, or who had to suffer the indignity of receiving a place on the board of Walmart because of her last name, or again because of that last name and the piddly millions it garnered from Wall Street was reduced to running for Senator from New York, and after that a run for the White House, and after her loss to Obama, the sexist booby prize of Secretary of State.

    This tale of hardship and woe, which Clinton was only partly to overcome through the traditional American values of connections and other people’s money, should resonate with all women. It is just inexplicable that it doesn’t with millennial women or that, given their ongoing sexual obsessions, they don’t recognize that real radical feminism isn’t about kicking your sexual predator of a husband out the door and using your own last name. It’s about the cynical choice to stay with him, use his name and connections, and even trot him out to schmooze and smooth the masses, you know to rise above.

  25. Ivory Bill Woodpecker

    Hey, wait a minute–

    “…canuck…”?

    Smarter-than-thou attitude?

    Is that you, Kirant?

  26. Ivory Bill Woodpecker

    Now Hugh mansplains to Hillary that she should have kicked her sexual-predator (proof that his horndog activities were predatory rather than consensual, please?) hubby out the door and gone out on her own.

    The Pharisaic moral supremacism is strong on this thread.

  27. Lisa

    The best ‘broad brush’ analysis of this is from the Archdruid Report.

    “In 1966 an American family with one breadwinner working full time at an hourly wage could count on having a home, a car, three square meals a day, and the other ordinary necessities of life, with some left over for the occasional luxury. In 2016, an American family with one breadwinner working full time at an hourly wage is as likely as not to end up living on the street, ”

    “The destruction of the wage class was largely accomplished by way of two major shifts in American economic life. The first was the dismantling of the American industrial economy and its replacement by Third World sweatshops; the second was mass immigration from Third World countries. Both of these measures are ways of driving down wages—not, please note, salaries, returns on investment, or welfare payments—by slashing the number of wage-paying jobs, on the one hand, while boosting the number of people competing for them on the other. ”

    “Both parties, despite occasional bursts of crocodile tears for American workers and their families, have backed the offshoring of jobs to the hilt. Immigration is a slightly more complex matter; the Democrats claim to be in favor of it, the Republicans now and then claim to oppose it, but what this means in practice is that legal immigration is difficult but illegal immigration is easy. The result was the creation of an immense work force of noncitizens who have no economic or political rights they have any hope of enforcing, which could then be used—and has been used, over and over again—to drive down wages, degrade working conditions, and advance the interests of employers over those of wage-earning employees. ”

    “Attempts by people in the wage class to mount any kind of effective challenge to the changes that have gutted their economic prospects and consigned them to a third-rate future have done very little so far. To some extent, that’s a function of the GOP’s sustained effort to lure wage class voters into backing Republican candidates on religious and moral grounds. It’s the mirror image of the ruse that’s been used by the Democratic party on a galaxy of interests on the leftward end of things—granted, the Democrats aren’t doing a thing about the issues that matter most to you, but neither are the Republicans, so you vote for the party that offends you least.”

    ” And that, dear reader, is where Donald Trump comes in.

    The man is brilliant. I mean that without the smallest trace of mockery. He’s figured out that the most effective way to get the wage class to rally to his banner is to get himself attacked, with the usual sort of shrill mockery, by the salary class. ”

    “As Trump broadens his lead, in turn, he’s started to talk about the other side of the equation—the offshoring of jobs—as his recent jab at Apple’s overseas sweatshops shows. The mainstream media’s response to that jab does a fine job of proving the case argued above: “If smartphones were made in the US, we’d have to pay more for them!” And of course that’s true: the salary class will have to pay more for its toys if the wage class is going to have decent jobs that pay enough to support a family. That this is unthinkable for so many people in the salary class—that they’re perfectly happy allowing their electronics to be made for starvation wages in an assortment of overseas hellholes, so long as this keeps the price down”

    And that pretty much sums it up, except that more and more of the ‘salary class’ (as he calls them) are now falling into the same systematic impoverishment that the wage class has suffered from for the last 40 years.

    The only option for the Democrats is Sanders, who has a simlar working class appeal, without all the Trump negatives. If the Dem ‘machine’ gets Clinton up, then they will lose the election.

    Because Clinton can only promise that the economic ‘machine’ will keep on going the same old way, pushing ever more numbers of Americans into poverty while the country’s infrastructure crumbles away. She is, being a neo-con, also is the most likely to start WW3 as well and US citizens have had enough of pointless, losing wars.

    http://thearchdruidreport.blogspot.com.au/2016/01/donald-trump-and-politics-of-resentment.html

  28. Ivory Bill Woodpecker

    Ah, yes, the Archdruid, another prophet of doom.

    Maybe this one will prove correct, but I have spent nearly 53 solar orbits now, being bombarded with apocalyptic prediction after apocalyptic prediction after apocalyptic prediction after apocalyptic prediction…you get the idea–and it hasn’t happened yet.

    Of course, that does not mean it won’t happen tomorrow, or next year, or whenever.

    However, when one hears interminable apocalyptic predictions without an apocalypse ever showing up, one can be forgiven for losing faith in apocalypses.

  29. Hugh

    I’m with Susan of Texas. I have an older sister, life-long liberal Democrat, gets her news from NPR. She rails against me because I refuse to vote for any Democrat (or Republican). She gives me the lesser of two evils line and that I will be responsible for whomever the Republicans put on the Supreme Court (this before Scalia’s death). I tell her what I tell everyone who has problems with me (or anyone) not voting or not voting for one of the two main parties. No one, and certainly no party, owns my vote or your vote. If they can’t give me positive (and I underline positive), substantive reasons for supporting them, then they don’t want my vote, or as I may have expressed it to my sister, f*ck them.

    The Presidential campaigns of both parties have already largely devolved into an issueless horse race. Trump looks like he could win his party’s nomination despite the Republican Establishment, and Clinton looks like she could win her party’s nomination with its Establishment and despite its base. This would set up a contest between two candidates with very high negatives. Trump is higher energy, but also more erratic. I agree with the comment above that he could attract some Sanders’ voters. I think too that a lot of millennials (and others) that Sanders got involved will stay at home. So the calculation for the Clinton campaign is how much they offer Sanders. Clinton is arrogant and vindictive with a notorious political tin ear. I could see her offering Sanders nothing or crumbs and then banking on the lesser of two evils argument to draw in enough progressives and millennials to beat Trump. I can also see her offering Sanders the Veep position to much the same end. The problem with this is I don’t see any upside for Sanders in accepting. Backing Clinton would alienate a lot of his supporters, who really detest her, he has a bigger soapbox as Senator than he would have in the semi-exile of the Vice Presidency, and at 74, he doesn’t need the Vice Presidency: if he wanted to retire, he could just go back to Vermont, and live as a private citizen under much freer and nicer conditions.

  30. Some Guy

    Ivory Bill, Greer (Archdruid), literally wrote a book entitled, ‘Apocalypse Not’.

  31. Ivory Bill Woodpecker

    Okay, but some of those books listed at the side of his blog looked like he does expect apocalypse–though granted, I only skimmed the titles.

  32. mc

    Mr. Welsh–The enjoyment of reading your blog comes not just from your commentary but also from the thoughtful if usually contradictory commentaries of your patrons. But please, as a metaphorical bar owner, you should remember that, when one of the patrons becomes a drunken lunatic driving off your other customers, most actual bar owners kick said maniac off the premises. Thank you.

  33. S Brennan

    Lisa;

    I used to read the Archdruid Report regularly, but stopped because it was damn depressing, but the link you put up was an intelligent read.

  34. Hugh

    Ivory Bill Woodpecker, how do you explain from your ivory perch how all Sanders’ mansplaining has won him the support of so many millennial women? Must be they are so obsessed with sex that they haven’t noticed he’s a man. I mean if you are going to drag out these canards can’t you at least vary them or make them a little more interesting?

    As for Bill Clinton and sexual predation, both social mores and the law recognize it isn’t just about physical violence but occurs when there is a substantial difference in power and/or authority between the predator and the victim. Monica Lewinsky and Paula Jones, for instance. He settled with Jones rather than be deposed about his sexual activities in the midst of his impeachment trial in part over his affair with Lewinsky. Or even Gennifer Flowers. Clinton denied on national television (60 Minutes) ever having had an affair with her. Flowers started playing tapes she had made of them together, which resulted in Clinton admitting that indeed he had had an “encounter” with Flowers, but only once. Although the 60 Minutes interview was not under oath, it raises a question common to such proceedings: “If you were lying then, are you lying now?” This was also the great era in which Clinton argued about what the meaning of “is” is and whether fellatio constituted sex.

    The current Bill Cosby case illustrates certain aspects of sexual predation. The first is that it is never singular. It is more a way of life. As such, it is virtually inconceivable that a spouse, if there is one, is unaware, especially over a period of decades of their partner’s actions, however they may rationalize them. Second, the predator can use their status (and think how much greater Clinton’s status as governor and President was compared even to Cosby’s) to hide their activities, deny them if they surface, defame and/or buy off their accusers, and above all else stay out of jail.

  35. jsn

    Thank you mc!!

  36. Lisa

    Both Trump and Sanders are an inevitable counter reaction to the dominant neo-liberal and neo-con ideologies that the Dems and GOP signed up with long ago.

    The ability for the GOP to play the religion and social conservatism cards, conning lots of working class people, has hit its use by date. We see this in Trump beating Cruz.

    The Dems have been tactically cynical about this, standing back and letting it happen when it suited them, throwing a few bones here and there to their liberal base when they had to.

  37. Ivory Bill Woodpecker

    How does Hugh explain from his perch why St. Bernard’s clout with millennials couldn’t win Iowa or Nevada for him?

    I also notice that Hugh, to back up his accusation of sexual predation against Bill Clinton, was compelled to use a rather broad definition of SP, reminiscent of Victorian mores (as distinct from actual Victorian practice, of course).

    Yes, the smart thing for Bill to do would have been to keep it in his pants, but that particular biological drive is notorious for its bad effects on the faculty of judgement.

    Also, the Cosby analogy is poor, at best. I don’t recall Clinton ever being accused of drugging any of his paramours.

  38. Hugh

    You know, Ivory Woodpecker, there comes a time in some arguments when the best way to discredit your opponent is simply to let them talk. So I cede the floor to you.

  39. I’m not going to old-white-guy-splain to people why they should vote Sanders.

    Bu I’ll be damned if I let anyone Goldman Sachs-Citibank-splain to me why I should vote Hillary.
    ~

  40. markfromireland

    Please don’t get rid of IBW that set of massive chips he has on each shoulder make him that rare thing a well-balanced North American “liberal” or “progressive” or whatever. I also like his reverse chicken little approach not least because further weakens the decaying redneck republic of which most of the commenters on this thread are denizens.

  41. Strangefate

    I feared that Some Guy might take back some of what he said, but no, Haruhi bless him, he doubled down on the “I am SO much smarter than both you and those benighted brown brothers” vibe. He’s gonna be fun.

    Well he does come off smarter than you Ivory but that wouldn’t take much since your posts are mainly arrogant ad hominems, weak snark, and a puzzlingly joyous embrace of defeatist fatalism. It’s like a laundry list of behaviors displaying the absolute worst tendencies of American liberals and why they’re so useless, not to mention off-putting to so many voters. At least Some Guy (and others you’re pestering) is trying to have an intelligent discussion.

    Okay, but some of those books listed at the side of his blog looked like he does expect apocalypse–though granted, I only skimmed the titles.’

    Honestly this says about all that needs said about Ivory’s fulminating. Skimming then going off with a superior attitude would seem to be his preferred method of discourse. While your comments never possess much value, the elections seem to be having a particularly adverse effect on you. For someone who claims that none of it matters, the game is fixed, you act like a person very emotionally invested in squelching any opinion that dissents from yours through insults and sheer assholery.

    I hardly ever post comments here, just read them, but fuck all you are being a prat lately.

  42. Ivory Bill Woodpecker

    @Mark: Why do you think I’m “well-balanced”?

    Several of the other folks here seem to think I’m unbalanced (which may be true, but that’s never been a disqualifying condition on Da Intertoobz). :mrgreen:

  43. VietnamVet

    This will be as consequential election as 1856 which brought on the American Civil War.

    Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders are telling the establishment to get lost. The 30% to 40% of Americans who have been screwed over the last 40 years will vote for one or the other. Donald Trump advocates waterboarding and dipping bullets in pig’s blood. This rhetoric kills people. Bernie Sanders will break up Wall Street and take back government from the oligarchs. At Justice Scalia’s funeral the hug of Bill Gates and Dick Cheney documents this close partnership. The establishment will move mountains or change votes on electoral servers to assure that the election is between Hillary Clinton and Marco Rubio; the first woman or Hispanic President. If the escalating holy war in Syria doesn’t get us; depriving both Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders of the chance to run for the presidency will assure it.

  44. markfromireland

    It’s like a laundry list of behaviors displaying the absolute worst tendencies of American liberals and why they’re so useless, not to mention off-putting to so many voters.

    YES! And it’s SO enjoyable watching him and his seemingly innumerable counterparts dig the grave of American “liberals” just that bit deeper. That he and his fellows are simultaneously hastening and deepening the collapse of a very nasty hegemon makes it all the sweeter.

    Thank you for expressing so perfectly his political function.

  45. Ivory Bill Woodpecker

    Thank you, Mark. It’s nice to know that I serve a useful purpose–assuming that your analysis is correct.

    While the Empire of Capital is indeed a rather nasty hegemon, I would like to remind you that just as Rome wasn’t built in a day, neither did it fall in one day. I expect this “Rome” will outlive both of us–et apres nous, le deluge?

    The nature of talking apes being what it is, I reckon something quite as nasty (or perhaps multiple somethings) will replace it.

    And so it goes, as the late Mr. Vonnegut might say, were he present.

  46. Ian Welsh

    The Archdruid expects a long slow decline. I expect various catastrophes. He came here once, sneered at me, and left.

    Nonetheless, a man doesn’t have to respect or like me to say smart things, and the Archdruid stays on the blogroll.

  47. Ian Welsh

    As for the rest, we will see. I’m pretty confident Trump is the nominee, but we’ll see on Sanders. I do not claim to be any good at predicting American elections. Americans exist in a stew of irrationality and propaganda which makes them, for me, difficult to predict. My succesful prediction in non-political realms are based on an ability to predict financial elites and an understanding of political-economic reality, which does have the second-final say.

    (Nature having the final say.)

  48. EmilianoZ

    I’ve never been very impressed with the Archidruid. He sometimes has some interesting ideas. But, what he can say in 300 words, he usually spreads in 3000. I usually give up somewhere along the road, looking for the meat but only finding amuse-bouches.

  49. Tom W Harris

    Hillary is a frantic shill for immigration “reform”: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B0F6MM76DmY

    Yet Sanders won the Nevada Hispanic vote. This suggests that immigration is not their only issue. It also makes one wonder why blacks see Hillary as their champion.

  50. Tom W Harris

    If Sanders wants to raid Clinton’s black vote, he can use this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ALXulk0T8cg

    Super Predators! AAAAGGGGGHHHH!!!!!!

  51. Tom W Harris

    And if he wants to finish her off, this pic of Bill, Bush I, and George Wallace chillin’ at an outdoor picnic should do it: http://cbsnews2.cbsistatic.com/hub/i/r/2003/06/11/45f9b559-a642-11e2-a3f0-029118418759/resize/620×465/e460f898fed89a2e46f6ff0d1bbac464/image558122.jpg

  52. sdv

    While I think IBW went far over the top against Some Guy, we all have our bad days, and times like these would fray the nerves of a saint–I wouldn’t even trust myself not to fly off the handle once in a while.

    It would be a shame if the commentariat here were to blow up into a full-out civil war over this.

  53. This is mild. Some of you might remember when I was sparring daily with some people (meaning Lambert Strether and his ilk). That feels like an aeon ago.

  54. cripes

    Just thought I’d mention this: there is about a 0% relationship between what Trump will say in his incoherent campaign speeches and what he will do as president. There will be no wall and he won’t do anything to increase social security or universal health care. He is more likely than not to respond to any perceived “threats” by massive and pointless bombing. He thinks a “bill” is what his assistant pays the restaurant where he eats lunch.

    To be fair, few candidates will (attempt) do anything they claim during an election campaign. Bernie Sanders may try, but that’s another story.

  55. different clue

    I have read the Cannon piece on all the horrible evil slander the Clintons have withstood. It turns out that all that slander was from the Whitewater libel machine. And it went on for 8 years. So when Cannon says she has withstood amazing criticism and attacks, those were all wall-to-wall Whitewater attacks.

    The Clintons never were very much criticised for Forced Free Trade Agreements, repealing Glass-Steagal, the Telecommunications Reform Act, other such things. Certainly not in the Big Media. And because of the nastiness of the Whtewater crusade, Clinton partisans can dismiss criticism of NAFTA as just more Whitewater-driven Clinton Derangement Syndrome.
    Thus are the Clintons immunized against examination for their open-the-floodgates-roll in the system of mass jobicide which has carefully exterminated millions of jobs in America from NAFTA till now . . . and counting. If I were to raise that on Cannon’s website, I wonder if he would accuse me of CDS.

  56. At this stage of the game, Bernie Sanders doesn’t have very many blue-collar supporters. His supporters are mainly white and college-educated. Currently, blue-collar Democrats are supporting Hillary Clinton, but they’re mostly minority voters. Both college-educated voters and minority voters hate Donald Trump, so I don’t think there will be much defection from these 2 groups if Trump is the Republican nominee. As for white blue-collar workers, they’re already supporting Trump.

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