JD Vance, Trump and the state of US politics

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BigMike
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Re: JD Vance, Trump and the state of US politics

Post by BigMike »

Alexis Jacobi wrote: Fri Nov 01, 2024 1:15 am
Thanks for sharing your thoughts, Alexis. I can understand where you're coming from—sometimes it feels like our votes are cast more against something than for a particular candidate. I think that speaks to a broader frustration many of us feel about the current state of our politics. We’re living in a time when it’s easy to focus on what divides us, but perhaps that’s exactly why it’s worth trying to dig into what we truly want for the future, beyond the four-year election cycles.

From your post, I get the sense that there’s a lot you feel needs fixing. You mention a lack of faith in the health of the Republic, and I agree that there are some deep-rooted issues that both sides need to address to bring us back to a stronger, healthier democracy. So maybe the question we’re both asking, each in our own way, is: what are the core values and practical changes we believe will improve things for everyone?

I’d be interested to know more about what you see as the root causes of the disarray and how you think the movement you see in Trump’s base could address them. For me, a lot of my beliefs about responsible governance come down to fairness, accountability, and ensuring that everyday people have a real shot at stability and success. If we could find some common ground there, maybe we could shift the conversation from personalities to principles.
BigMike
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Re: JD Vance, Trump and the state of US politics

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Alexis Jacobi wrote: Fri Nov 01, 2024 1:25 am
I appreciate your response, Alexis. I think you’re right to point out that both parties are influenced by powerful, wealthy factions, and I definitely get why that could make this message feel like “talking points.” The idea I’m getting at, though, is that, despite those influences, policy differences between the two parties have real consequences for everyday people. It’s less about which side is “pure” or “corrupt” and more about which policies impact things like taxes, healthcare costs, and job security for the average worker.

When I say “we,” I’m talking about values that a lot of Americans, regardless of party, still seem to hold: the importance of hard work, fairness, family, and responsibility. Sure, there are things we don’t all agree on, but most of us want stability, opportunity, and fairness in how resources and responsibilities are shared. That’s why I think it’s worth looking at how each party’s policies affect those values in real life, rather than focusing on the broader partisan divides.

I’d be interested in exploring what you think each faction “desires and hopes for.” It could be a good way to unpack these policies in a way that doesn’t get overshadowed by the influence of ultra-wealthy players. What values do you see each side genuinely upholding, and where do they fall short for regular folks?
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Alexis Jacobi
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Re: JD Vance, Trump and the state of US politics

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BigMike wrote: Fri Nov 01, 2024 8:17 am
Alexis Jacobi wrote: Fri Nov 01, 2024 1:15 am
Thanks for sharing your thoughts, Alexis. I can understand where you're coming from—sometimes it feels like our votes are cast more against something than for a particular candidate. I think that speaks to a broader frustration many of us feel about the current state of our politics. We’re living in a time when it’s easy to focus on what divides us, but perhaps that’s exactly why it’s worth trying to dig into what we truly want for the future, beyond the four-year election cycles.

From your post, I get the sense that there’s a lot you feel needs fixing. You mention a lack of faith in the health of the Republic, and I agree that there are some deep-rooted issues that both sides need to address to bring us back to a stronger, healthier democracy. So maybe the question we’re both asking, each in our own way, is: what are the core values and practical changes we believe will improve things for everyone?

I’d be interested to know more about what you see as the root causes of the disarray and how you think the movement you see in Trump’s base could address them. For me, a lot of my beliefs about responsible governance come down to fairness, accountability, and ensuring that everyday people have a real shot at stability and success. If we could find some common ground there, maybe we could shift the conversation from personalities to principles.
I am not sure that my views, my comments, and my own background to the strange and discordant situation that we are experiencing in the American Republic's life will be of much use to you, or coincide with your own focus. I use the word "project" to describe what people focus on here on this forum (and in so many different areas). I would like to know more of how you see and define your own "project" though I recognize that you seem to have done this in your first post.

The work of Robert O Paxton came up recently in a NYTs article, naturally for the purpose of assigning to Trump and the Trump phenomenon (or phenomena) a Nazi-like motive. However, the book was written in 2004 so more or less before the relatively recent explosion of the (so-called) Culture Wars into the strangeness and discord we have all been witnessing for the last 15 years when things really started to boil. I got the book and began to read it. It is not at all hard to understand its principle thesis, nor to notice that there was certainly such a thing as *fascist tendencies* that appeared long before actual fascists could attain power in Europe in the most notable cases.

Now, I mention this because I have for many years now been undertaking an unofficial *study* of those populist movements, on both the Left and the Right, that express proto-fascist tendencies. Originally, and I mean longer than 15 years ago, I involved myself in reading all sort of Left-tending and Progressive political works, the central ones being those of Noam Chomsky. And naturally I became aware of the militant and revolutionary activism of certain sixties and post-sixties groups which, obviously, carried out revolutionary violent protest, organized underground militias, etc. In our present I can certainly say that those who call themselves "Antifa" are Left- and Revolution-tending semi-fascists or proto-fascists, and so my point is that, today in America, and for a whole group of reasons (causes that can I reckon by discovered and talked about), the ill-health of the Republic, a wide-spread and general social or political sickness (uncertain how to define or to talk about this) has led to conditions that, as at other historical points, produce fascist-like reaction.

Though it is hard to define fascism with a set of initial phrases or points (Paxton takes this view) certain pre-conditions give it more latitude and freer reign. Now, we are certainly aware that there are extreme forms of factionalism that divide the country. My impression goes like this: The very definition of what America is and what it should be is "up in the air" insofar as factions define America very differently. Their views do not coincide.

So let me take as just one example the recent (Left- and Progressive based) direct political action, which not long ago swept the nation, of toppling monuments. See List of monuments and memorials removed during the George Floyd protests. This type of 'direct action' corresponds to the sort of social rage that prefigures the manifestation of that proto-fascism I speak of (and Paxton speaks of). I include an example from the American Left to contrast it, as fairly as possible, with those examples from the American Right that we are aware of. For example January 6th.

Though we could proceed to adopt the standard model of analysis and say that the Left-faction represents what is *good* and *true* in the people's will and is most in alignment with America's values, and that anything that opposes this Left-manifestation is -- and naturally this is said -- Nazi-like and therefore anti-American and also *evil* -- my view is that this will not help us to sift through our present and to discern *what really is going on* and how and why things have come to this juncture.

I admit though, right at the start, that all of this is a perceptual project: a project of receiving, analyzing, processing and then organizing a *perspective* on what is happening and why, and then a spiel which we then communicate to others in the positionisms that we all adopt (especially on this oddball forum).

With that said, and to be sure my own position is clear, I most certainly notice within the general population of the US, and here I refer to the angry masses who become vocal in politics, in rallies, in protests, in street demonstrations, in attacks of symbols and institutions -- I definitely notice those manifestations of unstructured action, the exact signs, the exact reaction, that pre-figures the larger, solidified and organized mass-movement that we know as fascism proper.

The curious thing, from my own perspective, is simply to notice that if there are *tendencies* of this sort, they appear strongly on both sides of political factionalism and on both sides of the binary political divisions Democrat-Republican.

It is pretty easy to see the utterly bizarre framing that has recently been expressed. It goes like this: Trump is described as 'fascist'. The rally at Madison Square Gardens is presented as being a Nazi rally as was the one that took place there just before the outbreak of WWll. Trump supporters, therefore, are comparable to Nazi supporters, and can fairly be described not only as 'garbage' but as a political demographic that is a supreme danger to the Republic. If this is true, then it can only be concluded that the proto-Nazi proto-Hitlerian figure Donald Trump, and perhaps others like him or close to him, should be "taken out". That is, if you follow through on the logic of what is presented as 'perceptual arrangement'.

You [I mean 'one'] cannot make these statements and then, when convenient, back away from them. Well, of course they can, and they do, but what is left is the residue of what they really think and what they really believe. But here we must say, or propose: They do not know what they really think. And so much of what they say is not really true. (The NYTs, in my view, transformed itself from a semi-responsible news agent to a propaganda-organ with a Maoist bent. But if I say this about the Times I will have to say something equally biting about Fox ... And what I do think is that it is this that is our duty).

In response, or perhaps in reaction (?) the Republican faction finds 'enemies within' who can and who do make up such outrageous stories such as the one I just mentioned, and who have sought to curtail 'speech' that they feel is bad and dangerous (or hurtful, etc.) So in their own *reaction* they take it to the absolute limits. No insulation is to be held back from. And once the *mood* of seeing veritable enemies everywhere becomes fixed in a population, it is not at all hard to see how the various tools of propaganda can then be employed to channel their *feelings* and paranoia ( a deep, existential sense of loss, fear, lack of control, and many other things) into concrete political actions and directions.

So these are some of the things that seem interesting, and converse able, in my own view of the present.

Now, who created this framing?
BigMike
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Re: JD Vance, Trump and the state of US politics

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Alexis Jacobi wrote: Fri Nov 01, 2024 12:43 pm
Thanks for laying out your perspective, Alexis. It’s clear you’re deeply invested in understanding what’s happening in America beyond the surface narratives, and I agree that simplistically labeling one side as entirely good or bad only escalates the division. The way you describe proto-fascist tendencies appearing in both factions speaks to a broader issue—a collective reaction to uncertainty, almost a defensive posture on both sides. And maybe that's at the heart of this mess: when people feel their values or identity are under threat, they start viewing the ‘other side’ as the enemy.

Your mention of Paxton’s work is thought-provoking. It suggests that the conditions for extremism are not confined to one ideology but can arise whenever social and political uncertainty becomes overwhelming. So perhaps the real question is not just who created this framing, but also why so many of us buy into it. Could it be that in uncertain times, people gravitate toward simple, often polarizing narratives that give them a clear 'side' to belong to?

I’d like to hear more about what you see as potential solutions or steps forward. Is there a way, in your view, to break this cycle of factionalism, or at least to approach these conversations in a way that doesn’t deepen the divide?
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FlashDangerpants
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Re: JD Vance, Trump and the state of US politics

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Is ... is this guy using GPT to rope-a-dope Jacobi without having to bother reading a bunch of Jacobi text?

This could be the first use of AI on this site that I am willing to endorse.
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Alexis Jacobi
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Re: JD Vance, Trump and the state of US politics

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BigMike wrote: Fri Nov 01, 2024 1:06 pm I’d like to hear more about what you see as potential solutions or steps forward. Is there a way, in your view, to break this cycle of factionalism, or at least to approach these conversations in a way that doesn’t deepen the divide?
The questions you ask, in my view, cannot be answered. To explain what I mean: I could take a shot at some sort of answer but it would inevitably be superficial if limited to cultural or social conflicts.

The reason is, I think, because we have not identified enough what the problem is, and what is actually going on. Again, my interests tend away from (what I might call) superficialities and toward issues that I think are of greater import.

I submit here a talk given by Brett Weinstein on the Winston Marshall podcast.
BigMike
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Re: JD Vance, Trump and the state of US politics

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Alexis Jacobi wrote: Fri Nov 01, 2024 6:39 pm
Thanks for your honesty, Alexis. I think you’re right that, without a clear understanding of the root issues, any attempt at solutions might feel superficial. Maybe that’s why we all keep coming back to this sense of a 'core problem' that feels hard to define yet seems crucial to tackle. I’ll definitely check out the Brett Weinstein talk you shared—it sounds like it could offer some useful context on this.

While we may not be able to solve the larger issues right here, I wonder if starting from a foundation of shared values could help us bridge some gaps. Despite our different experiences and perspectives, values like fairness, responsibility, and respect for others seem universal. Perhaps, by focusing on these, we could at least find a common ground that might make the bigger challenges feel a bit less overwhelming.

What do you think? Do you see certain values as still being widely shared, or are they themselves becoming points of division?
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Alexis Jacobi
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Re: JD Vance, Trump and the state of US politics

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I think if you and I shared our values and ideals that they would likely coincide in many areas. Quite honestly my political ideal is pretty standard Liberalism (in the original sense). But I have many issues with the Left agenda and progressivism as it is playing out now.

And yes, I think many (average) people share all sorts of values.

In subsequent posts I may be able to mention my thoughts about “spiritual malady” which, intuitively, I think is a big part.
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Alexis Jacobi
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Re: JD Vance, Trump and the state of US politics

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BigMike wrote: Fri Nov 01, 2024 1:06 pm
I’d like to hear more about what you see as potential solutions or steps forward. Is there a way, in your view, to break this cycle of factionalism, or at least to approach these conversations in a way that doesn’t deepen the divide?
I have a question, which also is a comment: Why must we even think of solutions and “steps forward”? What if — I am being serious — what is needed is the clarify differences, even ascertain that they are unresolvable? What if that is in truth the most productive work, and necessary?
BigMike
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Re: JD Vance, Trump and the state of US politics

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Alexis Jacobi wrote: Fri Nov 01, 2024 8:44 pm I have a question, which also is a comment: Why must we even think of solutions and “steps forward”? What if — I am being serious — what is needed is the clarify differences, even ascertain that they are unresolvable? What if that is in truth the most productive work, and necessary?
That’s an intriguing take, Alexis, and I appreciate you pushing back on the assumption that resolution or finding common ground is always the goal. There’s something powerful about the idea that clarifying and deeply understanding our differences could itself be a form of progress.

If I’m understanding you right, you’re suggesting that it might be more valuable to fully grasp where our divides lie—even if they’re ultimately unresolvable—rather than to smooth them over. I’m curious, though: in your view, how would clarifying these differences benefit us, especially in a society where cooperation on some level is inevitable? Do you think recognizing these unbridgeable divides could lead us to a more honest or perhaps even a more functional way of engaging with one another?
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Alexis Jacobi
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Re: JD Vance, Trump and the state of US politics

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BigMike wrote: Fri Nov 01, 2024 9:03 pm I’m curious, though: in your view, how would clarifying these differences benefit us, especially in a society where cooperation on some level is inevitable?
A couple of things: One, I am an expatriate. So I have ‘distance’ on that level (though I spend weeks and months up in the States yearly).

The other part is that I am, and we technically are, “philosophers” and not political doctors and healers. I define that object as seeing and describing, but not as applied anthropology (social work).

I find it more beneficial (to my “project”) to take advantage of distance (on various levels) if only because the process pleases me.

Oddly, I keep up on everything going on in the US and read up on contemporary issues and problems.

I am not sure if one faction in social conflict can benefit from the clarifying work of the other faction. But the faction that does clarify will surely benefit from its efforts.

I notice that people cooperate up North, but they do not necessarily communicate. I have friendly relations with people and all controversy is soundly avoided! It is kind of an art … 😎
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Re: JD Vance, Trump and the state of US politics

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Alexis Jacobi wrote: Fri Nov 01, 2024 10:14 pm
Thanks for sharing, Alexis. I appreciate the perspective you bring as an expatriate and a philosopher—having that distance, both geographically and intellectually, can offer valuable clarity. It’s true that sometimes observing and understanding without trying to resolve or ‘heal’ can reveal insights we might otherwise miss. And you’re right; there’s a certain art to navigating differences while maintaining good relations, especially when direct engagement isn’t always productive.

I’ve enjoyed this exchange and have some fresh perspectives to think about. Wishing you well with your ongoing ‘project’ of clarifying and observing—sometimes, that in itself can be the most meaningful work.
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Re: JD Vance, Trump and the state of US politics

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BigMike wrote: Fri Nov 01, 2024 10:33 pm
Wait, we’re done? 😎

Tell me a little more about where you stand, what you hope for, and what you are working toward.
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Re: JD Vance, Trump and the state of US politics

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Alexis Jacobi wrote: Fri Nov 01, 2024 10:14 pm I am an expatriate...I keep up on everything going on in the US and read up on contemporary issues and problems...I vote for Trump*.

*(Unspoken subtext: I vote for Trump because by living in a foreign country I am pretty much unaffected by what a pathological liar like Trump does to harm American society, and I see no moral problem with rewarding a felonious scoundrel with the means of avoiding accountability for his innumerable crimes.)
BigMike wrote: Fri Nov 01, 2024 10:33 pm"...I’ve enjoyed this exchange and have some fresh perspectives to think about..."
Alexis Jacobi wrote: Fri Nov 01, 2024 10:47 pm Wait, we’re done? 😎
Sorry, old buddy, but I think you may have lost BigMike when you confessed to being an "expatriate" (and, even worse, a Trump supporter).
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Dubious
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Re: JD Vance, Trump and the state of US politics

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Sorry for the delay; lately I've had less time to be on the computer!
seeds wrote: Thu Oct 31, 2024 12:01 amAnd you already know that I feel that the speed (or at least the inevitability) of America's decline is the result of (and proportional to) the negative karma it's been sowing across the planet over the last seven or so decades.
I think everything is beginning to fall apart due to an excess of the greedy, hedonistic, vulgar, and brazenly imperialistic society we've devolved into, as so precisely stated by you. It seems karma has colluded with nature itself in response to the grossly ineffective perennial thinking we've submitted ourselves to as described. I see karma as the agent enforcing payment in the end regardless of who or what was responsible for our crimes and deficiencies.

It all amounts to a collective rebalancing.
seeds wrote: Thu Oct 31, 2024 12:01 amIn other words, if you are willing to think of karma as being a "supernatural" process that's going to "reset things," then it seems to be already in progress in American society, and especially in the realm of politics.
I would not dispute that but it has to be mentioned that the U.S., still being the greatest superpower on the planet, would have a tsunami effect across the entire globe, especially so in the Western part.

The way it looks, we're heading in a direction where we're no-longer capable of correcting our errors. Throughout history, we've always forced collapses to happen and hardly ever managed to preempt one. The one now on our doorstep being the most deadly of all.

Karma, taken to its conclusion becomes irrevocable. The paradigms of nature, its inner logic, is thoroughly without sentiment. Transgress those too often or too egregiously and hell awaits. It's then that as usual, most will pray to a supernatural agent in hope to deflect the consequences...but when really has that ever happened!
seeds wrote: Thu Oct 31, 2024 12:01 amHowever, there's no escaping the dread that I feel (especially for the young) in that no matter which way the election goes, the decline is already baked into the system.
I agree. Even if Trump gets elected, that result will only serve as catalyst to expedite the decline already baked in.
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