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The biggest reasons I can think of:
I agree, but I should be more clear with what I'm trying to pose:
Why has the politics shifted so that Progressive positions are untenable? Why have the democrats believed they have to shift so far to the right?
I think, to convince people, propaganda has to appeal to concepts already held by target of the propaganda, and demonstrate how those held beliefs mean the target should embrace the POV of the propagandist.
It's absolute nonsense to dismiss exit polls on those grounds. As somebody who is a teacher - a math teacher - you should certainly understand that generally speaking, the larger the sample size less the margin of error. You'll see that the source features an average sample number much higher than 100-200 people.
Why craft a response to some imaginary straw man bs ?
Did you miss it WAY earlier when I pretty much conceded the numbers ?
How can you so totally misinterpret what I said. You're nonsense about me being a teacher etc., I guess I struck a nerve about you being a history major ?
Let me try again.
Accepting that in the Reagan election, the boomers between 16 and 21 didn't vote, and the ones between 21 and 30 slightly favored carter, and the ones between 31 and 34 favored Reagan.
Also TOTALLY accepting that in later elections anywhere from 50 to 54 percent of boomers voted for republicans (given all the propaganda, and self interest reasons I mentioned)
This still means that you are talking about making generalizations about
each 100 boomer voters (and the other 100 that didnt vote), based on what a few people did. If 4 of those 100 voters voted the other way, you would not be making this generalization.
So, yes, I basically just repeated what I said before. IT's doubtful that you are going to get it. I am not challenging the exit polls, although I did at one point (a little - 1988 an extremely low turn out election, but evidently the bible belt came out in full force.
But I'm not talking about that
Those 4 people out of 100 (really out of 200) are only statistically significant relative to an election, the outcome of which is determined by majority of the people that actually vote.
IT's not an indictment of the entire group, and it's not information upon which an interesting generalization cane be made, nor does it make sense to talk about blaming boomers collectively.
It's disappointing, but not surprising at all, given all the reasons I've already spent too much time spelling out, probably the biggest being that at least 25% are really stupid. That and all the conniving republicans have been doing the last 50 years.
25% or more of the boomers are idiots, but you aren't going to generalize about boomers being idiots (which makes sense) because it's the same for all the other groups.
But oh no, 3 percent more are republicans than democrats, even with the Christian right etc, they get it up to just a few percent more than democrats in some big elections, and you you say boomers as a group need to own up to that.
You're fucking retarded.
Why has the politics shifted so that Progressive positions are untenable? Why have the democrats believed they have to shift so far to the right?
I've repeated myself enough. I answered this already. Politics is a battle for the minds of the voters, especially the minds of the less intelligent folks. But a lot of this appeals to normal family types, hard working folks trying to live decently in times of slowly decreasing standard of living.
1) The middle became more and more important politically (it always is), as claims that the left were soft on defense and that they were all about "tax and spend."
2)The lies about welfare (welfare queens), but also the justified perception that welfare was not totally good in the way that it impacts communities, and individuals. Welfare was and is necessary, but there were some negatives that come with it.
3) The "starve the beast" strategy of running up deficits (Reagan lowering taxes while increasing spending (esp military)) based on the machiavellian plan that this would preempt liberals from being able to bring home the bacon so to speak, and that the resulting high debt could be used to argue against "tax and spend" liberals.
4) The southern strategy, which was put into motion before the boomers were nearly as big a part of the electorate. But we see the aftermath today: Guns, gays and god.
5) The amazing but believed lie, that if lowering taxes, when taxes are above a certain level can cause tax revenues to increase, because of how stimulative it is to the economy, that therefore even when taxes are relatively low that this effect holds.
A lot of people are selfish enough about their taxes that they don't even want to think this through they just take it on faith. Combine this with #2 and #3 above and you have a powerful issue.
Roger Ailles, Rupert Murdoch, Newt Gingrich, and all the founding members of the Heritage Foundation were born before the baby boom, as were countless other lapdogs of the people who pull the strings of the American right wing. The Koch brother were born in 1935 and 1940.
Bad people in all generations
Mistake to blame generations not individuals
Like blaming all americans for bush or obama
Or all people of a certain racial group for crime
IT's not an indictment of the entire group, and it's not information upon which an interesting generalization cane be made, nor does it make sense to talk about blaming boomers collectively.
Not this strawman again. The debate is whether boomers share responsibility for where we are.
This still means that you are talking about making generalizations about
each 100 boomer voters (and the other 100 that didnt vote), based on what a few people did. If 4 of those 100 voters voted the other way, you would not be making this generalization.
The thing is, there is no evidence offered. You're assuming that the non-voters would have voted against Reagan or Bush the First. If the margin of victory among boomers was much narrower, I'd be more inclined to believe that was a possibility.
Assuming your assumptions are correct, then it doesn't absolve responsibility for the outcome, because not voting changed the outcome.
But oh no, 3 percent more are republicans than democrats, even with the Christian right etc, they get it up to just a few percent more than democrats in some big elections, and you you say boomers as a group need to own up to that.
A few big elections? There was a damned big election recently with an extremely high turnout. Bush-Gore 2000.
This actually doesn't help your case, because you've been arguing there is a large non-voting contingent of boomers that leans left. High turnout elections have traditionally favored the democrats in the past century.
What was the result of that election?
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