VDH finally, and quite articulately, gets it about our PRESIDENT Trump. This causes me to wonder if he, along with a lot of other generally smart others, wasn't coerced into writing an anti-Trump article for that utterly disastrous issue of National Review, which came out during the primaries.
To: libstripper
[Finally, the Democrats failed to see that class-based populism is a far more inclusionary and thus dynamic phenomenon than is racial tribalismfor both whites and non-whites.]
Sheer VDH gold.
2 posted on
08/15/2017 6:40:56 AM PDT by
headstamp 2
(Ignorance is reparable, stupid is forever)
To: libstripper
I almost gave up on VDH after years of his trenchant analyses. He wrote several in a row that seemed to indicate he was starting to wander off into the broken ground that McCain occupies. He put his glasses back on, obviously, and turned his hearing aid up. I can put him back in my quick contact list.
3 posted on
08/15/2017 6:53:07 AM PDT by
arthurus
To: libstripper
I’ve read VDH pretty closely the whole time, and barely recall him ever actively opposing Trump. Maybe in the primary, but he was fully on board by the general election, I’m pretty sure. Best political commentator on the scene today, IMHO.
To: libstripper
Namely, Trumps enraged critics still do not grasp that he is a reflection of...Finally, some representation. HOORAY President Donald J. Trump. Thank you, sir.
5 posted on
08/15/2017 6:56:36 AM PDT by
PGalt
To: libstripper
Second, if Obama did not bequeath an upside legacy, he certainly left a downside. Tribal obsessions with identity politics were implicitly an attack on the white working class. Those in Ohio and Pennsylvania were not just angry for being written off as bitter clingers, irredeemables, and deplorables, but also furious to be scapegoated for having white privilege by those who alone enjoyed it. A party run by Pajama Boys, half-educated media talking heads, Middlebury-prolonged adolescents, Bay Area billionaire techies in t-shirts and flip-flops, Hollywood gated grandees, Al Gore green elites, and Black Lives Matter activists is not going to win easily back Michigan and Wisconsin. Finally, the Democrats failed to see that class-based populism is a far more inclusionary and thus dynamic phenomenon than is racial tribalismfor both whites and non-whites. Democrats are finally worrying that they have lost the white working class; they should be even more terrified that they might lose 40 percent of the traditional minority vote if the economy keeps growing and Trump keeps talking about protecting low wage-earners from the dual threats of globalization and illegal immigration. Victor Davis Hanen's one of our better thinkers... maybe his name could be included in the headline. I'd hate to miss him...
6 posted on
08/15/2017 7:00:20 AM PDT by
GOPJ
(Shaming into silence is the antithesis of psychological safety-James Damore-fired for speaking truth)
To: libstripper
Great article! VDH is an erudite conservative treasure.
He’s Ann C., when she was good, but without the drama.
7 posted on
08/15/2017 7:15:50 AM PDT by
tumblindice
(America's founding fathers: all armed conservatives)
To: libstripper
Hanson was NOT one of the authors in that "Against Trump" issue.
11 posted on
08/15/2017 10:03:00 AM PDT by
Albion Wilde
(I was not elected to continue a failed system. I was elected to change it. --Donald J. Trump)
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