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Ivy League Liberal Elitism Will Make Sarah Palin President-How Only Union Organizing Can Prevent It
Truthout | November 11, 2009 | Mike Elk

Posted on 11/12/2009 9:29:04 AM PST by 2ndDivisionVet

Conservatives win many votes saying that liberals are elitist. I am here to tell you that the liberal movement is indeed very elitist. Its organization's staffs are composed mainly of Ivy leaguers whose life experiences are dramatically different than the 70 percent of Americans that never graduate from college. Very few of them have any actual experience living with or knowing working-class people. As a graduate of Bucknell, I still feel out of a place and most glaringly underdressed when I get in a room with the Ivy Leaguers running our movement.

As garbageman turned United Electrical Workers (UE) in Political Action Director Chris Townsend put it to me:

"When I am in meetings in Washington, DC, with organizations that presume to speak for workers or on behalf of workers - I ironically find myself the only worker in the room. As a worker with a GED - and 30-plus years of labor union experience - opinions like mine are rarely sought and universally dismissed as being too extremist when most workers feel the way I do about things. This is why it is so common for liberal and left-wing staff and activists to completely misunderstand workers."

The experiences of liberal elites are so outside of the mainstream that, very often, they just don't understand the working class. They fail to communicate to workers because most of them have never talked to a worker in real life, except for to ask for fries at McDonald's. Instead, when they fail to understand the misdirected anger of the working class at its economic anxiety, they tend to engage in intellectual snobbery and narrow-mindedness that only serve to alienate the white working class further.

Such snobbery was expressed to me in an email recently sent to me from a Democratic media strategist who said the message of the day was, "Conservatives face a choice about the future of their movement: Will they come to the table to get things done or 'stick with the angry people'?"

Well, let me think about that for a second. If I am a poor white guy, do I want to go with the polite people (Democrats) who are going to beg for change with their sophisticated intellectual arguments that I don't understand? Or do I want to be with the party (Republicans) that embraces my anger and wants to get out in the streets to yell about how awful this economy is?

Americans are screaming now about the economic hell we are in. Republicans are screaming about how awful the economy is and winning many of them over. Albeit, they're winning them with the wrong solutions, but they are trying to win Joe the Plumber, not Joe Stiglitz, so the details don't really matter.

On the economy, the Democratic message is, "Sit tight, don't get out in the street and protest, everything will be alright."

White working-class guys would choose the angry people who are willing to stand up and say how frustrated they feel. The progressives who are telling me to be cool and not get upset with things are just merely talking down to me. They have the privilege of telling me not to get upset, when I have every right to be upset.

Sarah Palin indeed represents all the rage of the working class that liberals of this country are trying to quiet down. Many liberal elites engaged in revisionist history say that McCain's defeat was caused by Palin. However, anybody who actually worked on the Obama campaign like I did knew that McCain's defeat was caused by the financial crisis and McCain's baffling response and coddling of Wall Street.

As an organizer for the Obama campaign on the ground in Western Pennsylvania during the election, I remember how white, working-class, swing voters couldn't stop talking about Sarah Palin for weeks on end. For the three weeks between Palin's selection as VP candidate and the financial crash, we were scared shitless the Republicans were going to win as Palin led to McCain surging in the polls.

Many white, working-class people loved her because here was a politician who finally was working class and ready for a fight. They loved her even more as Ivy League liberals denounced her as basically "white trash." It felt to white, working-class people like liberal elites were calling them "white trash" too.

Liberals still treat Palin and the right-wing populist Tea Party Movement that she leads as "white trash." They spend more time attacking them as "stupid racists" than actually trying to win them over and address their concerns. Its as if liberals are saying we know better than you stupid working-class people.

To understand how easily Sarah Palin could be the next president, we need only look to another vice presidential candidate widely denounced by the liberal elite when he was announced in 1952 - Richard Milhouse Nixon. Nixon became president by mobilizing resentment of the working class against elites. By framing elites as talking down to the poor and working class, Sarah Palin, with the right slick ad men, could mobilize that same type of sentiment against the elitist "eggheads" of the Democratic Party.

From Rick Perlstein's classic, "Nixonland: The Rise of a President and the Fracturing of America":

"To cosmopolitan liberals, hating Richard Nixon, congratulating yourself for seeing through Richard Nixon and the elaborate political poker bluff with which he hooked the sentimental rubes, was becoming part and parcel of a political identity.

"And to a new suburban mass middle class that was tempting itself into Republicanism, admiring Richard Nixon was becoming part and parcel of a political identity based on seeing through the pretensions of the cosmopolitan liberals who claimed to know so much better than you (and Richard Nixon) what was best for your country. This side saw everything most genuine in Nixon, everything that was most brave, - who saw the Checkers speech for what it also actually was, not just a hustle but also an act of existential heroism: a brave refusal to let haughty 'betters' have their way with him."

It's like déjà vu all over again.

Republicans are rallying the troops against the educated elites of society. As a result of their political jujitsu, Republicans are making it look like they are engaged in a class war on behalf of the working class against the liberal elite.

Liberals instead are playing into the class war trap by talking down to the uneducated masses of America via TV talk shows and blogs. They can't understand why they aren't winning over the working class because they are too busy attacking them.

Such intellectual foolishness was dramatized in the way I heard liberal DC political operatives talk about the widely read focus group study by "The Very Separate Worlds of Conservatives" by Stan Greenberg, James Carville and others. They took the memo as evidence that working class people lived in a world so far outside of their own (socioeconomically speaking, they do) that they couldn't possibly be reasoned with using their methods). They reckoned that surely these people must be " crazy, brain dead racists" who believe Obama is a socialist out to get them.

What they failed to read is one of the main conclusions of the study that shows that their efforts to paint working class conservatives as "racist idiots" is backfiring big time:

"They readily identify themselves as a minority in this country - a minority whose values are mocked and attacked by a liberal media and class of elites."

I wonder why they feel under attack? Maybe it's all the liberal elites calling white, working class people "stupid racists."

Indeed, the focus groups found that race was not an important factor affecting the political opposition of white, working class conservatives. Indeed, the study found that mocking these people as racists, as I argued in my article, "Martin Luther King Would Have Loved the Teabaggers, Not Called Them Racists," only serves to stigmatize them more against liberal elites.

Talking down to working class people engaged in a class war against the elites isn't going to win them over.

What liberals have to do is unite with the teabaggers and engage in a class war against Wall Street. Organized labor has succeeded in doing this by using constant, year-round, on-the-job political engagement to compel people to come over. As a result, Obama won by 23 points among white, non-college graduates who belong to a union, even as he lost by 18 points among all white, non-college voters.

We need to "Organize the Unorganized" in massive organizing drives like we did in 1930's - the heydays for the progressive reform. Union organizing is the best way to engage people one-on-one on a constant year-round basis. We need be constantly sitting down with working class white conservatives one-on-one, listen to their concerns, and engage them in honest dialogue. Only real community organizing can do this, not the slick TV ad buys that DC liberals tend to prefer.

Part of the reason the Obama movement was so successful was that they invested so heavily in community organizing. We would treat them like human beings and engage in friendly conversation. We would find out what issues they cared about it and get them to critically look at issues in friendly, non-threatening communications. Much like Howard Dean's fifty-state strategy, we took no voter for granted. Our movement should do the same when it comes to voters if it expects to be sustainable over the long run.

Sure, we might not get them the first time or the second time or the third time; it might 20, 30, 40 or 50 long, deep conversations in order to win over these working white guys, but it's worth it However, when you get a union on your job every day eight hours day, a good, well-trained union leader or shop stewards have plenty of time to get to that 20th or 30th conversation you need to win a guy. Furthermore, you have a common bond which you guys can unite behind - fighting economic injustice in your workplace.

As a union organizer in West Virginia, I remember some of our most active members showing up with Bush-Cheney bumper stickers on their pickups. A lot of them would complain against liberals ruining society and then in the next breath argue passionately for a strike. Over time through constant dialogue and popular education, our union was able to win these members over to the liberal side. They realized that voting based on slick TV personalities made up to appear folksy was merely putting folks out of jobs.

Sure, not all of them came over, but enough that it was worth the effort. If we can just bring over one-third of white, working class conservatives, we can dramatically change the political landscape of this country. That's what the Employee Free Choice Act would be able to do.

Many liberal political operatives in DC dismiss the Employee Free Choice Act as merely political payback to the unions for their help in the election. They fail to see the larger political implications - increased unionization would dramatically change the political dynamics of this country and prevent 30,000 workers from getting fired from their jobs every year for trying to join a union.

Many lament the loss of marriage equality last week in Maine. There have been a thousand analyses of why we lost this important fight for a fundamental civil right. However, what none of them pointed out is that if we had increased unionization, the fight for marriage equality would be dramatically easier.

Its no coincidence that ranks of the Christian Coalition began to swell as the ranks of unions declined dramatically in the 1980's. Unions are organizations that bring people from different parts of society and unite them in a common cause. Union members know that their true enemy is Wall Street and not a couple of people trying to get married. This is why Obama won by 23 points among white, non-college graduates who belong to a union, even as he lost by 18 points among all white, non-college voters.

We as progressives can win only when we get all the teabaggers into our movement through getting them into unions. As Lincoln said, "United We Stand, Divided We Fall." Only organized labor can achieve that type of unity. Failure to bring working people into the Employee Free Choice Act could easily lead to the election of a Sarah Palin.

Sure, liberals laugh off the idea of Sarah Palin being elected president. However, elitist, out-of-touch liberals laughed off Nixon, Reagan and Bush as unelectable. Well, guess what, they all won.

If we don't stop laughing at white, working class people, we are going to lose too.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Editorial; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 2012; 2012election; economy; elections; liberalelitism; liberalfascism; liberalism; liberals; obama; palin; palin2012; republicans; sarahaplin; sarahpalin; unions
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Comments?
1 posted on 11/12/2009 9:29:06 AM PST by 2ndDivisionVet
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Uh...


2 posted on 11/12/2009 9:33:36 AM PST by snowrip (Liberal? YOU ARE A SOCIALIST WITH NO RATIONAL ARGUMENT.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

He claims to understand the tea-partiers, yet he calls them tea-baggers. He’s never met a tea-partier.


3 posted on 11/12/2009 9:36:50 AM PST by Mamzelle (Who is Kenneth Gladney? (Don't forget to bring your cameras))
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Rare to read an article where the author is so right and so wrong at the same time.

My sense is that the writer is on the journey many of us have made, from liberalism to conservatism.

They’re still in the early stages though - lots of issues to work through.


4 posted on 11/12/2009 9:38:23 AM PST by chrisser (Tweet not, lest ye a twit be.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Intelectually vacuous.

Protestors have consistantly espoused disdain for removal of choice in healthcare, frustration with the government money spigot to those who ran businesses into the ground (with no investigation into how that happened, as was properly done with Enron) etc. Not some vague undirected anger.

I would ignore this guy too, were I a liberal. He’s as dumb as a box of rocks.


5 posted on 11/12/2009 9:50:19 AM PST by MrEdd (Heck? Geewhiz Cripes, thats the place where people who don't believe in Gosh think they aint going.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
He makes some good points about the left’s wrongheaded approach against the tea parties, but then he goes off the deep end with his union organizing solution. Most people do not want to belong to unions. Unions are a thing of the past now that manufacturing is no longer the main part of our economy.
6 posted on 11/12/2009 10:01:55 AM PST by HwyChile
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

confirms what we all thought, that they were soiling their underwear over Sarah until McCain blew it. And that they still fear her.


7 posted on 11/12/2009 10:24:57 AM PST by Buckeye McFrog
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To: chrisser
Rare to read an article where the author is so right and so wrong at the same time.

Ya nailed it!

8 posted on 11/12/2009 10:25:43 AM PST by Eagle Eye (3%)
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To: Eagle Eye

also he does not address the fact that the majority of white working people are socially conservative, even if they may stray off the reservation on economics at times.
A party that keeps trying to stuff gay marriage and libertine abortion policies down their throats has no hope of winning them over, unions or not.


9 posted on 11/12/2009 10:27:38 AM PST by Buckeye McFrog
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Ironically, the Ivy League elites were conservative back when the Bible Belt was socialist (and voting for William Jennings Bryan).


10 posted on 11/12/2009 10:32:53 AM PST by Zionist Conspirator (Vayetze' Yitzchaq lasuach basadeh lifnot `arev; vayissa' `einayv vayar' vehinneh, gemallim ba'im.)
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To: Buckeye McFrog

I cannot understand the labor vote.

How can hard working people continue to vote to increase taxes and entitlements?

There is something visceral there that my logic cannot comprehend.


11 posted on 11/12/2009 10:43:09 AM PST by Eagle Eye (3%)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

By framing elites as talking down to the poor and working class, ...
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

The Marxist elites do NOT need to be “framed” as talking down to Americans. They DO talk down to Americans.


12 posted on 11/12/2009 10:43:41 AM PST by wintertime
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

ping


13 posted on 11/12/2009 10:49:07 AM PST by truthguy (Good intentions are not enough!)
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To: chrisser
Perfect response.

This article demonstrates that political parties are in fact the declared religions of the people in this country.

This guy can not give up being a Rat even though he agrees in principle with most of the conservative platform... I know so many like this guy and it is so frustrating to get them to make the leap to autonomous thinking.

It is as if their parents sat them down at the kitchen table long ago and told them any number of calumnies about the GOP and conservatism, and, like Sunday school lessons to a true believer, the effects are permanent.

I hope this former Obama campaign worker can develop a few more steradians of insight and make the leap to conservatism.

But his comment about feeling inferior to Ivy Leaguers kind of seals his fate.

He thinks much more clearly and independently than most Ivy Leaguers I know... he just doesn't believe he does.

The jail cell is open, dude, all you have to do is man up and walk out to conservatism, the Constitution, and Freedom.

You must be willing to do an about face to liberal socialism, which will take some courage. Do it.

14 posted on 11/12/2009 11:12:46 AM PST by caddie
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To: caddie
The only political principal upon which this guy agrees with conservatives is distaste for Ivy League liberals. He's on no journey to conservatism.

His preferred priority policy the EFCA (the "Card Check" bill) is the most un-conservative piece of legislation to come into play in DC in many, many years. Its noxious feature (effectively mandatory unionization of services companies and goods companies who can't move their facilities offshore) disguises its truly toxic feature (mandatory arbitration of union contracts). The health care bill can't hold a candle to it -- EFCA is trying to "fix" something (a free market in labor) that is not only not broke, but is one of America's greatest strength, where the health care bill can at least claim to be trying to fix (if through bad means) a system most people agree is deeply flawed.

His most important appeal to the liberal elite is that only will the EFCA create economic-policy liberals out of working class people, it will also effectively subvert social conservatism, because unions (somehow) will divert their members' attention away from things like opposing gay marriage.
15 posted on 11/12/2009 11:29:06 AM PST by only1percent
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

True! What this guy may or may not understand is that Sarah Palin also understands what this guy is saying about elitist liberal snobs and their unrelenting insults towards most of their neighbors.

Palin knows she can win an election without 30 percent of the vote. She’s also smart enough to know how to tweak the elites, and how to work around them.

I’m glad the guy is honest enough to state boldly that the union actions are designed to create Democrat voters. I don’t see that kind of honesty often.


16 posted on 11/12/2009 11:37:44 AM PST by redpoll
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
I give him an award for honesty. But he fails at critical thinking.

What liberals have to do is unite with the teabaggers and engage in a class war against Wall Street.

He is stuck on stupid and old union sloganeering.

The reality is that the democrats are holly own by Wall Street and everyone paying the slightest bit of attention knows it.

If Wall Street exploited the “working class” over the years it was a small thing compared the working class having to bail out their oppressors with the help of the democrats through massive deficits and higher taxation. The democrats have lost the mantle of being for the working class and it won’t be coming back any time soon.

Nationalized health care, cap and tax and comprehensive immigration reform are all elitist notions that work against the working class.

That dog won’t hunt.

17 posted on 11/12/2009 11:54:29 AM PST by usurper (Spelling or grammatical errors in this post can be attributed to the LA City School System)
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To: chrisser

Nailed it. I think he was really on to something when he talked about those of us who have lived in the real world versus those who pontificate to us from their elitist positions about how stupid we are and racist we are and blah blah. I think he really captures the appeal of Palin, that she went to a land grant university (like alot of us) that she has actually worked at a real job (like most of us) and raised her own family (like most of us). Her political philosophy was formed from these experiences that most of us out in flyover country share rather than at some think tank or in the offices of a Democratic Pol or opterative. I know that is why both my wife and I are so attracted to her. We know people like her and her husband and we ARE people like her and her husband. We both came from small town Nebraska families that instilled us with a work ethic and conservative values that have aided us (through alot of hard work and the application of the God given talents that we were blessed with) to attain a little slice of the American dream. That is where I think the guy is right on.

I think where he misses the boat is the whole union thing. I don’t think that liberals can grasp that there is a massive segment of the population that don’t wanna be herded into any group based on anything but shared beliefs. Rugged individualism does not compute with them. I refuse to bind myself to any group of folks whose sole reason for coming together is that we all share some disadvantage that we think is “keeping us down” or disadvantaging us in some way. It is against every fiber of my being (as well as most folks on this board I would reckon) to do that. That is what this guy (and most liberals) do not get.

I am for liberty, a small Constitutional government that stays out of my pocket and my life and respects the God given rights enumerated in said Constitution. Anyone or any group that works in the other direction is my opponent and, I fear, soon to be my blood enemy. Leave me alone, let me live my life in a self responsible manner and I will do the same for you. Otherwise, all bets are off.

Sorry about the rant, BRC


18 posted on 11/12/2009 12:43:30 PM PST by Big Red Clay (Greetings from the Big Red State)
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To: only1percent

The only political principal upon which this guy agrees with conservatives is distaste for Ivy League liberals. He’s on no journey to conservatism.

Well, its a start.


19 posted on 11/12/2009 12:52:07 PM PST by equalitybeforethelaw
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

This is such a BS article. My brother-in-law was a truck driver, and never finished high school. I never had trouble communicating with him, and he always had reasonable and well thought out political opinions.

The idea that the ‘rat elite is calm, cool and collected is ludicrous. They are shrill, frothing and utterly unreasonable.

People are angry because they are getting screwed ! Not because of those nasty opportunistic Republican rabble-rousers.

Let this deluded person proceed on with this drivel. Sane people won’t believe it, and that includes the majority of working class people. Only those fed full of ‘rat poison from CNN/ABC/NBC/CBS/PMSNBC will swallow this swill.


20 posted on 11/12/2009 1:14:03 PM PST by jimt
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