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Where Have All the Eric Hoffer Democrats Gone?
Human Events ^ | 12/05/2011 | Daniel J. Flynn

Posted on 12/05/2011 11:02:07 AM PST by neverdem

The surreal scene on the South Lawn of the White House featured a Lone Star-state school teacher toasting Frescas with a San Francisco stevedore. A scheduled five minutes turned into fifty-five. Dressed in work boots and a flannel coat despite eighty-degree heat, Eric Hoffer apologized for not accepting his conversation mate’s invitation to a state dinner. He did not attend because he did not own a tie. President Lyndon Johnson responded that Hoffer should just show up tie-less to the next one and promised that he would remove his in solidarity.

This used to be the Democratic Party. Oversized guys busting out of work clothes could comfortably converse with presidents. They didn’t always come from the same place. But they usually spoke each other’s language.

The party has retained its name but not its people.

“Preparations by Democratic operatives for the 2012 election make it clear for the first time that the party will explicitly abandon the white working class,” Thomas Edsall reports at the New York Times. “All pretense of trying to win a majority of the white working class has been effectively jettisoned in favor of cementing a center-left coalition” made up first of “professors, artists, designers, editors, human resources managers, lawyers, librarians, social workers, teachers and therapists—and a second, substantial constituency of lower-income voters who are disproportionately African-American and Hispanic.”

The feeling is mutual. A late November CNN poll found that half of white Democrats with no college education want their party to nominate for president someone other than the president.

What happened to the Eric Hoffer Democrats?

Hoffer, one of the “blue collar intellectuals” celebrated in my new book by that title, embodies the schism. On Wednesdays in the ’60s he held court at Berkeley, whose political science department had hired him to mentor, meet, and occasionally lecture students. Years earlier, “professor” Hoffer had ironically bused the dishes of Berkeley students at a Shattuck Avenue eatery. When he wasn’t holding office hours on the besieged campus, Hoffer moved cargo off and on ships on the docks. Instinctually more blue collar than intellectual, the author of The True Believer and subject of two late-’60s CBS specials increasingly felt ill at ease in the only political party he had ever known. 

Hoffer’s support for the Vietnam War, the president leading it, and most importantly, the nation waging it, set him apart from the intellectuals of the era. He quipped, “When I talk to American students and teachers about common Americans it is as if I was talking about mysterious people living on a mysterious continent.”

He warned about nascent affirmative action. “If you think that the Negro is your equal, you expect something from him,” he explained to Eric Sevareid. “If you think that the Negro is your inferior, that he is incapable of doing anything, then you want to treat him with extra special care, and you want to make him more equal than equal.”

Far from a moralist, the former train-yard tramp nevertheless lamented the drug naivety of the hippies and complained of not being able to discern the sex of passersby in his neighborhood.

The Democratic Party crack-up glared most obviously within the presidential commission on violence, which witnessed Hoffer and federal judge Leon Higginbotham clash explosively. The longshoreman, who had lived on skid row and picked crops, balked at the notion of poverty causing urban violence. The judge castigated Hoffer as being in “total error” and accused him of racism.

Both commission members, appointed by the same president, belonged to the same party. How could such a precarious coalition hold?

Obama-Democrats sticking with intellectuals and ditching blue collars is a conscious strategy that affirms decades of oblivious alienation. When Democrats rhetorically boast of being the party of the working man, it is nostalgia talking. The supposed rich man’s party, the Republicans, lost seven of the ten wealthiest counties in 2008.

More than four decades after Johnson and Hoffer’s surreal South Lawn scene, an equally bizarre made-for-the-media event took place off the West Wing. President Barack Obama and police officer James Crowley toasted beers rather than Frescas in the Rose Garden. The “beer summit” presented the president an opportunity to mend fences with the cop, and the constituency, he offended when he said Sergeant Crowley had “acted stupidly” in arresting Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates. But whereas school teacher Johnson and unschooled Hoffer hit it off, the law professor and the lawman appeared distant, rigid, strained, uncomfortable.

Opportunity missed.

It’s not just that they had been placed in an unnatural situation. One struggles to imagine them socializing effortlessly in any context.

The ease with which a past Democrat president mingled with a workingman, and the awkwardness with which today’s Democrat president does, serves as a metaphor for the party’s struggles to retain even a remnant of what was once its base.

A blue-collar Democrat was then almost redundant. It’s now almost a contradiction.



Daniel J. Flynn is a columnist for HUMAN EVENTS and the author of Blue Collar Intellectuals: When the Enlightened and the Everyman Elevated America (ISI Books, 2011).


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: erichoffer; erichofferdemocrats; thetruebeliever; truebeliever
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Eric Hoffer Democrats still loved America. I don't think they exist anymore.
1 posted on 12/05/2011 11:02:11 AM PST by neverdem
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To: neverdem

I agree with you. If any of them do, they are a distinct minority.


2 posted on 12/05/2011 11:07:01 AM PST by freespirited
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To: freespirited

I tell every blue dog democrat I meet in Mobile the same thing: Yesterday’s Southern Democrat is today’s Conservative Republican....

Most don’t want to hear it.....NONE deny it.

RLTW


3 posted on 12/05/2011 11:11:49 AM PST by military cop (I carry a .45....cause they don't make a .46....)
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To: neverdem

you’re gonna just love Obama’s ‘New Nationalism’ speech tomorrow.


4 posted on 12/05/2011 11:14:24 AM PST by griswold3 (Character is Destiny)
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To: neverdem

you’re gonna just love Obama’s ‘New Nationalism’ speech tomorrow.


5 posted on 12/05/2011 11:14:26 AM PST by griswold3 (Character is Destiny)
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To: neverdem

Was Hoffer a democrat?

He was a genuinely unique person, and I’m not sure using him this way really works.


6 posted on 12/05/2011 11:27:09 AM PST by SuzyQue
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To: neverdem
Eric Hoffer Democrats still loved America. I don't think they exist anymore.

There still are some. On the intellectual side, Victor Davis Hanson and Walter Russell Mead. On the political side, Sen. Lieberman -- a liberal Democrat but one who knows who the external enemy is.

7 posted on 12/05/2011 11:27:45 AM PST by omega4412
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To: omega4412

I thought they were called “Scoop Jackson” Democrats.


8 posted on 12/05/2011 11:29:42 AM PST by dfwgator
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To: neverdem

Eric Hoffer’s book, “The True Believer”, is a good, quick read. I remember reading it in High School and realizing that it made perfect sense. Hoffer writes in a very clear style, and demonstrates real understanding of human nature. Today’s Obama supporters include a lot of “True Believers”.


9 posted on 12/05/2011 11:30:15 AM PST by Avid Coug
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To: neverdem

They were replaced by Eric Holder democrats.


10 posted on 12/05/2011 11:30:44 AM PST by Tijeras_Slim
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To: neverdem

I loved seeing his specials.
He was captivating.


11 posted on 12/05/2011 11:35:35 AM PST by Vinnie
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To: neverdem
professors, artists, designers, editors, human resources managers, lawyers, librarians, social workers, teachers and therapists

Anybody notice a commonality here?

The group is primarily, though not exclusively, composed of occupations who produce no wealth for society. They are essentially parasitic on society and the economy.

12 posted on 12/05/2011 11:36:48 AM PST by Sherman Logan
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To: neverdem

Everything I needed to know about Democrats I learned as I watched them cheer the death of American soldiers while Bush was president.


13 posted on 12/05/2011 11:55:21 AM PST by kreitzer
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To: neverdem

I think Eric Hoffer was before the hippies drugged the Dem Party and much of America.


14 posted on 12/05/2011 11:57:06 AM PST by PapaNew
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To: neverdem

They’re dead, Jim.


15 posted on 12/05/2011 12:04:25 PM PST by RexBeach
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To: omega4412

Well, I am VERY surprised to hear VDH is a Democrat.
Are you sure?


16 posted on 12/05/2011 12:06:48 PM PST by supremedoctrine
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To: neverdem

Hoffer was a giant compared to today’s turds.


17 posted on 12/05/2011 12:15:15 PM PST by Inwoodian
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To: neverdem

Anyone who is anyone in the D Party at the policy making level is required to have gone through the Harvard or Yale group think process and those who haven’t are shunned. That’s the problem.


18 posted on 12/05/2011 12:21:33 PM PST by apoliticalone (Honest govt. that operates in the interest of US sovereignty and the people, not global $$$)
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To: neverdem

Anyone with patriotism, common sense, love of country and half a brain fled the Democrat Party years ago. I remember my own grandfather, a lifelong Democrat, pale and stunned, sitting at his kitchen table, letting the realization sink in that he was going to have to vote for Reagan.


19 posted on 12/05/2011 1:13:37 PM PST by Buckeye McFrog
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To: supremedoctrine; omega4412; goldstategop; Jim Robinson
There still are some. On the intellectual side, Victor Davis Hanson and Walter Russell Mead. On the political side, Sen. Lieberman -- a liberal Democrat but one who knows who the external enemy is.

It's true, and there's more than one way to make it rational. Victor Davis Hanson is registered as a rat.

There's only the rat party that controls the CA state offices.

I could be wrong, but any registered voter can vote in your primaries. Correct me, if I'm wrong.

They have more potential than is readily appreciated. They can help push a leftwing moonbat that will be rejected by the electorate in the general election, or help a more moderate rat in the general election. In most gerrymandered districts, they don't make a differencce.

20 posted on 12/05/2011 1:16:54 PM PST by neverdem (Xin loi minh oi)
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