This LA Times chip, by two people I respect–one of whom, Fred Siegel, is a good friend of mine–is beautiful far off the brand. It describes Democratic candidates of the recent past, but not the present campaign.
In amount, the Party that Kotkin and Siegel depict doesn’t even vaguely reflect the Party I’ve looked out here aboard the campaign trail this year. And now it’s off apt Fort Dodge, with John Edwards…
As for the environment–yes, it was a gentry issue in the past (and testimony namely gentry priorities–fiscial discipline namely another–aren’t necessarily wrong things). But this time, the candidates are framing it,
Crystal light base, appropriately, as a latent source of current jobs and as a national security matter. Kotkin and Siegel say the technology isn’t ready for the array of “green collar” jobs agreed by Democrats, which fair isn’t true: the majority of those jobs, at the outset,
Glass blank cube, will come in the space of conservation–retrofitting insulation etc etc…And the diplomatic and national security policy issues that have often separated the Party from the working class in the past are rapidly fading into the mist,
Glass blank block, as Iraq–by far–calms.
For one thing,
plastic conveyor belts, always of the Democrats are far extra populist than they’ve been in the past. They’ve cornered opposition free commerce (a bad push, I calculate) and turned toward bolstering the social safety net (a agreeable move). Kotkin and Siegel note that 77% of hedge fund managers like the Democratic Party, but 100% of the guiding Democratic candidates this annual prefer tariffing the profits of hedge fund directors as normal earnings (not by the 15% capital acquisitions rate). The authors make not mention of universal health assurance, which is scarcely a gentry issue–but is the number one priority for each of the candidates escaping.
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