It means this period, mainiac, not this specific year. Flying Dice can correct me if I'm wrong, but I'm pretty sure that's what they meant.
Define period then. Because if you are talking ugly periods my mind goes to the Vietnam war. Race riots, convention riots, political assasination of MLK and RFK... actually wait that's just all in one year.
This political period of partisanship? Probably starting small with Reagan's scandals and hitting it's stride right around Bill's scandals/2000 elections. Getting worse every election season, just about.
I'm not saying it was never this bad before. I'm saying it hasn't been this bad in a very long time. You think it was like this in the 50s, 60s, 70s, with people hoping to vote in the candidate they dislike to burn the whole thing to the ground? As a widespread sentiment, not just an incident here or there? With a candidate inciting violence during rallies? Congress is more split than ever before, objectively speaking. Least productive in terms of legislation ever, the last two congresses, iirc.
That's exactly it. This state of affairs has been a few decades in the making. If you think that political climates change annually like the leaves, with no connection to the past or future, you're delusional.
I mean, arguably it's cyclical. Things were pretty thoroughly divided back during the first few decades after the Revolution, but I was specifically referencing the
last time things were this bad. Yes, "time", as in "period". Not "time" as in "literally just things as they are right now as I type this".
Well, we literally had leftist militant groups running around the country, conducting bombings, and shooting people with cyanide bullets back during the Vietnam war, so yeah, I'd totally say that it's been like this before.
We're not talking about social unrest, though, we're talking about party polarization and the strength of party alignment in Congressional voting. The '70s was the tail end of a period of relatively conglomerated political alignments as far as the government was concerned.