Goddamn this fucking thread. Finally got caught up. Fuck these last couple weeks. I'm tired. But I can't resist throwing mine in on what the last 20 pages of discussion has mostly been about that I haven't had the time to participate in properly.
Frumple, I'll join you on FTFE. The media is fucking horrible. The profitable incentive to sensationalize is at the root of many of our problems, and I agree it was a huge factor in this election.
But I don't see it as the deciding one. What I see as the real deciding factor is the way the Democratic Party apparatus functioned and selected Hillary as a candidate at the worst possible time for it. You can argue that there was no rigging of the primary process. That she was a strong candidate. That she's not corrupt and is actually everything everyone wanted and we just don't realize it. This could all be true, but it's not even worth arguing as relates to the results of this election.
Because at the end of the day the fact remains that she is an icon of dynastic establishment politics refined to 100% purity, and this was an election where dissatisfaction with that side of politics is at an all-time high. Nearly half the left's voting base very strongly expressed this sentiment in the primary, and the other half's response to them was "Grow up and get real, or get Trump." You can even argue that the DNC themselves didn't behave this way, but faithful Democrat voters absolutely did. The attitude that those who were apprehensive on the left got from them was atrociously alienating. I saw it everywhere. I pointed it out in these exact words probably a dozen times on this very thread in the months leading up to the election, and it never got through to people who I know are very intelligent. A couple times it was when I was actively pursuing information to be better informed, because I'm self-aware enough to know that I have problem-levels of cynicism, try to challenge myself on it, but don't have proper time in my life right now to do my own digging. But just posing a neutral question was enough to get a grumpy "OMFG Bernie Bros" type response. Yeah, on this thread, I'm mainly talking about mainiac, but that type of attitude is something I saw frequently all over the place over the past year. He was/is not an isolated case.
I don't think this was about not appealing to the center, working class, rust belt, etc. It think it's about actively chasing away alliances that should have naturally been there, by failing to acknowledge the current political climate among the (potential) voting population and rejecting their sense of marginalization as petty and childish in the face of a literal Hitler that must be stopped, which is the same ultimatum we've been fed every election my whole life.
Turnouts don't indicate to me that a hidden pool of working class voters turned out in droves to vote for Trump. He didn't ride some massive wave of enthusiastic resonance with the rust belt. The GOP turnout didn't drastically change. The Democrat turnout did. It dropped by millions.
I'm among those who are shocked that she lost, because I thought all early indicators were that people were motivated to stop Trump at any cost. But for all that I'm shocked about that, I see the reason it happened as a no-brainer. The left has a problem with thinking they can use shame, fear, and condescension to get their way, and it's failed them.
And for fucks sake... it makes me physically ill when people point out that the party structures are not themselves government organizations, and thus have no obligation to behave democratically in how they choose their candidates. Because all that's pointing out to me is that our government is overwhelmingly controlled by two private organizations, and this makes it very, very hard NOT to cling to the cynical notion that the average person only has their fair share of input when those private organizations want them to.
But FTFE, because it's their fault that there's so much doubt in politics, which is where in-fighting begins. If they didn't sensationalize the fuck out of everything they could and ignore everything they couldn't, then there wouldn't be this space for ideological allies to fight and alienate each other over whether a candidate deserves to be trusted or not. It's still the people's fault that they get as shitty with each other as they do, instead of keeping it present in their minds that the goal is to work together.