(I know this is from a bit back and Trekkin was talking more about perception than truth, but I couldn't sleep anyway so here's a rant directed at no posters, just the manipulative 1%)
Seriously? The people who are building concentration camps? The people who oppose single-payer healthcare? The people who are running headlong into war with Iran? The people who deny that global warming is even happening?
You're going to side with them because you think politics is solely binary and that an impoverished police state is somehow similar to the governments of the wealthiest, freest states in the union?
Well, he seems serious to me -- and for what it's worth, I can understand why. The alternative is presently calling his religion a front for a cabal of pedophiles, his culture inherently evil and oppressive except where it's marketably quaint, and his politics so self-destructive they could only come about by evil people duping stupid people en masse. Do you see how that might not appeal?
By "alternative" you mean Conservative Evangelicals, right? Catholic-hating xenophobes, if not outright white-supremacists, who insist on destabilizing South-American regimes for profit?
The Pope isn't particularly popular among the Left as long as he keeps condemning homosexuality, not to mention any non-standard gender expression, but Catholics are fine. Not the high-ranking ones involved in the pedophilia coverup, but everyday Catholics. Our Left embraces other cultures, particularly ones which our Right-wing
hates.
And policy-wise our left-leaning congresscritters are vastly behind Europe, much less any sort of *actual* socialism, so I don't see the threat. Particularly when the alternative is literally the corporate imperialists who exploited SA economies to death.
That's how they operate, though. Exploit people to get rich, then get those *same people* to vote for them out of desperation. They promise everyone that vanishingly small chance of joining the upper class, while making it harder than ever to even remain middle class. Which just makes people more desperate.
I mean, they've got an entire grassroots demographic demanding the right to die in coal mines.
Furthermore, if someone is used to government not working, the people whose central idea is that government can fix everything for everyone can easily come off as naive. Arguing on moral grounds doesn't help dispel the impression that progressives aren't practical, either.
To the degree that that's fixable, it is, I think, down to the radical progressives to frame their proposals in ways that localize the effects until they can be considered in kitchen-table terms. For example, "single-payer healthcare" is a great slogan, but nobody has agreed on what it means at the budgetary level. Nor is it enough to just lean on class warfare and say all the money is coming out of billionaires' hides.
They're taking it out of our hides. If this program, a basic human right almost everywhere else in the world, requires taking some portion of their ill-gotten wealth back- I'm fine with that.
Single-payer healthcare is a very simple idea that's not hard to explain, because it's the worldwide default. Canada's the most common example due to proximity, which works. Having to buy your own insurance is vastly more complicated, which is why that's why the Republicans pushed it. Initially Romney's plan, later the "Obamacare" we got. The manipulative bastards got to fight their *own healthcare plan* while painting Obama and Democrats as crazy socialists for it. The Insurance companies won, the half-measure is struggling hard, and Republicans get to wield it as a *win*.
It's kind of like how there's a lot more of a pipeline for young Republicans to get involved in politics in college and so forth because they actually get paid. If you're asking people to choose between "you get to save the world eventually" and "you get to eat lunch today", expect hungry people to disagree with you.
I know there's that canned compass-vs-navigation metaphor that gets parroted to excuse progressives from having to plan anything, but ultimately, budgets are persuasive. It'd be nice if the far left had some.
Republicans don't give people lunch, though. They exploit their lower-class base while scapegoating academics, foreigners, and anybody else who's "different" enough to be a bogeyman. The Democrats have real plans to give everyone lunch (UBI, single-payer health care, clean air and water) but Republicans just abuse legislative procedure when anything comes *close* to getting through. Like shutting down government services, holding the American people hostage, to fund an ineffectual megaproject against an imaginary threat. That's not even bread and circuses - well, not bread anyway