I don’t understand why they could not concentrate on providing support for issues that relate to rural voters, like farm subsidies, issues related to national defense, issues related to providing affordable health care, issues related to the opioid crisis that affects rural America, etc. They really just need to look at the nation and see what the problems are and make solving them their platform.
They got what has been their platform for the last 50 years. Overturn Roe v Wade, cut taxes, stop any kind of gun control, and ignore the pandemic.
They got Roe v Wade and now they don’t have the anti-abortion single issue voters that they can rile up. They got their tax cuts under Trump and the economic situation for everyone except the wealthy few has drastically declined, and gun deaths are on the rise to the point where gun deaths are the most common cause of death for kids in America.
Initially the pandemic hit cities harder because dense populations spread diseases faster. But then it really hit the biggest republican demographics hard and many of their voters permanently aged out of voting.
Through their policy they have either killed off their own supporters or radicalized people into opposing them. If I were a kid in high school who survived a mass shooting and some tomato faced blowhard with a million listeners was calling me and my family anti-american crisis actors, it would radicalize me. Hell I wasn’t even targeted by the rhetoric and radicalized me further against Republicans.
The actual rural population is less than 20% of the total US population. The GOP cannot possibly win elections by appealing to the needs and concerns of rural america. They are instead following Nixon’s well worn racist strategy of appealing to the white suburban voters, and in particular to economically insecure white suburban voters.
The actual rural population is less than 20% of the total US population. The GOP cannot possibly win elections by appealing to the needs and concerns of rural america.
Especially appealing to rural voters at the cost of urban and suburban voters which is what the perception would be if the 80% of voters concerns are dismissed to address the 20% of rural voters.
Some of the concerns of the rural voters do concern, or should concern, urban voters. Farm subsidies, for instance; they stabilize prices so that you don’t see wild swings in commodities. It also ensures that more farmers are able to stay farmers when prices crash, which in turn means that Americans get to keep eating. Farm subsidies aren’t usually in contention, except when you’ve got someone with a bug up their ass about a ‘strategic cheese stockpile’ or some such.
Farm subsidies aren’t usually in contention, except when you’ve got someone with a bug up their ass about a ‘strategic cheese stockpile’ or some such.
I don’t disagree with your statements. I, as a suburban vote, also don’t want rural voter’s needs dismissed. The challenge to OP’s statements is exclusively focusing on rural voter’s needs to the exclusion of urban and suburban voters.
Because rural voters have spent decades dialed in to talk radio, their pastor, and more recently cable news. They talk each other around in circles, obfuscating the actual issues, and any time a real issue does creep into the discussion, they lay blame at the out group who has historically had no power in their communities.
You can’t appeal to the best interests of rural voters because rural voters themselves have no idea what to care about until the man on TV tells them how to say it to piss off “liberals.”
I don’t understand why they could not concentrate on providing support for issues that relate to rural voters… issues related to providing affordable health care
The last 13 years the Republicans have been railing against the Affordable Healthcare Act (ACA, aka Obamacare). To come out now and say that affordable healthcare is an issue that needs additional resource and effort would destroy their carefully cultivated narrative against the ACA.
They really just need to look at the nation and see what the problems are and make solving them their platform.
The problems the Republicans appear to champion are:
what clothing people wear
how they choose to engage in sex among consenting adults
what bathroom a person chooses to relieve themselves in
what mates they choose to marry
what regulations can be removed to increase corporate profits
whitewashing history which would otherwise reflect the reality of the USA’s checkered past
legal support for entrenched companies in their industry against alternatives
Most of this can be viewed easily through the lens of Wilhoit’s law:
“Conservatism consists of exactly one proposition, to wit: There must be in-groups whom the law protects but does not bind, alongside out-groups whom the law binds but does not protect.”
They can’t do any of that because it runs counter to their actual platform of giving tax breaks to the super rich while fucking over the poor.
So the only way to get the poor to support republicans is to engage in culture war bullshit.
If you look at any of the issues you raised, Republicans have been on the wrong side. They hate affordable healthcare, they want farm subsidies to only apply to the super rich mega farms, they want to punish opioid addicts while letting the Sackler family off scott free, and generally just want policy that will make life harder for everyone but themselves.
But they do want to hurt the people they’ve told their base to hate, even if those same policies hurt that base too.
I don’t understand why they could not concentrate on providing support for issues that relate to rural voters, like farm subsidies, issues related to national defense, issues related to providing affordable health care, issues related to the opioid crisis that affects rural America, etc. They really just need to look at the nation and see what the problems are and make solving them their platform.
They got what has been their platform for the last 50 years. Overturn Roe v Wade, cut taxes, stop any kind of gun control, and ignore the pandemic.
They got Roe v Wade and now they don’t have the anti-abortion single issue voters that they can rile up. They got their tax cuts under Trump and the economic situation for everyone except the wealthy few has drastically declined, and gun deaths are on the rise to the point where gun deaths are the most common cause of death for kids in America.
Initially the pandemic hit cities harder because dense populations spread diseases faster. But then it really hit the biggest republican demographics hard and many of their voters permanently aged out of voting.
Through their policy they have either killed off their own supporters or radicalized people into opposing them. If I were a kid in high school who survived a mass shooting and some tomato faced blowhard with a million listeners was calling me and my family anti-american crisis actors, it would radicalize me. Hell I wasn’t even targeted by the rhetoric and radicalized me further against Republicans.
The actual rural population is less than 20% of the total US population. The GOP cannot possibly win elections by appealing to the needs and concerns of rural america. They are instead following Nixon’s well worn racist strategy of appealing to the white suburban voters, and in particular to economically insecure white suburban voters.
Especially appealing to rural voters at the cost of urban and suburban voters which is what the perception would be if the 80% of voters concerns are dismissed to address the 20% of rural voters.
Some of the concerns of the rural voters do concern, or should concern, urban voters. Farm subsidies, for instance; they stabilize prices so that you don’t see wild swings in commodities. It also ensures that more farmers are able to stay farmers when prices crash, which in turn means that Americans get to keep eating. Farm subsidies aren’t usually in contention, except when you’ve got someone with a bug up their ass about a ‘strategic cheese stockpile’ or some such.
I don’t disagree with your statements. I, as a suburban vote, also don’t want rural voter’s needs dismissed. The challenge to OP’s statements is exclusively focusing on rural voter’s needs to the exclusion of urban and suburban voters.
Because rural voters have spent decades dialed in to talk radio, their pastor, and more recently cable news. They talk each other around in circles, obfuscating the actual issues, and any time a real issue does creep into the discussion, they lay blame at the out group who has historically had no power in their communities.
You can’t appeal to the best interests of rural voters because rural voters themselves have no idea what to care about until the man on TV tells them how to say it to piss off “liberals.”
As a rural pastor I wish they would listen to what I have to say and not what cable tv or radio tells them.
The last 13 years the Republicans have been railing against the Affordable Healthcare Act (ACA, aka Obamacare). To come out now and say that affordable healthcare is an issue that needs additional resource and effort would destroy their carefully cultivated narrative against the ACA.
The problems the Republicans appear to champion are:
Most of this can be viewed easily through the lens of Wilhoit’s law:
“Conservatism consists of exactly one proposition, to wit: There must be in-groups whom the law protects but does not bind, alongside out-groups whom the law binds but does not protect.”
They can’t do any of that because it runs counter to their actual platform of giving tax breaks to the super rich while fucking over the poor.
So the only way to get the poor to support republicans is to engage in culture war bullshit.
If you look at any of the issues you raised, Republicans have been on the wrong side. They hate affordable healthcare, they want farm subsidies to only apply to the super rich mega farms, they want to punish opioid addicts while letting the Sackler family off scott free, and generally just want policy that will make life harder for everyone but themselves.
But they do want to hurt the people they’ve told their base to hate, even if those same policies hurt that base too.