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Nov 18, 2016 18:58:35   #
AuntiE Loc: 45th Least Free State
 
http://www.nationalreview.com/article/442299/barack-obama-progressive-arrogance-leads-backlash?utm_source=Sailthru&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Daily%20Trending%20Email%20Reoccurring-%20Monday%20to%20Thursday%202016-11-18&utm_term=NR5PM%20Actives

Its Arrogance and Condescension Finally Catches Up with the Left
November 18, 2016 12:00 AM

President Barack Obama won’t explicitly say that Donald Trump is on the wrong side of history, but surely he believes it.

The president basically thinks anyone who gets in his way is transgressing the larger forces of history with a capital “H.” In 2008, he declared John McCain “on the wrong side of history right now” (the “right now” was a generous touch — allowing for the possibility that McCain might get right with History at some future date).

Obama has returned to this phrase and argument obsessively. It is deeply embedded in his, and the larger progressive, mind — and indirectly contributed to the Left’s catastrophic defeat on November 8.

The notion that History takes sides is a distant cousin to the Marxoid idea that we are on an inevitable path to socialism, and borrows heavily from the (genuine and very hard-won) moral capital of the abolitionists and civil-rights movement. Obama likes to quote Martin Luther King Jr. for the proposition that the arc of the moral universe bends toward justice. Whoever is considered on “the wrong side of history” by the Left is always loosely associated with the opprobrium of slavery and Jim Crow.

This means that progressives wield History as a weapon, and make it an occasion for constant self-congratulation. But there is a downside in the accompanying sense of smug inevitability that is off-putting at best and blinkered and self-deluding at worst.

For the Left, History is not a vast, unpredictable, untamable force, but has all the characteristics of a stereotypical Whole Foods shopper. History reads the Huffington Post, and follows Lena Dunham on Twitter. It really cares whether transgender people get to use the appropriate bathroom. History was probably hanging out at the Javits Center on election night, and collapsed into a puddle of tears right around the time Wisconsin was called.

The political dangers of this point of view should now be obvious:

It assumes that certain classes of people are retrograde. Why would Democrats bother to try to appeal to working-class white voters if they are stamped with the disapproval of History?

It becomes a warrant for all manner of overreach. History evidently favored trying to get nuns to sign up for contraceptives they didn’t want and forcing small business to bake cakes for gay weddings.

And, if History is thought to have an ascendant electoral coalition (and a hell of a data operation), it creates an unjustified sense of political inevitability. This is what the theorists of the “emerging Democratic majority,” and most pundits on the left, bought into.

All that said, the evidence was pretty good for the proposition that welfare-state programs, once ensconced, could never be reversed and therefore must enjoy the approval of History. This assumption pervaded the Obamacare debate. Senator Harry Reid lambasted Republicans for not “joining us on the right side of history” and compared them — of course — to defenders of slavery.

In retrospect, History might not have been so enamored of sprawling legislation based on faulty economic premises. When Republicans pass a repeal bill, it will constitute the most significant rollback of the welfare state ever.

Another progressive assumption is that the nation-state is bound to decline, as supranational institutions like the European Union grow and cross-border migrations increase. In a trip to Germany in April, President Obama deemed Angela Merkel’s policy of welcoming a massive wave of migrants as “on the right side of history.” Never mind that its recklessness has caused a backlash that is still brewing. Obama believed the same of his own latitudinarian views on immigration, apparently never imagining people might consider it progress to tighten our borders rather than render them more porous.

Now, a president who so confidently associated himself and his cause with the tide of the future has presided over a political wipeout that will send much of his legacy into the dustbin. If nothing else, History has a keen sense of humor.

— Rich Lowry is the editor of National Review. He can be reached via e-mail: comments.lowry@nationalreview.com. © 2016 King Features Syndicate



Sent from my iPad

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Nov 18, 2016 19:31:14   #
reconreb Loc: America / Inglis Fla.
 
AuntiE wrote:
http://www.nationalreview.com/article/442299/barack-obama-progressive-arrogance-leads-backlash?utm_source=Sailthru&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Daily%20Trending%20Email%20Reoccurring-%20Monday%20to%20Thursday%202016-11-18&utm_term=NR5PM%20Actives

Its Arrogance and Condescension Finally Catches Up with the Left
November 18, 2016 12:00 AM

President Barack Obama won’t explicitly say that Donald Trump is on the wrong side of history, but surely he believes it.

The president basically thinks anyone who gets in his way is transgressing the larger forces of history with a capital “H.” In 2008, he declared John McCain “on the wrong side of history right now” (the “right now” was a generous touch — allowing for the possibility that McCain might get right with History at some future date).

Obama has returned to this phrase and argument obsessively. It is deeply embedded in his, and the larger progressive, mind — and indirectly contributed to the Left’s catastrophic defeat on November 8.

The notion that History takes sides is a distant cousin to the Marxoid idea that we are on an inevitable path to socialism, and borrows heavily from the (genuine and very hard-won) moral capital of the abolitionists and civil-rights movement. Obama likes to quote Martin Luther King Jr. for the proposition that the arc of the moral universe bends toward justice. Whoever is considered on “the wrong side of history” by the Left is always loosely associated with the opprobrium of slavery and Jim Crow.

This means that progressives wield History as a weapon, and make it an occasion for constant self-congratulation. But there is a downside in the accompanying sense of smug inevitability that is off-putting at best and blinkered and self-deluding at worst.

For the Left, History is not a vast, unpredictable, untamable force, but has all the characteristics of a stereotypical Whole Foods shopper. History reads the Huffington Post, and follows Lena Dunham on Twitter. It really cares whether transgender people get to use the appropriate bathroom. History was probably hanging out at the Javits Center on election night, and collapsed into a puddle of tears right around the time Wisconsin was called.

The political dangers of this point of view should now be obvious:

It assumes that certain classes of people are retrograde. Why would Democrats bother to try to appeal to working-class white voters if they are stamped with the disapproval of History?

It becomes a warrant for all manner of overreach. History evidently favored trying to get nuns to sign up for contraceptives they didn’t want and forcing small business to bake cakes for gay weddings.

And, if History is thought to have an ascendant electoral coalition (and a hell of a data operation), it creates an unjustified sense of political inevitability. This is what the theorists of the “emerging Democratic majority,” and most pundits on the left, bought into.

All that said, the evidence was pretty good for the proposition that welfare-state programs, once ensconced, could never be reversed and therefore must enjoy the approval of History. This assumption pervaded the Obamacare debate. Senator Harry Reid lambasted Republicans for not “joining us on the right side of history” and compared them — of course — to defenders of slavery.

In retrospect, History might not have been so enamored of sprawling legislation based on faulty economic premises. When Republicans pass a repeal bill, it will constitute the most significant rollback of the welfare state ever.

Another progressive assumption is that the nation-state is bound to decline, as supranational institutions like the European Union grow and cross-border migrations increase. In a trip to Germany in April, President Obama deemed Angela Merkel’s policy of welcoming a massive wave of migrants as “on the right side of history.” Never mind that its recklessness has caused a backlash that is still brewing. Obama believed the same of his own latitudinarian views on immigration, apparently never imagining people might consider it progress to tighten our borders rather than render them more porous.

Now, a president who so confidently associated himself and his cause with the tide of the future has presided over a political wipeout that will send much of his legacy into the dustbin. If nothing else, History has a keen sense of humor.

— Rich Lowry is the editor of National Review. He can be reached via e-mail: comments.lowry@nationalreview.com. © 2016 King Features Syndicate



Sent from my iPad
http://www.nationalreview.com/article/442299/barac... (show quote)


Hypocrisy has a way of consuming itself obama's legacy is proving that fact ..Thanks ..

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Nov 18, 2016 19:42:28   #
AuntiE Loc: 45th Least Free State
 
reconreb wrote:
Hypocrisy has a way of consuming itself obama's legacy is proving that fact ..Thanks ..


Someone sent this to me today.



Reply
Check out topic: Friday Funnies
Nov 18, 2016 19:56:41   #
BigMike Loc: yerington nv
 
AuntiE wrote:
http://www.nationalreview.com/article/442299/barack-obama-progressive-arrogance-leads-backlash?utm_source=Sailthru&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Daily%20Trending%20Email%20Reoccurring-%20Monday%20to%20Thursday%202016-11-18&utm_term=NR5PM%20Actives

Its Arrogance and Condescension Finally Catches Up with the Left
November 18, 2016 12:00 AM

President Barack Obama won’t explicitly say that Donald Trump is on the wrong side of history, but surely he believes it.

The president basically thinks anyone who gets in his way is transgressing the larger forces of history with a capital “H.” In 2008, he declared John McCain “on the wrong side of history right now” (the “right now” was a generous touch — allowing for the possibility that McCain might get right with History at some future date).

Obama has returned to this phrase and argument obsessively. It is deeply embedded in his, and the larger progressive, mind — and indirectly contributed to the Left’s catastrophic defeat on November 8.

The notion that History takes sides is a distant cousin to the Marxoid idea that we are on an inevitable path to socialism, and borrows heavily from the (genuine and very hard-won) moral capital of the abolitionists and civil-rights movement. Obama likes to quote Martin Luther King Jr. for the proposition that the arc of the moral universe bends toward justice. Whoever is considered on “the wrong side of history” by the Left is always loosely associated with the opprobrium of slavery and Jim Crow.

This means that progressives wield History as a weapon, and make it an occasion for constant self-congratulation. But there is a downside in the accompanying sense of smug inevitability that is off-putting at best and blinkered and self-deluding at worst.

For the Left, History is not a vast, unpredictable, untamable force, but has all the characteristics of a stereotypical Whole Foods shopper. History reads the Huffington Post, and follows Lena Dunham on Twitter. It really cares whether transgender people get to use the appropriate bathroom. History was probably hanging out at the Javits Center on election night, and collapsed into a puddle of tears right around the time Wisconsin was called.

The political dangers of this point of view should now be obvious:

It assumes that certain classes of people are retrograde. Why would Democrats bother to try to appeal to working-class white voters if they are stamped with the disapproval of History?

It becomes a warrant for all manner of overreach. History evidently favored trying to get nuns to sign up for contraceptives they didn’t want and forcing small business to bake cakes for gay weddings.

And, if History is thought to have an ascendant electoral coalition (and a hell of a data operation), it creates an unjustified sense of political inevitability. This is what the theorists of the “emerging Democratic majority,” and most pundits on the left, bought into.

All that said, the evidence was pretty good for the proposition that welfare-state programs, once ensconced, could never be reversed and therefore must enjoy the approval of History. This assumption pervaded the Obamacare debate. Senator Harry Reid lambasted Republicans for not “joining us on the right side of history” and compared them — of course — to defenders of slavery.

In retrospect, History might not have been so enamored of sprawling legislation based on faulty economic premises. When Republicans pass a repeal bill, it will constitute the most significant rollback of the welfare state ever.

Another progressive assumption is that the nation-state is bound to decline, as supranational institutions like the European Union grow and cross-border migrations increase. In a trip to Germany in April, President Obama deemed Angela Merkel’s policy of welcoming a massive wave of migrants as “on the right side of history.” Never mind that its recklessness has caused a backlash that is still brewing. Obama believed the same of his own latitudinarian views on immigration, apparently never imagining people might consider it progress to tighten our borders rather than render them more porous.

Now, a president who so confidently associated himself and his cause with the tide of the future has presided over a political wipeout that will send much of his legacy into the dustbin. If nothing else, History has a keen sense of humor.

— Rich Lowry is the editor of National Review. He can be reached via e-mail: comments.lowry@nationalreview.com. © 2016 King Features Syndicate



Sent from my iPad
http://www.nationalreview.com/article/442299/barac... (show quote)


Tried to point BREXIT out to them, but not only are they arrogant and condescending, they suffer from a peculiar form of cognitive dissonance that prevented them from believing it could happen here.

Reply
Nov 18, 2016 20:04:32   #
AuntiE Loc: 45th Least Free State
 
BigMike wrote:
Tried to point BREXIT out to them, but not only are they arrogant and condescending, they suffer from a peculiar form of cognitive dissonance that prevented them from believing it could happen here.


I read an interview with David Brooks, NYT, who said the "enlightened, us, need to not be condescending. We need to go out and educate the unenlightened." Oh, Mr. Brooks, please bring on your enlightenment ...you arrogant presumptuous piece of defecation. My other response is, and please, please, please excuse the extreme language (which I normally avoid like the bubonic plague). I will likely never live this down.



Reply
Nov 18, 2016 20:11:31   #
reconreb Loc: America / Inglis Fla.
 
AuntiE wrote:
I read an interview with David Brooks, NYT, who said the "enlightened, us, need to not be condescending. We need to go out and educate the unenlightened." Oh, Mr. Brooks, please bring on your enlightenment ...you arrogant presumptuous piece of defecation. My other response is, and please, please, please excuse the extreme language (which I normally avoid like the bubonic plague). I will likely never live this down.


Ahh,, you remind me of the wisdom that made America great ,, Thank you !

Reply
Nov 18, 2016 20:19:41   #
moldyoldy
 
BigMike wrote:
Tried to point BREXIT out to them, but not only are they arrogant and condescending, they suffer from a peculiar form of cognitive dissonance that prevented them from believing it could happen here.


Britain regretted not coming out to vote too. They quickly realized their mistake.

Reply
Nov 18, 2016 20:33:01   #
BigMike Loc: yerington nv
 
AuntiE wrote:
I read an interview with David Brooks, NYT, who said the "enlightened, us, need to not be condescending. We need to go out and educate the unenlightened." Oh, Mr. Brooks, please bring on your enlightenment ...you arrogant presumptuous piece of defecation. My other response is, and please, please, please excuse the extreme language (which I normally avoid like the bubonic plague). I will likely never live this down.


Live what down?

Reply
Nov 18, 2016 20:37:49   #
BigMike Loc: yerington nv
 
moldyoldy wrote:
Britain regretted not coming out to vote too. They quickly realized their mistake.


Um...Britain did come out and vote. Britain voted to leave the EU. The lazy losers...the globalists, did not. The mistake was joining the EU to begin with. We told you guys repeatedly to not count your chickens too quickly.

Reply
Nov 18, 2016 21:04:11   #
kenjay Loc: Arkansas
 
moldyoldy wrote:
Britain regretted not coming out to vote too. They quickly realized their mistake.

No they did not and they will be better off without the EU.

Reply
Nov 18, 2016 21:30:53   #
moldyoldy
 
kenjay wrote:
No they did not and they will be better off without the EU.


You are wrong as usual.

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/brexit-anger-bregret-leave-voters-protest-vote-thought-uk-stay-in-eu-remain-win-a7102516.html

http://www.cnn.com/2016/06/25/politics/uk-referendum-regrexit/index.html

http://www.vox.com/2016/6/24/12024634/brexit-supporters-regret-vote

Reply
Check out topic: Saudi TV Mocks Biden (video)
Nov 18, 2016 21:38:52   #
AuntiE Loc: 45th Least Free State
 


Apparently, unsurprisingly, you have yet to learn the sites you choose for information have an agenda. My English friends, small in number they may be, all voted for leave, as did their communities.

Reply
Nov 18, 2016 23:21:03   #
kenjay Loc: Arkansas
 

No as usual you are wrong definitely better out of the EU spook.

Reply
Nov 18, 2016 23:28:15   #
archie bunker Loc: Texas
 
AuntiE wrote:
http://www.nationalreview.com/article/442299/barack-obama-progressive-arrogance-leads-backlash?utm_source=Sailthru&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Daily%20Trending%20Email%20Reoccurring-%20Monday%20to%20Thursday%202016-11-18&utm_term=NR5PM%20Actives

Its Arrogance and Condescension Finally Catches Up with the Left
November 18, 2016 12:00 AM

President Barack Obama won’t explicitly say that Donald Trump is on the wrong side of history, but surely he believes it.

The president basically thinks anyone who gets in his way is transgressing the larger forces of history with a capital “H.” In 2008, he declared John McCain “on the wrong side of history right now” (the “right now” was a generous touch — allowing for the possibility that McCain might get right with History at some future date).

Obama has returned to this phrase and argument obsessively. It is deeply embedded in his, and the larger progressive, mind — and indirectly contributed to the Left’s catastrophic defeat on November 8.

The notion that History takes sides is a distant cousin to the Marxoid idea that we are on an inevitable path to socialism, and borrows heavily from the (genuine and very hard-won) moral capital of the abolitionists and civil-rights movement. Obama likes to quote Martin Luther King Jr. for the proposition that the arc of the moral universe bends toward justice. Whoever is considered on “the wrong side of history” by the Left is always loosely associated with the opprobrium of slavery and Jim Crow.

This means that progressives wield History as a weapon, and make it an occasion for constant self-congratulation. But there is a downside in the accompanying sense of smug inevitability that is off-putting at best and blinkered and self-deluding at worst.

For the Left, History is not a vast, unpredictable, untamable force, but has all the characteristics of a stereotypical Whole Foods shopper. History reads the Huffington Post, and follows Lena Dunham on Twitter. It really cares whether transgender people get to use the appropriate bathroom. History was probably hanging out at the Javits Center on election night, and collapsed into a puddle of tears right around the time Wisconsin was called.

The political dangers of this point of view should now be obvious:

It assumes that certain classes of people are retrograde. Why would Democrats bother to try to appeal to working-class white voters if they are stamped with the disapproval of History?

It becomes a warrant for all manner of overreach. History evidently favored trying to get nuns to sign up for contraceptives they didn’t want and forcing small business to bake cakes for gay weddings.

And, if History is thought to have an ascendant electoral coalition (and a hell of a data operation), it creates an unjustified sense of political inevitability. This is what the theorists of the “emerging Democratic majority,” and most pundits on the left, bought into.

All that said, the evidence was pretty good for the proposition that welfare-state programs, once ensconced, could never be reversed and therefore must enjoy the approval of History. This assumption pervaded the Obamacare debate. Senator Harry Reid lambasted Republicans for not “joining us on the right side of history” and compared them — of course — to defenders of slavery.

In retrospect, History might not have been so enamored of sprawling legislation based on faulty economic premises. When Republicans pass a repeal bill, it will constitute the most significant rollback of the welfare state ever.

Another progressive assumption is that the nation-state is bound to decline, as supranational institutions like the European Union grow and cross-border migrations increase. In a trip to Germany in April, President Obama deemed Angela Merkel’s policy of welcoming a massive wave of migrants as “on the right side of history.” Never mind that its recklessness has caused a backlash that is still brewing. Obama believed the same of his own latitudinarian views on immigration, apparently never imagining people might consider it progress to tighten our borders rather than render them more porous.

Now, a president who so confidently associated himself and his cause with the tide of the future has presided over a political wipeout that will send much of his legacy into the dustbin. If nothing else, History has a keen sense of humor.

— Rich Lowry is the editor of National Review. He can be reached via e-mail: comments.lowry@nationalreview.com. © 2016 King Features Syndicate



Sent from my iPad
http://www.nationalreview.com/article/442299/barac... (show quote)


I use products easily purchased at Wal-Greens to control my condensation. They help control my aroma while showing my condescension of those who are.......ummmm.....stupid?

Before you wear me out; be aware that I'm aware of how these things try to spell for us!

Reply
Nov 19, 2016 11:43:04   #
BigMike Loc: yerington nv
 
archie bunker wrote:
I use products easily purchased at Wal-Greens to control my condensation. They help control my aroma while showing my condescension of those who are.......ummmm.....stupid?

Before you wear me out; be aware that I'm aware of how these things try to spell for us!
I use products easily purchased at Wal-Greens to c... (show quote)


I resisted the impulse. Unusual for me, but I know better than to incur Auntie's wrath!

Reply
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