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It def worked, trump lost because he lost the suburbs, and college educated voters.
his gains with black and brown voters kept him in striking distance.
he lost in the end.
but to pretend like it didn't work is crazy talk.
he increased his share of the black vote, that is the very definition of working.
imo you better hope Tim Scott never wins the nomination.
The idea that you'd win any demographic group 92-8 for the rest of time is also makes zero sense.
The republicans have def not hit their ceiling yet with black voters.
Put him signing the letter aside, what came afterward is where the real ****** behavior starts imo.I mean as a general principle, if you feel that your arguments or even your character is being consistently misrepresented by your colleagues, it maybe is better to move on.
That doesn't seems to be the case with Matt Yglesias though. It seems like he signed onto a letter with a transphobic subtext, he got called on it but one of his colleagues really hurt him by saying that they felt unsafe and it probably festered. Yglesias certainly considers himself an ally of the trans community and its an awkward position to be in when you feel that you’ve been treated unfairly and that person treating you unfairly is using your allyship with their community to get away with it. It’s a tough call since the left needs webs of allyship/solidarity to succeed.
I suppose that could be fragility but whatever it is, it seems different than Weis and Sullivan’s departures. Those two consistently called for genocide, their colleagues engaged with their arguments, as they were constructed, and those two moved on so they could advocate for genocide in a more supportive environment.
The republicans have def not hit their ceiling yet with black voters.
Put him signing the letter aside, what came afterward is where the real ****ty behavior starts imo.
That is not what his coworker did though. She didn't report him to HR, she didn't throw him under the bus, she actually said Matt has been nothing but kind to her, she didn't there to be any official pushback from Vox management toward him. She was apparently one of many people at Vox used a letter to the editor program to make their disagreement with Matt more official.
So I don't how she came close to doing what you characterized. Like she called him an ally, called him kind, what to make sure no disciplinary action was taken against him. In return Matt cherry picks parts of the story to craft a narrative, this results in Emily getting attack and threaten online, to the point Yglesias had to demand people stop it.
Now he quits, runs to conservatives writers to be a posterboy of free speech being stifled, and then cites that one instance again, misrepresenting what Emily did. Which results in another wave of disgusting **** being thrown at her.
If anything, Yglesias is an example of a practice many white affluent liberals like to do. Use their claim allyship as a shield to do ****ty things against marginalized groups. Then when the pushback comes, they pearl clutch. Yglesias doesn't seem like he is pissed his allyship for used against him, he is pissed that his feelings were not central to the discourse around the situation. Even worse, he keeps hinting there is more to the story, yet the only thing he is talking freely about is this one instance. How he was wronged by a transgender coworker who....checks notes...disagreed with him disagreeing with others.
Seems to me that Yglesias is a privilege white dude that loves to kick the hornet's nest whenever he a) thinks it is necessary b) for his own assumment, but this time the right person pushed back, and he ended up with egg on his face. And the thing is that his handling of the situation is not an outlier when it comes to left wing spaces. Sure he is a much better actor/human being/writer than Sullivan and Weis. Weis and Sullivan are entitled bigots. But I think it is a fair comparison to make considering how he is behaving just like them after he quit. Telling a convenient story that paints him as the the only one that was wronged.
Dude is a critic that couldn't handle criticism. A person that couldn't handle the same energy he puts out in the world being return to him in the smallest way.
I think there is a difference between saying members of marginalized groups on the left should have some patience with other members because solidarity is necessary, people are not perfect, and disagreements should be able to exist within the coalition without breaking it. I am all for stop the purity testing. But I am not sympathetic to someone that confuses that sentiment (intentionally or unintentionally) with being allowed to say whatever you want, even if you are an *******, with no pushback.
I think calling him fragile is me letting him off easy.
The Republicans hit their ceiling in 2004.
Additionally, they have zero interest in even addressing or acknowledging the systemic racism and inequities that their policies make worse.
LOL. Bless your heart.
So he is not talking to Conor Friedersdorf (a known complainer of so called liberal cancel culture) and Andrew Sullivan (the ultimate complainer of liberal cancel culture), giving a one sided take on a situation as a prime example of why he felt he should leave Vox. He didn't do that?seems to me you're doing a lot of mind reading when the dudes stated rationale makes total sense.
he wants to write more provocative takes but was told that with him as a Vox founder he has to be more diplomatic in public,
combine that with the fact that younger people at Vox have further left than him and he's no longer in a management position it was worth to go for more independence and take a shot trying the sub stack game.
all this stuff about using ally ship as a shield, and fragility just seems like mind reading. he didn't say he was wronged by anyone, or that he should be a poster child for free speech or anything like that.
i dunno seems to me like you're drawing a lot of extreme inferences when the reality, it's just a dude switching jobs.
That's the simple solution to the issue?it's very strange to me
the implication is that you think that 90% of black people are always going to vote democrat for the rest of time?
I dunno, I don't think democrats should be so complacent,
imo democrats should work harder to deliver material gains for black and brown communities.
because it seems pretty clear that democrats need to hold that 90-10 margin for their coalition to be viable
and it's totally possible for republicans to make a dent in that.
So he is not talking to Conor Friedersdorf (a known complainer of so called liberal cancel culture) and Andrew Sullivan (the ultimate complainer of liberal cancel cluture), giving a one sided take on a situation as a prime example of why he felt he should leave Vox. He didn't do that?
That's the simple solution to the issue?
Damn, never thought about it that way.
They should just ask Mitch to take a vote on the dozens of bills that would improve the material conditions of black communities
Or they could push for policies when they don't have the White House, even though the GOP might take credit for it, and use those things as talking points. Like criminal justice reform, expansionary monetary policy, and stimulus checks.
I wonder why they never try that stuff.
Did I say that?you make it sound like because he talked to x person it makes his point more extreme than it actually was. it's not like by talking to Friedsersdorf or Sullivan he automatically agrees with all their takes on cancel culture.
again the claim does not sound that extreme or crazy.
the claim just doesn't sound that crazy. it's obvious that younger progressives have different views on speech and harm caused by speech and he disagrees with them he said as much.
“Something we’ve seen in a lot of organizations is increasing sensitivity about language and what people say,” he told me. “It’s a damaging trend in the media in particular because it is an industry that’s about ideas, and if you treat disagreement as a source of harm or personal safety, then it’s very challenging to do good work.”
it's natural as you get older, the younger people are more progressive than you are. and that culture clash can make it harder to do your job.
it just seems to that Ygleiasis is just popular enough that he start his own thing and not have to deal with it.
im not even making value judgment claims about who is right about this cancel culture stuff. it seems to me that minds can differ on the subject and it's not that big of a deal.
Huh?yah you know im aware all that
im saying when they have the power to do stuff they should work harder to deliver for black and brown and not take the vote for granted.
when people act like 90-10 republicans is a hard ceiling as some have said in this thread, it strikes me like that's a recipe to take black voters for granted.
Did I say that?
Is not that they signed the letter, or he left, or he even talked to those people, is that he is using a ****ty one sided take on a situation as an example too. If dude's beef was that his editors didn't give him freedom to do good work. Then why the hell is he bringing up a situation where someone went out there way to be critical of him but make sure there was no profession blowback.
If dude's beef was that his editors didn't give him freedom to do good work. Then why the hell is he bringing up a situation where someone went out there way to be critical of him but make sure there was no profession blowback.
If minds could differ and it not be that big a deal. Then why the **** does he even have an issue with his coworkers criticism then.
Huh?
So your point is that the Dems should do what they were planning to do if they got the trifecta?
Cause unless you can name the leaders of the Democratic Party than advocate for doing nothing for black voters, cause 90% will always vote Dem, seems like you care take a sentiment that might exist among a few individuals, and applying it to every Dem.