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Elizabeth Sandifer

Elizabeth Sandifer created Eruditorum Press. She’s not really sure why she did that, and she apologizes for the inconvenience. She currently writes Last War in Albion, a history of the magical war between Alan Moore and Grant Morrison. She used to write TARDIS Eruditorum, a history of Britain told through the lens of a ropey sci-fi series. She also wrote Neoreaction a Basilisk, writes comics these days, and has ADHD so will probably just randomly write some other shit sooner or later. Support Elizabeth on Patreon.

58 Comments

  1. Tom B
    November 10, 2016 @ 3:27 pm

    I do have to take issue with one of your earlier statements, “First, then: nobody is to blame for Trump’s election save for the people who voted for him.” The actions of the DNC in working things so that Hillary would get the nomination instead of Bernie Sanders, and Hillary’s actions themselves also shoulder a fair amount of the blame. I’m willing to believe the polls that Sanders would have beaten Trump easily. Given everything that was being revealed about Hillary by the end, I suspect that anybody but Trump would have beaten Hillary also. Both major parties chose the one candidate who would be vulnerable to defeat from the other party’s candidate. We truly ended up with the worst choices of the bunch here. It seems like there was no mandate at all for a candidate; far too many of the votes were merely votes against the other party’s candidate.

    Reply

    • Elizabeth Sandifer
      November 10, 2016 @ 3:35 pm

      I think saying that the polls showing Sanders would have beaten Trump were right is pure wishful thinking in the face of seeing how the polls saying Clinton would did. Looking at the numbers, Trump won with fewer votes than any Republican candidate has gotten since 2000. He won because of low black turnout in Milwaukee, Philadelphia, and Detroit, basically. Notably, Sanders showed very little ability to energize black voters, having basically screwed himself with that demographic when he “all lives mattered” the BLM protesters back in 2015. I see virtually no reason to think he’d have performed significantly differently.

      So yeah. I think this is pretty much the epitome of “crap circular firing squad opinions.”

      Reply

      • col
        November 10, 2016 @ 3:52 pm

        Phil is dead-on right about this, and I’m getting very weary of the “Bernie would have won” narrative. As said, Sanders never convinced black voters he was fully in their corner (otherwise he would’ve won the primaries handily: it would’ve been a repeat of Obama in ’08) and odds are black turnout would’ve been depressed which would’ve offset any gains Sanders made w/midwest whites.

        further, these polls are of a Sanders who didn’t endure a brutal 4-month campaign against a Breitbart-sponsored psychopath. A Sanders who would’ve been defined as a dangerous Communist Jew who wanted to nationalize your job. You think that would’ve played well in the Midwest & south? Seriously?

        Reply

        • Josh04
          November 10, 2016 @ 3:57 pm

          It didn’t stop Obama.

          Reply

          • col
            November 10, 2016 @ 4:05 pm

            who had historically high black turnout which Sanders would not have had. plus BS would’ve had serious anti-Semitic/ red-baiting propaganda thrown against him. i just don’t see how he performs better than HRC given those conditions.

          • Tom B
            November 10, 2016 @ 6:25 pm

            By not having the emails and the look of corruption about him which was turning people away from Clinton toward the end (this would include any of the younger voters who didn’t want the same old, same old from Hillary but wouldn’t vote for Trump). There were enough of those people where it matters, and I don’t see him losing black voters that Clinton already had – she wasn’t exactly bringing the black voters in droves either, having them sitting it out instead. You need to compare where Clinton was with the black votes and whether that would really change with Sanders.

            Mind you, there weren’t any palatable options that were going to win the election. You were dealing with the stench of corruption from Clinton compared to the stench of Trump coming from him. The lack of stench with Sanders would make up for a lot. It would have been a question if the party rallied around him; I think they would have because they would have wanted to maintain power and wouldn’t want to lose it by not backing him.

          • A guy in Vermont
            November 10, 2016 @ 8:50 pm

            They would have used his wife to throw stink on him.
            Do a little Googling and you’ll see what I mean. Whether the “questions” have any merit is wholly beside the question.

          • Asteele
            November 13, 2016 @ 12:22 am

            People who backed the wrong candidate needing Trump to be an unstoppable electoral nugget aught, to assuage their egos for supporting a neo-liberal garbage candidate are the delusional ones. The lions share of the blame on our side belongs to the Democratic Party who can’t seem to figure out we might not want to run super unpopular people in what are essentially popularity contests.

      • Jim
        November 14, 2016 @ 1:23 pm

        I doubt Sanders would have won – but then again, I didn’t think Trump was going to win. I suspect he might have done better than Clinton in any case. But even if Sanders wouldn’t have won, I’m sure there must have been someone the Democrats could have put forward who could have beaten Trump. And I’m pretty sure that if Clinton had led a different life up to this point she could have beaten Trump. And I’m pretty sure Trump might not have won if many of the people on the left could have got over their barely concealed hatred of the (white) working class and had actually tried to present better solutions to economic inequality than Trump’s “let’s get rid of the Mexicans”.

        “Only Trump’s supporters are to blame” is a wonderful way to get out of actually doing anything that might prevent this kind of thing from happening again.

        Reply

    • Josh
      November 10, 2016 @ 3:35 pm

      Bernie doing better than Hillary presupposes that the party rallies around him like it did around her, and wouldn’t have immediately grabbed him in a bear hug and self-destructed a-la UK Labour.

      Reply

    • taiey
      November 11, 2016 @ 4:19 am

      There is no scale of ‘working things’ that could have got Sanders the nomination over Clinton smaller than “only let white people vote”.

      Reply

  2. Kyle Edwards
    November 10, 2016 @ 3:28 pm

    Thank you.

    Reply

  3. jacob chapman
    November 10, 2016 @ 4:19 pm

    “Deaths in the millions are the best case scenario. The worst is billions.”

    But suppose that doesn’t happen. Suppose that he’s such a shit administrator that none of his awful promises never get off the ground and get blocked out of spite by ever politician in the establishment that hates him?

    Reply

    • Kit Power
      November 10, 2016 @ 4:48 pm

      If you’re a prayer, pray for that.

      Reply

    • Jarl
      November 11, 2016 @ 2:40 am

      While he does have both houses and a vacant SCOTUS seat in his pocket, I really do hope “build a wall” becomes his “close gitmo”.

      Reply

      • Kit Power
        November 11, 2016 @ 1:15 pm

        It already has, but that’s a sideshow, i’m afraid.

        Reply

  4. Megara Justice Machine
    November 10, 2016 @ 5:16 pm

    This was one of your best, Phil. Also one of the best OMG WTF?! writing I’ve read on this terrible situation so far.

    Reply

  5. Austin Loomis
    November 10, 2016 @ 6:04 pm

    In my offline table of contents for this website, I have labeled this post not with the single “@” for general “post-TARDIS-Eruditorum content by Philip Sandifer”, but with the “@@+” for “Weird Kitties, Neoreaction a Basilisk, and other content related to the war against angry dogs”.

    At 46, I’m not young. With deathclock.com predicting me to check out at 71, I’m closer to death than birth. And, though I have things I want and plan to do before Jim Morrison’s blue bus calls me to the End, I’ve known for years that I’ve got no place here on Earth.

    Jesus, the image of the invisible God, told his doomsday-cult followers to be in the world, but not of it. That’s what I’m going to have to do, albeit in a different way from the “Christians” of Chambersburg who have embraced the doomsday-cult struggle against Satan’s international bankers, the Communist One-World Conspiracy, and its domestic arm “the Democrat Party” (or some such garbled nonsense) while ignoring all that Marxist talk about feeding the hungry, healing the sick, and otherwise helping the Least Of These.

    Reply

  6. bombasticus
    November 10, 2016 @ 7:20 pm

    Tower rises, you gave the lightning a route. Can’t wait to see where you all go from here.

    Reply

  7. Al Maxwell
    November 10, 2016 @ 8:02 pm

    I wonder what this essay would have looked like if the candidate who actually ran on hatred had won. Dude, Phil, are you serious? Trump supporters are evil, yet you wanted to elect someone who takes bribes from anti-gay, anti-trans, anti-women countries; who PAID people to attack Trump supporters; who called half of Trump’s supporters deplorable. Yet Trump is the bigot. You’re serious?

    Reply

    • Elizabeth Sandifer
      November 10, 2016 @ 8:05 pm

      Fuck off and gargle bleach.

      Reply

    • Austin Loomis
      November 10, 2016 @ 8:36 pm

      Deflect, deflect, deflect.

      who takes bribes from anti-gay, anti-trans, anti-women countries;

      Partial credit, and there were plenty of us on what passes for a left here in America calling her on that exception to her general pro-gay, pro-trans, pro-women policies (because Republicans are so noted for being pro-gay, pro-trans, and pro-women in situations that don’t give them a club to beat “the Democrat Party” about the head and shoulders).

      who PAID people to attack Trump supporters;

      [citation desperately needed]

      who called half of Trump’s supporters deplorable.

      She was wrong about that. In my experience, it’s closer to 73%.

      In conclusion, and with every whit of the respect that you are actually due, go jump in a gorram volcano, ya ruttin’ cave newt.

      Reply

      • Alan
        November 13, 2016 @ 8:43 am

        And let’s be honest — all things considered, “deplorables” was such a kind, dignified word to describe people who were ultimately revealed as “unrepentent Klan and Nazi sympathisers.”

        Reply

    • ViolentBeetle
      November 10, 2016 @ 8:42 pm

      Please, UAE are not anti-trans. I think. Or is it just Iran?

      Also, very tolerant of you, Phil. You don’t really need to embarrass yourself in your own blog, you know.

      Reply

      • Elizabeth Sandifer
        November 10, 2016 @ 8:44 pm

        I am literally not even slightly embarrassed. If anything, I’m rather pleased with the choice of “gargle” as a word.

        Reply

      • Chris
        November 10, 2016 @ 10:43 pm

        Given your ongoing attempts to condescend to the owner of the blog in very dim ways, I’d suggest you could also embarrass yourself elsewhere. /who/ might be better suited.

        Reply

        • Jarl
          November 11, 2016 @ 2:39 am

          Hey, now, /who/ probably had nothing to do with this.

          Reply

  8. ViolentBeetle
    November 10, 2016 @ 8:31 pm

    A failed resistance is absolutely at fault when every choice it makes is disastrous. To lose to Donald Trump at elections is like losing chess game to a pineapple. It have everything to do with your own extremely poor judgement. Why on Earth did Democrats field Hillary Clinton? Why didn’t she back off after Wikileaks incident? Why did mainstream media shill for her so blatantly?

    Reply

    • Elizabeth Sandifer
      November 10, 2016 @ 8:32 pm

      I mean, the pineapple’s got a 100% win rate in this analogy.

      Reply

    • Harmen
      November 10, 2016 @ 8:45 pm

      There does seem to be the question how good the Clinton Campaign really was. I mean, why the hell didn’t Clinton double down on the rust belt states after Sanders beat her in two primaries there.

      For reference: Sanders won the Wisconsin primary in a surprise upset. Clinton never visited the state in the general election, whereas Trump visited several times and polling showed he had a small chance of winning the state. Lo and behold, Trump wins it with the slightest of margins and clinches the nomination.

      What the hell was the campaign thinking?

      Reply

      • ViolentBeetle
        November 10, 2016 @ 8:51 pm

        Watching Clinton campaign and supporters was like watching a man repeatedly shooting himself in the foot. First time it’s a tragic accident. Second time it turns into farce. But at third time it turns into a psychological horror about a man so divorced from reality he doesn’t realize he’s turning his foot into a fine red mist.

        But to the last moment I believed Trump was bad enough to lose to her. Turned out not even Trump is bad enough.

        Reply

    • Alan
      November 13, 2016 @ 8:45 am

      I’d give my right arm to see the parallel dimension in which Bernie Sanders won the nomination only to be sandbagged in the last week by Wikileaks revelations about his plan to nationalize whole sectors of the US economy or how much he really planned to increase taxes.

      Reply

  9. John G. Wood
    November 10, 2016 @ 9:32 pm

    Hm, seems to be a lot of “blaming the resistance” going on in these comments. I’m mostly with Phil on how little good this does us, though with the caveat that I think it is useful – after a cooling off period – to take a look at what went wrong (which does not mean simply engaging in might-have-beens). Not in order to blame the people who failed to stop the avalanche, but in order to come up with strategies to avoid the same thing happening again (shutting the stable door before the next horse bolts, for instance).

    This has been a rough week. Despite living in the UK, people in our house were literally in tears upon hearing the result. Nevertheless, I will repeat my stance that declaring people to be evil is not useful. What Trump has said and done is evil, the act of supporting him is evil; but the people who do these things are not in themselves evil. Granny Weatherwax said something along the lines of all sin stemming from treating people as things, which is pretty good philosophy, and this kind of labelling stops you thinking of your targets as human. But it’s not just a moral concept, it’s also strategic: once you give someone a label like that, you are likely to both over- and under-estimate them. Make no mistake, these are still your enemies. But you are trying to stop what they do, not oppose them as part of some manichean “light versus dark” battle. Your name is probably not Luke Skywalker (or Harry Potter, for that matter).

    Finally, it is noteworthy that young people overwhelmingly opposed both Trump and Brexit. My current thinking – which may change, it is early days – is that if I try to do anything active, it will be to support them, to encourage them, and to try to help them avoid going the way of the Baby Boomers as they age. If that can be achieved, and if the human race survives long enough, then this can be the last generation in which these events will happen.

    Love and respect to you all.

    Reply

  10. Lambda
    November 10, 2016 @ 9:34 pm

    Obviously, some Trump supporters are evil, like that guy earlier, but if it’s anything like Brexit, and it rather feels that way, the majority have probably just been lied to consistently over a long period of time, and don’t have the smarts and/or time and energy necessary to find out. So they might be fixable. Especially when America fails to become “great” again.

    Anyway, maybe I’m missing stuff from not actually being in the country, but it feels to me very hard to work out what Trump actually wants to do with the presidency, now he’s got it. We know all sorts of things that he’s said he’ll do, but he’s not exactly known for being truthful and honest. It might be worth waiting a bit to see what actually happens before planning any strategies to deal with it or counter it.

    (Odd minor bug; I’m getting other people’s name/email/website details pre-filled in the comment form. Providing this comment doesn’t appear to come from peeeeeeet, just overwriting them works.)

    Reply

    • Elizabeth Sandifer
      November 10, 2016 @ 10:29 pm

      Known bug. We thought we’d fixed it. It’s back. Anna doesn’t have much developer time on the immediate horizon alas, but it’s on the to-do list.

      Reply

  11. dm
    November 10, 2016 @ 9:58 pm

    “A purge of Trump voters is both infeasible and pointless, and yet individual targets all fail to actually deprive the fire of its oxygen.”

    This is incredibly frustrating. There was a time when you could point to one or two targets, say Murdoch and Cheney, and say “Killing those two would make the world a materially better place for the overwhelming majority of people currently alive on planet Earth”. Trump is not, despite what just about everyone is saying, a movement. He is a totem for one movement, a puppet for another, and a figurehead for yet another, among them the traditional white supremacist nationalists of the KKK and the new media savvy white supremacists of the Alt Right. That’s not being facetious- I sincerely doubt the KKK and MiYi (I’m loathe to publish his full name anywhere on the internet) could ever get along. But what matters is that he has a massive and disparate following, among them some vastly more competent leaders-in-waiting, so a surgical strike would likely only lead to a wider infection.

    Reply

    • dm
      November 10, 2016 @ 10:01 pm

      Oh dear, I posted under my full name. Not sure whether to squeamishly request removal or to just own it.

      Reply

      • Elizabeth Sandifer
        November 10, 2016 @ 10:29 pm

        How’s that?

        Reply

        • dm
          November 10, 2016 @ 11:45 pm

          Cheers! (this is my usual handle, but that will do nicely)

          Reply

          • dm
            November 10, 2016 @ 11:45 pm

            Argh It’s happened again!

  12. bombasticus
    November 11, 2016 @ 12:08 am

    Autopsies are comfortingly lurid but while I might be woefully off base I think Archimedes’ pivot works best when there is one enemy in sight hereabouts.

    Reply

    • bombasticus
      November 11, 2016 @ 12:26 am

      …which is of course the point of the original post! Friendly fire! Friendly fire!

      Reply

  13. Jarl
    November 11, 2016 @ 2:36 am

    Now, more than ever, the world needs the Liberal Crime Squad.

    “WE NEED A SLOGAN”.

    Reply

  14. Froborr
    November 11, 2016 @ 2:38 am

    I’ve got a lot of people trying to convince me that the obligation to resist does not require quitting my job prior to the inauguration. (I work on a contract basis supporting the Bureau of Labor Statistics. I have essentially three bosses, one of whom is not government; the other two are five steps below the President in the hierarchy.) I’m still struggling with the question.

    Reply

    • taiey
      November 11, 2016 @ 4:28 am

      You stay, and you don’t let him do anything illegal or immoral through you.

      http://www.vox.com/2016/8/26/12639588/donald-trump-executive-power

      Reply

      • Lambda
        November 11, 2016 @ 8:18 am

        Yes, this. If a load of employees quit their jobs, this is an ineffective form of resistance. It just means the popular vote has imposed a one-time rehiring and retraining cost on the government which has given it a workforce which will obey without question and made it more dangerous.

        If people stay in their jobs but refuse to do anything unethical, it creates an ongoing problem for the government, and specifically, an ongoing problem which only manifests when it tries to do something unethical, making this more difficult for it. That’s a far better way to resist. It also makes use of one advantage we do have; we’re far better at continuing to think for ourselves even when an authority figure has told us to do something.

        (This should work even better in Europe, where there’s an explicit human right to follow your ethics.)

        Reply

        • Shannon
          November 13, 2016 @ 4:34 am

          It actually wouldn’t involve a one-time rehiring cost – Trump’s team has explicitly said that federal hiring (and presumably contracting, but who knows?) is frozen on Inauguration Day. Not only will they not create new positions, but they won’t even backfill people who leave or retire. They’re trying to create power through attrition by making everyone’s lives miserable.

          Reply

  15. Matt Davison
    November 11, 2016 @ 4:39 am

    Trump got slightly less votes than McCain and Romney.

    Still, Trump won because a significant number of voters who made the effort to vote for Obama in 2008 and 2012 didn’t show up this time – and I do think the strategy to basically make this a coronation for Clinton backfired spectacularly.

    Half the country couldn’t be bothered to vote at all – and that is the real tragedy.

    Reply

  16. Daru
    November 11, 2016 @ 7:37 am

    “And in the face of such destructive forces as have presented themselves, the simple act of creativity is gloriously defiant.”

    This nails it for me. Really great article Phil. These words express my work and attitude to it all perfectly. Thank all of the gods and goddesses that I have actually found a creative, vibrant, leftist utopian bolt hole to work in and have the opportunity to seed inspiration and creativity with wild abandon. It’s the only thing I can do I feel in the face of all of this.

    Reply

  17. mr_mond
    November 11, 2016 @ 8:19 am

    @Daru

    I feel the same. My initial anger and sadness brought by first reports of Trump supporters lashing out triumphantly (and a certain asshole co-worker) now transformed into a blazing need to create. We will keep fighting.

    And Phil, it feels laughably inadequate, but I want to share this short poem I wrote today. Thank you for being an inspiration.

    “Alchemy”

    It’s this knife scraping
    On a raw nerve inside
    Your inner spacetimes
    That is best turned into brass –
    A key strumming on a piano string

    Reply

    • Daru
      November 12, 2016 @ 9:36 am

      @ mr_mond:

      “@Daru

      I feel the same. My initial anger and sadness brought by first reports of Trump supporters lashing out triumphantly (and a certain asshole co-worker) now transformed into a blazing need to create. We will keep fighting.”

      Thanks so much and really enjoyed the short poem.

      I had a weird day as normal on the day I heard the result. I’m Scottish and work within an arts based day service for adults with disabilities with the most creative group of people in one building that I have ever experienced (both staff & members).

      I found myself telling a story for Diwali about Ganesha (the wonderful elephant God) where an evil asura was seeking power over all of the Gods and worlds. In the end Ganesha got so frustrated with him that he broke off one of his own tusks, threw it at the asura’s head, turning him into a mouse. From that point on the asura was Ganesha’s own ‘mouse carriage’.

      Somehow it all seemed like an appropriate response to the day’s events and was very therapeutic for me to perform.

      Reply

  18. saxon_b
    November 11, 2016 @ 10:43 pm

    An impassioned essay Phil. Thank you.

    However like a lot of commentators here I will quibble that those who voted for him aren’t automatically evil racists. True there are a lot of them, and even more when you factor in the far right evangelicals who are gloating at the prospect of stripping back marriage equality or the separation of church and state. And in their triumphalism they’re becoming noisy, vindictive and abusive.

    But to my mind far worse is that it seems that many of the Trump voters seem to have been everyday people who feeling economic pressure and decided to lash out at ‘the system’ and ‘the elites’ – and in doing so choose a representative of ‘the system’ most likely to screw them over.

    Because the candidates for both of the two big US parties were among ‘the elites’. And even if you work on the level of harm minimisation, Clinton has a long history of public services for others, and Trump doesn’t. Just the opposite. And these facts were known: the not paying of suppliers, the rolling use of chapter 11 bankruptcies, the vindictive use of litigation to shut up opponents who point out his misdeeds, including funding litigation from supposed charity trusts, the treating people horribly and thinking he can get away with it because he’s Donald Trump, and all the rest.

    And because ordinary people were hurting and Trump offered a way to lash out at the system that they believed was hurting them, they bought into his rhetoric and chose to ignore the facts in front of them.
    And here is the important bit: Even if Trump genuinely wants to be a successful president simply in order to leave a legacy where he is not seen as a loser, and in practice manages to be an even halfway mediocre president who doesn’t stuff things up catastrophically – the fact remains that the people who voted for him had all the information in front of them warning them that by his past history and temperament things could go terribly wrong. And they chose to ignore it.

    This goes beyond mere partisan politics and the associated phenomenon of post truth politics. The bigger picture is the way the media landscape operates these days, with people self-selecting particular sources of information and ignoring the rest (if necessary by indulging in conspiracy theory thinking). I don’t see that changing. I really wish I could, but I think that’s a trend that’s only going to get stronger – and have more of an impact on politics now that Trump has shown that big lie politics are back as a feasible tactic, and that as far as mudslinging goes there is now literally no longer a bottom to the barrel.

    Michael Moore predicted the Trump win, and even better why and where: disenfranchisement in the rust belt states. He also predicted that that the people who voted for him would be incredibly disappointed when he failed to make things better for them. I have a scarier idea. What if Trump can’t or won’t make things better for them, but in their very human stubbornness to admit that they were wrong the people buy into the mythology that the Trump presidency is great? A small factoid I saw recently was that the past four presidents said that they would bring together the American people, but failed. You had to go back to someone like Reagan for a general feeling of goodwill. And what was one of the characteristics of the Reagan period? The economic policies that made things harder for people on the lower end of the spectrum, and the victim blaming that if you don’t have a job it’s your own fault, and a retro style callousness for minorities. And look at what Reagan’s reputation as bringing in a golden age is like today.

    So picture this: working class America saying “I may still be doing it tough, but at least President Trump got rid of the Mexicans and is keeping out those damn Muslims and preserving public morality by preventing those godless homosexuals from marrying.”

    The opening line to Neoreaction: A Basilisk: “Let us assume that we are fucked.”

    [End edit: Wow, reading back after finishing, this got way darker than I had expected. It started out as an observation that not all Trump voters were gibbering racist loons, and instead were people who were hurting and who bought into the flimflam and, per Moore, will be very disappointed when Trump inevitably fails them. And then my hindbrain took over and started ranting on the electronic street corner. Still, the basic premise stands: angry but otherwise normal people drank the koolaid, and that the way the social-media interaction is set up at the moment things aren’t going to get better.]

    Reply

  19. Dean Flemming
    November 12, 2016 @ 10:34 am

    I apologize for the vulgar language of the article to which I have provided a link. Moreover, the tone somewhat humorous, but I have yet to read another analysis of Trump’s support as insightful than this. (Too long, didn’t read: countryside versus city.)

    http://www.cracked.com/blog/6-reasons-trumps-rise-that-no-one-talks-about/

    Reply

    • Desdemona.GC
      November 13, 2016 @ 12:54 pm

      Yes… Thank you for the link.

      Please, everyone scratching their heads, or screaming in rage, read this article. I won’t claim it will change your mind, but it might go some way toward helping you in understanding what just happened.

      I’m Australian. And yes we have more than a ghost of a dog in the fight. Our defense policy is co-reliant on the USA, as are may of our trade deals, about one half of our TV and maybe 75% of our cinema experience. What happens in the USA does effect us in material ways. The UK, despite our traditional ties, not so much. Brexit, meh. Change of US President, edge of the seat.

      In Australia the same divide is evident. I’m originally country, grandparents ran businesses and owned a farm. I grew up in a town with a population of fifteen-hundred; just over double the student enrollment of the school my son attended last year. I moved from town when I was eighteen, for want of opportunities, to one of the three largest cities in Australia.

      The divide is very real and it hurts. Trump is not the answer; he never was. But, like Pauline Hanson ( https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pauline_Hanson), definitely more a working class Trump, he offers a blunt instrument to smack those seen as elites, the ruling class that talks down to them as much as any Lord or Lady of the Manor ever did, tells them what is good for them and laughs with the full-throttle power of the combined media, government and academia when they dare question their ‘betters’.

      The divide is real and getting larger.

      Reply

  20. Turnip
    November 15, 2016 @ 3:32 pm

    I don’t suppose that recent events will speed up the release of Neoreaction for those of us who failed to kickstart it? I imagine the answer is “no”, but I want to read it before everything burns.

    Reply

  21. Martin Porter
    November 15, 2016 @ 6:02 pm

    Brilliant as always.

    I’d really like to share this on my blog, partly because it’s better than anything I write, and partly because people in the UK really do want to know what people like you think.

    Reply

  22. Akyn Drum
    November 16, 2016 @ 4:06 pm

    Phil’s claim that no-one is to blame other than Trump voters appears to rest on the assumption that everyone else was a failed resister. This seems to exclude all those people who didn’t resist.

    Phil later adds that “He won because of low black turnout in Milwaukee, Philadelphia, and Detroit.” In that case, shouldn’t we conclude that black voters in M, P and D who didn’t vote are partly to blame? Unless we’re to regard not bothering to vote as a form of resistance.

    If you don’t vote, then the only thing you’re trying to resist is any responsibility for whatever outcome arises. I’m not saying that Clinton was entitled to those uncast black votes, nor that anyone has a moral duty to vote. But, if your vote could have changed the result, then your choice not to cast it was a passive contribution to Trump’s victory.

    That doesn’t mean that we condemn the non-voters, but we shouldn’t let them avoid their share of responsibility.

    Reply

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