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The Voters Revolt Against Our Cultural Curators, Again

  
Via:  XXJefferson51  •  4 years ago  •  7 comments

By:   Salena Zito

The Voters Revolt Against Our Cultural Curators, Again
Now, Biden and the Democrats have been caught once again failing to appreciate why they were sent to Washington, D.C. They underestimated just how toxic their intersection with the cultural curators would be for them -- with those constantly telling voters they are insurrectionists and racists, lying about voting laws in Georgia and Texas and Pennsylvania and smearing them because they don't want idiotic ideas driven into their children's skulls. On Tuesday, those voters gave Democrats a...

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We are standing tall, proudly on open and defiant all out revolt against the bicoastal secular progressive elites that want to be our curators and controllers. We will not be their subjects not their serfs.  


S E E D E D   C O N T E N T



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Source: AP Photo/Lynne Sladky

PITTSBURGH -- On the morning of Election Day in western Pennsylvania, Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf mentioned on a local radio show that his wife had submitted his mail-in ballot for him -- a direct violation of Pennsylvania election law punishable by up to a year in prison, a $1,000 fine or possibly both.

Had the progressive Democrat signed the voting bill that passed this summer, HB 1300, any member of his household could have dropped it off for him. Moreover, it would have established early in-person voting and required signature verification of mail-in ballots.

When he vetoed the bill, Wolf said at the time it was because it "restricted the freedom to vote."

This story will last a day or two in the local news. What reporters and elected officials will miss about this moment is where the seed is planted in the public psyche -- just one more snippet of information adding to their dissatisfaction with the party in power. It is one of many signs collected over many years that indicate insiders like Wolf are detached from the people they govern.

Their detachment is not just geographical but cultural, and it is not limited to politics. For decades, the nation's cultural curators have operated through corporations, national sports organizations, Hollywood, academia and the national news media. More and more, they have become detached from the people who buy, watch or are educated by them.

In Wolf's case, he spent the last two years telling his constituents he knew better on everything, especially regarding his secretive, autocratic handling of the pandemic and his controversial moves regarding business waivers and nursing homes. He allowed only "life-sustaining sectors of the economy" to stay open, yet he initially allowed his family's cabinet business to remain open. His former health secretary, Rachel Levine, now a prominent member of the Biden administration, made decisions that turned Pennsylvania nursing homes into coronavirus death traps, then removed her mother from a personal care facility.

Their "do as I say not as I do" attitude led to last Tuesday's reaction, but that wasn't the first instance. Before that, there was a referendum this spring that curtailed the governor's emergency powers. Last fall, Democrats lost state House and Senate seats even though they had expected to take over both chambers. They were once again handed defeats in last Tuesday's elections in places they were supposed to win.

This trend is certainly not limited to Pennsylvania -- and it has not always favored Republicans. In 2006, Republicans were wildly out of step with their constituents. Democrats such as Rahm Emmanuel wisely understood that and recruited Democratic candidates who could win in conservative districts. They hired ad-makers like Steve McMahon at Purple Strategies, who created "We share your values" messaging that appealed to independent, Republican and Democratic voters. They won big in that year's midterm elections.

I have argued for years that the conservative-populist coalition was born in 2008 when John McCain became the Republican nominee. These voters either stayed home or voted against their interests for Barack Obama because of his candidacy's historic and aspirational nature.

By 2009, their breakaway began, and the anti-establishment Tea Party movement was born. The 2010 midterm elections demonstrated the coalition's strength, but it felt the same way toward Mitt Romney as it had for McCain -- nice guy, but didn't inspire them. Obama became the first president ever reelected with fewer popular votes and a smaller percentage than his first election.

Instead of listening to the voters, Obama spent his second term going all-in with executive action. Democrats shed the blue-collar and rural voters that had been part of their coalition and went full elite progressive. The 2014 election was the result, an even worse bloodbath for Democrats than 2010.

Two things were missed in the coverage of 2016. First, former President Donald Trump was never the cause of that election -- he was the result of a coalition that had been building for a decade, made up of suburban-educated voters, blue-collar and rural voters, and a growing number of middle-class Hispanic voters.

The coalition was choppy in 2018, losing House seats but gaining Senate seats in the Trump midterm election. In 2020, for all the losses Republicans suffered, Trump received a record number of votes for any incumbent, and there was a little red wave down-ballot as the coalition strengthened for Republicans not named Trump.

Now, Biden and the Democrats have been caught once again failing to appreciate why they were sent to Washington, D.C. They underestimated just how toxic their intersection with the cultural curators would be for them -- with those constantly telling voters they are insurrectionists and racists, lying about voting laws in Georgia and Texas and Pennsylvania and smearing them because they don't want idiotic ideas driven into their children's skulls. On Tuesday, those voters gave Democrats a piece of their mind, not just here in Pennsylvania but also in Virginia, New Jersey and nationwide.

Will the curators continue to underestimate and insult the electorate? Look to 2022, an inside-out midterm election. It will not be about Trump -- oh, how the Democrats misunderstood that on Tuesday. It will not be about spending more money and passing bills people never requested. It will be about their lives, their children, their communities and their futures.

Just ask the voters and listen to their answers.

Salena Zito is a CNN political analyst, and a staff reporter and columnist for the Washington Examiner. She reaches the Everyman and Everywoman through shoe-leather journalism, traveling from Main Street to the beltway and all places in between.


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XXJefferson51
Senior Guide
1  seeder  XXJefferson51    4 years ago
What reporters and elected officials will miss about this moment is where the seed is planted in the public psyche -- just one more snippet of information adding to their dissatisfaction with the party in power. It is one of many signs collected over many years that indicate insiders like Wolf are detached from the people they govern.

Their detachment is not just geographical but cultural, and it is not limited to politics. For decades, the nation's cultural curators have operated through corporations, national sports organizations, Hollywood, academia and the national news media. More and more, they have become detached from the people who buy, watch or are educated by them.

In Wolf's case, he spent the last two years telling his constituents he knew better on everything, especially regarding his secretive, autocratic handling of the pandemic and his controversial moves regarding business waivers and nursing homes. He allowed only "life-sustaining sectors of the economy" to stay open, yet he initially allowed his family's cabinet business to remain open. His former health secretary, Rachel Levine, now a prominent member of the Biden administration, made decisions that turned Pennsylvania nursing homes into coronavirus death traps, then removed her mother from a personal care facility.

 
 
 
XXJefferson51
Senior Guide
1.1  seeder  XXJefferson51  replied to  XXJefferson51 @1    4 years ago

No Jab, No Job

Gary Varvel November 16, 2021
gv111521dAPR-620x459.jpg

See more Varvel toons HERE .

 
 
 
XXJefferson51
Senior Guide
2  seeder  XXJefferson51    4 years ago
…The Left went into its standard mode of operation -- lie, smear, get hysterical and incite the mob.

Some examples:

MSNBC devoted a segment to what I said. They played the Newsmax video of me -- but, tellingly, they played only part of what I said. They dropped, "And it should have been inconceivable; they (gays) should not have been made pariahs." If you watch the video of me speaking as played on MSNBC, you actually see me mouthing those words, but MSNBC made sure you can't hear me say them. Dropping those words changes the entire meaning of what I said.

And change the meaning of what I said is precisely what The Independent, Slate, Politifact, the Advocate, Media Matters, The Bulwark writers and every other left-wing individual and organization that covered this story did.

Gays with AIDS were indeed pariahs, and some awful things were done to and said about them. This was especially true in the first years of the AIDS outbreak, and especially after Dr. Anthony Fauci announced that AIDS may be transmittable through casual household contact (rather than solely by the exchange of body fluids), and most especially after the media hyped the myth that AIDS was as easily transmitted and common among heterosexuals as it was among gay men and intravenous drug users. As a result, many Americans panicked.

Consequently, almost everyone with AIDS -- not only gay men -- were rendered pariahs. One of the most famous examples was Ryan White, a 10-year-old boy who was not gay (to anyone's knowledge), who was kicked out of school in 1986 because he had contracted AIDS from a tainted blood transfusion.

Now let's compare that pariah status to that of the unvaccinated today.

Were there government mandates to fire every gay man with AIDS, as there are today for every company in America with 100-plus employees?

Did government edicts deprive AIDS patients of their incomes and pensions? Were gay policemen, nurses and firefighters fired?

Was there a ban on gay men (with or without AIDS) entering movie theaters, restaurants, hair salons, etc., unless they could prove they did not have AIDS? Such bans exist at this moment on the unvaccinated.

Was there any talk about banning anyone with AIDS from using all public transportation? Such a ban on the unvaccinated exists in Canada and is being seriously discussed by the Biden administration. Last week, Austria barred unvaccinated people who do not have natural immunity from restaurants, hotels, hair salons and large public events.

Here's more on the treatment of the unvaccinated:

The former premier of New South Wales, Bob Carr, has called on the Australian government to follow Singapore's decision to discontinue free COVID-19 treatment for unvaccinated patients. He said it was time unvaccinated Australians should be forced to "pay for your willful stupidity."

Howard Stern said: "I'm really of mind to say, 'Look, if you didn't get vaccinated and you got Covid, you don't get into a hospital.'"

MSNBC host Mehdi Hasan supports segregating the unvaccinated and denying them access to basic goods and services.

Noam Chomsky said that the unvaccinated should be pushed into isolation. When asked how the unvaccinated would then be able to get food, Chomsky responded, "How can we get food to them? Well, that's actually their problem."

"Noam Chomsky is trending because he wants to get tough on people who choose to stay unvaccinated," Mehdi Hasan said on MSNBC. "Good for him."

Leana Wen, a visiting professor of health policy at George Washington University, Washington Post columnist, and medical analyst for CNN, told Chris Cuomo on CNN:

"We need to start looking at the choice to remain unvaccinated the same as we look at driving while intoxicated. You have the option to not get vaccinated if you want, but then you can't go out in public."

Jimmy Kimmel said this:

"Dr. Fauci said that if hospitals get any more overcrowded, they're going to have to make some very tough choices about who gets an ICU bed. That choice doesn't seem so tough to me. Vaccinated person having a heart attack? Yes, come right on in, we'll take care of you. Unvaccinated guy who gobbled horse goo? Rest in peace, wheezy."

My comments were about the government-imposed pariah status of the unvaccinated today; they in no way denied the social pariah status of gays with AIDS in the 1980s. But facts do not matter to the angry and the hate-filled.

Tim Miller, writer-at-large for the Bulwark, said on the MSNBC program that featured my Newsmax interview:

"His (Prager's) revisionist history is a central tenet of right-wing victimhood. They love the victim status ... and to pretend like the suffering of people didn't exist."

Miller simply lied about what I said. I never pretended the suffering of people didn't exist. I compared the pariah status of the unvaccinated today to the pariah status of gays during the AIDS epidemic and said the former is worse. That is demonstrably true: Not one of these commentators cited an example of government or commentators calling for banning AIDS victims from working, from eating out, from getting a haircut or a plane ticket or from receiving medical care.

As noted above, every left-wing outlet that covered the issue lied:

The Independent: "Right-wing radio host claims gay men weren't 'pariahs' during Aids crisis -- but unvaccinated are now."

Poynter Institute for Media Studies: "Dennis Prager's claim that it was 'inconceivable' that gay men were seen as 'pariahs' in the 1980s is extraordinarily inaccurate."

Politifact (a so-called fact-checker): "To suggest that gay men and intravenous drug users were not considered pariahs during the AIDS crisis of the 1980s is entirely inaccurate ... We rate the statement Pants on Fire."

The Advocate (perhaps the most long-standing and prominent gay site): Like MSNBC, it dropped the last two sentences when it quoted me.

Tampa Bay Times headline: "The Pants on Fire claim that it was 'inconceivable' gay men were seen as 'pariahs.'"

Another writer at The Bulwark, Jonathan V. Last, asked: "Is Dennis Prager Stupid or Evil?" To support this, he printed the truncated quote of what I said, just like MSNBC and the others.

Why did the Left lie about what I said?

For two reasons.

The first is something I have known and written about since I studied communism in graduate school: Neither liberty nor truth is, or has ever been, a left-wing value. Both are liberal values, and both are conservative values. But neither is a left-wing value.

The second is that on the Left, victim status is everything. Only left-wing approved groups can be deemed victims, and gays are, of course, one of those groups. Whatever the price -- including truth -- the Left must maintain its monopoly on victimhood...

Read more:
 
 
 
XXJefferson51
Senior Guide
2.1  seeder  XXJefferson51  replied to  XXJefferson51 @2    4 years ago

We are all standing tall, very proud on open and defiant revolt against the evil of bicoastal secular progressive elites that want to be our curators and controllers. We will not be their subjects nor their serfs.  

 
 
 
Tessylo
Professor Expert
3  Tessylo    4 years ago

Y'all/you aren't standing tall or proud, on SHIT.  

 
 
 
XXJefferson51
Senior Guide
3.1  seeder  XXJefferson51  replied to  Tessylo @3    4 years ago

We aren’t standing any where near the left as described at the end of your comment.  But we are most proud of our history, traditions, culture, lifestyle choices and of 1776 America.  And we do stand very tall in our resistance to the secular progressive elites in our coastal urban areas 

 
 
 
XXJefferson51
Senior Guide
3.2  seeder  XXJefferson51  replied to  Tessylo @3    4 years ago

The rebellion against the bi coastal secular progressive elites is on!  

 
 

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