April 26, 2011
@lavvocato: 

Position Paper: Fantastic FantasyPrevailing logic says those from the bottom who roll with the Tea Party’s line of thinking do so because they are not disheartened by the fact that the authors penning their manifesto prosper as they flounder. Instead, they are riled up by and rallying around the fact that all hell is breaking loose and it has to be someone’s fault. The Koch’s proclaim that it is the Obama Administration’s fault and many Americans have taken their word for it. 
These hard working citizens are open to any explanation for their misfortune that does not end in it being their fault. No matter the long-term soundness of the Obama Administration’s economic policy, current conditions make it easy for the opposition to proclaim that their policies are bad for America. Even though those framing the argument are misleading their constituents by massaging the facts to fit around their faulty reasoning, the opposition’s claims have proven convincing and catalyzing. 
When the Koch’s call the President a radical egalitarian, they have found a receptive audience in American’s who are losing assets and increasing liabilities in spite of doing what they are advised would lead to propertied wealth: getting educated; applying themselves; and playing politics. Burning ambition and blind aspiration are as American as apple pie, so the rich find a receptive audience when they direct the non-rich to pull themselves up. 
American’s appreciate a well-crafted story. We find fantasy fantastic. 
Notably and somewhat ironically, both the Change and Tea Party movements owe much of their success to the power of compelling narratives— as did the New Frontier, Reaganism, the Third Way, and Compassionate Conservatism. In their choice between Change and the Tea Party, constituents align with the side whose fantastic fantasy about a better America they find most fascinating. Despite the fact that the Tea Party’s policies provide the rich with a mandate to operate with an insurmountable advantage, leaving the non-rich at the mercy of the rich’s benevolence, the Koch’s tell an unbelievable tale coaxing sensible citizens to buy tickets to the grand ole party.
Winning the future requires that the Obama Campaign to release a sequel to the Change blockbuster that features a phenomenal plot with a happy ending where the wealth, education, and opportunity disparity in America and in the world astonishingly subsides.

@lavvocato

Position Paper: Fantastic Fantasy

Prevailing logic says those from the bottom who roll with the Tea Party’s line of thinking do so because they are not disheartened by the fact that the authors penning their manifesto prosper as they flounder. Instead, they are riled up by and rallying around the fact that all hell is breaking loose and it has to be someone’s fault. The Koch’s proclaim that it is the Obama Administration’s fault and many Americans have taken their word for it.

These hard working citizens are open to any explanation for their misfortune that does not end in it being their fault. No matter the long-term soundness of the Obama Administration’s economic policy, current conditions make it easy for the opposition to proclaim that their policies are bad for America. Even though those framing the argument are misleading their constituents by massaging the facts to fit around their faulty reasoning, the opposition’s claims have proven convincing and catalyzing.

When the Koch’s call the President a radical egalitarian, they have found a receptive audience in American’s who are losing assets and increasing liabilities in spite of doing what they are advised would lead to propertied wealth: getting educated; applying themselves; and playing politics. Burning ambition and blind aspiration are as American as apple pie, so the rich find a receptive audience when they direct the non-rich to pull themselves up.

American’s appreciate a well-crafted story. We find fantasy fantastic.

Notably and somewhat ironically, both the Change and Tea Party movements owe much of their success to the power of compelling narratives— as did the New Frontier, Reaganism, the Third Way, and Compassionate Conservatism. In their choice between Change and the Tea Party, constituents align with the side whose fantastic fantasy about a better America they find most fascinating. Despite the fact that the Tea Party’s policies provide the rich with a mandate to operate with an insurmountable advantage, leaving the non-rich at the mercy of the rich’s benevolence, the Koch’s tell an unbelievable tale coaxing sensible citizens to buy tickets to the grand ole party.

Winning the future requires that the Obama Campaign to release a sequel to the Change blockbuster that features a phenomenal plot with a happy ending where the wealth, education, and opportunity disparity in America and in the world astonishingly subsides.

(via veryveryurban)

Liked posts on Tumblr: More liked posts »