Re: Trump to win?
Watch the persuasion skills of Sanders too. The man has gone from 3% name recognition to serious contender in only a couple of months. He has been adept at 'thinking past the sale' as Adams calls it, inviting voters to imagine saving $5,000 per year on their health insurance bills or no longer having to scrimp and save and take out loans to send their children to college. He rarely uses the first person singular, preferring the first person plural, just like Trump. With Trump, 'we' is ambiguous, one can imagine it as tribally as they want, but it's generally 'real Americans' vs. 'outsiders' of one kind or another. With Sanders, 'we' is every American except the 400 or so who are billionaires.
In fact, look closely at how he has constructed his narrative and his messaging. Go to his website. Scroll down. It's always about us and Not The Billionaires! This narrative is tailor made for a confrontation with Trump. Sanders repeatedly says the candidate he wants to face most is Donald Trump. He disparages the man whilst simultaneously trying to appeal to his voter base. Any step Trump takes to support his own class, like his comments that 'wages are too high' immediately are pounced on as evidence that he's an outsider, forcing Trump to recant and deny. I'll add that this is the only candidate who has forced Trump to recant and deny. When Jeb! tried it, he got shoved in a locker with an atomic wedgie.
In the end of the day, the Sanders campaign is tailor made to defeat Trump. The 'us vs. the billionaires' message works best against a billionaire, obviously. And there's only one in the race. But there's talk that Michael Bloomberg might jump in as an independent, especially if it were a Sanders/Trump race, to defend 'the establishment.' If you ask me, there's nothing Sanders would like more, than if that in fact came to pass. Standing on stage in a general election between a billionaire financier and a billionaire real estate mogul with a pile of momentum built upon the 'us against the billionaires' premise would be simply perfect for him. David vs. Goliath. The Rebels vs. the Empire. The Battle of Thermopylae. Take your historical pick. The narrative has already been built. "Look, he has them so frightened, they sent the two richest men in New York City after him! They didn't even send the hired help to take him out! They're desperate. He's got them on the ropes!" "What do these guys do but charge us interest and rent?" "They don't even make anything!" "All they want is more for themselves and less for everyone else."
Don't forget, Sanders may seem nebbishy, but the good guys in the underdog position have to. Nevertheless, he remains the single most popular Senator in the United States with his constituents bar none, and by a wide margin. And Sanders is the only candidate in the race in either party with a positive approval rating across the electorate. In fact, he and Joe Biden are the only politicians in America who have had a positive approval rating in the past 12 months, with Sanders the only politician to consistently hold onto it. His TV ads top the ACE Matrix. He successfully dings, not really attacks, both Clinton and Obama without mentioning names. Watch him do it in this social security ad. Or watch it in this two visions ad.
Each time, he's creating and re-enforcing the 'Americans vs. billionaires' narrative, while reminding viewers in a not-so-subtle way that Republicans and other Democrats are simply bought-and-paid-for tools of the billionaires that are, according to the narrative, the road block standing between 320,000,000 Americans and a better life. Pitting him up 1v1 or 1v2 against actual billionaires is exactly what he wants. It makes the narrative super clear. Notice how he doesn't really attack Clinton. He keeps kind of defending her and placing the blame on billionaires. Even when he hit her for taking $600,000 in speaking fees from Goldman Sachs last night, he reminded us the head of Goldman Sachs is a billionaire. Everything in the narrative is geared up for a Sanders v. Trump or a Sanders v. Trump v. Bloomberg matchup. Before they even get to the general election Trump and Bloomberg will already obviously have the roles of the Emperor and Darth Vader in the tale he's weaving. He's the only one that can claim higher purity. Trump can claim he's unbought, because he does the buying. Sanders can claim he's unbought because he doesn't take filthy billionaire money--in his case "WE are not for sale!" will be the line. There's not another candidate in the field in either party who can stand up to that with moral clarity.
If I'm even half right here, and it's the narrative that's important, keep watching. Because Adams will have to be off as things transition. He focuses on the wisdom of youth, and concludes they are the least wise and don't know anything, so that's why they follow Sanders. But Adams misses the point in his blog post about Sanders and the youth. Sanders doesn't necessarily need the youth at all for their wisdom or knowledge, save for working the computers and whatnot. He needs them for their purity. That's where the narrative breaks his way. The older and wiser and more jaded may know more, but many of them ate of the apple to get there. The game becomes good vs. evil, weak vs. strong, underdog vs. bully. And in any country saturated with the culture of Abrahamic religions, we know who the bulk of people will pull for in that scenario, much to Nietzsche's chagrin.
Originally posted by shiny!
View Post
Watch the persuasion skills of Sanders too. The man has gone from 3% name recognition to serious contender in only a couple of months. He has been adept at 'thinking past the sale' as Adams calls it, inviting voters to imagine saving $5,000 per year on their health insurance bills or no longer having to scrimp and save and take out loans to send their children to college. He rarely uses the first person singular, preferring the first person plural, just like Trump. With Trump, 'we' is ambiguous, one can imagine it as tribally as they want, but it's generally 'real Americans' vs. 'outsiders' of one kind or another. With Sanders, 'we' is every American except the 400 or so who are billionaires.
In fact, look closely at how he has constructed his narrative and his messaging. Go to his website. Scroll down. It's always about us and Not The Billionaires! This narrative is tailor made for a confrontation with Trump. Sanders repeatedly says the candidate he wants to face most is Donald Trump. He disparages the man whilst simultaneously trying to appeal to his voter base. Any step Trump takes to support his own class, like his comments that 'wages are too high' immediately are pounced on as evidence that he's an outsider, forcing Trump to recant and deny. I'll add that this is the only candidate who has forced Trump to recant and deny. When Jeb! tried it, he got shoved in a locker with an atomic wedgie.
In the end of the day, the Sanders campaign is tailor made to defeat Trump. The 'us vs. the billionaires' message works best against a billionaire, obviously. And there's only one in the race. But there's talk that Michael Bloomberg might jump in as an independent, especially if it were a Sanders/Trump race, to defend 'the establishment.' If you ask me, there's nothing Sanders would like more, than if that in fact came to pass. Standing on stage in a general election between a billionaire financier and a billionaire real estate mogul with a pile of momentum built upon the 'us against the billionaires' premise would be simply perfect for him. David vs. Goliath. The Rebels vs. the Empire. The Battle of Thermopylae. Take your historical pick. The narrative has already been built. "Look, he has them so frightened, they sent the two richest men in New York City after him! They didn't even send the hired help to take him out! They're desperate. He's got them on the ropes!" "What do these guys do but charge us interest and rent?" "They don't even make anything!" "All they want is more for themselves and less for everyone else."
Don't forget, Sanders may seem nebbishy, but the good guys in the underdog position have to. Nevertheless, he remains the single most popular Senator in the United States with his constituents bar none, and by a wide margin. And Sanders is the only candidate in the race in either party with a positive approval rating across the electorate. In fact, he and Joe Biden are the only politicians in America who have had a positive approval rating in the past 12 months, with Sanders the only politician to consistently hold onto it. His TV ads top the ACE Matrix. He successfully dings, not really attacks, both Clinton and Obama without mentioning names. Watch him do it in this social security ad. Or watch it in this two visions ad.
Each time, he's creating and re-enforcing the 'Americans vs. billionaires' narrative, while reminding viewers in a not-so-subtle way that Republicans and other Democrats are simply bought-and-paid-for tools of the billionaires that are, according to the narrative, the road block standing between 320,000,000 Americans and a better life. Pitting him up 1v1 or 1v2 against actual billionaires is exactly what he wants. It makes the narrative super clear. Notice how he doesn't really attack Clinton. He keeps kind of defending her and placing the blame on billionaires. Even when he hit her for taking $600,000 in speaking fees from Goldman Sachs last night, he reminded us the head of Goldman Sachs is a billionaire. Everything in the narrative is geared up for a Sanders v. Trump or a Sanders v. Trump v. Bloomberg matchup. Before they even get to the general election Trump and Bloomberg will already obviously have the roles of the Emperor and Darth Vader in the tale he's weaving. He's the only one that can claim higher purity. Trump can claim he's unbought, because he does the buying. Sanders can claim he's unbought because he doesn't take filthy billionaire money--in his case "WE are not for sale!" will be the line. There's not another candidate in the field in either party who can stand up to that with moral clarity.
If I'm even half right here, and it's the narrative that's important, keep watching. Because Adams will have to be off as things transition. He focuses on the wisdom of youth, and concludes they are the least wise and don't know anything, so that's why they follow Sanders. But Adams misses the point in his blog post about Sanders and the youth. Sanders doesn't necessarily need the youth at all for their wisdom or knowledge, save for working the computers and whatnot. He needs them for their purity. That's where the narrative breaks his way. The older and wiser and more jaded may know more, but many of them ate of the apple to get there. The game becomes good vs. evil, weak vs. strong, underdog vs. bully. And in any country saturated with the culture of Abrahamic religions, we know who the bulk of people will pull for in that scenario, much to Nietzsche's chagrin.
Comment