Newsletter Subject

Is Elon Musk Correct When He Says Liberals Have Moved Far to the Left Since 2008?

From

substack.com

Email Address

culturcidal@substack.com

Sent On

Sat, Apr 30, 2022 05:54 PM

Email Preheader Text

Short answer? Yes. Long answer? Read the column.                                  

Short answer? Yes. Long answer? Read the column.                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                 [Is Elon Musk Correct When He Says Liberals Have Moved Far to the Left Since 2008?]( Short answer? Yes. Long answer? Read the column. [John Hawkins]( Apr 30 [Comment]( [Share]( Elon Musk created an enormous amount of controversy by posting this cartoon: [Twitter avatar for @elonmusk]Elon Musk @elonmusk [Image]([April 28th 2022 210,357 Retweets1,513,837 Likes]( Naturally, you had conservatives agreeing with it and liberals alternately going, “That’s crazy. Conservatives radicalized, but liberals didn’t change at all!” Or saying something akin to, “Far right-wingers are all evil, while far left-wingers just want to give you free health care!” A few liberals tried to “prove” that this wasn’t true by posting charts. However, before we even get into the whole, “Are these charts from reliable sources?” question, it’s worth noting that almost none of them addressed the real question, which is whether liberals have moved to the Left. They usually addressed other topics entirely. For example, here’s left-of-center statistics guru Nate Silver addressing one of the charts that was most offered up as “proof”: [Twitter avatar for @NateSilver538]Nate Silver @NateSilver538 This is based on DW-Nominate, an algorithm that measures clusters of voting patterns in the U.S. Congress without knowing anything about the content of the legislation. It is an OK measure of *party-line voting in the US Congress* but NOT a very good one of left-right ideology. [Image]([April 28th 2022 94 Retweets1,051 Likes]( Silver also tossed out some other charts which show both parties moving significantly toward the extremes. [Twitter avatar for @NateSilver538]Nate Silver @NateSilver538 DW-Nominate is useful for some purposes. Congress members who break party lines more often tend to perform well electorally, for instance. But there are much more direct ways to study ideology, such as by looking at surveys of voters, or party platforms. [Image] [Image]([April 28th 2022 30 Retweets486 Likes]( However, it is actually difficult to definitively “prove” this answer one way or the other because it’s an extremely complicated question. Why is it complicated? For a lot of reasons. Just as a starting point, the real-world definition (as opposed to the dictionary definition) of what defines a liberal and a conservative has changed quite a bit. By today’s standards, Richard Nixon wasn’t a conservative and John F. Kennedy wasn’t a liberal. Additionally, both parties have populist and moderate wings that emphasize different things. Conservatives are not necessarily in sink with the GOP and liberals aren’t necessarily in step with the Democratic Party. We can have big arguments about what forces in each party are “fringe” or “mainstream.” The rhetoric used to describe some ideas has changed in ways that may make a position sound more or less radical. Some radical ideas have been around a long time but haven’t necessarily “gone mainstream” until recently. It’s also even worth noting that some ideas are cyclical. The liberal movement of the sixties was in many ways much more radical than the liberal movement of the early 2000s, while the conservative movement in the sixties was much more undergirded by Libertarianism than it is today. On and on it goes. So, does that mean the question can’t be answered? Absolutely not. It can be answered correctly, but there just isn’t going to be some chart that neatly reflects an answer here or elsewhere. That means it will be an arguable point. That being said, I started blogging in 2001 and I’ve done just about everything in the conservative movement since then. I’ve put up signs, worked for candidates including a presidential campaign, worked at a local GOP headquarters, been part of the Tea Party movement, done hundreds of hours as a guest on talk radio, been one of the most popular conservative columnists on the net, built a top 10,000 in the world conservative website, ran a conservative ad network, conferred behind the scenes with congressional aides, and interviewed a vast number of big-name conservatives – you may agree with me or not, but I know what I’m talking about better than 99.9% of the people out there. With that in mind, let’s start with conservatives. Have they changed since 2008? Yes, but maybe not in the way that most people may think. Since then, as a general rule, conservatives have become more populist (not a surprise), but also, more LIBERAL on social issues. In other words, conservatives have moved TO THE LEFT in some important ways since 2008. How did I come to that conclusion? Well first of all, since I have been around so long, I can look back at my own writing during that period. For example, here’s a piece I wrote in 2012 called, “[Twenty things this conservative believes](.” There’s not a single one of those 20 items that I disagree with today. In fact, after thinking about it for a while, there are only a few areas where my political beliefs have changed in the last two decades. I am still a free trader, but I am much less of an absolutist about it after seeing other nations wiping out industries here by supplementing their own side. I’m much less interested in trying to spread democracy around the world as a result of seeing our success in that area under Reagan turn to failure under Bush. Of course, I still think marriage is extremely important, but I believe the system that served us well for so long is now broken. I’m much more skeptical about Muslim immigrants in particular and immigration on the whole after seeing the number of freeloaders and bad actors we’ve brought here. I’m not entirely sure how to properly address the issue, but after reading [Ray Dalio’s book](, I am much more concerned about the long-term dangers of income inequality. Those are changes, but not radical ones. Did conservatives as a whole change? I would argue “yes,” but not in the way most people believe. I think conservatives as a whole MOVED TO THE LEFT a bit on social and cultural issues, in part (but not entirely) because of Donald Trump’s presidency. Want some examples? In, 2008, conservatives were adamantly against gay marriage. Today, [55% of Republicans support gay marriage](. As for Trump, although his legislative agenda was very in line with grassroots conservative values, his behavior led to conservatives shifting to the Left in how they approached some moral and cultural issues. For example, in 2008, many of the same conservatives chanting “Let’s go Brandon!” or “F*** Joe Biden!” today would have told you that it was very important to show respect for the office of the presidency. A candidate that cheated on a pregnant wife with a stripper in 2008? That wouldn’t have flown with conservatives. Today, it does. Even the sort of loud, “This election was rigged!” protesting we saw from Trump has always been more of a liberal thing than a conservative thing. For good or ill, conservatives used to be much more concerned than liberals about potentially undermining faith in the electoral system. Now, most conservatives didn’t look at those things as “being more liberal,” they looked at them as “fighting fire with fire,” but the fire in question was liberal attitudes and tactics. Even the Jan 6 riot at the Capitol, which has been widely condemned on the Right, is nothing more than a copy of the tactics liberals used all across the country throughout 2020. Once you get beyond that sort of thing, Trump’s agenda was essentially mainstream conservatism with a populist tilt. Granted, George W. Bush and Trump would have disagreed on some agenda items (like immigration), but that has more to do with the populist vs. Country Club Republican battle in the GOP than a change in conservative beliefs. So, what about liberals? Have they changed? Liberals would say, “No.” I would say, “Hell, yes.” Culturcidal by John Hawkins is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. [Subscribe now]( Just as a beginning point, when Barack Obama was first elected, he was against gay marriage. Certainly, they didn’t mean it, but back then liberals at least claimed that they wanted to secure the border and be tough on crime. That’s a far cry from Joe Biden doing everything possible to increase the number of illegal aliens coming into the United States. We’ve also had numerous liberal districts defunding the police and refusing to prosecute many criminals. Granted, liberals have always been soft on crime, but you could make a decent argument that’s an escalation from where they’ve been in the past. Unquestionably, it’s a huge step to the Left from where they were in 2008. Similarly, liberals have always romanticized rioting and domestic terrorism for left-wing causes (for example, see the Black Panthers and Bill Ayers). However again, the level of rioting and destruction that was simply allowed to occur in liberal cities with minimal interference from the authorities seems like a huge escalation from 2008, although arguably it would be more of a lateral move from what liberals were winking at in the sixties. Cancel culture? That may have been a thing on some college campuses in 2008, but liberals used to take pride in being pro-free speech, even if they didn’t live up to those ideals. Today, outright censorship is a mainstream liberal value. Additionally, there were certainly some liberals in 2008 pushing a pro-trans agenda, but the idea that biological men would be allowed in women’s bathrooms and playing women’s sports was considered ludicrous back then, even among most of the Left. That goes double for the idea that everyone else had to be forced to pretend all of that was completely normal if they didn’t want to be accused of committing a hate crime. Along similar lines, even liberals might have rioted if someone tried to take their kid to a drag queen story hour in 2008. The idea that the president would declare America to be systemically racist, that white kids should be taught to hate themselves because of the color of their skin, or that children could pick their genders were certainly not mainstream ideas on the Left back then either. Similarly, although both sides criticized each other, liberals back then saved most of their criticism for prominent people on the other side and weren’t just declaring anyone that voted for the other side had to be doing it because they were a Nazi or White Supremacist. Corporations? They dabbled in politics, but the idea that the NFL, Coca-Cola, Nike, or Disney would get publicly involved in issues that had nothing to do with their businesses just to cater to the Left would have been considered loony. That’s partially because the Left didn’t insist on EVERYTHING being a political issue in 2008. Along similar lines, the press was an arm of the Democratic Party, even back then, but they at least liked to keep up the pretense that they were trying to be fair. Today, it’s impossible to be an ethical mainstream journalist because simple neutrality is considered to be beyond the pale among reporters. When people like Elon Musk, Joe Rogan, JK Rowling, Dave Chapelle, or even Bill FREAKING Maher complain that liberals have dramatically moved to the Left, this isn’t hyperbole. It’s based on things that have happened in the real world. If liberals want to pretend otherwise, they can, but as you can see from what Musk said, they’re not even fooling each other, much less everyone else. --------------------------------------------------------------- [Subscribe now]( [Share]( [Leave a comment]( [101 Things All Young Adults Should Know]( [Like]( [[Comment]Comment]( [[Share]Share]( You’re a free subscriber to [Culturcidal by John Hawkins](. For the full experience, [become a paid subscriber.]( [Subscribe]( © 2022 John Hawkins [Unsubscribe]( 548 Market Street PMB 72296, San Francisco, CA 94104 [Publish on Substack]([Get the app](

EDM Keywords (223)

wrote writing would world women winking whole ways way wanted want voters voted useful undergirded trying trump true tough told today thinking things thing taught talking take system surveys surprise support supplementing success stripper still step start sports sort soft social skin skeptical sixties sink since side show seeing see secure scenes saw saved said rioting rioted right result refusing recently reasons radical question put prove pretense pretend press presidency posting populist politics police piece period people party parties particular partially part opposed one office offered occur number nothing necessarily nazi much moved moral means mean maybe may mainstream loud lot looking looked look long live line libertarianism liberals liberal level legislation left know kid keep issues issue interviewed instance insist industries increase impossible important immigration ideas idea hyperbole hours hate happened guest gop good going goes give genders fringe freeloaders free forces forced flown fire failure fact examples example evil everything even escalation entirely elsewhere election done disagreed disagree destruction describe defines dabbled cyclical culturcidal criticism crime course copy controversy content considered conservatives conservative concerned complicated committing come column color cheated charts chart changes changed change certainly cater capitol candidate businesses bush brought broken border book bit beyond better believe become bathrooms based back around arm areas area approached app answer always also allowed algorithm agenda addressed adamantly across accused absolutist 2008 2001

Marketing emails from substack.com

View More
Sent On

31/05/2024

Sent On

31/05/2024

Sent On

31/05/2024

Sent On

31/05/2024

Sent On

30/05/2024

Sent On

30/05/2024

Email Content Statistics

Subscribe Now

Subject Line Length

Data shows that subject lines with 6 to 10 words generated 21 percent higher open rate.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Number of Words

The more words in the content, the more time the user will need to spend reading. Get straight to the point with catchy short phrases and interesting photos and graphics.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Number of Images

More images or large images might cause the email to load slower. Aim for a balance of words and images.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Time to Read

Longer reading time requires more attention and patience from users. Aim for short phrases and catchy keywords.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Predicted open rate

Subscribe Now

Spam Score

Spam score is determined by a large number of checks performed on the content of the email. For the best delivery results, it is advised to lower your spam score as much as possible.

Subscribe Now

Flesch reading score

Flesch reading score measures how complex a text is. The lower the score, the more difficult the text is to read. The Flesch readability score uses the average length of your sentences (measured by the number of words) and the average number of syllables per word in an equation to calculate the reading ease. Text with a very high Flesch reading ease score (about 100) is straightforward and easy to read, with short sentences and no words of more than two syllables. Usually, a reading ease score of 60-70 is considered acceptable/normal for web copy.

Subscribe Now

Technologies

What powers this email? Every email we receive is parsed to determine the sending ESP and any additional email technologies used.

Subscribe Now

Email Size (not include images)

Font Used

No. Font Name
Subscribe Now

Copyright © 2019–2024 SimilarMail.