What's The Matter With White People?
How Scapegoat Politics Is Dividing America
and Bankrupting The Middle Class
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How scapegoat politics is dividing the us and bankrupting the middle-class. The dimension and balance of the American middle class was the envy of the entire world. But alterations unleashed in the 1960s pitted people in America against one another politically in new and harmful ways—while economically, every person declined significantly except the rich –the top 2%.
Right-wing way of life warriors (RepubliKlans) blamed the drop on the ethical shortcomings of the “other” Americans—Blacks, Latinos, feminists, gays, immigrants, union members —to court ignorant white people with a bitter “Us” vs. “Them” politics. Liberals tried using but largely unsuccessful to factually argue the reality that we are all in this jointly. Political analyst and well-known Salon columnist Joan Walsh traces this deeply troubling narrative of a disintegrating white America being conned by the conservative republican propaganda that the Blacks, Latinos, feminists, gays, immigrants, & union members, were responsible for their rapidly changing world and the decline in their living standards. So-called Reagan democrats defecting from their fathers democratic party and voting for republicans not realizing that they were economically slicing their own throats as their “saviors” ; dramatically lowered their wages, outsourced their jobs overseas, and gave them tons of credit (debt) to make up the difference of the lost wages.
The book connects the dots of the American decline through trends that commenced in the seventies and carry on today—including the demise of unions, the stagnation of middle course wages, the extension of the right’s “Southern Approach” all through the region, the victory of Reagan Republicanism, the widening partisan divide, the boost in income inequality, and the fall in financial mobility.
Explores how the GOP’s renewed tradition war—one which could conceivably one day make Rick Santorum president, and created radical alterations in states like Wisconsin, Ohio, and Virginia.
As the United States turns into a “greater part-minority” way of life, even though the GOP doubles down on racial and cultural appeals to rev up its demographically threatened white foundation in 2012, Walsh talks about race in trustworthy, unflinching, unfamiliar phrases, acknowledging not just Republican but Democratic Party political mistakes—and her own. This book will be important reading through as the nation struggles by way of political polarization and racial adjustment to invent the next “Us” in the years ahead.