Narratives of civil conflict

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Nice diary

Not sure I entirely buy the assertions in your second-to-last paragraph, but maybe I'm just not understanding your terms. Seems to me the political and economic elite are meritocratic enough, in that politicians who are capable politicians (unfortunately not the same thing as capable legislators or executives!) tend to get re-elected, and the economic elite is more-or-less made up of people with a demonstrated ability to make money, if nothing else. On the other hand the media strikes me as very much a good-old-boys club.

Anyway, with respect to your main point, I suspect the rants about the "elite" are an attempt to bring the less rich, more rural, socially conservative voters into the GOP fold alongside the pro-business group that arguably actually decides Republican policies. The pro-nationalist is a bit harder for me to characterize, because there are certainly aspects of knee-jerk pseudo patriotism in there, but there is also IMHO calculated imperialism exemplified by the neocons.

(Painting with a very broad brush, obviously, and needless to say none of the above necessarily applies to any particular conservative.)

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Come, my friends. 'Tis not too late to seek a newer world -- Tennyson

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political/economic elite

Thanks, I thought this would be a good topic for SC.

As for my parting point, the issue is admitedly fairly jumbled. By my casual inspection, the political and economic elites seem to be quite dynastic (Bush, Gore, Rockefeller, Kennedy). First, money and political power seem to go hand in hand. Second, particular families generate large numbers of politicians, and their sucess seems to be based on their family's wealth and political connections. I even see this on the local level, though there is less of an association of political power and exceptional wealth. I also see very little turnover of incumbants...though admittedly, people can break into the system.

For the conservative pundits, they are inconsistant on the wealth issue. They will happily attack Gore for being wealthy, but conversely come to the defense of "the rich" in general and to rich Republicans. There's apparently something subtle going on here...I think it's a little more complicated than just partisanship. Perhaps this support for the rich arises from their own semi-privileged position in society, so they look for allies among anyone with an incentive to maintain the status quo.

I think they also have the impression that the "liberal elite" didn't make any sacrifices during their project of including blacks in American institutions, and are suspicious that the elite will be protected by their immense wealth while working-class Americans pay the price of whatever projects the elite decide that we should undertake.

As for the professional elite, each profession is self-selecting to a large part (though not  monopolistic), and this lead to the development of a peculiar culture in each profession. However, this doesn't have much of a multi-generational component. For example, very few scientists are children of scientists, and admission to the ranks of professional scientists is governed by standardized processes rather than personal connections or wealth.

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"You have seen how a man was made a slave; you shall see how a slave was
made a man." --Frederick Douglas favicon

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