Many on the Right are quick to demonize the idea of "identity politics" - except when it comes to negatively stereotyping & generalizing about certain perceived negative attributes of certain minorities, yet are strangely reluctant to do this when it involves 'men'.
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
Labour voters tend to feel more strongly about fairness, public services, & the need for collective action to tackle Britain’s problems.
They tend to be more liberal on gender & race equality & gay rights, are less hostile to Europe & to immigrants, & want a more equal society.
Tory voters tend to feel more strongly about the private sector, entrepreneurialism, crime & punishment, and taking individual rather than collective responsibility.
They tend to be less liberal on gender & race equality & gay rights & are more hostile to Europe & to immigrants.
In 2011, asked to pick the proudest year in Britain’s history, most @UKLabour voters’ chose 1948, the year the #NHS was founded; among @Conservatives it was 1940, the year when Britain stood alone against Hitler.
Voting intention is now much more to do with values than class.
THREAD on Cory Wimberly's book, 'How #Propaganda Became Public Relations'.
Imho, his book contains new & useful insights into why progressives have failed to progress democracy in meaningful ways, & reconceptualizes 'corporate propaganda' to help us forge new approaches.
To start, a few quotes from two of the 'founding fathers' of public relations:
“The significant revolution of modern times is not industrial or economic or political, but the revolution which is taking place in the art of creating consent among the governed".
- Walter Lippmann
“The basic elements of human nature are fixed as to desires and instincts and innate tendencies. The directions, however, in which these basic elements may be turned by skillful handling are infinite.”
"So Tim, what was it about British Asian satirist Nish Kumar that made you cancel his show?"
Welcome to all the trolls taking time out of their busy day to reply. I have no problem with you not finding Nish funny, as sense of humour is entirely subjective.
"What is it about British Asian satirist Nish Kumar that inspired you to share with us how much you dislike him?"
FAO dimwits: I'm parodying Mrs Merton's interview with Paul Daniels' wife Debee McGee “So what first attracted you to the millionaire Paul Daniels?” It was funny NOT because McGee is or isn't a 'gold-digger' (she may or may not be) but because of the construction of the question.
“News feeds on @Facebook or @Twitter operate on a business model of commodifying the attention of billions of people per day. They have led to narrower and crazier views of the world.”
"the internet has taken us back to the (American) 1890s: Once again, we have a small class of enormously wealthy and economically powerful people whose obligations are to themselves, and perhaps to their shareholders, but not to the greater good."
We "cannot ignore the existence of “organized structures aimed at sowing mistrust, undermining democratic stability.” Action must be taken against “inauthentic use” and “automated exploitation” if they harm “civic discourse,” according to the EU’s Digital Services Act".
The "war on woke" is just a re-run of the "war on PC" from the 80s/90s, when people realised society would be improved if we reduced or stopped the use of grotesquely offensive terms to describe women & minorities - & Britain IS infinitely better off without those words.
The term “Political Correctness” is an “exonym”: a term for another group, which signals that the speaker does not belong to it, & it's helped the Right to drive a wedge between working-class people & the political parties who claimed to speak for them.
1970s National Front:
It’s an old trick, used by dictators, for the powerful to encourage the less powerful to vent their rage against those who have been their allies, & then to persuade them into thinking that they have been 'liberated'.
It costs the powerful nothing, & it pays frightful dividends.
So Laurence Fox is "honoured" to talk with far-right media group 'Epoch Times', which promotes far-right politicians in Europe, spreads anti-vax & other conspiracy theories, was the second-largest funder of pro-Trump Facebook ads, & is affiliated with the Falun Gong movement.
Epoch Times became a close media ally of Trump, & spread the far-right, pro-Trump QAnon conspiracy theory. It created a network of YouTube channels to pump out election disinformation, one of which claimed the Capitol Hill riot was a "false flag" operation orchestrated by antifa.
Epoch Times has spread #COVID19 misinformation, & has promoted anti-China rhetoric & conspiracy theories around the #coronavirus outbreak, for example through an 8-page special edition called "How the Chinese Communist Party Endangered the World".