Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

phantom power

(25,966 posts)
Tue Oct 22, 2013, 10:24 AM Oct 2013

On Cake and Political Identity

Overheard about town:

MAN NUMBER ONE (observing MAN NO.2 eating some kind of dessert item out of a Starbucks bag, good-naturedly inquires): "What is that? Like a $10 cake?"

MAN NUMBER TWO (taken aback, collects himself, and finally responds with a wry smile): "I'm a Republican, I can afford it."

It was such a short and poignant exchange. Just a little light ribbing between two long-time acquaintances.

MAN NO.1 feels that Starbucks is a place to go to spend way too much money on coffee and cake. When he sees someone eating or drinking Starbucks products, he thinks "profligate spender" and can't help declaring, however indirectly, his disapproval. He thereby seeks to establish his moral superiority and perhaps to edify his friend.

MAN NO.2 is put on the defensive. Here he is, caught eating overpriced cake. How can he explain himself? The answer presents itself. He, unlike his friend, has enough money to spend it on luxuries. But, how to put it so as to declare his own moral superiority? "I'm a Republican," he says, "I can afford it."

...

Coming from New Jersey, these are the types of conservatives I am most intimately familiar with. I didn't grow up around social conservatives or resentful middle class strivers. I grew up around bankers and lawyers and business executives who were Republicans because being a Republican signified that they were part of the elite. It was the same reason that people chose the Episcopalian Church over the Methodist one. It was about status.

These folks have made an alliance with social conservatives, largely from the South, but they have done so through gritted teeth. They have never had any respect for the social conservatives or for Southern culture, and they find it increasingly embarrassing to self-identify as Republican because it has come to mean that you are a religious fanatic or an economic illiterate or a science-denier or a homophobe or a racist or the kind of guy who thinks rape can't cause pregnancy.

All that "elite" status is wearing off. The presumption of moral superiority has been reversed.

In these parts, we can still hear a man claim it's okay for him to eat overpriced cake because he's a Republican, but it no longer makes the same kind of sense that it once did. It's gotten to the point in the Mid-Atlantic that the charge shifts from "why are you eating overpriced cake?" to "how the fuck can you be a Republican?"

Republicanism is no longer respectable. It no longer signifies status or moral superiority. Around here, it's just a big question mark.

http://www.boomantribune.com/story/2013/10/22/9582/7297
7 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
On Cake and Political Identity (Original Post) phantom power Oct 2013 OP
k&r for exposure. n/t Laelth Oct 2013 #1
I kinda liked how he unpacked that phantom power Oct 2013 #2
Agreed. n/t Laelth Oct 2013 #7
K&R! TeamPooka Oct 2013 #3
That's an odd response anyway el_bryanto Oct 2013 #4
It's odd if you view political affiliation as an expression of internal values phantom power Oct 2013 #5
MMMMmmmmm... cake... ScreamingMeemie Oct 2013 #6

phantom power

(25,966 posts)
2. I kinda liked how he unpacked that
Tue Oct 22, 2013, 01:25 PM
Oct 2013

It's frequently hard to verbalize all the social subtext in our language, but I think he nailed that one

el_bryanto

(11,804 posts)
4. That's an odd response anyway
Tue Oct 22, 2013, 01:33 PM
Oct 2013

I'm allowed to have nice stuff because I'm a Republican? Of course the flip is even worse "You claim to care about the poor and yet here you are having a steak (or comparably priced vegetarian meal)."

Bryant

phantom power

(25,966 posts)
5. It's odd if you view political affiliation as an expression of internal values
Tue Oct 22, 2013, 01:44 PM
Oct 2013

But if, like the author says, you essentially identified yourself with Republicans as a sort of social status statement, it makes more sense.

As the OP also discusses, "Republican" no longer has the kind of social status connotations as it used to, which is a direct consequence of the "useful idiot" component of the party actually getting elected. The Teabilly contingent has always been around, but they used to be confined to the voting booths, and the "social elite / plutocrat" wing of the GOP could sort of pretend they didn't exist most of the time. Now they're out of their cage and screwing up their social brand.

Which is what eventually happens when you make deals with the devil.


Latest Discussions»General Discussion»On Cake and Political Ide...