| ▲ | adventured 2 hours ago | |||||||
The bumbling dope is the default go-to characterization by the left, they always target intelligence first no matter what. Bush 1 was a dope. Dan Quayle was a dope. Bush 2 was a dope (until they decided they liked him). Sarah Palin was a dope. Trump is a dope. Vance is a dope. The left views intelligence as a top tier prize, so they start by first trying to dismantle someone's standing on that. How likely is it that all of those people are actually stupid compared to the typical voter? Zero chance. They're more likely to be considerably smarter than the typical voter, above average intelligence across the board. Are Bill Clinton and Obama smarter than Trump? Yes imo. But you can't play at nuance in the propaganda game though, so the left always settles on: my opponent is stupid; and they push hard in that direction. | ||||||||
| ▲ | amalcon an hour ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
I don't remember people thinking HW Bush was dumb. Or McCain, or Romney, or Ryan, or McConnell, or even someone like Gingrich. Quayle, Palin, W Bush (very incorrectly, dude was wrong and/or lying about a lot of stuff but he wasn't dumb), and Trump, sure. The thing those people have in common is that they have unorthodox public speaking styles. Especially Trump. It's kind of a pro wrestling adjacent style -- lots of performative bombast, specific tropes referencing cultural touchstones, I'm not trying to change anyone's mind on any substantive issue. I'm just trying to put myself into a particular box in the viewer's mind. It can be effective, but when it's not, it comes off as buffoonish. | ||||||||
| ▲ | gardenhedge an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-] | |||||||
Bill Clinton who got caught in a sex scandal... smart? | ||||||||
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| ▲ | scarecrowbob an hour ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
A willingness to break norms could be genius, or it could be a sign that the person doing that simply doesn't understand why those norms are in place. I think you're both correct to note that attacking the intelligence of a person is both meaningless and a pretty normal liberal tactic. At the same time, one way of understanding the shift from hard to soft power is the same as understanding Trumps "intelligence": he's funny and knows how to work a crowd, but it doesn't functionally matter how smart he is because he has so much organized power and thus resources that he doesn't -have- to be smart. Being rich and sociopathic is probably way more effective than worrying about the long games, and everything in sir hoss's life probably makes that fact obvious. In that same way, my horrors about this shift in power could also be stated as a worry that the folks running the US gov don't feel like they need to have any subtlety or mask on their power because they are more comfortable using dumb, brute force. And they might be correct in that assessment- they might not need to be intelligent if they can be brutal enough. Good luck to them and "game on" I guess; 3k troops versus 150k activated but as yet non-violent folks in Minneapolis will be an interesting bit of data for sure. | ||||||||