barmar, on 2020-September-18, 22:50, said:
Unfortunately, once a slogan has caught on, it's really hard to undo it.
It's also really hard to come up with something "catchy" that accurately describes what you want. You can't fit all the nuances into 3 words.
We saw it before with "Black Lives Matter". The opposition jumped on this, disingenuously interpreting it as meaning only black lives matter, when what's really meant is that black lives also matter. They ask why white lives don't matter, but that's not what the BLM protesters are saying -- the status quo is fine for white people, black people just want an end to all the problems that imply that they don't matter.
It's not a zero-sum game -- improving the lives of people of color doesn't mean that white people have to lose something. But that's not what many privileged white people think. Consider the speech that was given at the RNC, when someone (Pence?) talked about protecting the suburbs from those people moving in and lowering your property values. That was the justification for red-lining decades ago, but we were supposed to be long past that.
I agree.
We are at a moment of choice. How do we see life?
I will again go back to my adolescence.
My high school math teacher often found me very frustrating but he was instrumental in my getting a scholarship to college.
When I got it, my high school Spanish teacher (Fresh and Soph years) made it clear she thought I should not have gotten it. She felt I had largely wasted my chances in school. I understood her thoughts on this and appreciated the clarity. A clear expression of disappointment can be very useful.
Now, many years later, I still see this as a fine example of the two sides of a coin.
We should provide opportunity. Is there anyone who thinks that we should not? Advocating for opportunity will attract support. And it is simple reality that sometimes opportunities are wasted.
We need to provide doors that can be opened, preferably opened without using a battering ram. The individual benefits directly and society benefits as well. But not everyone will walk through that door. So a variety of doors would be good.
I think Biden can credibly advocate along such lines. A key part is that it really does not have to be us versus them. Not a zero sum game, as you say. We all benefit when a person sees how to make a decent life for himself and his family. Yes, his or her family, of course. We all benefit, anyone can see that. And some people are very hard to help. That has to be accepted too. Adolescence is a turbulent time and I was no sure thing. But opportunity is the key. And I think there are a lot of votes in that message. And second chances are a very good idea.
Perhaps this seems simplistic but sometimes simple is the way to go.
And I really do think we are at a moment of choice in this country.