Anonymous ID: 61ddbb Feb. 4, 2021, 5:16 a.m. No.12819465   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9618 >>9831 >>0033 >>0086

More Americans Expect to Lose Influence Under Biden. Here’s Why That’s a Problem

 

President Joe Biden walks to Marine One on the South Lawn of the White House on Jan. 29, 2021. Credit - Drew Angerer—Getty Images

 

This article is part of the The DC Brief, TIME’s politics newsletter. Sign up here to get stories like this sent to your inbox every weekday.

 

In politics, the reality of a situation is often second to how it’s perceived.

 

President Gerald Ford was, in the public’s mind, a klutz. It didn’t matter that he was the only President to tackle a Heisman winner or to turn down an NFL contract. Chevy Chase’s impersonation of Ford during the early days of Saturday Night Live rendered the 38th President someone who couldn’t navigate stairs. It didn’t matter that President Bill Clinton zeroed out the deficit and left office with a surplus; his critics still see him as a big-spending liberal who never met a government program he didn’t love. Both George W. Bush and John Kerry were members of the same secret society at Yale, yet Bush was the plain-spoken guy you’d like to grab a beer with, while Kerry was the elitist with an heiress wife.

 

Political campaigns spend millions trying to fight these baked-in ideas, but it’s usually for naught. Once the public locks onto an idea, it’s tough to move it.

 

Which is why a poll released this week from the Pew Research Center caught my eye. According to its wide survey of more than 5,300 Americans, a majority of the public thinks the Biden Administration will give more influence to Black people, women, LGBT individuals, young and Hispanic persons. That’s pretty much what the Democratic Party has campaigned on for the last few elections, so it’s not a real surprise that the marketing is working.

 

What did leave me a little shaken was who were perceived as losers in Biden’s America. According to Pew’s survey, Evangelical Christians, businesses and the military were expected to lose influence under Biden. So, too, were white people, wealthy individuals, older Americans and men — basically, Biden’s avatar. Taken as a whole, more respondents said they’d lose influence under Biden than gain. And that carries with it deep insecurity and lays the groundwork for potential public resentment against the new government.

 

Some of this might reflect the sentiment of supporters of former President Donald Trump captured in the poll, echoing his grievances after his electoral loss. Other reasons for the widespread sense of powerlessness could include the fact that Evangelical Christians, businesses and the military actually had it pretty good under Trump: he gave them their conservative judges, cut their taxes and jacked-up the Pentagon budget. Joe Biden’s progressive tendencies are a predictable cause for concern for these groups.

 

(A quick technical disclaimer: this year’s Pew survey was the first to use an online panel, whereas previous iterations were done by telephone. Pew notes that the numbers are therefore not directly comparable to other years’ results. Even so, I trust you will also find the non-scientific narrative worth considering.)

 

It’s the “people like yourself” question, though, that potentially carries the strongest political risk for Biden. When Pew asked whether “people like yourself” will gain or lose influence ahead of the previous four Inaugurations, Americans were optimistic. On the cusp of the Trump era, 40% said people like them would gain influence, and 27% said they’d lose it. On the cusp of Barack Obama’s tenure, a whopping 47% of respondents said people like them would gain influence while just 18% said they’d lose ground. And when George W. Bush was about to come to power, 35% said they’d gain power to the 26% who expected to lose it. Clinton came to power with 43% of Americans expecting to gain influence and just 22% expecting to be shut out.

 

Asked last month if they’d gain or lose influence under Biden, 24% respondents said they would gain influence while 36% expected to lose.

 

In other words, the share of people who expect to lose power based on a President has gone from 22% in 1993 to 36% today. That’s certainly not all down to Biden himself; a lot has happened this year to make people feel pessimistic.

 

But it’s also not a trendline that is heading in the right direction if you want wide buy-in from a bitterly divided nation. Instead, it is a recipe for resentment and lesion on Biden’s legitimacy. It shows that despite the marketing effort to cast Democrats as the party of inclusion, a record level of Americans expect to be shut out. It doesn’t matter what the ground realities are, of course. Rich, white people probably aren’t on the cusp of losing their agency in America. It’s a gut call. And right now, Americans’ guts are rotting.

 

https://www.yahoo.com/news/more-americans-expect-lose-influence-190948573.html

Anonymous ID: 61ddbb Feb. 4, 2021, 5:48 a.m. No.12819604   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9642 >>9748

>>12819535

Exactly. Here is some MSM sauce.

 

At Least Two Buildings Near US Capitol Complex Evacuated Amid Protests

 

UPDATE (Jan. 6, 2021, 2:40 p.m.): Demonstrators waving Trump flags rushed up the steps of the U.S. Capitol Wednesday as crowds of President Donald Trump’s supporters descended on Washington, D.C. to protest election results while Congress met to count Electoral College votes.

 

An alert from U.S. Capitol Police told occupants of Cannon to remain calm and move "in a safe manner" to the exits due to "police activity."

 

Congressional staffers in the Longworth House Office Building voluntarily gathered in the building’s basement but had not been ordered to evacuate the building, one staffer said.

 

There are underground tunnels that connect every building on Capitol Hill. Staff can move between buildings indoors.

 

The Library of Congress is located adjacent to the U.S. Capitol complex.

 

An alert from U.S. Capitol Police told occupants of Cannon to remain calm and move "in a safe manner" to the exits due to "police activity."

 

Congressional staffers in the Longworth House Office Building voluntarily gathered in the building’s basement but had not been ordered to evacuate the building, one staffer said.

 

There are underground tunnels that connect every building on Capitol Hill. Staff can move between buildings indoors.

 

The Library of Congress is located adjacent to the U.S. Capitol complex.

 

https://www.nbcwashington.com/news/at-least-two-buildings-near-us-capitol-complex-evacuated-amid-protests/2531447/

Anonymous ID: 61ddbb Feb. 4, 2021, 6:54 a.m. No.12820057   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0086 >>0120

Give a dog a bone. Elon, Dog or Master? Woof…or Wolf?

 

Elon Musk, back on Twitter, turns his attention to Dogecoin

 

LONDON (Reuters) - Cryptocurrency Dogecoin surged more than 60% on Thursday after billionaire entrepreneur Elon Musk tweeted about it, two days after he said he was to take a break from Twitter "for a while".

 

Dogecoin, which is based on a popular internet meme, jumped 67.99% to $0.054496, according to data on blockchain and cryptocurrency website Coindesk.

 

Musk first tweeted "Doge" after a picture of a rocket going to the moon. He then tweeted "Dogecoin is the people's crypto".

 

The Tesla chief also posted an edited image of himself with the Shiba Inu dog at the centre of the doge meme, also the logo for the cryptocurrency.

 

Musk, who has 45.2 million followers on Twitter, has been highly engaged in the recent retail trading frenzy, tweeting about specific companies and cryptocurrencies and helping send their prices soaring.

 

Shares in GameStop, Etsy and CD Projekt have jumped following comments about them on his Twitter account. Some of these stocks had been heavily shorted.

 

"I am become meme, Destroyer of shorts," Musk tweeted.

 

Last Friday he added "#bitcoin" to his Twitter bio, sending the largest cryptocurrency flying. He has since taken the tag off.

 

Dogecoin was created largely as a satirical critique of the 2013 crypto frenzy, but can still be bought and sold on digital currency exchanges.

 

It regularly makes a comeback during viral crypto rallies, with individuals promoting it on social media. Last week it soared after Carole Baskin, one of the stars of Netflix Inc's "Tiger King" talked about it in a video online.

 

Meanwhile, cryptocurrency ethereum is also on a record-setting spree as investors buy it before the launch of ethereum futures on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange next week.

 

Ethereum rose to record high of $1,698.56 before giving up some of those gains to trade 2.7% lower in early London trading. Bitcoin, the most popular crypto currency, also fell 1.2% to $37,184.

 

Cryptocurrencies are gaining traction with more mainstream investors, with the total market value of all cryptocurrencies reaching more than $1 trillion for the first time earlier in January.

 

https://www.yahoo.com/finance/news/elon-musk-back-twitter-turns-095608926.html