While broadly in agreement, I see an interesting problem here: do "Hispanics" broadly accept that premise that they are a single unified group? They are way too diverse to think that. Many Hispanics will not see Central Americans as like them. 1/
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I think Trump and the environment that gave rise to his presidency represent breakdown of the functioning of US political institution in general. Where there have been worse social and econ crises, the political system was robust enough for US to survive. 1/
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E.g. the Great Depression, the 60s, and so on. Mostly b/c the political institutions were run on the hypocrisy of the "functioning" kind, where pols were willing to cut deals. Less so today. Political institutions are generally reviled. Dealmaking is anathema. 2/
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And name calling and moralistic posturing substitutes for politicking. And Trump is very good at this sort of dysfunctional politics--he got there b/c of this. The racist nonsense is an important part of this act. But dysfunctional politics, even if it weren't racist, is.. 3/
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Still dysfunctional. The key challenge for me is to find a way to reintroduce the "productive" hypocrisy back into politics so that deals can be made and productive things can actually get done, while the moralistic posturing can be suppressed. 4/
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So, to me, racism is a symptom, rather than the cause. Very serious symptom, but not as serious as one might think--as you pointed out, the racism against Muslims and African Americans, for now at least, has little or bite, and I think even that aginst Hispanics is... 5/
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not quite that monumental in the long run. (Perhaps like anti-Catholic bias in 1920s-50s?) But the deinstitutionalization of politics generally is the biggest threat facing US politics, IMHO. 6/
End of conversation
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