Of course not. Nobody ever doubted that.
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Replying to @mtracey
Obama was/is a symbol of cool, cosmopolitanism. Trump is the antithesis. But both are kind of a fashion statement for some.
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Replying to @TheStalwart
And HRC is a symbol of... nothingness. Banal continuity. Thus the sapped enthusiasm relative to Obama.
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Replying to @mtracey
Perhaps, in the sense of Kerry, Gore, Bush, Clinton I, etc.
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Replying to @TheStalwart
Gore, maybe. Kerry not so much: he was the repository of anti-establishment sentiment just by virtue of running against Bush.
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Replying to @mtracey
I'm not talking about sentiment. I'm talking about aesthetics and self expression.
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Replying to @TheStalwart
Yeah, I think the aesthetics of Kerry support in 2004 had a tinge of anti-establishment to it. Remember "Rock the Vote"???
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Replying to @mtracey
And really, Kerry as some kind of anti-establishment avatar?
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Replying to @TheStalwart
He subsumed some of those sentiments just because Bush and the war were so loathed.
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Replying to @mtracey
Zero disagreement there. But that's not the same as being, in essence, style icon
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Yeah, agreed. Obama was in his own class in that respect.
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Replying to @mtracey
I certainly think the signage gap is interesting. I just think there's potentially a wide range of things to draw from it.
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Replying to @TheStalwart
I know. What's interesting is the HRC partisans angrily insisting that there is *nothing whatsoever* to be gleaned from it.
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