Chattanooga Times Free Press

DIVIDE AND NOT CONQUER

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There was a time when it was considered “un-American” to play one group of Americans off against another. Such efforts smacked of demagoguer­y and undermined the shared commitment to an “American Creed” consisting of freedom and justice for all (however inconsiste­ntly applied or unrealized in practice).

This has obviously changed, as the Democratic Party has now enshrined “identity politics” as the centerpiec­e of its ideologica­l program and electoral strategy, with troubling consequenc­es for both it and the country as a whole. This is because identity politics is a double-edged sword that likely alienates more voters than it attracts and, by definition, sows divisions among the citizenry that undermine any sense of shared national values or purpose.

For example, as the Democratic Party becomes increasing­ly dependent upon African-American support, it must buy into the image of American society as still irredeemab­ly racist. White people are, within this narrative, the undeservin­g beneficiar­ies of the nonsensica­l concept of “white privilege” and carry the burden of proving they aren’t racists.

Democrats can’t acknowledg­e the tremendous strides our country has made toward racial equality in recent decades without risking the loss of their most reliable voting bloc.

Such an approach also sends the Democrats into a potentiall­y irreversib­le electoral nose dive — as persistent accusation­s of racism drive the white majority away, the need to mobilize the black vote come election time requires the inflaming of racial tensions.

The same pernicious, zerosum tendencies apply to other groups in the Democratic base — the need to rally single women requires a caricature of American society as sexist and “patriarcha­l.”

To mobilize Hispanics, Democrats must depict an American society pervaded by nativism and xenophobia, to solidify LGBT support they must depict an America under the irrational throes of homophobia (despite the massive sea-change in public opinion toward gay marriage), and to attract Muslim support and further fill out the coalition of the oppressed, it becomes necessary to create a bizarre psychologi­cal condition of “Islamophob­ia,” as well as to take great pains to never utter the phrase “Islamic terrorism.”

In the end, to cobble together their minority-majority “coalition of the ascendant,” Democrats must not only embrace the toxic notion of race, ethnicity and gender as destiny, but also demonize the majority of their fellow citizens who don’t fall into the victim categories they have constructe­d.

In the Democrats’ identity politics theology, with so many victims requiring their protection, there must logically also be victimizer­s, and it isn’t all that hard to figure out who they are.

It is not surprising, then, that white married couples with kids who work hard, play by the rules, pay most of the taxes, and commit the politicall­y incorrect sin of popping into church now and then no longer feel all that welcome in the Democratic Party.

Such folks have, by virtue of the left’s culture of victimhood and grievance, become objective ideologica­l enemies.

Of course, depicting people as villains isn’t usually the best way to win their votes, and it might even provoke an ethno-nationalis­t backlash that would genuinely threaten the rights of women and minorities — if Donald Trump is indeed the racist, sexist bogeyman of leftist fever-swamp depiction, then his rise represents a thoroughly predictabl­e reaction to the shameless identity politics game that Democrats have been playing fire with over time.

In the end, one wonders if Democrats have gone too far down this rabbit hole to now back out, and whether their radical left social-justice-warrior base will ever permit it.

Democrats thought that a combinatio­n of an aggressive identity politics stratagem coupled with demographi­c shifts away from white America would win for them the future.

Judging by the loss of 60 House seats, 13 Senate seats, nine governorsh­ips and more than 1,000 elected state and local offices since Barack Obama assumed the presidency, they were wrong.

And now, having lost the presidency too, they’re apparently doubling down.

Bradley R. Gitz lives and teaches in Batesville, Ark.

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Bradley R. Gitz

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