Populist nationalism is over. It might play a role in Congressional elections here and there, but it will never again be an important national force like it was in 2016. The fact that immigration is going to permanently change our ethnic-racial demographics is now something the American people are used to.
Neoliberal economics is over. The whole supply-side theory is more thoroughly discredited than Marxism. It has been tried and tried and tried, and it has never accomplished anything but its real intended purpose, which is to make the rich richer.
The religious right is over. It will remain relevant only in certain cultural enclaves. Everybody else just points at it and laughs.
Neoconservative warhawkery is over. Even the GOP has repudiated it. PNAC shut down more than a decade ago. After Iraq and Afghanistan, nobody takes seriously any more the idea that the U.S. can invade any other country and do "nation-building" to any beneficial effect.
If there is any Wave of the Future in American politics, it will come from the left, and not from the Democrats. That's not going away, because it is rooted in the very real economic needs and demands of distressed and anxious Americans who can see very clearly that wealth inequality, as such, is a problem.
Neoliberal economics is over. The whole supply-side theory is more thoroughly discredited than Marxism. It has been tried and tried and tried, and it has never accomplished anything but its real intended purpose, which is to make the rich richer.
The religious right is over. It will remain relevant only in certain cultural enclaves. Everybody else just points at it and laughs.
Neoconservative warhawkery is over. Even the GOP has repudiated it. PNAC shut down more than a decade ago. After Iraq and Afghanistan, nobody takes seriously any more the idea that the U.S. can invade any other country and do "nation-building" to any beneficial effect.
If there is any Wave of the Future in American politics, it will come from the left, and not from the Democrats. That's not going away, because it is rooted in the very real economic needs and demands of distressed and anxious Americans who can see very clearly that wealth inequality, as such, is a problem.
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