I really try to avoid this tendency to mythologize the present. It's something I am inherently cynical about. Every standing ovation as if an audience witnessed the greatest performance ever. GOAT talk. Every news story that says "made history" in its copy. Hyperbole galore.
So at its roots, I don't believe this at all. But I do believe there are a lot of vested interests in wanting us to believe that.
It's in the language people use. Talk of "red" and "blue" just reduce everyone to binaries, which is bullcrap. People are like "How can a woman who looks like a lesbian college teacher be undecided with a vote for Kamala?", forgetting that a lot of people aren't cool with the paving of Palestine into a parking lot. Or people pointing fingers at California saying, :You're a blue state, you voted for this" as if Orange County was super liberal country all along. Sorry to break this to everyone, but EVERYTHING is a mash-up of purple-green-pink-orange.
A lot of this is being jacked for the modern media economy of clicks, likes, engagement. Social media is doing this to us to a large degree. Polarization is good for ratings.
I'm really offended at how badly politics is being put on a path we saw with sports (ESPN SportsCenter, DraftKings) and financial news (CNBC, r/WallStreetBets, etc.). I honestly think we're months away from media companies coming up with "Fantasy Election Leagues" with cash prizes and gambling on them to boot. Polymarket is already bought in.
She's compromised in my eyes. Someone only a European could like. And I'm in Europe!
This.
I've thought that since a year ago. Some furniture got moved in the interim, but it's the same outcome.