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|    alt.war.civil.usa    |    Discussing American civil war.. and 2.0    |    44,056 messages    |
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|    Message 42,267 of 44,056    |
|    Ryan to All    |
|    Feeble Old tRUMP'S MAGA Movement Made Up    |
|    15 Aug 24 01:56:20    |
      XPost: alt.atheism, or.politics, talk.politics.guns       XPost: sac.politics       From: X@Y.com              Just how racist is the MAGA movement? This survey measures it.              A Trump supporter holds a Confederate flag outside the Senate chamber after       rioters breached the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.              By Jennifer Rubin       September 28, 2022              It has long been understood that the MAGA movement is heavily dependent on       White grievance and straight-up racism. (Hence Donald Trump’s refusal to       disavow racist groups and his statement that there were “very fine people       on both sides” in the violent clashes at the white-supremacist rally in       Charlottesville.)       Sign up for the Prompt 2024 newsletter for opinions on the biggest       questions in politics              Now, we have numbers to prove it.              The connection between racism and the right-wing movement is apparent in a       new poll from the Public Religion Research Institute. The survey asked       respondents about 11 statements designed to probe views on racism. For       example: “White Americans today are not responsible for discrimination       against Black people in the past.” The pollsters then used their answers to       quantify a “structural racism index,” which provides a general score from       zero to 1 measuring a person’s attitudes on “white supremacy and racial       inequality, the impact of discrimination on African American economic       mobility, the treatment of African Americans in the criminal justice       system, general perceptions of race, and whether racism is still       significant problem today.” Higher scores indicate a more receptive       attitude to racist beliefs.              The results shouldn’t surprise anyone paying attention to the MAGA crowd’s       rhetoric and veneration of the Confederacy. “Among all Americans, the       median value on the structural racism index is 0.45, near the center of the       scale,” the poll found. “The median score on the structural racism index       for Republicans is 0.67, compared with 0.45 for independents and 0.27 for       Democrats.” Put differently, Republicans are much more likely to buy into       the notion that Whites are victims.              The poll also found that the religious group that makes up the core of       today’s GOP and MAGA movement has the highest structural racism measure       among the demographics it surveyed: “White evangelical Protestants have the       highest median score, at 0.64, while Latter-day Saints, white Catholics,       and white mainline Protestants each have a median of 0.55. By contrast,       religiously unaffiliated white Americans score 0.33.” This is true even       though Whites report far less discrimination toward them than racial       minorities do.              The survey also captured just how popular the “Lost Cause” to rewrite the       history of the Civil War and downplay or ignore the evil of slavery is on       the right: “Republicans overwhelmingly back efforts to preserve the legacy       of the Confederacy (85%), compared with less than half of independents       (46%) and only one in four Democrats (26%). The contrast between white       Republicans and white Democrats is stark. Nearly nine in 10 white       Republicans (87%), compared with 23% of white Democrats, support efforts to       preserve the legacy of the Confederacy.”              Americans who fully support reforming Confederate monuments have a much       lower structural racism index score, while those who oppose it have a much       higher score. The same is true when it comes to renaming schools honoring       individuals who supported slavery and racial discrimination or changing       racist mascots.              Those who want to keep Confederate monuments and offensive mascots in place       might deny that their views have anything to do with bigotry, but then       again, they often deny the legacy of racism and paint Whites as victims,       too. In general, MAGA forces have one goal when they amplify “replacement       theory” or fuss over corporations promoting inclusivity: to maximize White       anger and resentment.              Robert P. Jones, who leads PRRI, tells me, “While this result may seem       surprising or even shocking to many White Christians, it is because we do       not know our own history. If we take a clear-eyed look at our history, we       see a widespread, centuries-long Christian defense of white supremacy.” He       adds, “For example, every major Protestant Christian denomination split       over the issue of slavery in the Civil War, with Methodists, Episcopalians,       Presbyterians, and Baptists in the South all breaking fellowship with their       Northern brethren.” Given that history, Jones says, “it’s hardly a surprise       that a denial of systemic racism is a defining feature of White       evangelicalism today.”              The PRRI poll shows the MAGA movement has done a solid job convincing the       core of the GOP base that they are victims. And let’s be clear: An       aggrieved electoral minority that believes it has been victimized and is       ready to deploy violence is a serious threat to an inclusive democracy.                     https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2022/09/28/racism-survey-prri-maga-       republicans/              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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