dog whistle politics examples
i'm a linguist, i've been working on political language, writing about political language for a very long time, and this cycle is obviously very interesting, it's it's not easy to say how much this election is a one-off and how much it signals a real sea change either ideologically or linguistically. is it a black crow or just a gray
one? but i do think it's clear that whatever happens in november we're not going to go back to the same kind of political discourse that's been dominant for the last 40 or 50 years. it isn't just a matter of phraseology though it's true that where we're hearing less of phrases like big government and traditional values, but
that's partly because trump isn't really cut from the standard conservative mold...partly because everybody's focused on personalities rather than issues. but it's also because the election has brought home the growing fissures in the coalitions of the right and of the left. you can hear this in the way people talk about
race and gender. on the right, things have gotten cruder more explicit. i think of the revival of the nixon era dog whistle law and order that's a phrase that somehow gathers inner-city blacks, mexicans, and muslims together into this single dusky menace. and on the left people are allowing themselves to talk about racism and sexism more
directly than in most recent times. people used to be called racially insensitive now people on the left are allowing themselves to say they're racist. i have to say though that the most significant shifts in political discourse are really tonal. public and private used to be these very distinct settings. but that line has been blurring
for a long time and technology is obviously accelerated the process. true, now trump is an outlier here nevermind how he talks about race just listen to him label his adversaries with schoolyard epithets like "stupid" and "loser". those are words that not even harry truman used that way. not in public life,
they're the sorts of things you use in in exchanges with with your friends. but a lot of people here that as a mark of candor and authenticity, and it's really just a marked example of the pervasive way the language of private chatter has bubbled up into public exposure. i sometimes get the feeling that all of political discourse has become just one
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