LDAHL
8-4-16, 1:42pm
As I try to make sense of the chaos within the major political parties, and not just in the U.S., I thought this piece in the Economist made a lot of sense.
http://www.economist.com/news/leaders/21702750-farewell-left-versus-right-contest-matters-now-open-against-closed-new
They make the case that the divide may not be so much between Left and Right as between Open and Closed. Both the Trump and Sanders campaigns focused largely on trade protectionism and immigration themes. The malleable principles of Clinton seem to be inclining against some of her past globalist positions. She defended TPP before being against it, for instance. I'm not sure that President Obama isn't our most prominent advocate of free trade and global alliances at the moment.
Many current European issues seem to have an open/closed context as well.
Is it possible that we will be hearing less about big government vs. small and shift our focus along a more isolationist/globalist axis?
http://www.economist.com/news/leaders/21702750-farewell-left-versus-right-contest-matters-now-open-against-closed-new
They make the case that the divide may not be so much between Left and Right as between Open and Closed. Both the Trump and Sanders campaigns focused largely on trade protectionism and immigration themes. The malleable principles of Clinton seem to be inclining against some of her past globalist positions. She defended TPP before being against it, for instance. I'm not sure that President Obama isn't our most prominent advocate of free trade and global alliances at the moment.
Many current European issues seem to have an open/closed context as well.
Is it possible that we will be hearing less about big government vs. small and shift our focus along a more isolationist/globalist axis?