• AJ Sadauskas@aus.social
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    1 year ago

    @bobthened @MentalEdge A great example of this was with free trade and tariff reductions, alongside free markets, which were a shibboleth of the American right for decades.

    Through most of the '80s, '90s, 2000s, and 2010s, protectionism, tariffs, and any opposition to free trade agreements were denounced by the right as “socialism”.

    Reagan was a free trader, at least in his rhetoric. (Albeit one who in practice provided state subsidies to important rural constituents, such as corn and dairy farmers. He also imposed tariffs on some Japanese electronic goods.)

    Bush Snr was a free trader.

    George W. Bush was a free trader. (Albeit one who invaded Iraq to prop up the oil sector, and ended up beginning the bank bailouts as the GFC hit.)

    Meanwhile, the Seattle anti-WTO protests opposed neoliberal free trade: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/1999_Seattle_WTO_protests

    Then comes Trump.

    His policies included imposing massive tariff barriers, and opposing free trade agreements.

    Economic policies the right had just spent decades denouncing as socialism.

    But because Trump had dressed those same policies up in nationalistic rhetoric, those same policies were suddenly embraced by the American right.

    Because it’s often not about the policies themselves.

    It’s about who advocates for them, how they’re communicated, and whether (or not) they’re the politically correct (in the original sense of the term) position for the IS right to support.