honorentheos wrote:That's fair. I'd also recommend the article from The National Review as an inside look on how conservatives feel about this allegation. I found it online, here: National Review
I'll warn you that reading The National Review can get to me once in a while as I really find the general tone grating. It's one of three politics-based magazines I subscribe (the others being Reason and The Nation) and of them it's the one I relate to the least. In fact, I usually disagree with most of the articles. But I try to use the fact I get a negative response to the writing as a tool, in that I find myself forced to confront the emotion and engage the writing itself. I've found it helpful in understanding the conservative arguments for their positions as well as why some things they say that seem so irrational are more grounded than I would have accepted otherwise.
I think this is one of those cases. I do agree that race was part of the national campaign, but I disagree that there was as much as the right was accused of. And frankly, I think true progressives should recognize that going out of our way looking for racism can undermine our argument for being the grown-ups in the room.
EDIT: To change link so it connected to the 1st page of the article.
Thanks, honor.
I agree that we should avoid racial hypersensitivity. OTOH, we shouldn't be afraid of recognizing true racial dogwhistles, either. Birtherism is a particularly noxious form of racial politics. Trump was the national posterboy for birtherism. He was a Romney surrogate, to the extent of making robocalls for him.