Jaguar
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- Joined
- May 5, 2007
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Populist discourse is preoccupied with the discovery and identification of the enemy. The adversary may include such diverse groups as foreigners, minorities, the press, or the business and/or political class.
No shit. Imagine that.
Is Bernie a Populist?
Let’s take a look at some of Sen. Sanders’s comments on social media following his recent victory in the New Hampshire primary.
In one Facebook post, he stated:
"Now is the time to have the guts to take on the corporate and financial elite of this country that controls so much of our economy and our government."
This short statement articulates Sanders’s view that business leaders and wealthy individuals are conspiring with political leaders for their own mutual benefit to the detriment of the common man.
In a separate post, Sanders declared:
"What we have done tonight in New Hampshire is nothing short of the beginning of a political revolution. Let's win this primary. Let's defeat Donald Trump. And then let us begin the work of transforming this country when we are in the White House."
This message clearly conveys that Sanders believes that a revolution of sorts is necessary to subvert the existing order controlled by the conspiring business and financial elite.
Sanders’s repeated use of the word “we†conveys that he represents the people. His denunciation of business leaders and the wealthy indicates that they are the enemy of the people. His call for a political revolution suggests that this group of people no longer deserve the rights afforded them by a broken system in need of transformation.
An analysis of Sanders’s discourse strongly suggests he is following the populist playbook
No shit. Imagine that.
Populists to the left of me, Populists to the right, here I am.