I grew up in a rural community, began my career as an organizer in small towns, and now lead one of the largest efforts to rebuild pro-democracy, pro-worker civic capacity in rural America. So I can speak with some authority when I say that President Biden, somewhat surprisingly, has ushered in a new economic paradigm that can radically transform the lives of rural people and build a more politically and economically secure future for all Americans.

He calls his agenda “Bidenomics,” a term that will be hotly debated in the months ahead. But what does it mean? And what’s its significance for rural people?

In simplest terms, Bidenomics arguably is the most significant departure in 40 years from the “free market revolution” that rose to dominance in the 1980s — a dramatic alteration to our country’s economic trajectory.

The combination of executive and congressional action since Biden took office — from the American Rescue Plan, to the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, to the CHIPS Act, Inflation Reduction Act and key executive action promoting competition and protecting workers — presents greater potential for revitalizing rural communities than anything since the New Deal. These were huge steps in the right direction, and yet rural people are still struggling. The updated Rural Policy Action Report offers a continued roadmap for how to help rural communities, protect the environment and core freedoms, and renew shared prosperity across geographic divides.

93 points

Do they even know that??

Being good for a group of people is not the same as them knowing that you’ve been good for them. This is eternally where Democrats fall flat on their faces.

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23 points

I think think that’s what this propaganda piece is aiming to accomplish: hopefully it will make them believe it.

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21 points

Republicans have spent literally decades convincing these people they are the best for them. They have honed that false image and every Republican knows to fall in-line and go after these folks. They hammer that point home every chance they get.

Democrats have a couple of campaign events here or there every couple of years, maybe a couple of articles printed, and then they go back to endlessly pandering to teeny, tiny demographic groups that couldn’t get anyone elected.

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1 point

What drives me crazy is the purity ponies that will go after anyone and everyone (and each other) over navel-gazing bullshit like “intersectionalities” and oppression olympics and so on…

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6 points

The farmer/decentralized tech enthusiast cross section is probably small. Actually, given their hurdles in jailbreaking tractors and right to repair being so important to so many, it could be higher than average. Huh.

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5 points
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The actual article is in The Hill

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11 points

To be fair, Republican policies have been horrible for them and they don’t know about that, but that’s two sides of the same coin. I don’t know that liberals have really been able to insert themselves into the rural propaganda space like conservatives have. All they need is some charismatic guy/gal in a folksy voice to talk about family values and the Bible, then just steer it in the direction of loving thy neighbor and taking care of your fellow man. Liberal/progressive values need to be normalized in rural areas and connected to the values they already have. Right now all they’re really hearing are conservative voices.

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3 points

I don’t know that liberals have really been able to insert themselves into the rural propaganda space like conservatives have.

It probably doesn’t help that most of the media targeting them is owned by people that want the regulatory state to go back to where it was in the late 1800s so they can become modern-day Rockefellers and Carnegies

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3 points

Conservatives taking over AM radio stations in the 90s has had an underappreciated and disastrous effect on this country.

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7 points

Of course not. Their media is controlled by them. It may be worse than fox now.

Honestly, Lemmy is probably worse than Reddit at challenging a comment like this, but it’s better than the shit my father in law turns on when he drives my child around. Challenge it.

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1 point

How can you tell others to challenge it when you can’t even stand up to your FIL?

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-2 points

Honestly, Lemmy is probably worse than Reddit at challenging a comment like this

The power posters tend to be the same Reddit shills and eternal optimists that dominated the old platforms. Who the hell actually even reads The Hill on the reg, anyway? Much less feels the urge to repost it to social media as frequently as this guy? He’s been on the site for 3 months and already posted nearly 2k times, all from a handful of mainstream news outlets.

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-4 points

Do they even know that??

Big number go up things get better. What else do you need to know?

Falling literacy rates? Rising infant mortality? Declining life expectancy? Pollution? 100-degree weather stretching into the Fall? Collapsing infrastructure and rising cost-of-living? Ballooning household debt in the face of wages that continue to fall relative to the value of assets and equities?

Stfu, idiot. You just don’t understand economics. Life in the de-industrialized midwest has never been better. Say thank you and go back into your living holes. Be grateful things aren’t worse.

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56 points
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Ok, good, so does that mean you’ll continue to support Democratic policies in the future? Because rural America has held urban and suburban America in a goddamn stranglehold for the last 23 years and we could really use some economic relief ourselves.

It should be clear from the evidence thus far that conservative policies don’t benefit anybody except the ultra-wealthy.

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9 points

Rural America isnt on lemmy, you’re talking to an empty chair unfortunately

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52 points

Rural American will still vote against it because it’s a put in place by a Democrat.

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34 points
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Deleted by creator
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33 points

In my experience, the bar for a godsend is very low in rural America. If you are hungry there and a McDonalds is still open, it’s a godsend. If they bring back reruns of Andy Griffith at 3 o’clock on channel 2 it’s a godsend.

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8 points

I guess the point of your post is basically “haha rural America”. And yet, after living in several cities one of my biggest goals is to get the fuck out of urban America.

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26 points

I think the point is that they consistently vote against their own interests, then fall for the demonization of those trying to help them.

Then when modern convenience falls in their lap because it’s just too economically unfeasible to not bring it to them… they fall over themselves wondering at the minor upgrade in their living conditions.

I’m under no illusion that urban (or even suburban) living doesn’t have downsides… but they pale in comparison to the shit-sandwich that people in rural areas continue to serve themselves.

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-13 points

Imagine the arrogance to think you know better than someone you’ve never met, who lives their own lives second by second and knows the details of their needs and wants intimately, what’s best for them better than they do. Maybe you should be their dictator.

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4 points

As someone who’s done it I’ll tell you it’s worth it. Sure, you get some real bumpkins out there. They can be rough but they’re mostly friendly. Some of them are stupid, but that’s anywhere. They’re usually simpler for sure, and the pace is slower, and the rules are more lax, and that can be hard getting used to, but once you’re used to it, no traffic and your amazon packages are still on your doorstep waiting for you.

Just avoid tweaker towns, which is harder than it sounds.

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10 points

Yeah, it’s fine. If you’re white.

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1 point

Ok, bye

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-6 points

They grow your food and usually make shit you need to survive because they can be taken advantage of. This creates a culture where they don’t always have as much or access to the same things urban dwellers do. What a condescending statement to make.

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13 points

They really don’t grow your food most of the time. Corn and Soy are the most grown crops, and 70+ % of either are ground up to feed animals or make biofuels. Biofuels don’t even make economic or environmental sense at all, it’s only created because the government mandates its addition to gasoline and diesel, making both more expensive. That’s 40% of all corn grown literally going up in flames for absolutely no reason other than to subsidize farmers who are overproducing corn.

American farmers also massively overproduce milk too, mostly because they can feed cows the unlimited soy and feed corn available and because the US government will literally buy up all the excess milk (and turn it to cheese and stockpile it) or pay farmers to dump it down the drain to keep the prices up.

And it’s not just milk, soy, and corn that’s overproduced, it’s everything. The amount of agricultural subsidy is insane, and most of it is to keep farmers in business who are growing stuff nobody wants or are growing stuff in areas where the land is so poor that without massive subsidy, there would be no profit, in the first place.

And all of this overproduction is absolutely destroying the environment. Actual cities and towns filled with people doing actually productive things are running short of water because the government insists on keep Joe farmer’s irrigation dependant farm in the goddamn desert in business producing soy beans that are then exported to feed pigs in China. Hell half the time it isn’t even Joe Farmer, it’s Joe Farmer Corp owned by the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia who realized growing that same crop in their desert was unsustainable.

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1 point

That’s 40% of all corn grown literally going up in flames for absolutely no reason other than to subsidize farmers who are overproducing corn.

They do this because the first primaries of the season are in Iowa, so they want to keep those corn farmers happy or they lose the primary.

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0 points
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15 points

The picture of a pair of boomer ass landowners is not helping them with the message

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-3 points

If you were already a PMC with a bunch of invested cash and property, you’ll be happy to know that the 80-year-old insurance industry flak turned bagman for the Obama administration turned white savior for the liberal establishment is going to be propping those inflated asset prices up one more business cycle.

But if you’re watching Congress go into another round of cut-backs on domestic services, privatization of education and health care, ramping up of the national security state, and war-mongering abroad while the President rubber stamps it all… well… maybe just shut up and Vote Blue No Matter Who because the alternative to the Kyrsten Sinema Senate will be even worse.

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