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Culture War Roundup for the week of July 7, 2025

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Right, I can appreciate the tough position they are in, but I'm having a tough time sympathizing with the "we have already rejected the woke, what more do you want?" attitude. I can also understand the the official Democratic Party leadership isn't going to air their dirty laundry and say anything to the effect of "look, listen... we're kinda in a tug of war intra-party conflict here, and there's only so much we can do right now", but I would expect more from anonymous posters here.

Biden in 2020 was one of the least progressive candidates and became the nominee

The problem with this as a metric is that candidates have to be aware of their chances of victory in the general election, so there will almost certainly be some amount of hiding their power level (or even exaggerating it, when they know they're not going to implement a policy, because it's not popular with elites / lobbies, but popular with the nation as a whole). For example, Biden might not have ran on pressuring medical associations to remove age limits on medical transitions for children, but that is, in fact, what his administration deliberately did, once in power.

I consider myself anti-woke/centrist Dem and feel I have commented along those lines here (notably when trans topics come up). And I should mention that Carville does air his dirty laundry with progressives.

The problem with this as a metric is that candidates have to be aware of their chances of victory in the general election, so there will almost certainly be some amount of hiding their power level

I don't disagree on your general observation, but I was more using Biden an example of voter habits rather than politician. The politicians that win Democratic primaries tend to be centrists (or at least posing/perceived as centrists), making me believe that progressive policies are less popular even within the Democratic party.