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Culture War Roundup for the week of November 24, 2025

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Has nobody brought up the Marjorie Taylor Greene thing? I guess I'll jump on that grenade.

After break with Trump, Marjorie Taylor Greene will resign

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, the Georgia Republican who rose to prominence as one of President Trump's biggest defenders and recently became one of his biggest critics, is leaving Congress.

In some respects, it seems like the current GOP coalition is beginning to fracture. Up until recently, MTG was a high profile face in the MAGA movement. The fact that she is bowing out seems to represent something of a sea change in DC politics.

Both parties seem to be having problems, and to me, at least, it's fascinating that the problems seem to have a lot of overlap. In no particular order, both the DNC and GOP seem to be having a lot of internal problems with the following:

  1. Israel
  2. Economic policy - particularly healthcare
  3. Nazis
  4. Epstein

In some respects, it almost feels like a realignment might be creeping up on us. Is anyone else getting a similar feeling? Are there any alternatives that fit current events better?

In some respects, it almost feels like a realignment might be creeping up on us. Is anyone else getting a similar feeling?

I get a similar feeling, but sometimes I feel like the Dixiecrat realignment never fully resolved and we've been dealing with it (Goldwater, Reagan, Gingrich, Trump, etc.) ever since. The movement from Dems = labor and Rep = management/bankers/owners into whatever we have now never seems to have reached a stable equilibrium.

In conditions of full suffrage, there aren't enough management/bankers/owners to sustain an entire political party by themselves. They/we tend to cluster in a particular party, and pull off a certain faction of the middle/lower class to make up the numbers. So you can have aristos + loyal yeomen against the middle class, or the Wall Street + blacks + LGBT alliance, or the bankers + tech + based alliance, etc. But these tend not to be stable long term.

In conditions of full suffrage

This might be the key difference that I hadn't thought about it. However, even after full suffrage and that division fracturing for presidential elections, Dems basically controlled the house from FDR until Gingrich. That probably hid some of the realignment that was going on.

But these tend not to be stable long term.

The donor class of Team R still being management/bankers/owners who desire Big Line Go Up Forever while the base is increasingly anti-immigrant chuds (it's not a boo-light, I'm one of them) is definitely not stable.

The donor class of Team R still being management/bankers/owners who desire Big Line Go Up Forever while the base is increasingly anti-immigrant chuds (it's not a boo-light, I'm one of them) is definitely not stable.

A stable alliance between the business segment of the GOP and the anti-immigrant chuds is entirely possible in the near to medium term, if it dawns upon the business segment of the GOP that a large portion of immigration is dysgenic—whether it be through legal or illegal immigrants and their Birthright Citizenship children—and could compromise the ability of Big Line Go Up Forever. Or if even Big Line Go Up for Now: Pocket Go Evermore Thin Fivever as more of take-home pay gets chomped by NPV of net-tax transfers.

The if is, admittedly, doing a lot of heavy lifting there. People can remain oblivious longer than they can remain solvent.

A stable alliance between the business segment of the GOP and the anti-immigrant chuds is entirely possible in the near to medium term, if it dawns upon the business segment of the GOP that a large portion of immigration is dysgenic—whether it be through legal or illegal immigrants and their Birthright Citizenship children—and could compromise the ability of Big Line Go Up Forever. Or if even Big Line Go Up for Now: Pocket Go Evermore Thin Fivever as more of take-home pay gets chomped by NPV of net-tax transfers.

I think to get such an alliance you'd have to offer the business segment something in exchange for losing some of their workforce -- relaxed labor, environmental, and building regulations. Problem is, that's not only outside the Overton window, it's not what the anti-immigrant chuds want. They're basically like 80s Democrats, only anti-immigrant.

I feel like it is worth pointing out that this would absolutely be better for the businesses in question. Microsoft have embraced H1-B visas and Infinity Indians with open arms... and look at what's happened to their products. These policies aren't actually good for businesses at all in the long run, but they are good for executives who get quarterly performance bonuses and are incentivised to jump ship with a golden parachute before the consequences of eating the seed corn actually show up. I don't think these people are just morons who don't know how to run businesses, I think they're responding rationally to the incentive structures around them, incentive structures which are ultimately bad for the businesses in question.