"Some fine day, Democrats may figure out how to get on the right side of the value divide - how to define America as a place of the common good and not a playground of the strong"
About this Quote
Gitlin’s “some fine day” lands like a sigh disguised as prophecy: not quite hope, not quite scorn, but the weary cadence of someone who’s watched Democrats keep losing arguments they assumed they were winning. The line performs a neat inversion. Instead of treating elections as a battle over interests (tax rates, programs, constituencies), he frames it as a battle over moral storytelling - the “value divide.” His jab is that Democrats often act as if policy competence will automatically read as virtue, while Republicans have been more willing to narrate strength, freedom, and deservingness in emotionally legible terms.
“Get on the right side” is deliberately double-edged: “right” as morally correct, but also a wink at the Right’s comparative fluency in values language. The subtext is not that Democrats lack values, but that they’ve ceded the terrain of values to their opponents by speaking in managerial, technocratic registers. “Define America” is the operative verb. Politics here is branding with consequences: whoever defines the nation defines who belongs, who is owed care, and what counts as success.
The contrast - “common good” versus “playground of the strong” - compresses a whole critique of neoliberal drift and post-Reagan inequality into one playground metaphor. It’s vivid because it treats dominance as childish, not heroic: the strong aren’t noble strivers; they’re the kids who keep everyone else off the equipment.
Contextually, Gitlin’s coming out of the long hangover of late-20th-century liberalism: the New Deal moral consensus shattered, the culture wars weaponized, Democrats triangulating their way into competence without conviction. He’s urging a return to an older, bolder claim: solidarity isn’t a policy preference, it’s an American identity.
“Get on the right side” is deliberately double-edged: “right” as morally correct, but also a wink at the Right’s comparative fluency in values language. The subtext is not that Democrats lack values, but that they’ve ceded the terrain of values to their opponents by speaking in managerial, technocratic registers. “Define America” is the operative verb. Politics here is branding with consequences: whoever defines the nation defines who belongs, who is owed care, and what counts as success.
The contrast - “common good” versus “playground of the strong” - compresses a whole critique of neoliberal drift and post-Reagan inequality into one playground metaphor. It’s vivid because it treats dominance as childish, not heroic: the strong aren’t noble strivers; they’re the kids who keep everyone else off the equipment.
Contextually, Gitlin’s coming out of the long hangover of late-20th-century liberalism: the New Deal moral consensus shattered, the culture wars weaponized, Democrats triangulating their way into competence without conviction. He’s urging a return to an older, bolder claim: solidarity isn’t a policy preference, it’s an American identity.
Quote Details
| Topic | Equality |
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