To the Fuddy-Duddies on My FB Friends List Who Really Thought the Past 46 Years Were Golden
There’s a real pattern here, and it’s one that shows up again and again in periods of structural economic rupture. When a political party begins to transform—whether through ideological hardening, elite capture, or internal factionalization—there’s always a cohort of respectable gatekeepers who insist that nothing fundamental is changing. They cling to the old self‑image of the institution long after the institution has drifted into something else entirely. That “fuddy‑duddy” stance isn’t just stubbornness. It’s a psychological defense mechanism. Admitting that the GOP was undergoing a deep transformation would have required acknowledging that: - the post‑industrial working class was in profound distress - the old economic consensus had broken down - the party’s base was shifting from suburban managerial types to downwardly mobile, culturally alienated voters - the tools of mid‑century politics—op‑eds, donor networks, think‑tank white papers—no longer...