Monthly Archives: September 2012

Report: Beyond Guns and God: White Working Class

Here’s a very recent report on the beliefs and political tendencies of the white working class in the US. “White working class”  defined as non-hispanic whites without a four-year college degree who hold non-salaried jobs.

http://publicreligion.org/research/2012/09/race-class-culture-survey-2012/

From the press release announcing the report.

Challenging Five Myths About the White Working Class

Myth 1. White working-class Americans strongly identify with the Tea Party movement. White working-class Americans (13%) are no more likely than white college-educated Americans (10%) to say they consider themselves part of the Tea Party. White working-class Americans (34%) are also about equally as likely as white college-educated Americans (31%) to say the Tea Party movement shares their values.

Myth 2. White working-class Americans have abandoned traditional religiosity and a strong work ethic. White working-class Americans are more likely than Americans overall to identify as white evangelical Protestants (36% vs. 21%). They do not attend religious services less frequently than Americans overall (48% vs. 50% attend at least once a month), and do not report that religion is less important in their lives (60% vs. 59% say religion is important in their lives). White working-class Americans also work hard, averaging more hours per week than white college-educated Americans (51 vs. 46).

Myth 3. White working-class Americans vote against their economic interests. Low-income white working-class Americans and white working-class Americans who have received food stamps within the last two years were significantly less likely to support Romney, whose economic plan would reduce funding for government programs like food stamps.

  • White working-class voters in households that make less than $30,000 per year were nearly evenly divided in their voting preferences (39% favored Obama, 42% favored Romney). However, a majority (51%) of white working-class voters with annual incomes of $30,000 or more a year supported Romney, while 35% preferred Obama.
  • Half (50%) of white working-class voters who have not reported using food stamps in the past two years supported Romney, while less than one-third (32%) supported Obama. By contrast, white working-class voters who reported receiving food stamps in the last two years preferred Obama to Romney by a significant margin (48% vs. 36%).

Myth 4. White working-class Americans are animated by culture war issues like abortion or same-sex marriage.

  • White working-class Americans are somewhat divided on abortion. Half (50%) say that abortion should be legal in all or most cases, compared to 45% who say it should be illegal in all or most cases.
  • While half (50%) of white working-class Americans are opposed to allowing gay and lesbian couples to marry legally, more than 4-in-10 (43%) favor same-sex marriage.
  • Only 1-in-20 white working-class Americans say that either abortion (3%) or same-sex marriage (2%) is the most important issue to their vote. By contrast, a majority (53%) of white working-class Americans say the economy is their most important voting issue.

Myth 5. White working-class Americans embrace unfettered free market capitalism. In fact, white working-class Americans display a strong strain of economic populism.

  • Seven-in-ten (70%) white working-class Americans believe the economic system in this country unfairly favors the wealthy, and a majority (53%) say that one of the biggest problems in this country is that we don’t give everyone an equal chance in life.
  • A plurality (46%) of white working-class Americans believe that capitalism and the free market system are at odds with Christian values, while 38% disagree.
  • Nearly 8-in-10 white working-class Americans say that corporations moving American jobs overseas are somewhat (25%) or very (53%) responsible for Americans’ current economic distress.
  • Over 6-in-10 (62%) white working-class Americans favor raising the tax rate on Americans with household incomes of over $1 million per year.

Confirming Five Pieces of Conventional Wisdom
1. White working-class Americans embrace different consumer preferences, lifestyle choices, and parenting choices than white college-educated Americans.

  • A majority (56%) of white working-class Americans report that they would prefer to shop at Walmart as opposed to Target, while 6-in-10 (60%) white college-educated Americans say the reverse.
  • Only 31% of white working-class Americans have a close friend or family member who is vegetarian, compared to a majority (53%) of college-educated Americans.

White working-class Americans are more likely than white college-educated Americans to value deference to authority over autonomy. When asked to choose between pairs of traits that emphasize children’s autonomy versus deference to parental authority, nearly two-thirds (65%) of white working-class Americans favor authoritarian childrearing traits, compared to around 4-in-10 (41%) white college-educated Americans.

2. White working-class Americans are less likely than white college-educated Americans to feel connected to government. While a majority (51%) of white college-educated Americans say they think of the U.S. government as “our” government rather than “the” government, only 39% of white working-class Americans think about the U.S. government as “our” government.

3. White working-class Americans are more likely than white college-educated Americans to believe that blacks and other minorities have received too many advantages and government attention.

  • Six-in-ten (60%) white working-class Americans agree that discrimination against whites has become as big a problem as discrimination against blacks and other minorities, compared to only 39% of white college-educated Americans.
  • Nearly half (49%) of white working-class Americans agree that over the past few decades the government has paid too much attention to the problems of blacks and other minorities, compared to 32% of white college-educated Americans.
  • White working-class Americans in the West (40%), Midwest (48%), and Northeast (48%) are less likely than white working-class Americans in the South (58%) to believe that over the past few decades, the government has paid too much attention to the problems of blacks and other minorities.

4. White working-class Americans have concerns about immigrants competing with them for jobs. White working-class Americans are 20 points more likely than white college-educated Americans to agree that illegal immigrants taking jobs that would otherwise be filled by American citizens are responsible for our current economic problems (57% vs. 37%).

5. Despite being economically disillusioned, white working-class Americans strongly believe in American exceptionalism. Although white working-class Americans are less likely than white college-educated Americans to believe the American Dream still holds true (47% vs. 63%), they are more likely than white college-educated Americans to believe that God has granted America a special place in human history (70% vs. 42%).

Recipe: Cocktails

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/23/magazine/come-september.html?src=dayp&_r=0

Oh, the days grow short when we reach September. Kurt Weill and Maxwell Anderson got that right in “September Song,” didn’t they? Cheerful it’s not, but for a year in my early 20s, the only music I could stand to hear was Weill’s. I was adrift, and politically charged cabaret numbers — often sung in a language I did not understand — somehow anchored me. I downed plenty of whiskey back then (and still do), but as with music, my taste in drinks was growing up. It was then that I first made a martini, first tasted absinthe and could, for the first time, call myself a regular at a New York bar — one where an indulgent bartender might sometimes pop onto the sound system the Lotte Lenya tape I just happened to have in my backpack.

Albertine Cocktail

(Adapted from ‘‘The Savoy Cocktail Book,’’ 1933 edition.)

Ingredients

  • 1 oz. Cointreau
  • 1 oz. yellow Chartreuse
  • 1 oz. kirschwasser (a clear, dry cherry brandy)
  • A dash of maraschino liqueur.

Preparation

Shake well with ice and strain into a chilled coupe.
 
Cabaret Cocktail

Ingredients

  • A few drops of absinthe
  • 1 1/2 oz. dry gin
  • 1 oz. dry vermouth
  • 1/2 oz. Benedictine
  • 1 dash Angostura bitters
  • 1 brandy-cured cherry.

Preparation

1.
Swirl a few drops of absinthe in a chilled coupe. Shake the other ingredients with ice in a mixing glass, then strain into absinthe-coated coupe. Garnish with cherry.

 

Report: Beyond Guns and God: White Working Class

Here’s a very recent report on the beliefs and political tendencies of the white working class in the US. “White working class”  defined as non-hispanic whites without a four-year college degree who hold non-salaried jobs.

http://publicreligion.org/research/2012/09/race-class-culture-survey-2012/

From the press release announcing the report.

Challenging Five Myths About the White Working Class

Myth 1. White working-class Americans strongly identify with the Tea Party movement. White working-class Americans (13%) are no more likely than white college-educated Americans (10%) to say they consider themselves part of the Tea Party. White working-class Americans (34%) are also about equally as likely as white college-educated Americans (31%) to say the Tea Party movement shares their values.

Myth 2. White working-class Americans have abandoned traditional religiosity and a strong work ethic. White working-class Americans are more likely than Americans overall to identify as white evangelical Protestants (36% vs. 21%). They do not attend religious services less frequently than Americans overall (48% vs. 50% attend at least once a month), and do not report that religion is less important in their lives (60% vs. 59% say religion is important in their lives). White working-class Americans also work hard, averaging more hours per week than white college-educated Americans (51 vs. 46).

Myth 3. White working-class Americans vote against their economic interests. Low-income white working-class Americans and white working-class Americans who have received food stamps within the last two years were significantly less likely to support Romney, whose economic plan would reduce funding for government programs like food stamps.

  • White working-class voters in households that make less than $30,000 per year were nearly evenly divided in their voting preferences (39% favored Obama, 42% favored Romney). However, a majority (51%) of white working-class voters with annual incomes of $30,000 or more a year supported Romney, while 35% preferred Obama.
  • Half (50%) of white working-class voters who have not reported using food stamps in the past two years supported Romney, while less than one-third (32%) supported Obama. By contrast, white working-class voters who reported receiving food stamps in the last two years preferred Obama to Romney by a significant margin (48% vs. 36%).

Myth 4. White working-class Americans are animated by culture war issues like abortion or same-sex marriage.

  • White working-class Americans are somewhat divided on abortion. Half (50%) say that abortion should be legal in all or most cases, compared to 45% who say it should be illegal in all or most cases.
  • While half (50%) of white working-class Americans are opposed to allowing gay and lesbian couples to marry legally, more than 4-in-10 (43%) favor same-sex marriage.
  • Only 1-in-20 white working-class Americans say that either abortion (3%) or same-sex marriage (2%) is the most important issue to their vote. By contrast, a majority (53%) of white working-class Americans say the economy is their most important voting issue.

Myth 5. White working-class Americans embrace unfettered free market capitalism. In fact, white working-class Americans display a strong strain of economic populism.

  • Seven-in-ten (70%) white working-class Americans believe the economic system in this country unfairly favors the wealthy, and a majority (53%) say that one of the biggest problems in this country is that we don’t give everyone an equal chance in life.
  • A plurality (46%) of white working-class Americans believe that capitalism and the free market system are at odds with Christian values, while 38% disagree.
  • Nearly 8-in-10 white working-class Americans say that corporations moving American jobs overseas are somewhat (25%) or very (53%) responsible for Americans’ current economic distress.
  • Over 6-in-10 (62%) white working-class Americans favor raising the tax rate on Americans with household incomes of over $1 million per year.

Confirming Five Pieces of Conventional Wisdom
1. White working-class Americans embrace different consumer preferences, lifestyle choices, and parenting choices than white college-educated Americans.

  • A majority (56%) of white working-class Americans report that they would prefer to shop at Walmart as opposed to Target, while 6-in-10 (60%) white college-educated Americans say the reverse.
  • Only 31% of white working-class Americans have a close friend or family member who is vegetarian, compared to a majority (53%) of college-educated Americans.

White working-class Americans are more likely than white college-educated Americans to value deference to authority over autonomy. When asked to choose between pairs of traits that emphasize children’s autonomy versus deference to parental authority, nearly two-thirds (65%) of white working-class Americans favor authoritarian childrearing traits, compared to around 4-in-10 (41%) white college-educated Americans.

2. White working-class Americans are less likely than white college-educated Americans to feel connected to government. While a majority (51%) of white college-educated Americans say they think of the U.S. government as “our” government rather than “the” government, only 39% of white working-class Americans think about the U.S. government as “our” government.

3. White working-class Americans are more likely than white college-educated Americans to believe that blacks and other minorities have received too many advantages and government attention.

  • Six-in-ten (60%) white working-class Americans agree that discrimination against whites has become as big a problem as discrimination against blacks and other minorities, compared to only 39% of white college-educated Americans.
  • Nearly half (49%) of white working-class Americans agree that over the past few decades the government has paid too much attention to the problems of blacks and other minorities, compared to 32% of white college-educated Americans.
  • White working-class Americans in the West (40%), Midwest (48%), and Northeast (48%) are less likely than white working-class Americans in the South (58%) to believe that over the past few decades, the government has paid too much attention to the problems of blacks and other minorities.

4. White working-class Americans have concerns about immigrants competing with them for jobs. White working-class Americans are 20 points more likely than white college-educated Americans to agree that illegal immigrants taking jobs that would otherwise be filled by American citizens are responsible for our current economic problems (57% vs. 37%).

5. Despite being economically disillusioned, white working-class Americans strongly believe in American exceptionalism. Although white working-class Americans are less likely than white college-educated Americans to believe the American Dream still holds true (47% vs. 63%), they are more likely than white college-educated Americans to believe that God has granted America a special place in human history (70% vs. 42%).

Recipe: Cocktails

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/23/magazine/come-september.html?src=dayp&_r=0

Oh, the days grow short when we reach September. Kurt Weill and Maxwell Anderson got that right in “September Song,” didn’t they? Cheerful it’s not, but for a year in my early 20s, the only music I could stand to hear was Weill’s. I was adrift, and politically charged cabaret numbers — often sung in a language I did not understand — somehow anchored me. I downed plenty of whiskey back then (and still do), but as with music, my taste in drinks was growing up. It was then that I first made a martini, first tasted absinthe and could, for the first time, call myself a regular at a New York bar — one where an indulgent bartender might sometimes pop onto the sound system the Lotte Lenya tape I just happened to have in my backpack.

Albertine Cocktail

(Adapted from ‘‘The Savoy Cocktail Book,’’ 1933 edition.)

Ingredients

  • 1 oz. Cointreau
  • 1 oz. yellow Chartreuse
  • 1 oz. kirschwasser (a clear, dry cherry brandy)
  • A dash of maraschino liqueur.

Preparation

Shake well with ice and strain into a chilled coupe.
 
Cabaret Cocktail

Ingredients

  • A few drops of absinthe
  • 1 1/2 oz. dry gin
  • 1 oz. dry vermouth
  • 1/2 oz. Benedictine
  • 1 dash Angostura bitters
  • 1 brandy-cured cherry.

Preparation

1.
Swirl a few drops of absinthe in a chilled coupe. Shake the other ingredients with ice in a mixing glass, then strain into absinthe-coated coupe. Garnish with cherry.

 

Romney Gaffe

This morning Robert and Mira had something of a disjointed and unenlightened conversation about Mitt Romney’s recent gaffe at a fancy fund raising party.  Romney made a sort of divisive comment of the kind that candidates for President are not supposed to make.

He said the following:

“There are 47% of the people who will vote for [President Obama] no matter what. All right, there are 47% who are with him, who are dependent upon government, who believe that they are victims, who believe the government has a responsibility to take care of them, who believe that they are entitled to healthcare, to food, to housing, to you name it.” Associated Press / September 17, 2012.
Robert’s only real comment on this is that Mr. Romney’s statement, read literally, is very difficult to understand. Read less literally, it seems that Mr. Romney thinks that Obama’s core base is full of folks who feel the government owes them something more than it should. But the words he chose are mean-spirited. They are bad.
It seems to Robert that Mr. Romney forgot for a moment that he was speaking in public (and when a candidate speaks to anyone who is not on his close staff, it is “in public.”) He got carried away and let the rhetoric fly a little too far. Perhaps, as the New Yorker jokes, he could not control himself after getting drunk on a bowl of rum raisin ice cream.
It is unclear to Robert how much this matters. He’s not going to vote for Mr. Romney in any event, and the folks that are truly undecided voters probably don’t care too much either.


Romney Gaffe

This morning Robert and Mira had something of a disjointed and unenlightened conversation about Mitt Romney’s recent gaffe at a fancy fund raising party.  Romney made a sort of divisive comment of the kind that candidates for President are not supposed to make.

He said the following:

“There are 47% of the people who will vote for [President Obama] no matter what. All right, there are 47% who are with him, who are dependent upon government, who believe that they are victims, who believe the government has a responsibility to take care of them, who believe that they are entitled to healthcare, to food, to housing, to you name it.” Associated Press / September 17, 2012.
Robert’s only real comment on this is that Mr. Romney’s statement, read literally, is very difficult to understand. Read less literally, it seems that Mr. Romney thinks that Obama’s core base is full of folks who feel the government owes them something more than it should. But the words he chose are mean-spirited. They are bad.
It seems to Robert that Mr. Romney forgot for a moment that he was speaking in public (and when a candidate speaks to anyone who is not on his close staff, it is “in public.”) He got carried away and let the rhetoric fly a little too far. Perhaps, as the New Yorker jokes, he could not control himself after getting drunk on a bowl of rum raisin ice cream.
It is unclear to Robert how much this matters. He’s not going to vote for Mr. Romney in any event, and the folks that are truly undecided voters probably don’t care too much either.


Mexico City Tacos and Tamales Recommendations

From the NY Times.

1.  Corner of Baja California and Insurgentes Sur; Colonia Hipódromo.

2. Avenida Hidalgo, between Lecaroz and El Globo bakeries; Colonia Coyoacán. Each tamal costs about 12 pesos.

3. Flor de Lis, Huichapan 21 A, Colonia Condesa; (52-55) 5286-0811. Two tamales with beans and salsa cost about 40 pesos. 
4. El Turix, Emilio Castelar 212, Colonia Polanco; (52-55) 5280-6449. Each slim torta costs about 22 pesos. 
5.  El Capricho, Augusto Rodin 407, Colonia Mixcoac;(52-55) 5563-9158. Each giant torta costs about 80 pesos. 
6. La Castellana, multiple locations; tortaslacastellana.com. Each torta costs about 30 pesos.
7. Beatricita, Londres 190-D, Colonia Zona Rosa; (52-55) 5511-4213; Each taco is about 25 pesos.
 
 8.  El Charro, Mercado de Coyoacán, Location No. 289-290, Colonia Coyoacán; (52-55) 5554-8719. Each taco costs about 9 pesos. 
9. Tacos Manolo, Luz Saviñón between Anaxágoras and Cuauhtémoc, Colonia Del Valle. Each taco costs about 8 pesos.