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Culture War Roundup for the week of March 25, 2024

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I'm guessing transgender people and some college-educated non-religious social liberals asked for them

Did they? When I'm talking about self-ID, I do mean self-ID - a law that allows you to declare yourself to be another sex on the basis of nothing more than your say-so, and be considered such in the eyes of the law. My impression is that it's considered rather controversial even among trans people, seeing as this already resulted in rapists being sent to women's prisons, let alone for the modal non-religious social liberal. In countries like Spain and Germany, you could make the argument (I'd debate it though) that enough people must have wanted it, that the laws passed, as there was at least a proper public debate around them, but it's less believable in Malta where it was snuck through, or Ireland, where the activists themselves admit to pushing the law through under the cover of gay marriage.

but once you account for people's salience on the issue, and what the parties advocating against mass migration are also for, that's where you run into problems

An anti-immigration party losing fair and square because the issue isn't as important as others, or because they can't help but sperg out on other issues and turn off the voters is not what I'm talking about. Mainstream parties establishing "cordons sanitaires", because working with outright communists is fine, but a coalition with an anti-immigration party is beyond the pale, or playing with the idea of outright banning them when such a cordon might not be enough, is closer to what I'm talking about. But another part of it is when people elect supposed "fascists" on their anti-immigration platform, and they proceed to import immigrants anyway.

Now, I do actually think you'll eventually get what you want, a sort of Fortress Europe, but even then it's going to be very tough to deport many migrants already there

Yeah... that might be one of the reasons people were against immigration when there still weren't that many immigrants...

Then, yes, in theory, people hate globalization, but they love the cheap stuff

The problem with that argument is that pre-globalization is in living memory, and this claim doesn't make sense in light of it. My father-in-law supported his family on a single income, owns several properties, and his only education is a trade school. I think we could do worse then that (and in fact we are).

and get very upset, as we've seen recently, when things get more expensive at all.

People get upset over expensive rent and food, not over expensive iPhones.

Kind of a revealed preference in that people frankly, would rather have cheap stuff than a strong manufacturing base.

Revealed preference requires two options to be available to people, and taking the one that goes counter to what they express in public when you ask them. How does that apply to globalization? What switch can people flip to try the version of their country where they have expensive foreign goods, and a domestic manufacturing base?