Lawrence finds a fabulous article that explains the Trump phenomenon in terms even a Liberal Arts Major can understand:
The Bronx of my childhood was a paradise. My street ran parallel to a section of the old Croton Aqueduct, by then long disused, which we kids called the Ackey. Along its banks grew trees and bushes and wild flowers forming a ribbon of thicket in which we played, and through which we “hiked.”
...
In this urban sanctuary I grew up safe, loved, happy, and unmistakably working class, yet somehow I slipped away. I was reared to become an ironworker or electrician, but I managed to pass through a posh New England liberal arts college and end up a tech journalist and author. I’ve worked unsupervised, chiefly from home, since the 1990s.
Most of my relatives and old neighborhood friends hate people like me. And I don’t blame them. Most are lifelong Democrats, yet they voted for Donald Trump, and will again, and I can’t blame them for that, either. Let me explain.
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Donald Trump defeated Hillary Clinton in the swing states the same way Barack Obama had: by characterizing her as disdainful toward blue-collar Americans. It was a potent message among those who once had seen decent wages in return for honest work, lately reduced to Walmart greeters and Uber drivers. Humiliated by a labor market in which they had nothing to trade, the former working class understood that they also had nothing to lose. Liberal democracy and its supporting institutions shed their veneer of sanctity when dead-end employees can aspire only to dead-end management gigs. Call them “associates” and “technicians” all you want; they know who they’ve become and what others think of them. They are why Trump won in the swing states; he was propelled to victory by disillusioned Obama voters. They gleefully chanted “lock her up” not because they thought Hillary was an actual criminal, but because they knew what her election would bring them: four or eight more years of economic and social stagnation to top off the twenty they’d already been through.
He points out some things that the author left out, but those are details. The big picture is spot on, and Lawrence sums it up well:
All that said, he’s right about the overwhelming contempt the Democratic establishment has shown toward the very people who used to make up their base. In the 1950s, Democrats aimed their political pitch at blue collar guys who brought a lunch pail to work every day. In 2020, they seem to be aiming their political pitch at woke liberal arts majors screaming obscenities into cops’ faces.
The only thing left to add is that a primary reason that the Usual Suspects hate Donald Trump is that Trump is a class traitor: Wharton Business School grad who prioritizes the working class instead of the swells.
And Biden should be the candidate to do the same except the lights are on but nobody's home. And if someone were home 50 years of graft and corruption would keep him in line. There's no plan to do anything but lose bigly, but they still have the hate.
4 comments:
No, they chanted “Lock her up!” because she IS a criminal, and she belongs in a cage. And as more info comes to light, it’s looking like Barkie Obutthole should be too.
That email server she had set up was a felony and a conspiracy to commit felony. It was also treasonous because of the information she privy to as SecState. And she didn't do it because it was convenient. She did it to hide what she was doing.
If I set up a server to circumvent security and public records laws, I'd be lucky to get out in 10 years.
The Dems will kick off civil war 2.0 next year, no matter who wins. That's why they don't care too much about Biden and the election.
When I get a text from a Democratic Party related organization, I let them know they are the party that loves pedophiles/transweirdos, illegal immigrants first, anti-gun, high taxes, and destruction of the economy.
I hate the Republican party as well and many of them are traitors to America as well, but I'm out of tolerance for leftards.
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