Fish and Bread
Dona nobis pacem
- Jan 31, 2005
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Here is the thing many don't understand about either Trump supporters or acceptors. The messages people heard and believed were extremely colored by which news outlet you turned to and/or believed. For example, it's not that they accept xenophobia, it's that they don't accept the charge that believing immigration laws should be enforced and improved where necessary is xenophobic.
Respectfully, I just don't buy this explaination of the Trump phenomon. People would have to be awfully naive not to understand that Trump was running on a platform of bigotry. Some people could have been that naive, and others are actual white supremecist neo-nazi skinheads. He was endorsed by David Duke, the KKK, and the "alt-right", one of whom be hired as as a top official in his White House (Steve Bannon). Recently, some of his supporters held a convention where a man at the podium did a Nazi salute and led "Heil Trump" chant alongs with the crowd.
Hate crimes have already gone up a lot. People feel emboldened. Several times I've heard audio of people lashing out at minorities over various incidents and then, even though the disputes has nothing to do with politics or elections, the white person involved just randomly blurts out "I voted for Trump and we won" as if that should self-evidently mean that the racial or religious minority person in the argument no longer has standing. A lot of Trump supporters knew exactly what they were voting for.
Now, I guess, like I said, some were niave. And of course there are always in between cases of people who aren't niave and also aren't really that racist, but who were upset enough at the status quo not to *care* that Trump was running a bigoted campaign, even though they may not have liked that he was. Still, that should be a hard thing to overlook.
You know, I think the biggest area where people legitimately read Trump wrong when voting for him, though, is that working class whites thought he was on their side economically. I do think many of them really believed that he was. Already, though, his appointments suggest that he is going to be very bad for the majority of his lower and middle class voters economically. He is appointing a cabinet that skews heavily in favor of big business interests.
Voters on the right in the US have consistantly have been missing the point of things in the 21st century so far. For example, they got upset at the Great Recession, where government officials deregulated markets to allow large corporations and banks to take advantage of people and do risky things, hurting the lower and niddle classes, and then requiring bailouts so the economy could survive. So, people protest that by... forming the "Tea Party" and pushing for more deregulation and lower taxes on corporations? How does that make sense? It is more of the same that caused the problems in the first place.
Similarly, they've now channeled anger at their economic lot in life and transnational corporations doing things that hirt them (Moving jobs overseas, etc.) Into electing electing a guy who has put forward a former CEO of Exxon-Mobile as his Secretary of State nominee. You know, Exxon-Mobile, the company that was among the first big American companoesnof yesteryear to come out and say that they no longer considered themselves an American corporation.
Truth be told, the economic interests of the average Trump voter would have been far, far better served if they had voted in the Democratic primaries, propelled Bernie Sanders to victory in them, and then voted for Bernie against Trump in the general. Even Clinton would have done better for them than Trump will.
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