Donald Trump is hardly a savior because there are none except the one you view in the mirror every morning if you bother.
Trump is merely an ingredient--a necessary one in this case--like the main one you need in a recipe. We are surrounded by deception and lies, Gilbert and Sullivan's things not being what they seem, skim milk masquerading as whip cream. The two main parties and, yes, so too the third and fourth and so on. These are not parities of and by and for the people. These are elitists, control mongers, even mobsters not much different from the kind one can see on television and in the movies.
Questioning their territory is one thing, threatening it another. And that's what the anti-globalization movement is about. Not Trump. He's just a symbol, a dangerous one they in their arrogance and conceit vastly underestimated. It's not Trump; it's those deplorables, another convenient epithet.
Populism is as racists a term as the elitists and MSM have in their lexicon of what constitutes racism. It is no different from calling a person or group a name based on the color of their skin or their sex. Labeling an individual or group a name, or epithet, for exercising what is suppose to be their right to freedom of choice, speech and assembly in the phony democracies that populate the globe is the height of racism.
The real racists are those who created the meme zero tolerance. The climate change freaks who dissemble and threaten anyone and all who question their hardly exact science. In a real democracy tolerance is one of the most basic planks. A never ending one centered on diversity, not the PC packaged kind that's being forced on societies today. It begins and ends with individuals not regulations and laws. It begins and ends with respect. And if there are any spiritual people still around today willing to risk making their beliefs public, they know it begins and ends with love.
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Must Read of the Day – ‘I Listened to a Trump Supporter
I talked at
length with a Trump supporter I grew up around. I wanted to understand.
I respected her growing up. I wanted to know why a person as kind and
compassionate as I remember her is voting for someone like Donald Trump.
She was a family
friend, a good person. In rural Ohio, everything was tight. Money, jobs.
If you really needed quick cash, she’d put you to work doing
landscaping. She’d pay fairly and reliably for the area.
She’s voting
for Donald Trump. I disagree with her choice, but I understand why she
rejects Clinton so fiercely, and why she’s been swept up in Donald
Trump’s particular brand of right-wing populism. I feel that on the
left, it’s increasingly easy to ignore these people, to disregard them,
to write them off as racists, bigots, or uneducated. I
think that’s a loss for everyone involved, and that sometimes listening
can help you to at least understand why a person is making the choices
they make, so you can work on the root causes. For her, the root cause
isn’t racism. In fact, I remember her as one of the only people in the
area who proudly hired black workers, in a place where that was a huge
issue. She fought over that choice.
But that’s enough background. Let me relay a bit of what she told me.
She’s a person who
built her business from the ground up. She wasn’t rich, but was very
comfortable for the area. She had a nice house, a nice car, and was
stable. She achieved the American dream of not having to struggle.
Things changed during the housing crisis. A landscaping business
requires customers who need landscaping, and people who don’t own homes
just don’t need landscaping. In some of these neighborhoods, one in five
people lost their homes. That almost immediately turns a successful
landscaping business into a struggling one.
Then there was a
domino effect. She couldn’t pay for her lawn-care equipment leases and
loans. That hurt her work efficiency. Then, she lost her car. But that
didn’t stop the payments. Then, she lost her house. She slowly had to
let go all of her employees, until it was just her, hand-mowing lawns
for cash the way you might expect a high school student in the
summertime.
She told me
that every week, it seemed there was another default letter, another
foreclosure, another bank demanding more blood from her dry veins. To
her, that pile of default notices and demands for payment looked
suspiciously similar to Hillary Clinton’s top donor list.
She
lost everything she worked so hard for. Obama swore he was going to
help. The Wall Street bailout did seem to help Wall Street. But it did
absolutely nothing for her. She turns on the news and sees how the Dow
Jones is doing better than ever. But that didn’t bring her house and
livelihood back. Liberals insist that Obama’s made her life better. But,
now she’s driving a car that falls apart randomly while having to pay
those same banks for a car she doesn’t own and never will. It’s
difficult to convince someone whose life is objectively worse that their
life is better. And it’s disingenuous to try. You can break down the
specifics, sure. But when someone’s hungry, and you’re busy silencing
their complaints by telling them how well world hunger is improving,
you’re just going to upset them.
This is not a person who is stupid or racist.
She knows Bush caused the economy collapse with his irresponsible tax
policies and wars. But she saw liberals as fighting for the banks’
recovery, to hell with her needs. She sees in Hillary someone who
celebrates that approach. Who measures US success by the success of
multinational mega corporations — corporations who undercut and destroy
local businesses. This is a person who grew up in a town with a friendly
neighborhood general store, a locally-owned hardware store, farmers’
markets, florists, and auto shops. All of these businesses closed when
Walmart moved into town. All their owners now work at that Walmart for a
fraction of their previous wages, no benefits, and no hope for
something better, something of their own. And now, she sees a free trade
supporting former Walmart executive about to come in to office, and it
feels like salt in her community’s wounds.
This
is a wounded person. Insulting her or continuing to hurt her isn’t
going to help. She’s swept up in Trump’s message because she feels
someone’s finally listening. Right-wing populism is an awful
thing. But desperate people with their backs against the wall will grasp
on to whatever they feel will bring a change. Neoliberal capitalism is
not sustainable for these people.
Over the
past few years, she tried getting back in her business. But a
corporation moved in and is operating far cheaper, using undocumented
immigrant labor. I should note: She specifically said she doesn’t hold
it against the migrant workers. As she said, “They’ve got to take
whatever jobs they can get. Just like we do. It’s not their fault. They
didn’t choose to make prices so low that legal businesses couldn’t
compete.” She was literally a “job creator”. And she wasbeing priced out
by the very people Donald Trump insists are pricing her out. That hurts
everyone, and it adds an air of authenticity to what he says.
I asked her if she
supports Trump’s Mexico wall. She told me, “It doesn’t matter if I do.
Hillary wants a wall, too. That wall’s gonna happen.” She wasn’t simply
making this up. She’s heard this from many sources, Clinton being one of them.
So to her, the idea of a border wall is a non-issue. I pressed her on
the issue, and she said she thinks, “It’s a waste of money. If someone
wants to cross the border, they’re gonna cross the border.”…
A few times, she
seemed ashamed of things Trump’s said or done. I’d ask her to unpack her
feelings. She said he sometimes upsets her, but “If you wait and wait
for a flawless candidate, you’ll never find one.” She said she’d be much prouder to vote for Trump if he’d tone down his rhetoric.
This fits into my strongly held
belief that people are looking for an excuse to vote for Trump. All he
has to do to win is tone down some of his more heinous and idiotic
tendencies.
I talked to her a bit about Bernie Sanders, to see what she thought of him. She told me, “He seemed like a nice enough guy. But I didn’t pay him much mind because there was no way he was gonna beat Clinton.” I talked with her about his platform, his policy proposals. She lit up. She told me, “It’s a real shame he didn’t make it.” She told me that if she knew him, his record, and his proposals, she’d have voted for him. I said that since the primary concluded, Hillary’s shifted some to adopt policies similar to his, and I asked if that changed her mind. She told me, “It doesn’t matter what she says. It matters what she’s done.”No amount of insulting her from an ivory tower is going to change her mind. No amount of guffawing about her lack of education, her self-deception, her racism, or her internalized misogyny is going to change her mind. The only thing she’ll listen to is a promise of real change to the system that’s hurt her. If the Democratic Party can’t offer her a viable alternative, we’re going to see another neck-and-neck election in 2020, and in 2024, and in 2028.These people need a populist answer. They need someone willing to listen to their very real concerns, and offer solutions that don’t look like Band-Aids on bullet wounds. If they had that on the left, we wouldn’t even be discussing Ohio as a “swing state”.Right now, this is the discourse we’re seeing about Trump supporters. This only emboldens those attitudes. To people like her, this feels like the left is laughing at her for her unwillingness to get in line and support the things that have left her broke and broken.
The above excerpts are not the entire piece. You should read the whole thing: I Listened to a Trump Supporter.
The more deeply I think about
this election, the more I agree that the above sentiments motivate Trump
voters far more than feelings of racism or hate. As I noted in a piece
published a few weeks ago, The Status Quo vs. Donald Trump:
This isn’t about me. This is about the American voter, and the more time passes, the more I understand the motivations of the vast majority of Trump supporters. It isn’t xenophobia or racism, it’s a vote against the status quo and the way they’ve strip mined and destroyed this country. It’s a FU vote and a major gamble, but it’s not as irrational or hateful as you might think.
This doesn’t mean that Trump won’t
betray his supporters and prove to be the Republican version of Barack
Obama, but it does mean that the dominant media narrative
characterizing Trump supporters as a bunch of racist, uneducated brutes
is pretty much just dishonest, elitist propaganda.
libertyblitzkrieg.com/2016/10/05/must-read-of-the-day-i-listened-to-a-trump-supporter/
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