mike777, on 2016-August-16, 22:29, said:
Winston you seem to be misreading the votes and the polls. The Democratic party is getting votes, massive votes from the working class. Why in the world do you think the Democratic party does not get votes from the working class?
Look at the working class votes in calif, in LA, in NYC in Phili, in Chicago, in Detroit, Charlotte, in SF, in Oakland, in Gary, in etc etc.
I predict Hillary will get milions and millions of working class votes.
------------------------
-----------------------------
As has been pointed out in this thread and in numerous media reports those voting for Trump are: racists, uneducated, homophobic, islamicphobia, hate women, or just plain white trash.
Unlike Sheldon Cooper, I can spot sarcasm - even misguided sarcasm. But information is the great equalizer in the battle for minds. Here is some pertinent information about Trump voters.
source:
http://www.theatlant...-really/471714/
emphasis added
Quote
The single best predictor of Trump support in the GOP primary is the absence of a college degree. In an analysis of Trump's blowout win in New Hampshire, Evan Soltas determined that the factor explaining most of the variance in Trump's support in New Hampshire was education.
“For every 1 percentage point more college graduates over the age of 25, Donald Trump's share of votes falls by 0.65 percentage points,” he said.
Diplomas are what Ron Brownstein calls the “new Republican fault line.” In 2012, Mitt Romney struggled for months to consolidate support because, even as he had clear support among college-educated Republicans, he fared worse among non-college voters.
Quote
RAND tested several queries to clearly divide Trump’s support from his rivals. For example, they found that Trump crushes Ted Cruz among voters who both strongly believe that “immigrants threaten American customs and values" and among voters who "strongly favor" raising taxes on the richest American households. But voters who agreed with the statement “people like me don't have any say about what the government does” were 86.5 percent more likely to prefer Trump. This feeling of powerlessness and voicelessness was a much better predictor of Trump support than age, race, college attainment, income, attitudes towards Muslims, illegal immigrants, or Hispanic identity.
Less educated people who feel they have no voice in government are the primary Trump supporters - the same group that Romney could not attract in his attempt.
That is a pretty good description of working class - less educated. powerless, and fearful of job loss to outside laborers - don't you think?
The confusing aspect is to figure out why the powerless-feeling working class continues to support the party that is determined to eradicate the only hope for power, i.e. unions and collective bargaining, the working class has.
Personally, I think a lot of it has to do with the weakening of the FCC and the Fairness Doctrine, along with weakening of the anti-trust laws, which has led over time to organizations that fill the written news and airwaves with what can only be termed biased propaganda.
Where this disinformation misses is with the tech-savvy young, who are more prone to garner their knowledge from the internet and independent sources. That independent thought, to me, is the explanation of the Bernie Sanders phenomenon and a source of optimism for the country.