awm, on 2016-October-16, 15:09, said:
But I think it is fair to ask why a candidate who seems so repulsive in so many ways has such a significant base of support (yes, he will probably lose, but he will still get maybe 60 million votes). And when we ask this question, it makes sense to interview the less educated white voters (where he has a substantial majority) rather than ask (to give an amusing example) the one Trump-supporting African-American teen in Illinois that the LA Times persists on polling.
"But I think it is fair to ask why a candidate who seems so repulsive in so many ways has such a significant base of support"
I think that it is not only fair, I think it is important. And I think the article was a useful contribution to understanding. I'll give a few thoughts of my own rather than try to channel the author.
For one thing, "non-college educated" is like "non-white". It says what someone is not rather than what someone is. Many years ago I had a neighbor whose racial make-up was part Black and part Native American. I am just guessing here, but my guess is that he would have accepted either classification, probably reluctantly, but he would have bristled at Non-White.
And then consider: The people in charge of these polls and surveys are, probably, college educated. The newspaper articles and opinion pieces are for the most part written by people with college degrees. So it comes out like this. We the Us have polled people. We have found that when we poll the Us, they agree with Us. These are the correct views. When we poll the non-Us, they hold other views, the wrong views. Let's assume the polls are accurate since, broadly, I imagine that they are. The optics are still a problem. I can well imagine a non-college educated person, married, job holding, raising kids, saying "Hey, I have an idea. Let's group people by whether or not they are self-supporting rather than by which degree they have." This is not some wild fantasy. I went to college because I wanted to, my parents, especially me father, saw little point in it. I was brought up to be self-supporting. That was important. College? Ok. Can't see why, but ok.
The author speaks of "the wings of moral superiority". Well, with Donald Trump nobody has to worry about any wings of moral superiority. I am not entirely joking here. A childhood memory: My parents were lax about church attendance and the minister was over berating them about this. "Too early on a Sunday" my mother explained. "Early to bed, early to rise, makes a person healthy wealthy and wise" said the minster. "Early to bed, early to rise, and your wife goes out with the other guys" responded my mother. There was nothing wrong at all with my parents' morals, but they found the self-righteous to be tiresome.
The question is broadly discussed: "How can we, or just can we, put the country back together?" . I am far from sure that we can. I thought the article might be helpful. Helpful or not, I liked it.
Irrelevant piece of data: Hillary Clinton went to Wellesley College. I grew up on Wellesley Avenue in St. Paul. I was a young adult before I learned that there is a college with the same name as my street. Stanford was a block over, and then Berkeley. If there is any spark of relevance, it is that we have a Wellesley graduate seeking votes from people who have never heard of the place. I believe it is called a culture clash.