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NCTraveler

(30,481 posts)
Tue Dec 6, 2016, 03:11 PM Dec 2016

Obama nailed it. No need to sugar coat it.

"They get bitter, they cling to guns or religion or antipathy to people who aren't like them or anti-immigrant sentiment or anti-trade sentiment as a way to explain their frustrations."

It isn't about economics. Their frustrations manifest themselves in more divisive manners.

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Obama nailed it. No need to sugar coat it. (Original Post) NCTraveler Dec 2016 OP
And Trump won on their backs metroins Dec 2016 #1
Interesting that the person quoted won as well. That isn't a Clinton quote. nt. NCTraveler Dec 2016 #2
I know metroins Dec 2016 #5
I'm probably in the minority Nwgirl503 Dec 2016 #15
I feel like we've tried the young vote for 20 years metroins Dec 2016 #20
I agree to a point Nwgirl503 Dec 2016 #31
Tried how? quakerboy Dec 2016 #44
Yes metroins Dec 2016 #46
I gotta be honest quakerboy Dec 2016 #49
If I recall, he took a lot of flak for that statement, but it was true then and is true now. shraby Dec 2016 #3
Yep. Clinton took a lot of flak for her deplorable statement. NCTraveler Dec 2016 #4
He took flack for conveniently edited and shortened versions pangaia Dec 2016 #26
Read "Hillbilly Elegy" SharonAnn Dec 2016 #47
Now we can add on... yallerdawg Dec 2016 #6
you forgot the first paragraph of his quote (equally salient) geek tragedy Dec 2016 #7
Yes. Thanks, geek tragedy. elleng Dec 2016 #10
His point is spot on. The addition really doesn't add much to the manifistation of bitterness. NCTraveler Dec 2016 #11
the point was that the people have a lot to be pissed about, and when people geek tragedy Dec 2016 #16
Correct Lithos Dec 2016 #28
People crave simple explanations to complex phenomena. geek tragedy Dec 2016 #30
But Lithos, if you deplore tens of millions of voters, you have fewer to appeal to... Eleanors38 Dec 2016 #32
yes, the hispanics are racist or have some other issues where i don't justify it either . JI7 Dec 2016 #42
I haven't heard any anyone say all white blue collar workers are racists.. JHan Dec 2016 #51
Trump did not get 30 percent of the Latino vote. That figure was debunked. StevieM Dec 2016 #55
Like their faithful voting for Republican and once and a while voting blue and expecting everything uponit7771 Dec 2016 #53
...And also the Right... SkyDaddy7 Dec 2016 #24
Yep. Chitown Kev Dec 2016 #50
Yes, POTUS was right, but it is ALSO about economics. elleng Dec 2016 #8
That is why Clinton spent so much time focusing on the economy. nt. NCTraveler Dec 2016 #12
Exactly. She talked about it constantly. The post-election media narrative is pure fiction. StevieM Dec 2016 #54
Thisyes lunasun Dec 2016 #56
The problem is that half the people will always be in the bottom 50 percent. rzemanfl Dec 2016 #17
No, it isn't. That is totally bogus. duffyduff Dec 2016 #18
Indeed, all we need are some coastal states and the Beltway. It'll work everytime!! Eleanors38 Dec 2016 #33
In the last week of this Campaign Run. Wellstone ruled Dec 2016 #9
much of Trump's nastiest treatment, was directed toward the other republicans NRQ891 Dec 2016 #13
Good points. Trump's supporters had "their hippy on," "doin' it in the road." Eleanors38 Dec 2016 #34
Yet incumbents were re-elected at an even higher rate than normal. In both the House and Senate. Garrett78 Dec 2016 #39
fear and insecurity feeds those frustrations. You can't pretend economics have no role. JCanete Dec 2016 #14
They think somebody else is benefiting at their (entitled) expense. duffyduff Dec 2016 #19
you know all about every member of this group, what they think, and why they do what they do NRQ891 Dec 2016 #21
That just isn't true that you can't change mindsets. What about how people have stopped JCanete Dec 2016 #29
Yes he did. He was right then and is still right now. I never understood the hoopla about that liberalla Dec 2016 #22
He basically pointed out that water is wet. Shocking. Garrett78 Dec 2016 #40
That is why they were so angry. coco22 Dec 2016 #23
I think Democrats should LEAD with GUN CONTROL! Yeah, baby! That'll work. Eleanors38 Dec 2016 #35
Still true eight years later. George II Dec 2016 #25
It's also the *cheating*. nt LaydeeBug Dec 2016 #27
Every one needs something safe to cling to - guns and God can be like that - can fix a lot of ills; jmg257 Dec 2016 #36
Eerily prophetic RonniePudding Dec 2016 #37
Post removed Post removed Dec 2016 #38
drumpfuck has their backs.. rofl Cha Dec 2016 #41
Yes. So ... how do we counteract that? nt CaptainTruth Dec 2016 #43
It certainly is not about economics ProfessorPlum Dec 2016 #45
Obama took such a drubbing for saying this - and it's 100% true SpankMe Dec 2016 #48
The 1st Noble Truth of Suffering vlyons Dec 2016 #52

Nwgirl503

(406 posts)
15. I'm probably in the minority
Tue Dec 6, 2016, 03:53 PM
Dec 2016

But I don't think we do. We need to hit the newly minted or soon to be minted voting age demographics and the ones who didn't come out to vote. I understand the lesser of two evils vote, but I don't know how to reach those people if they really thought Trump was the lesser of two evils.

metroins

(2,550 posts)
20. I feel like we've tried the young vote for 20 years
Tue Dec 6, 2016, 04:54 PM
Dec 2016

and it continues to not be the wave push we need.

Old people vote.

In 2008, the Obama vote got the young voters out only a few percentage above 2004, then they dropped way off in 2012. If Obama only got about 50% of them to come out, that's about as good as it'll ever get in the near future.



Nwgirl503

(406 posts)
31. I agree to a point
Tue Dec 6, 2016, 07:06 PM
Dec 2016

I can't find any hard and fast numbers about current 17-25 year old demographics, but I will say the advent and rise of social media makes reaching this age group a much different beast than even as recently as 8 years ago for that same age range. If everything I've read is correct, this group is larger than the baby boomer group.

8 years ago, this same age group was coming into or off of war, the recession, the housing market crash. This was when MySpace was still prominent and Napster was the go-to music source. Social media and access to information wasn't nearly as readily available as it is now. I feel like we need to find a way to engage this age group. Just my 2 cents. Lol!

quakerboy

(14,132 posts)
44. Tried how?
Wed Dec 7, 2016, 05:20 AM
Dec 2016

Because maybe its the way that we are doing that outreach. Or maybe its what we are trying to sell them

Or it could be the people we are trying to reach. But with three+ major variables, I think its worth giving some thought to which one might be the issue.

Old people vote. Problem is that the same stats that one would use to prove that statment also show they vote conservative.

metroins

(2,550 posts)
46. Yes
Wed Dec 7, 2016, 12:33 PM
Dec 2016

We've tried through college campuses, concerts, music/movie stars, technology. A ton actually.

Heck, we even threw "free college" at them this go around and turnout was still decent but not great along the primaries and general.

Getting rid of caucuses could help, but honestly I remember in my 20s I didn't think about voting, never looked it up, I had better things to do. I was busy and the government just felt too far away for me to care to look it up. I would've voted for whoever my parents told me to.

I think the correct demographic to go after is middle aged and older voters...they are consistent and have been for a while.

quakerboy

(14,132 posts)
49. I gotta be honest
Thu Dec 8, 2016, 12:24 AM
Dec 2016

Obama tried the get the youth vote strategy

Obama won twice.

Hillary tried the rely on the older voters strategy.

She does not appear headed for the White house.

Needless to say, I am not persuaded.


I think its the sales pitch, myself. Hey, here's a concert, here's some words about free college that most of us know are just words unlikely to become any sort of reality. That sounds like trying to trade cheap trinkets for votes. Its not genuine. Its not gonna fly in the modern era. And hey.. look! it didnt.


But lets try it again and hope for a different result. That should work out really well.

yallerdawg

(16,104 posts)
6. Now we can add on...
Tue Dec 6, 2016, 03:17 PM
Dec 2016

"opioids, meth and heroin."

Sympathy and help...or shorter lifespans?

If they vote Republican, it surely will be a dying demographic.

 

geek tragedy

(68,868 posts)
7. you forgot the first paragraph of his quote (equally salient)
Tue Dec 6, 2016, 03:21 PM
Dec 2016
You go into these small towns in Pennsylvania and, like a lot of small towns in the Midwest, the jobs have been gone now for 25 years and nothing's replaced them. And they fell through the Clinton administration, and the Bush administration, and each successive administration has said that somehow these communities are gonna regenerate and they have not.


Why they are bitter is just as important as how that bitterness is made manifest.
 

NCTraveler

(30,481 posts)
11. His point is spot on. The addition really doesn't add much to the manifistation of bitterness.
Tue Dec 6, 2016, 03:27 PM
Dec 2016

It matters little as to the message brought into many of these small towns. Their bitterness will manifest itself in the bible, guns, and division. That is the point of the rest of the quote.

Many don't want to take the time to really look at what he was saying. It holds true today.

 

geek tragedy

(68,868 posts)
16. the point was that the people have a lot to be pissed about, and when people
Tue Dec 6, 2016, 04:33 PM
Dec 2016

are pissed they often are not rational as to where they direct that anger.

Democrats have not done a great job selling themselves as the party of the workers who've lost out due to globalization. We've done a great job selling ourselves as the party of workers who can benefit from the shift to a export-led, services-based economy.

Lithos

(26,451 posts)
28. Correct
Tue Dec 6, 2016, 06:20 PM
Dec 2016

This is one of the realities of this election.

I'm rather sick of hearing people say that anyone who is white and blue collar is automatically a racist bigot. 30% of hispanics, many blue collar as well, voted for Trump. Are they racist?

 

geek tragedy

(68,868 posts)
30. People crave simple explanations to complex phenomena.
Tue Dec 6, 2016, 07:04 PM
Dec 2016

Blaming it all on racism amounts to comfort food to soothe ideological and partisan angst.

 

Eleanors38

(18,318 posts)
32. But Lithos, if you deplore tens of millions of voters, you have fewer to appeal to...
Tue Dec 6, 2016, 07:13 PM
Dec 2016

...so resources can be concentrated on the Coasts. Makes losing more efficient and thorough!

JHan

(10,173 posts)
51. I haven't heard any anyone say all white blue collar workers are racists..
Thu Dec 8, 2016, 02:29 AM
Dec 2016

People will tune out what they want and don't want to hear depending on what they can get. A Hispanic voter may think - "I need my job back and I try to follow the laws of this country, I'm not "illegal" so Trump's talk doesn't bother or affect me"

We can't keep evading the fact that millions voted for a demagogue, regardless of the reasons - whether convenience, self loathing - as in the case of Hispanic Trump Surrogate who essentially said that Hispanic Culture is a problem and "taking over" - or whatever other reason.

Millions of Americans knowingly voted for a bigot, either because the bigotry appealed to them, or it didn't rate highly on their list of disqualifying reasons to reject a candidate.

StevieM

(10,539 posts)
55. Trump did not get 30 percent of the Latino vote. That figure was debunked.
Thu Dec 8, 2016, 04:19 AM
Dec 2016

A lot about the exit polls was wrong, as evidenced by the fact that they had HRC winning.

A simple look at the precinct-by-precinct data will clearly show that Hillary did much better than that. Latinos were the one group she did better with than Obama.

uponit7771

(91,671 posts)
53. Like their faithful voting for Republican and once and a while voting blue and expecting everything
Thu Dec 8, 2016, 04:04 AM
Dec 2016

... to change yesterday?!

SkyDaddy7

(6,045 posts)
24. ...And also the Right...
Tue Dec 6, 2016, 05:51 PM
Dec 2016

the same people who championed these policies that left these small town white folks & others who voted for TRUMP unemployed & also refused to allow the Federal Government to invest in the future of this country to create many new industries & jobs that could have put many of these people back to work...Turned around & LIED TO THEM & used the financial crisis & told them that it was the Mexicans & "illegal immigrants" that caused their pain along with the policies of President Obama & the Democrats that have left them in the situation they are in & they bought it!! The Right used racial, xenophobic & religious bigotry to distract just enough "poorly educated" & racist whites to do their bidding at the polls! Not to mention the FBI & the Russians played a major role as well.

I hate to be cynical but all I can think about is who will be the next Democratic POTUS to come in & clean the freaking mess left by TRUMP & the GOP Congress only to be shamed while in office by of course the Right, but the media, and many cry baby blind Democrats not getting everything they wanted when they wanted it & the public & then another idiot Republican will be voted back into office!! Sorry but this is becoming an American theme!

elleng

(135,884 posts)
8. Yes, POTUS was right, but it is ALSO about economics.
Tue Dec 6, 2016, 03:24 PM
Dec 2016

It's a serious mistake if 'we' don't recognize it.

A Bigger Economic Pie, but a Smaller Slice for Half of the U.S.

'Even with all the setbacks from recessions, burst bubbles and vanishing industries, the United States has still pumped out breathtaking riches over the last three and half decades.

The real economy more than doubled in size; the government now uses a substantial share of that bounty to hand over as much as $5 trillion to help working families, older people, disabled and unemployed people pay for a home, visit a doctor and put their children through school.

Yet for half of all Americans, their share of the total economic pie has shrunk significantly, new research has found.

This group — the approximately 117 million adults stuck on the lower half of the income ladder — “has been completely shut off from economic growth since the 1970s,” the team of economists found. “Even after taxes and transfers, there has been close to zero growth for working-age adults in the bottom 50 percent.”'>>>

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/12/06/business/economy/a-bigger-economic-pie-but-a-smaller-slice-for-half-of-the-us.html?

http://www.democraticunderground.com/111679295

StevieM

(10,539 posts)
54. Exactly. She talked about it constantly. The post-election media narrative is pure fiction.
Thu Dec 8, 2016, 04:15 AM
Dec 2016

And the talk about identity politics is particularly absurd. Trump's entire campaign was about identity politics.

rzemanfl

(30,282 posts)
17. The problem is that half the people will always be in the bottom 50 percent.
Tue Dec 6, 2016, 04:35 PM
Dec 2016

Employers used to take pride in paying "a living wage." Unions used to see people got one. Now the top tier wants it all and fuck everyone else.

 

duffyduff

(3,251 posts)
18. No, it isn't. That is totally bogus.
Tue Dec 6, 2016, 04:47 PM
Dec 2016

Why do I say that? Because the time to have complained was 35 YEARS AGO, when Reagan declared open warfare on working people.

These white males do NOT give a shit about economics. They can't because they keep voting wrong time after time after time. All they live for is guns, God, and bigotry.

We do NOT need their votes. They can't be reached. They can't be reasoned with because their minds are closed. End of story.

 

Wellstone ruled

(34,661 posts)
9. In the last week of this Campaign Run.
Tue Dec 6, 2016, 03:24 PM
Dec 2016

This seemed to be the underlying theme. If one has ever worked a Telemarketing or Phone Center Job,you pick up on the nuances in the contacts voice,and this anger distrust thing was very evident with many people. Noticed it more in Rural areas. Hunch's many times tells one the real story.

NRQ891

(217 posts)
13. much of Trump's nastiest treatment, was directed toward the other republicans
Tue Dec 6, 2016, 03:39 PM
Dec 2016

this election started out with Jeb arriving like he was Junior at the family business. Massive financial war chest, journalistic revisionism of the W Bush era propaganda - a shoe-in.

then there was Ted Cruz, a cynic who had locked up the tea party and Evangelical vote

then there was Marco Rubio, an empty suit trading on a play for the Hispanic vote for the Republican party

there was Rand Paul, inheritor of the pot smoking libertarian conservatives, from his father Ron

and Carly Fiorina, a tech executive who united stockholders and workers in their hate of her

and Trump destroyed them all, mercilessly. Don't underestimate that was part of his appeal, a voting population that was mad at everyone, not just immigrants and muslims. They were angry with the *entire* political establishment, *including* Republicans

I think this point gets overlooked

Garrett78

(10,721 posts)
39. Yet incumbents were re-elected at an even higher rate than normal. In both the House and Senate.
Tue Dec 6, 2016, 09:57 PM
Dec 2016

Including major proponents of the TPP.

 

JCanete

(5,272 posts)
14. fear and insecurity feeds those frustrations. You can't pretend economics have no role.
Tue Dec 6, 2016, 03:40 PM
Dec 2016

Divide and conquer plays on those fears, plays on those superstitions. People are being led by their limbic systems, because their limbic systems are in control, and that is very much the case because they are always in a state of some degree of economic uncertainty.

Adhere to Maslow's hierarchy of needs. If you want people to get beyond those bottom tiers that have them worried about scarcity and who is taking their shit, then you have to offer them a sense of stability here. Or, frankly, offer them a mother-fucking class war already, and turn that limbic fear towards the thing that actually ails them. By giving them this new and appropriate target of their frustrations, we can start to work on their compassion for the ones they've been blaming all this time. They are no longer the source of their fears, they are their brothers and sisters etc. in common cause. Just a little bit of mirror neuron activity and maybe we can start getting somewhere here, to the point where their sense of self, their esteem is tied to how they treat these populations of people that they had never previously truly seen as people.



 

duffyduff

(3,251 posts)
19. They think somebody else is benefiting at their (entitled) expense.
Tue Dec 6, 2016, 04:53 PM
Dec 2016

They think illegals or minorities or women or public employees or unions or some other phony baloney sector is doing better at their expense. They are morons, complete and total morons.

THAT is the only thing about "economics" they care about. They keep voting GOP because of the idiot "social issues" and the pandering to prejudices.

I know all about Maslow, and it doesn't apply to people who cannot be reached. It is a waste of time and futile. You cannot EVER, EVER change that mindset that has been there since childhood and reinforced by religion and/or the military and further reinforced by hate radio and slanted media outlets like Fox.

There are millions upon millions of people who do NOT vote. THOSE are the people we should reach, not the bigoted, entitled white males.

NRQ891

(217 posts)
21. you know all about every member of this group, what they think, and why they do what they do
Tue Dec 6, 2016, 05:09 PM
Dec 2016

because of their race and gender - and you know that they are inferior - because they're bigoted

do I understand you correctly?

 

JCanete

(5,272 posts)
29. That just isn't true that you can't change mindsets. What about how people have stopped
Tue Dec 6, 2016, 06:37 PM
Dec 2016

thinking homosexuality is wrong or deviant in their own lifetimes and have even come around to gay marriage.

You are pointing out how people think as if it isn't continually reified by the media and the politicians in their localities, and yes their churches. We have to fight that message and not give up on people, and it shouldn't ever be our job to decide who and who can't be "saved."

If MLK had only gotten through to people who already saw him as human, his impact on American Consciousness would have hardly been as profound.

liberalla

(9,987 posts)
22. Yes he did. He was right then and is still right now. I never understood the hoopla about that
Tue Dec 6, 2016, 05:46 PM
Dec 2016

statement when it first became public. It seemed very astute.

coco22

(1,258 posts)
23. That is why they were so angry.
Tue Dec 6, 2016, 05:49 PM
Dec 2016

They can't handle the truth if you tell them the truth they run to get their guns...

jmg257

(11,996 posts)
36. Every one needs something safe to cling to - guns and God can be like that - can fix a lot of ills;
Tue Dec 6, 2016, 07:55 PM
Dec 2016

and someone to be angry at & to blame for whatever makes them angry - people who aren't like them are easy.

Response to NCTraveler (Original post)

ProfessorPlum

(11,338 posts)
45. It certainly is not about economics
Wed Dec 7, 2016, 07:28 AM
Dec 2016

you are 100% right there. Trump actually said that the current minimum wage was too high.

So, people who say they voted for him because of economic insecurity can go fuck themselves.

SpankMe

(3,226 posts)
48. Obama took such a drubbing for saying this - and it's 100% true
Wed Dec 7, 2016, 02:32 PM
Dec 2016

But, Trump lies and distorts his way through the campaign - and wins the presidency because of it.

This country is so upside down...

vlyons

(10,252 posts)
52. The 1st Noble Truth of Suffering
Thu Dec 8, 2016, 03:52 AM
Dec 2016

When Buddha became enlightened, his 1st teaching came to be called the 4 Noble Truths, the first of which was the Truth of Suffering. We are all of us suffering. It's called the realm of Samsara, the realm of Suffering. We think that our egos are real solid things, and we blame external stuff as the cause of our frustrations, disappointments, failures, mistakes, rejections, abandonment, etc etc.

There's the suffering of suffering, such as physical and emotional pain and discomfort. The suffering of karma, experiencing the results and consequences of our bad and non-productive decisions and actions. And then a type of existential suffering, which is experiencing that everything that we desire is impermanent and ultimately unsatisfactory, as a means of gaining permanent happiness.

When we get in touch with our own suffering in its various forms, ideally it enables us to find compassion for the suffering of others. It is this lack of empathy and compassion for others that I find most alarming about the far RWers.

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