There is a group of voters that Donald Trump has brought to
the Republican party which has overwhelmed both the extremist-Christian /
extremist-conservative (“tea party”) base,
and the “traditional” or “establishment” Republicans. This is how he became the party nominee for
2016.
The extremist-Christian / extremist-conservative groups had
already overwhelmed the “traditional” or “establishment” Republicans enough to
dominate party agenda for the last few elections. But they, in turn, have been completely overwhelmed this year by
the Trump supporters.
So who are these Trump supporters? It varies,
but largely they are working class and lower middle class folks who work
in the trades. They have been left
behind economically by the Republican party,
which is largely in-hoc to giant corporation management, but these Trump supporters have voted for
Republicans generally because of “trickle-down economics” promises, which have since proven to be lies.
60+ years of being left behind economically have left them
very angry, and this anger actually extends
to both parties (equally guilty). Trump
promises to do something to help them,
although his actual business record denies that he will.
However, you have to
look very hard to find out about that discrepancy, which is something non-college-educated folks
seldom do. And that is how Trump won the
Republican nomination: he tells the “conservative”
left-behinds what they want to hear, and
they look no further. They outnumber the
rest of the entire party.
The Other Side
There is also a group
of relatively-strident voters that Bernie Sanders has brought to the Democratic
party. They are a considerable
plurality, or Sanders would not have
come anywhere near as close as he did to being the nominee. And he did.
A plurality that large must be taken very seriously, and I think the Democrats-as-a-whole
did, when adopting their platform. Even so,
Hillary Clinton has become the Democratic nominee for 2016. But, a
lot of the issues addressed in her acceptance speech actually came from the Sanders
campaign.
So who are these Sanders supporters? A coalition of multiple groups, actually.
One group is non-college-educated working class people left behind by
both parties for 60+ years, exactly like
the Trump supporters, except for
opposite political leanings. They are
very angry, at both parties.
Another group is college-educated middle class people also left
behind by both parties for 60+ years.
These are somewhat-similar to the Trump supporters, but have opposite political leanings. They are also angry at both parties.
Most of the rest are college-educated and relatively-young
(under-30) folks. There are some older
folks who also like what Senator Sanders had to say. Most of these folks are not “angry” so much
as just looking for real change.
Net Effect from Both
Sides
All share a problem with being left behind economically for
60+ years. That’s the common element
among them all, whether Trump or Sanders
supporters.
Here’s the funny part,
if it wasn’t so pathetic: between
the Trump supporters and the Bernie Sanders supporters, they are a majority of the electorate. If they could ditch the opposite-party
political propaganda, there’s enough of
them to vote in the changes that would correct 60+ years of being left behind
economically.
How Did This Happen?
That being left behind comes from three dominant sources: (1) improperly-regulated globalization, (2) improperly-regulated automation, and (3) the very richest entities not paying
their fair share of taxes.
Improperly-regulated globalization sends jobs overseas to
slave-labor economies, because the
short-term labor costs are lower.
Improperly-regulated automation reduces the number of properly-paying
jobs at home, because robots get paid no
salaries or benefits. Super-rich
entities buy politicians in order to pay no taxes.
Globalization: this
must happen, but it demands proper
regulation to avoid sending jobs overseas to the slave labor markets. This is a moral imperative, because slavery anywhere is wrong. Simple as that.
If the overseas job is a slave labor job, then there needs to be a real economic
disadvantage to sending that work overseas to that slave labor market. The first thing that comes to mind is far
bigger taxes when outsourced jobs go to slave labor.
Automation: this will
happen, but it doesn’t need to be as
cheap as it currently is. This again is
a moral imperative, and a constitutional
imperative in the United States!
The way automation currently happens in this country, a large number of manual labor jobs are
eliminated in favor of a very few robot-supervision / maintenance jobs. So how is allowing net job elimination for
enhanced profit in accord with “promoting the general welfare”, as the constitution has it?
Just what in hell are all 330 million of us supposed to do
for a living? Our government is supposed
to be managing that question “for the general welfare”, and obviously has not. Not since at least WW2.
Tax avoidance by the richest: if you can buy enough representatives and
senators their jobs, they will write
laws for you that enable you to avoid paying taxes. Only the real giants can afford to do this really
effectively, so there is a spectrum of tax
avoidance effects that completely leaves out small businesses and
individuals. Again, how is that fair? Or in accord with the constitution?
My Conclusions
Yet, there is nothing
surprising about that outcome. We have
allowed it to happen since the founding of the Republic by allowing lobbyist
monies in government. This has been
going on “big time” since WW2. To end it,
all lobbyist monies must be outlawed.
It’s really that simple.
Why have these three problems been going on for so long? In a word,
money talks far too loudly in the halls of our government. That’s both elected officials who work for
whoever bought their jobs for them (not we who elected them), and appointed officials who get rich the same
way.
They follow the money.
They follow the money.
Fix that, and a lot
of our problems go away.
Update 8-4-16:
Update 8-4-16:
There are some related articles elsewhere on this site, one of which seems to be modestly popular
with readers (the 7-29-16 article).
Another one is just a funny (the 4-24-16 article). All share the search keyword “idiocy in
politics”. Here’s the list:
8-4-16….Evaluation
of Choices for 2016
7-29-16…..Stuff
You Normally Do Not Think About (this one)
6-5-16…….Trump? NO!!
4-24-16….Better
Choices in November
12-21-15..Facts
Must Trump Politics