Why Rural America Voted for Trump

American_Jihad

Flaming Libs/Koranimals
May 1, 2012
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3,715
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Gulf of Mex 26.609, -82.220
I know, forgive me for using this source but it will occupy the liberal mind...
Why Rural America Voted for Trump

The New York Times

By ROBERT LEONARD 12 hrs ago
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Knoxville, Iowa — One recent morning, I sat near two young men at a coffee shop here whom I’ve known since they were little boys. Now about 18, they pushed away from the table, and one said: “Let’s go to work. Let the liberals sleep in.” The other nodded.

They’re hard workers. As a kid, one washed dishes, took orders and swept the floor at a restaurant. Every summer, the other picked sweet corn by hand at dawn for a farm stand and for grocery stores, and then went to work all day on his parents’ farm. Now one is a welder, and the other is in his first year at a state university on an academic scholarship. They are conservative, believe in hard work, family, the military and cops, and they know that abortion and socialism are evil, that Jesus Christ is our savior, and that Donald J. Trump will be good for America.

They are part of a growing movement in rural America that immerses many young people in a culture — not just conservative news outlets but also home and church environments — that emphasizes contemporary conservative values. It views liberals as loathsome, misinformed and weak, even dangerous.

Who are these rural, red-county people who brought Mr. Trump into power? I’m a native Iowan and reporter in rural Marion County, Iowa. I consider myself fairly liberal. My family has mostly voted Democratic since long before I was born. To be honest, for years, even I have struggled to understand how these conservative friends and neighbors I respect — and at times admire — can think so differently from me, not to mention how over 60 percent of voters in my county could have chosen Mr. Trump.

Political analysts have talked about how ignorance, racism, sexism, nationalism, Islamophobia, economic disenfranchisement and the decline of the middle class contributed to the popularity of Mr. Trump in rural America. But this misses the deeper cultural factors that shape the thinking of the conservatives who live here.

For me, it took a 2015 pre-caucus stop in Pella by J. C. Watts, a Baptist minister raised in the small town of Eufaula, Okla., who was a Republican congressman from 1995 to 2003, to begin to understand my neighbors — and most likely other rural Americans as well.

“The difference between Republicans and Democrats is that Republicans believe people are fundamentally bad, while Democrats see people as fundamentally good,” said Mr. Watts, who was in the area to campaign for Senator Rand Paul. “We are born bad,” he said and added that children did not need to be taught to behave badly — they are born knowing how to do that.

“We teach them how to be good,” he said. “We become good by being reborn — born again.”

He continued: “Democrats believe that we are born good, that we create God, not that he created us. If we are our own God, as the Democrats say, then we need to look at something else to blame when things go wrong — not us.”

...

While many blame poor decisions by Mrs. Clinton for her loss, in an environment like this, the Democratic candidate probably didn’t matter. And the Democratic Party may not for generations to come. The Republican brand is strong in rural America — perhaps even strong enough to withstand a disastrous Trump presidency.

Rural conservatives feel that their world is under siege, and that Democrats are an enemy to be feared and loathed. Given the philosophical premises Mr. Watts presented as the difference between Democrats and Republicans, reconciliation seems a long way off.

Why Rural America Voted for Trump
 
Although Donald Trump is a minority president-elect, those who did vote for him are products of public schools in poor states.
 
Same reason why Rural parts of Afghanistan supports the taliban and Rural Egypt voted for the muslim brotherhood. You're stuck in the far past.
upload_2017-1-6_0-40-58.jpeg


How's the space program coming along since Obama shut down the shuttle?

Oh that's right! It's more important to bomb other sovereign nations we haven't declared war against and force the working people to pay for more health insurance to a private business at the point of a sword. Tell us again about the great peaceful progressives.

*****SMILE*****



:)
 
anyone who voted for The Hair Club President is a sucker.

SUCKERS !
 
Low-info, low income, and thinking Orange Jebus will give them power and control.

That's why they voted for him.
 
smh I am wondering if people are really believing the garbage they are spewing. If so sorry, but it only shows your ignorance.

Time and again we have seen ''low income, uneducated''. Anyone prove that from an unbiased source?? It obviously is not true.
So why say it. Are you still THAT shocked and surprised? Enough time has passed. It is a done deal.
 
smh I am wondering if people are really believing the garbage they are spewing. If so sorry, but it only shows your ignorance.

Time and again we have seen ''low income, uneducated''. Anyone prove that from an unbiased source?? It obviously is not true.
So why say it. Are you still THAT shocked and surprised? Enough time has passed. It is a done deal.
They can't face reality...

Outside of a few tiny geographical locales, people despise progressives. They despise liars, they despise communists, and they want them gone.

Think of libs as cultists. They congregate together and they infect each other with their nonsense. But in the end, they're just fanatical lunatics. They don't understand how things work in the world because they are totally insular. They only listen to their leaders and each other, they do not experience or understand the rest of the world except through a filter of indoctrination, fear and life long, 24 hour a day, 7 days a week, conditioning.
 
I know, forgive me for using this source but it will occupy the liberal mind...
Why Rural America Voted for Trump

The New York Times

By ROBERT LEONARD 12 hrs ago
BBxUVGF.img


Knoxville, Iowa — One recent morning, I sat near two young men at a coffee shop here whom I’ve known since they were little boys. Now about 18, they pushed away from the table, and one said: “Let’s go to work. Let the liberals sleep in.” The other nodded.

They’re hard workers. As a kid, one washed dishes, took orders and swept the floor at a restaurant. Every summer, the other picked sweet corn by hand at dawn for a farm stand and for grocery stores, and then went to work all day on his parents’ farm. Now one is a welder, and the other is in his first year at a state university on an academic scholarship. They are conservative, believe in hard work, family, the military and cops, and they know that abortion and socialism are evil, that Jesus Christ is our savior, and that Donald J. Trump will be good for America.

They are part of a growing movement in rural America that immerses many young people in a culture — not just conservative news outlets but also home and church environments — that emphasizes contemporary conservative values. It views liberals as loathsome, misinformed and weak, even dangerous.

Who are these rural, red-county people who brought Mr. Trump into power? I’m a native Iowan and reporter in rural Marion County, Iowa. I consider myself fairly liberal. My family has mostly voted Democratic since long before I was born. To be honest, for years, even I have struggled to understand how these conservative friends and neighbors I respect — and at times admire — can think so differently from me, not to mention how over 60 percent of voters in my county could have chosen Mr. Trump.

Political analysts have talked about how ignorance, racism, sexism, nationalism, Islamophobia, economic disenfranchisement and the decline of the middle class contributed to the popularity of Mr. Trump in rural America. But this misses the deeper cultural factors that shape the thinking of the conservatives who live here.

For me, it took a 2015 pre-caucus stop in Pella by J. C. Watts, a Baptist minister raised in the small town of Eufaula, Okla., who was a Republican congressman from 1995 to 2003, to begin to understand my neighbors — and most likely other rural Americans as well.

“The difference between Republicans and Democrats is that Republicans believe people are fundamentally bad, while Democrats see people as fundamentally good,” said Mr. Watts, who was in the area to campaign for Senator Rand Paul. “We are born bad,” he said and added that children did not need to be taught to behave badly — they are born knowing how to do that.

“We teach them how to be good,” he said. “We become good by being reborn — born again.”

He continued: “Democrats believe that we are born good, that we create God, not that he created us. If we are our own God, as the Democrats say, then we need to look at something else to blame when things go wrong — not us.”

...

While many blame poor decisions by Mrs. Clinton for her loss, in an environment like this, the Democratic candidate probably didn’t matter. And the Democratic Party may not for generations to come. The Republican brand is strong in rural America — perhaps even strong enough to withstand a disastrous Trump presidency.

Rural conservatives feel that their world is under siege, and that Democrats are an enemy to be feared and loathed. Given the philosophical premises Mr. Watts presented as the difference between Democrats and Republicans, reconciliation seems a long way off.

Why Rural America Voted for Trump
Everybody knows the reason Clinton jumped out to an early lead in the election was because the Republicans hadn't gotten off work, yet.

Obama's "Job Plan" just didn't create enough unemployed people. But, damn ---- you got to give him credit for trying.
 
The most fascinating thing in my mind is that rural America depends on taxpayers from big cities in order to survive. From agriculture subsidies to Medicaid to Food Stamps to Medicare and Social Security recipients being typically older people who remain in the smaller towns that younger people have fled for better opportunities.

These people depend on other taxpayers put keep voting for a party they have to pivot and then fight because all Republicans want to do is cut all the programs rural people need.
 
The most fascinating thing in my mind is that rural America depends on taxpayers from big cities in order to survive. From agriculture subsidies to Medicaid to Food Stamps to Medicare and Social Security recipients being typically older people who remain in the smaller towns that younger people have fled for better opportunities.

These people depend on other taxpayers put keep voting for a party they have to pivot and then fight because all Republicans want to do is cut all the programs rural people need.
The Trump University Bag of Hammers Marching Band on Parade ...
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