Educated voters?

expatobserver

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David Brooks said it right on PBS..
for a long time the US had a bias to the college educated

that probably resulted in the masses of non college feeling discriminated against

Trump hit the nail on the head, with people wanting revenge. Against many things
that they felt were against them Trump talked revenge. People liked that
get back at my perceived enemies

and the non college were perhaps less educated, or informed, thinking that
the economy was the problem, when inflation figures, job figures and gdp showed the US
was in a good position. the college crowd thot life was good

But the others were not looking at it that way.
and they were the 'silent majority' who voted the other way.
When Trump policies hit.. the viewpoint will change


So
 
This is your college educated:



"Stanford Law has a Trigglypuff problem"​




"Does anyone remember Trigglypuff, a forerunner of the abusive Stanford-style protesters? At a 2016 University of Massachusetts campus event, Triggly shouted down Christina Hoff Sommers, then speaking on the nature of feminism. Her venom and appearance became an emblem style of unreason.

Once upon a time, that anger and need for attention might have been ignored, sublimated or medicated. But seven years later, in the non-binary age, Cora “Trigglypuff” Segal is a prize-winning graduate student and instructor in Gender and Women’s Studies at the University of Wisconsin. “As a scholar-activist of disability justice and racial capitalism, she is particularly interested in anti-capitalist, anti-state and abolitionist disability politics and resistance,” her bio reads."


trigglypuff-sjw.gif






 

"The Society for Disability Studies 2021 Irving K. Zola Award Winner​


Cora, a fat white woman with brown medium-length curly hair and glasses. She is wearing a brown snakeskin-print top over a white turtle-neck top. She has a blue beret on."
CoraS.jpg





"The Society for Disability Studies is pleased to announce that Cora Segal has won the 2021 Irving K. Zola Award for Emerging Scholars in Disability Studies for her paper “Against Productivity & Liberal Pity: A Case Study in Prison Abolition & Disability Justice.”

Cora Segal (she/her pronouns) is a first year Master’s student in Gender & Women’s Studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Her work examines how state and capitalist violence such as borders, policing, prisons, and colonial occupation create what is considered a normative body-mind. As a scholar-activist of disability justice and racial capitalism, she is particularly interested in anti-capitalist, anti-state and abolitionist disability politics and resistance."

 
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