It's a provocative title, intriguing, because to me, understanding how it is that good, good people find Donald Trump so appealing remains the mystery of the Trump era. I like Joe Biden. I voted for him (by mail), but the truth is, I could have been faithful to any number of Democratic candidates this time around. I was pleased to hear every one of them speak.
But I'm not madcap bonkers about Biden, not as crazed as Trump's panting fans, not obsessed or bewitched, willing to risk Covid just to welcome him mask-lessly on a cold airport tarmac. What on earth makes Bible-toting evangelicals buy into a grotesque storyline that a cabal of heinous Democrats and RHINOs, plus some Hollywood star types, and any number of "elites" (of whom I must be one, I guess) gather together ritually to kill children and drink their blood? QAnon anyone?
But let's leave the madness out. Why do ordinary people slavishly pull on their MAGA caps or hoist Trump flags for a Trump flotilla? On that subject I read because I just don't understand.
An opinion piece in the New York Times some time ago made some limited sense. It doesn't explain the evangelical swoon, but abortion IS the Trump card there--and I understand. I don't fall in line, but I understand. If Democrats are baby-killers, as my five-year-old son said of Obama in 2008 as he crawled into my lap, I get that. I don't agree, but I do understand.
In "Why They Loved Him," Farah Stockman, an editor at the Times, took a close look at a man named Tim, who, like dozens of men and women she'd interviewed, lost his job and his way of life by way of NAFTA, the North American Free Trade Agreement, when thousands of blue-collar jobs went south to Mexico and made fatter cats out of men who had been loaded already.
"A machinist named Tim," she claims, "carried his steelworker union card in his wallet for years after the factory closed, just to remind himself who he was." NAFTA didn't simply steal his job, it robbed him of something far more important--identity. "Tim grew up in a union household. His dad had been an autoworker; his grandfather, a coal miner." He lost his job, AND he lost his way of life.
That Tim would drop his own, generations'-old commitments to the Democratic party, a party that, he said, once stood up for the little guy, and instead surf a big orange wave behind a man with weird hair who promised to bring those jobs to boarded-up main streets all over the rust belt makes good sense. Men and women like Tim have every right to say, "Give me back my life." It wasn't only the living wage those steelworkers wanted returned, it was a loving community, a way of life that gives meaning and order to any of their/our lives.
What resonated with me was that union card, something he couldn't and wouldn't toss. Somehow that union card meant more to him than the unemployed or underemployed guy he saw when he looked in a mirror. Enter Donald J. Trump.
I've been helping a World War II nurse--she's a century old--write her memoirs. She's Lakota. She tells me that the 1868 Ft. Laramie Treaty essentially "unmanned" her grandfather. When he signed onto the treaty inaugurating the reservation system, everything changed. No longer would the buffalo roam through the heart of their lives, their culture. As long as he could remember, he'd been nomadic--the Lakota had never cities, even towns. Reservations changed everything.
To understand the significant social problems of our reservation, my Lakota nurse told me, start there--with a way of life entirely erased by way of an inky thumbprint, a way of life ended forever.
What Trump offered Tim and so many others is hope, as Stockman says, "false hope, but false hope is better than no hope at all."
To understand the significant social problems of our reservation, my Lakota nurse told me, start there--with a way of life entirely erased by way of an inky thumbprint, a way of life ended forever.
What Trump offered Tim and so many others is hope, as Stockman says, "false hope, but false hope is better than no hope at all."
But it was false hope, as Tim--I do hope--has now perhaps come to understand.
The title of the article takes the past tense. In two weeks, we'll see.
5 comments:
That you did not vote for Trump, I can forgive you. That you voted for Biden I Can't. A politician for 47 years has done nothing buy pad the pockets of family and friend. He waffles on every thing. He is corrupt
Sorry, Lawrence. In a battle of honesty between Donald T and Joe B, Joe B seems to me a cub scout. But I understand your view because every once in a while I switch to Fox just to see how the other half lives.
LOL. I would say corrupt is the definition of Trump. He pads his own pockets and only cares for himself. Maybe his family a little. Although, his wife just needs to get a little older and she will be out. Have to cut expenses you know
MarkCharles2020.com
Biden won't be an FDR, Kennedy, Reagan or Obama, but there's decency to him. Trump? 95% of what comes out of his mouth is a lie. I'll watch him for ten minutes and realize he hasn't spoken a stitch of truth. If I were American, I'd vote for Joe. He ain't a bad guy; he isn't sleepy either. Trump should end up in a prison, where a good number of his aides currently dwell. Dirk S.
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