RawStory

Opinion

These 15 startling election takeaways reveal the surprising electorate that resulted in President-elect Trump

The American electorate in 2016 has some strange and surprising features, according to a new survey released Thursday by PPRI/The Atlantic. The survey, an exploration of why people did or didn’t vote, found most voters apathetic early on, with two-thirds not participating in the primaries, but then becoming engaged in a passionate fight over what many working-class whites saw as their last chance to preserve a country where they could prosper. Conversely, many women and communities of color felt deeply threatened by Donald Trump and were left feeling discouraged and fearful after the election.

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The psychopathology that explains Donald Trump's troubling anti-democratic behavior

The following is from Alfie Kohn's blog at www.alfiekohn.org

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Why did 53 percent of white women voters go for Donald Trump?

I was swimming in the public pool near my house on Veterans Day, November 11, 2016, a few days after the presidential election. The pool is divided into lanes and swimmers are expected to swim in their lanes. The pool was very crowded because of the holiday. A white man came in, surveyed the pool, and jumped into my lane. Soon, he was bearing down on me. I felt intimidated because he was a very aggressive swimmer and much larger than me. Afterwards I talked about what happened in the shower with the other women who had seen it all. Instead of ignoring his intrusion or of asking the guards to deal with it, I decided to speak to the man myself.

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These are the 5 most idiotic Trump moments of this week

We don’t want to alarm you or anything, but it’s beginning to look like Donald Trump does not know how this whole presidenting thing works. And since he has the curiosity level of a pet rock, chances don’t seem great he’ll be learning anytime soon. His week was a combination of gaffes, bizarre confessions and weirdly tone-deaf phone calls that appear to be setting off international incidents. He seems to miss campaigning, and held a rally in Ohio to crow again about all the other people he vanquished when he beat Hillary. He tweeted how he’s just going to unconstitutionally toss flag burners out of the country. (Whee, this presidenting thing is fun!) And he also took the time to oh-so-presidentially tweet his detail-free “big announcement” about how he’s going to step back from running his companies, so no more “conflicts of interest!” Poof, they’ll just magically disappear.

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Trump’s Carrier coup reveals credibility gap between Twitter rhetoric and economic reality

In a political coup, President-elect Donald Trump says that his transition team has struck a deal with Carrier’s Indianapolis plant to keep 1,000 jobs in the state.

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Donald Trump is no Mussolini -- but liberal democracy could still be in danger

Observers continue to draw parallels between President-elect Donald Trump and the Italian fascist dictator Benito Mussolini. But the similarities – narcissism, opportunism, authoritarianism – coexist with sharp differences. One came from a working-class, socialistic background and saw himself as an intellectual and an ideologue. The other is a billionaire real estate magnate with a pronounced anti-intellectual streak.

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This is who we should really blame for viral fake news

Consider for a moment the oxymoronic concept of “fake news,” which we have been hearing so much about lately. This isn’t your typical disinformation or misinformation — generated by the government, or foreign adversaries, or corporations — to advance an agenda by confusing the public. It isn’t even the familiar dystopian idea of manipulated fact designed to keep people lobotomized and malleable in some post-human autocracy. Those scenarios assume at least an underlying truth against which nefarious forces can take aim.

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Hillary Clinton made the same mistake as Al Gore

During the 2016 election campaign, Hillary Clinton repeated a mistake that Democratic presidential candidate Al Gore made in the 2000 election. In both cases Democratic contenders and their staff assumed that voters’ concern about character flaws would greatly influence their decision-making. In 2000 Al Gore surrendered an opportunity to associate himself with the economy’s robust economic performance under Bill Clinton, while in 2016 Hillary Clinton failed to identify unabashedly and aggressively with major economic improvements during her husband’s presidency and in Barack Obama’s two terms in the White House. Mrs. Clinton and her strategists concentrated their attacks on Donald Trump’s character rather than his ideas about dealing with the economy. In debates, speeches and ads, Hillary Clinton’s team maintained that Trump was unfit to serve as president. Yet many voters who favored Trump viewed his economic message as more important than his personal shortcomings. Trump’s promise to boost manufacturing and deliver good jobs meant more to them than doubts about the GOP candidate’s moral and mental fitness.

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Professor on watchlist of progressives: 'I will not shut up -- America is still worth fighting for'

So, yes, I have the dubious honor of being on the “Professor Watchlist” — a list published recently by a young alt-right provocateur who knew that such a list would get media traction because of Sen. McCarthy’s attacks on academics during the Red Scare. I made the list not because of complaints about my teaching, but because of my public writing about politics.

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Trump's quiet pick for legal adviser shows he's dead set on nuking our democracy

When Hillary Clinton lost the Electoral College, most post-mortems faulted Democrats for failing to empathize with the anger and abandonment non-coastal Americans are feeling. But last week, when Donald Trump sucked up to the (previously dishonest, subsequently gem-like) New York Times, flip-flopping six times in an hour-long interview, I wondered whether his backtracking might be causing some of his supporters to feel abandoned. If they are, I empathize with their incipient buyer’s remorse. I imagine they must feel a bit like Bernie Madoff’s investors did, after realizing they’d been conned.

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Prepare for your 4-year-long nightmare: Here are the 15 biggest fears of a Trump presidency

Across the political spectrum, President-elect Donald Trump has inspired worry and outright fear. He has said and done so many abnormal things that it’s anyone’s guess what his presidency will look like. So, to give you nightmares for the next four years, here’s a not-so-brief list of America’s greatest fears of a Trump presidency.

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Don’t fall for Trump’s bait and switch saving 1,000 Carrier jobs -- he's screwing over millions of workers

Donald Trump deserves some credit if Carrier Corp. does keep “close to 1,000 jobs” in Indianapolis as the company announced today. The company, a subsidiary of the industrial giant, United Technologies, said it reached a deal with Trump, who is slated to travel to the Hoosier State on Thursday to unveil the agreement.

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Here are 15 Trump supporters who violated the US Flag Code — by wearing Old Glory

President-elect Donald Trump set off a storm of controversy on Tuesday after tweeting that people who burn the U.S. flag should be punished.

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