I have steadfastly avoided most âTrump voterâ treatises in the news and the constant rush to check on his approval ratings. They reek of a fawning, confused attempt to normalize, empathize with and explain elements of American society that people of color, and white folks with even a rudimentary knowledge of history, have always known.
America is, at its core, a nasty, venal, selfish and racist culture. Yes, we have our spots of progress: the MLKs; the first black this; a major discrimination case is won; a few âvery special episodesâ of Black-ish, etc. By and large, though, the long arc of history has generally bent toward crushing the necks of poor, weak and, especially, African-American citizens.
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So the question shouldnât be, why did millions of Americans vote for Donald Trump? That answer is obvious. The question should be, why have his core supporters stuck with him and, spoiler alert, why will they continue to stick with him no matter what he does over the next four to eight years?
Do they believe heâll build that wall? Do they believe heâll bring back jobs? Do they believe heâll really âMake America great againâ? Of course not. Trump voters donât believe in what Trump says. They donât care, and they donât have to. Trump voters already think that America is done, finished, final, a fatality; they figured that out a long time ago. They didnât elect Donald Trump to fix America; they elected Donald Trump to make sure that as America falls, white folks go down swinging.
Most Trump-voter articles fall into three categories:
1. What motivated people to vote for Trump: The answer is usually some variation of âeconomic anxietyâ and âcultural anxiety,â which is just fancy code-speech for racists. These folks are different from just plain olâ Republicans who were just voting party.
2. Why Barack Obama voters switched from Obama to Trump: The answer is generally the same (with a smattering of âI hated Hillary Clintonâ), with buzzwords like âcultural anxietyâ and fear of Black Lives Matter mixed in. This has baffled many mainstream white commentators and journalists who donât understand how someone could move from a black president who touts an open multicultural society to a racist, sexist president who advocates ethnocentrism and suspicion.
It really shouldnât. Didnât the No. 1-rated Cosby Show give way to Roseanne? Wasnât the â90s Michael Jordan era followed by the mainstreaming of Confederate-flag-winking NASCAR? Didnât the insanely popular racial and gender diversity of Americaâs Next Top Model give birth to the ethnocentric buffoonery and latent bigotry of Jersey Shore and Duck Dynasty? To paraphrase Van Jones, the âwhitewashâ is real, and weâve seen it before.
3. What it will take for Trump voters to abandon him: These stories involve putting together some collection of mostly white Trump voters (and usually one black guy in a suit from the Steve Harvey Collection), who are presented with lie after lie that Trump has told, and the journalist sits there gobsmacked as these people calmly stick with Trump no matter what. Itâs like the Michael Jackson/R. Kelly black-jury-selection sketch on Chappelleâs Show, when they ask Dave if he thinks O.J. is guilty and he says, âMy blackness will not permit me to make a statement like that.â
White Trump supporters arenât going to come out and just say, âThat black guy and his pretty wife and kids made me feel bad about myself, and Trump is my way of getting back at him.â The rules of whiteness prohibit such honesty.
The reason these analyses fail is that they donât get to the root of white-American psyche over the last two decades or so. Imagine youâre a 35-year-old white guy in 1999. The world is your oyster; the next 15 years, your income, life and opportunities are going to skyrocket. Then, boom: Columbine, the white suburbs are no longer safe; 2000, the electoral system is a mess; 2001, America is no longer safe from terror; 2002, the economy is rigged for big business like Enron; and 2005, Americaâs party city New Orleans gets flooded and the government botches the recovery.
After all that, the only way to fix the country is by handing it over to a handsome, smart black guy with a funny name. How emasculating! Eight years later, youâve got black folks protesting, gays on every television network, and even black athletes, from college to the pros, are demanding to be heard. To quote the late Bill Paxton, âGame over, man; game over!â America is done.
The â80s arenât coming back; the era of white male cultural hegemony is only at 97 percent instead of 100 percent, and thereâs no way to change it. Trump voters know this. They know that manufacturing jobs that pay a living wage arenât coming back. They know that a wall is impractical. They know that terrorism is impossible to stop. When you know the inevitable is coming, when you know that you have to face change or become irrelevant, you either change or you kick and scream and drag every tablecloth and curtain in a temper tantrum on your way out.
Donald Trump is that temper tantrum. This is why Trump voters are still angry. Why theyâre still stabbing college students and hanging nooses and protesting at Confederate statues and canât stop talking about Obama and Hillary. Those arenât the actions of optimistic winners who believe Americaâs best days are ahead.
Trump supporters still believe that America is ruined, soiled, tainted and irredeemable. No matter what America says to Trump now, his voters know that she dated a black guy for eight years and she liked it, and she still thinks about him. Why do you think conservatives are always calling their enemies âcuckoldsâ? Itâs projection.
This is why poll after poll shows supporters sticking with Trump no matter how many times he fails or completely betrays his policy promises. They never expected him to change anything, and they never will. All they need to know is that he drives liberals crazy (and to them, âliberalsâ are anyone who isnât a Trump supporter), that heâs white and male, and doesnât challenge Americans to grow up and change.
This kind of political nihilism has the potential to destroy this country and severely destabilize the world. A leader whose supporters donât expect him to deliver on promises and who donât care if heâs honest, and whose greatest value is seen not in what he delivers but in how he antagonizes political enemies, is no leader. Heâs a political cudgel, a temper tantrum from an electorate that votes out of spite, not hope; anger, not ambition; disdain, not destiny.
They just want to make sure they go down swinging, and if that drives the rest of the world off the cliff, so be it. At least the black guy wonât be at the steering wheel.
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