I’m not really surprised by this, but still don’t get why this group primarily votes Republican.
Well, I have some theories…
- They are particularly susceptible to the Republican disinformation campaign.
- Racial prejudice
- Most importantly, they have been hit hardest by the Economic downturn and don’t know where to turn.
My guess is this demographic was open to Obama and the Democrats, but was the first group to become disillusioned when the focus turned to Health Care, instead of Jobs, and no one was punished for the economic collapse.
These folks aren’t dumb. They know the Rich and the Corporations have bought the government.
The Democrats need to work harder to make their case to this group and not let the GOP control the narrative.
It would also help if they acted like real Democrats instead of Republican Lites and delivered for this group…
From the Washington Post:
The deep recession has had a profound effect on virtually every segment of the country’s population. But if there is an epicenter of financial stress and frustration, it is among whites without college degrees.
By many measures, this politically sensitive group has emerged from the recession with a particularly dark view of the economy and the financial future. Whites without college degrees also are the most apt to blame Washington for the problems, and are exceedingly harsh in their judgment of the Obama administration and its economic policies.
These findings come from a new national survey conducted by The Washington Post, the Kaiser Family Foundation and Harvard University. The numbers represent a fresh look at the effects of the long recession on all Americans, but particularly “non-college whites,” a group of long-fought-over voters often considered a bellwether of the political ramifications of economic woes.
A mere 10 percent of whites without college degrees say they are satisfied with the nation’s current economic situation. Most – 56 percent – say the country’s best days are in the past, and more, 61 percent, say it will be a long time before the economy begins to recover.
Fully 43 percent of non-college whites say “hard work and determination are no guarantees of success,” and nearly half doubt that they have enough education and skills to compete in the job market.
Not everything is bleak in this group’s outlook, according to the survey. Nearly seven in 10 say they are mostly optimistic about their future, although that is somewhat lower than for whites with college degrees, and for most other groups in the population. More than six in 10 report feeling at least somewhat secure financially.
The survey also found differences in the outlooks of younger and older whites without college degrees. Those younger than 50 were more optimistic about the future than were those older than 50 and were somewhat less pessimistic about how long it will take the economy to recover.
via Poll: Whites without college degrees especially pessimistic about economy.
Yesterday, Once More
I’ll take us back to the 1960’s one more time…
I just came across a few snapshots in time. Some “time capsule” moments on YouTube.
I keep looking back because I keep wondering where the energy for change has gone.
It’s hard to believe how much times have changed…for the better– since the early 1960’s. But I never realized how depressing the 1960’s–which I always thought of a as a decade of hope and change– could be…It’s remarkable, given the restrictive society at the time, how much hope was alive then.
I wonder if it still is…
There were so many people afraid of change then– just like now.
Today, the Afghanistan war has just surpassed Vietnam as our longest war. Bush’s personal vendetta/ war or choice in Iraq is still going on. Ghetto’s still exist. The Tea Baggers prove racism is still alive . The old “Silent Majority”, which isn’t either, is still around. Post-feminism wants to return women to the kitchen and subservience, while the Men of the Religious Right still try to take away their right to control their own bodies. I’m almost relieved we haven’t come far enough on Gay Rights to start dismantling them…
I think we need to look back to see “the way we were” to see how far we have come.
Then, maybe, we can gain the courage and the energy to keep moving forward.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LH4-tOqLH94
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qOezOJevD6E
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Tagged as gay, glen campbell, janice ian, politics, pro choice, society, women, women's rights