YDB95
Hopeless Romantic!
- Joined
- Nov 5, 2011
- Posts
- 13,823
Top five at least.Where do you think racism ranks in the things that need correction in this country,?![]()
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Top five at least.Where do you think racism ranks in the things that need correction in this country,?![]()
Above or below allowing men in women's sports?Top five at least.
Since literally no one is calling for allowing men in women's sports, I'd say far above. Now, transphobia is quite close, probably also in the top five.Above or below allowing men in women's sports?![]()
How exactly is Trump promoting racism and transphobia? That all existed long before Trump.Since literally no one is calling for allowing men in women's sports, I'd say far above. Now, transphobia is quite close, probably also in the top five.
Trump's hard core supporters know that their lives are going to get worse. This is because computer technology and automation are eliminating the better paying jobs they have the intelligence to learn. They want Trump to ruin the economy in order to spread the misery around. They love Trump because he hates the same people they hate.
you think he will resign and we can INSTALL Harris like the DNC did. so free and democratic. Dems didnt vote for Harris when they had the chance.The Trump Voters Who Are Losing Patience
Some of the president’s own voters are ready to blame him if their lives don’t improve soon.
By Sarah Longwell
https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/I98uvqbBvijNm9PKBeSV9hoxOAk=/0x0:1200x675/960x540/media/img/mt/2025/03/TrumpEconomy/original.gif
Illustration by The Atlantic. Source: Getty.
March 4, 2025, 4:45 PM ET
Donald Trump is president because, in the broadest possible sense, voters were unhappy with the direction of the country and wanted a change. The question now is whether what we’re seeing in Washington reflects the change they wanted.
Since January, I’ve conducted regular focus groups with voters across the political spectrum, asking them about Trump’s performance. Some patterns are starting to emerge. First: Lots of Trump voters believe they’re getting exactly what they signed up for—DOGE, disruption, someone shaking up Washington.
But Trump didn’t win with his base alone. Another significant group contributed to his margin of victory: people who voted for him because the change they wanted wasn’t systemic disruption but relief from the high cost of living they’ve been experiencing since the COVID lockdowns ended.
Read: The Trump backers who have buyer’s remorse
Voters in this group tend to be “soft” partisans or nonpartisan. They don’t follow politics closely and vote mostly based on things that affect their day-to-day lives—grocery and gas prices, rent, inflation. Many of these voters in the focus groups are showing signs that they do not believe that Trump’s policy priorities are about cheaper groceries. Instead, they see him getting distracted by culture-war issues that won’t actually improve their lives.
In his first term, a significant number of voters felt that Trump was a bad person who was good at managing the economy, which gave them a mixed view of him. But the past decade has functioned like exposure therapy for Trump: Many people have become desensitized to his character defects, so that what remains is the vague sense that “Trump = good economy.” These voters no longer look at his social-media posts, and they don’t read past headlines as they scroll. So his bad character—which hasn’t gone away—no longer registers.
But voters in this group are noticing that the job they elected him to do—fix the economy—is not getting done.
“ I would like to see him do a little bit more for the economy … because that was one of the platforms that he did run on, that he was going to help the economy,” Holly, a 2020 and 2024 Trump voter from Maine, said in a late-February focus group. (To protect participants’ privacy, we do not identify them by their last name.) “You know, we haven’t really seen that. My grocery prices are still the same, if not higher, than they were.”
“I wanted a lot of change as far as inflation and the price of everything,” Sharli, a Biden-to-Trump voter from Georgia, said in another focus group last month. “So I haven’t seen any real changes there. As a matter of fact, I think for me, things are worse, as far as the inflation.”
“I just worry about the tariffs making everything cost more. Looks like we might have to take some more pain before it gets better, as far as inflation,” Bobby, a two-time Trump voter from Texas, said.
“ The first month has definitely been chaotic from what I’ve seen,” said Steven, a young 2024 Trump voter from New York. “For the general public, the first thing that we noticed were the prices on the eggs, and the memes going around talking about how getting somebody an egg is a delicacy now.”
From where these people sit, Trump doesn’t look like he’s making much progress on fixing the economy. If anything, as Bobby suggested, the new tariffs on Canada, Mexico, and China could hurt U.S. consumers. And the inflation rate has ticked up since late last year.
For these voters, what Trump seems to be doing instead are a bunch of crazy things that make his administration look distracted, chaotic, and ineffective. Things such as gutting the Federal Aviation Administration; firing—and quickly rehiring—nuclear scientists; installing an anti-vaccine conspiracist to steward America’s health systems; letting an unelected MAGA billionaire dismantle the federal government.
Now, it’s true that die-hard Trump fans love this stuff. They’re here for the liberal tears, and I’m confident that Trump will keep his sky-high approval ratings with the Republican base. But among voters who don’t identify as hard partisans, some are confused and downright worried about what’s happening. These are not members of the resistance. They’re all people who voted for Trump—many of them for the first time.
“ Firing the FAA director and then having, like, five plane crashes within a matter of, like, two weeks is literally insane,” a first-time Trump voter named Zackery said, referring to a pressure campaign that ended in the former FAA chief’s resignation in January. “Firing the people who handle nuclear weapons, and then realizing who you fired, and then having to be like, ‘Hey, hey, hey, don’t go, we need you’ … Like, that’s crazy.”
Hal, a young Trump 2024 voter from New Jersey, said: “ I’m not a huge fan of some claims that RFK has been making without any necessarily scientific backing or evidence.”
Bobby, the two-time Trump voter from Texas, said: “ As far as renaming the Gulf, stuff like that, or buying [Greenland] … I don’t know. It’s just kind of nonsense to me.”
Focus groups, of course, capture only part of the picture. But polls, too, are already showing a decline in Trump’s approval numbers, and discontent with Trump on the economy. A recent Reuters poll had him at 44 percent approval, down from 47 percent in January. Quinnipiac showed his disapproval rising from 43 percent to 49 percent over his first month. A Washington Post/Ipsos poll found that only 43 percent of Americans support his first-month policies, and that 53 percent disapprove of his handling of the economy.
Put the focus groups and the polling together and you start to understand the broader political environment: Some of Trump’s own voters are ready to blame him—just as they did former President Joe Biden—if their lives don’t improve, and soon. The next plane that goes down, the next elimination of an essential government function, the next kid who dies of measles—the administration will own all that.
The fan service Trump is doing for his base doesn’t get him anywhere with the people on the margins who helped put him in the White House, and who will determine the makeup of Congress in two years. Fixing what people think is wrong with the economy requires governing, something Trump has proved constitutionally incapable of doing. As we keep slogging through our daily politics, don’t be surprised to see Trump’s numbers continue to drop.
If that happens, the focus groups suggest that it won’t be because these voters gain any new appreciation for Democrats. It’ll be because Trump keeps shedding his own marginal supporters.
Presidents’ honeymoons tend to end in the summer of their first year. Biden’s ended during the Afghanistan pullout; Trump’s approval rating took a nosedive after Charlottesville; voters grew more critical of Barack Obama as the financial crisis lengthened. Perhaps summer is coming early for Trump this year.
https://www.theatlantic.com/politic...opy-link&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=share
just learn to pay your college loans backTrump's hard core supporters know that their lives are going to get worse. This is because computer technology and automation are eliminating the better paying jobs they have the intelligence to learn. They want Trump to ruin the economy in order to spread the misery around. They love Trump because he hates the same people they hate.
I have no college loans.just learn to pay your college loans back
so many with nose rings do, they are so smart yet cannot understand what a bank loan is. They were fooled by Biden, hahahahaI have no college loans.
No more fooled than the cult sheep willingly walking to Trump's slaughter house - they are deaf to the screams coming out of that slaughter houseso many with nose rings do, they are so smart yet cannot understand what a bank loan is. They were fooled by Biden, hahahaha
Vivid, but ridiculous hyperbole. (Did I spell it right?)No more fooled than the cult sheep willingly walking to Trump's slaughter house - they are deaf to the screams coming out of that slaughter house
Haha, one of the sheep answers & correctly spells the word but now pronounce it - it isn't pronounced hyperbola like you spelled it, obviously because that's how you pronounce itVivid, but ridiculous hyperbole. (Did I spell it right?)![]()
Did you know that sheep get worms in their sinuses and you have to whack them in the face to knock the worms out.Haha, one of the sheep answers & correctly spells the word but now pronounce it - it isn't pronounced hyperbola like you spelled it, obviously because that's how you pronounce it
They're known as trumptards
Don't worry, when that bolt penetrates your brain in the Trump slaughter house, your sinus worms will be the least of your worriesDid you know that sheep get worms in their sinuses and you have to whack them in the face to knock the worms out.![]()
Yea, social media meant that the Trumptards could find one another and bind together in their stupidity - as evidenced by the posters hereThey're known as trumptards
You think he's coming after me? I'm not worried. I'll wiggle under the fence.Don't worry, when that bolt penetrates your brain in the Trump slaughter house, sinus worms will be the least of your worries
What are Democrats trending at? 19% approval? Lol.Yea, social media meant that the Trumptards could find one another and bind together in their stupidity - as evidenced by the posters here
Nah, he doesn't give a fuck about you, one way or the other - doesn't care if you live or die - you're just collateral damage to his asinine presidencyYou think he's coming after me? I'm not worried. I'll wiggle under the fence.![]()
Oh dear, is that all you can say - yes, both the Rep & Dems are idiots - both asinine fools being led to different demises but at least the Dems are benign - the Reps have given up that pretense of caring about the US a long time agoWhat are Democrats trending at? 19% approval? Lol.![]()
How have you been afflicted by Trump other than your persistent TDS disorder?Nah, he doesn't give a fuck about you - you're just collateral damage to his asinine presidency
I don't consider myself an idiot.Oh dear, is that all you can say - yes, both the Rep & Dems are idiots - both asinine fools being led to different demises but at least the Dems are benign - the Reps have given up that pretense of caring about the US a long time ago
Idiots never doI don't consider myself an idiot.![]()